The King of Vodka (41 page)

Read The King of Vodka Online

Authors: Linda Himelstein

anti-alcohol crusade of, xxvi–xxvii, 140–41, 258, 263–64

criticism of tsar by, 219

novels of, xxvii, 67, 79, 102–3

peasants' relief and, 152

trademarks, 69, 119, 268

Smirnoff, 321, 333, 335, 336

Transchel, Kate, 217

Tretyakov, Pavel, 38–39, 101

Tretyakov, Sergey, 310

Tretyakova, Vera, 38, 39

Tretyakov family, 62, 83, 101, 108, 191

Tretyakov Museum, 38, 101

Trotskiy, Leon, 250, 283, 285, 293

Trukhanova, Nataliya, 226–30

Turgenev, Ivan, 38, 61, 114, 116

 

Uglich, xxii, 9, 10, 11, 14–15, 18

Union Against Drunkenness, xxvii, 141

United States, 85, 103–4, 105, 113, 165–66

Smirnoff vodka market and, 320–24, 327–30, 336, 337

 

Valle Ricci, Umberto de la, 269, 279, 292–93, 315

Vienna Exposition (1873), 80, 81–89, 91–92, 103, 105, 132

Vintorg (Vintorgpravleniye), 308

Vladimir, Grand Duke, 238

Vladimir, Metropolitan, xxiii

Vladimir Aleksandrovich, Grand Prince, 177

vodka culture, xix, xxv, xxviii, 24, 54, 103, 116, 126, 127, 150, 248, 258, 263, 273–74, 338

vodka riots, 47

vodka wars, xxvi, 111, 120–28

Volkov, Ivan, 253–54

Voronotsov-Dashkov, Illarion

Ivanovich, 131, 136

Vyshnegradskiy, Ivan, 138–39, 151–52

 

West, James L., 292

wine cellars, 49–50, 54

rules for, 25n

wine pogroms, 289–90

wines, xxii, xxviii, 14, 15, 24, 77–78, 103, 126, 169, 170, 249

Bolshevik takeover and, 291

profit margin on, 150

prohibition and, 278

Smirnov line of, 92, 103, 104, 175, 215, 260, 265

Witte, Sergey, 152, 153–54, 156, 165, 166, 167, 172, 177, 190, 204, 224, 273, 334

removal from office of, 233–34

vodka monopoly and, 168–70, 186, 236–37

World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago, 1893), 165–66

World War I, 274, 275–85, 288, 293

World War II, 328

 

Yakovlev, Aleksander, 14

Yaron, Grigoriy, 255, 257

Yaron, Mark, 257

Yaroslavl province, 7, 8, 14, 15, 33, 48, 49, 184–85, 186

Yeltsin, Boris, 335, 336

Yusupov, Felix, Prince, 280

 

zemstvo
(civic groups), 55

Zhemchugova, Praskovya, 29–30

Zhukov, Nikolay Nikolayevich, 74–75, 77

Ziloti, Aleksander, 38–39

Zimina, Avdotya, 122, 124

Zimin family, 10, 124

Zola, Émile, xix–xx

About the Author

LINDA HIMELSTEIN
began her career in the Washington bureau of the
Wall Street Journal
before working at the
San Francisco Recorder
and the
Legal Times.
In 1993 she joined
BusinessWeek
as a legal affairs editor, writing about a wide array of topics, including the tobacco industry and Wall Street. One of her cover stories helped
BusinessWeek
win the National Magazine Award. Later, as the magazine's Silicon Valley bureau chief, she wrote about the infancies of eBay, Yahoo!, and other companies. She lives with her family in Northern California.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

Credits

Jacket Design by TheDesignWorksGroup, Charles Brock

THE KING OF VODKA
. Copyright © 2009 by Linda Himelstein. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Adobe Digital Edition April 2009 ISBN 978-0-06-187616-5

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*
Little independent or primary evidence exists detailing Smirnov's early childhood. This reconstruction is drawn from available data on serfs and information provided by Vladimir Grechukhin, the director of the Folk Ethnographic Museum in Myshkin, which houses a small museum devoted to Smirnov.

†
Boyar is an old term referring to a member of the Russian aristocracy.

*
Pubs, taverns, wine cellars, and other liquor outlets had to follow strict rules. Taverns, for instance, were allowed to serve food along with liquor to customers while many wine cellars could not. Some shops could serve only take-out drinks while others were allowed to serve drinks on their premises.

*
This is a reconstruction based on the available evidence.

*
The dialogue and scene have been created to demonstrate a typical exchange during Smirnov'time.

†
$1.30 in 1858 ($36 today).

*
About $46,768 today.

†
Dukhobors were a religious sect that did not accept churches as places for prayer. They were supported by Tolstoy at the end of the nineteenth century. Molokans were a religious sect opposed to the Russian Orthodox Church and its rituals.

*
Serfs still faced difficulty leaving their villages and often could not afford to buy land offered them because of steep costs.

*
Russia uses a different way of measuring alcohol content than the United States. Degrees and percents are equivalent, but an alcohol's proof value is different.

*
Smirnov'Smirnov's name never appears in attendance records of these events or in the memoirs of other merchants at the time.

*
Mariya's age is calculated by church records at the time of her death. No birth records for her could be found.

*
The average cost of a bottle of wine was calculated from retail prices listed by participants in the Russian Exhibition of 1870.

*
Evidence regarding Smirnov's preparations for, and the journey to, the fair is scarce. This account is a likely scenario based on available archives, documents, and family accounts.

*
The anecdote comes from a translation of Vladimir Smirnov's memories in the Bakhmeteff Archive at Columbia University, New York City.

*
The conclusion about the change in commercial advertisements comes from an analysis of six leading newspapers in Moscow.

†
In Russia, vodka was referred to as wine.

*
The ad and its translation were obtained from the Smirnoff Vodka Archive collection at the Davis Center for Russian Studies in the Fung Library at Harvard University.

*
In reality, the law encouraged more producers to enter the business illegally. They did not want to pay higher fees and therefore launched their operations outside the law.

†
Pubs were places where only drinks could be served.

*
Smirnov's interior design plans come from floor plans obtained from the Moscow Committee on Heritage.

*
Anecdote provided by Anton Valdin, a genealogist who worked with Smirnov's descendants. The anecdote also appears in
The Vodka King
, a book published in 1999 that was written by Smirnov's descendants.

*
Details of Smirnov's village life are drawn from regional museums and archives with the help of Vladimir Grechukhin. They reflect the most pervasive local customs at the time.

*
Prior to Smirnov's request, the title of vodka purveyor to the tsar could be held only by an individual.

*
Kira Smirnova related this story during interviews in Moscow in July 2005 and in October 2007.

*
The equivalent of about $5 billion today.

*
Description is based on a personal interview on Nov. 12, 2005, with Varvara Nikolayevna Petukhova, a resident who saw the cathedral. It no longer exists.

*
The five sons and Mariya were each left 260,000 rubles in cash. After Mariya's death, her share was, as far as anyone knows, divided equally among the sons.

*
This information comes from extensive research conducted by Sergey's son Oleg in the 1970s.

*
The 500,000 rubles payment is an assumption based on the amount Vladimir officially received for his interest in the family business, though it could have been more. In addition, the agreement was changed in April 1905 to cover eight years.

*
Based on the memoirs of P. Isheyev, a close friend of the couple.

*
Documents explaining the aftermath of these decisions could not be located. It is likely the Smirnovs appealed the decisions. Company ads from 1914 to 1917 feature all four coats of arms and reference to the purveyor title.

*
The Smirnov's wartime contributions come from research conducted by Anton Valdin.

*
The value of a ruble in 1821 was about twenty-one cents.

*
Remains of all but two victims were discovered in 1991. The last two, including Nikolay II's only son, Aleksey, were found in 2007.

*
During Stalin's reign these paintings were hidden because Stalin saw them as decadent. Only after his death, in the 1950s, did they begin to be viewed publicly.

*
During the height of the Cold War, the popularity of the Moscow Mule waned. However, in the summer of 2008, Diageo, the largest spirits company in the world, reintroduced the classic cocktail through a multimillion-dollar advertising campaign.

*
Interview with Anton Valdin.

*
Translated archival documents obtained from the Davis Center for Russian Studies, the Smirnoff Vodka Archives Collection in the Fung Library, Harvard University.

*
Grigoriy's business history is culled from pages in the Uglich government archives.

†
A local listing of businesses confirms that Arseniy came to Uglich to work with Grigoriy. It is presumed that Pyotr and his brother did as well since boys typically stayed with their fathers.

*
The timing of Ivan's arrival in Moscow is derived from his death notice.

*
The journey to Moscow has been re-created from available records and from typical stories of serfs going to Moscow for seasonal work.

*
The modern address is given here. It was different in the nineteenth century.

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