Martin Spanberg
Martin Spanberg was a Danish-born Russian naval officer who took part with his compatriot Vitus Bering in both Kamchatka expeditions as second in command. He is best known for finding a sea route to Japan from Russian territory and for exploring the Kuril Islands. Shikotan, one of the Kurils, was renamed in his honor by the Russians in 1796.Career
Spanberg led three voyages in 1738, 1739, and 1742. On the first of these voyages, Spanberg left 29 June 1738 aboard the Archangel Michael with his own assistants William Walton and Alexander Shelting commanding the Sv. or St. Gabriel and the Nadezhda respectively. He charted 30 of the Kurils. On the second voyage, he gained a fourth shipthe Bolsheretsk and was the first Russian commander to visit Honshu in Japan, establishing Russo-Japanese diplomatic relations. His ships landed in a scenic area now part of the Rikuchu Kaigan National Park but, despite isolationist Japanese sakoku policy of the time, the sailors were treated with courtesy. The second and third voyages also surveyed the coasts of Japan and Sakhalin as well as the Kurils.Works
Spanberg wrote a brief account of his travels. They pointedly failed to locate the phantom islands of Rica de Oro and Rica de Plata supposedly in the area. Producing the first trustworthy account of the region, Spanberg further established that the supposedly enormous Staten Island and Company Land common on European maps after the 1643 visit of Maarten Gerritsz Vries of the Dutch East India Company were either nonexistent or much smaller in extent, grossly misrepresenting some of the Kurils like Urup and Iturup. This was not, however, immediately accepted, and the various phantom islands continued to appear on French and other maps for decades longer.Honors
in the Kurils and Shpanberg Island in the Nordenskiöld Archipelago are named for him.