Sergey Maksimov
Sergey Vasilievich Maksimov was a Russian traveler and ethnographic writer. In his works, based on his extensive travels across Imperial Russia, he gathered a wealth of detail about traditional life in rural communities.
Born into a family of petty nobility, Maksimov entered the medical faculty of Imperial Moscow University in 1850 and later studied at the Imperial Academy of Medical Surgery in St. Petersburg.
Maksimov made his literary debut with the ethnographic sketch Peasant Gatherings in the Kostroma Province. Between 1855 and 1868, much like Vladimir Dal before him, he undertook six major expeditions throughout Russia. His impressions from these travels found expression in such works as A Year in the North, In the East: A Journey to the Amur, The Forest Wilderness: Scenes of Folk Life, Siberia and the Katorga, The Wandering Russia of the Christ’s Sake Beggars, and The Unclean Force. According to the Great Russian Encyclopedia:
Maksimov also wrote works intended for popular readership, including The Land of the Baptized Light, devoted to the lives of Russia's indigenous peoples. His Winged Words provided explanations of many Russian idioms and proverbial expressions. He was a close friend of the writers Aleksey Pisemsky and Alexander Ostrovsky, and Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin once remarked that Maksimov's stories "ought to be a constant companion to anyone who seeks to understand the Russian national character."
In 1900, Maksimov was elected an honorary member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences. The materials he collected were widely used by notable writers. During the Soviet era, his legacy fell into obscurity and his works were seldom reprinted. Rediscovered by a wider public in the early 21st century, Maksimov's major writings are now once again regularly published in Russia. His major writings have never been translated into foreign languages, so he remains little known outside the Russian-speaking countries.