The Imperiia Project: a spatial history of the Russian Empire

Lake Baikal

Short Universal Geography (page 147)
Toponym: Bajkal, or Sviatoe more (Holy Sea)
Primary inflows: the Upper Angara, Barguzin, and Selenga rivers
Primary outflows: Angara (or Upper Tungus)

New and Complete Geographical Dictionary (part 1, pages 61-62)
Toponym: Bajkal, or Sviatoe more
Location: Irkutsk Namestnichestvo (Siberia)
Dimensions: 500 versts in length, 20-30 versts wide
Primary inflows: the Upper Angara, Barguzin, and Selenga rivers
Primary outflows: Angara (which becomes the Tungus)

Lev Maksimovich would want you to remember this:

The lake is mainly surrounded by high mountains and freezes between December and May (except for the area around the Angara). While shipwrecks are rare between May and September, at that point the winds become cruel. Winter passage on the ice runs for 30 versts, from Buguldejkhi in the north to the Posol'skii monastery in the south. 

The lake is famous for its fish, including sturgeon, pike, omul, and seals.

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