Onufriy Stepanov had been appointed Yerofey Khabarov's…
July 1654 CE
Onufriy Stepanov had been appointed Yerofey Khabarov's deputy in the region of Dauria (the upper reaches of the Amur River) after the lattter's departure to Moscow in the fall of 1653, and put in charge of the three hundred and twenty men who remained there.
Stepanov and his men had suffered privations without enough grain and timber, so they decided to sail down the Amur River beyond the Sungari River to the Ducher country in order to procure food and building materials.
Stepanov had succeeded in his mission, but not without skirmishes with the Duchers, exacting a considerable yasak, or fur tribute, from them.
Here he had built winter quarters.
Stepanovi sails back to the Sungari River n the summer of 1654 to find grain and is joined by another band of fifty “Cossacks”.
After sailing up the Sungari for three days, he meets a Manchu army under the command of Mingandali. (According to Stepanov, it consisted of three thousand Chinese and Manchus, not including the Duchers and Daurs).
A river battle ensues, and Stepanov and his men come off victorious, but the remaining Manchu forces go ashore and entrench themselves.
The Cossacks make an attempt to besiege the trenches, but sustain losses and have to retreat downriver where they are joined by thirty men under his lieutenant, Beketov.
He retreats up the Amur, past the Zeya to the mouth of the Kamora River, and winters at the half-ruined Kamora fortress.