The living conditions along the Amur River…
July 1656 CE
The living conditions along the Amur River have meanwhile grown worse from year to year due to the fact that most of the native population have been impoverished by the Cossacks’ exactions and have left the area.
Stepanov has discovered also that the Daurs and Duchers have been resettled by the order of the Shunzhi Emperor from the Amur River to the Kurga River.
Thus, the Amur region has become almost completely deserted, the shores of the Sungari River in particular.
An increasing number of outlaws in the area prey on both the natives and the legal Cossacks.
Onufriy Stepanov and his men often encounter uluses, sacked and burnt down by robbers.
The Cossacks find themselves in a critical situation, especially considering the fact that they lack manpower to fight their way to more fertile lands.
To avoid death from starvation, Stepanov’s men have to plow and scatter the fields with seeds themselves.
It is pointless to remain in this region any longer, so Stepanov waits for an opportunity to leave.
He dispatches on July 22, 1656, a group of fifty Cossacks to Moscow to deliver a new yasak, providing them with a letter asking the tsar not to send his men back to him due to the lack of food in the Amur region.