The Chukchi participated in
endemic warfare against neighboring tribes, especially the
Koryaks. Russians first began contacting the Chukchi when they reached the
Kolyma (1643) and the
Anadyr (1649). The route from
Nizhnekolymsk to the fort at
Anadyrsk along the southwest of the main Chukchi area became a major trade route. The overland journey from
Yakutsk to Anadyrsk took about six months. The Chukchi were generally ignored for the next fifty years because they were warlike and did not provide furs or other valuable commodities to tax. Armed skirmishes flared up around 1700 when the Russians began operating in the
Kamchatka Peninsula and needed to protect their communications from the Chukchi and
Koryak. The first attempt to conquer them was made in 1701. Other expeditions were sent out in 1708, 1709 and 1711 with considerable bloodshed but little success and unable to eliminate the local population on the large territory. War was renewed in 1729, when the Chukchi defeated an expedition from Okhotsk and killed its commander. Command passed to Major
Dmitry Pavlutsky, who adopted
very destructive tactics, burning, driving off reindeer, killing men and capturing women and children. In 1742, the government at Saint Petersburg ordered another war in which the Chukchi and Koryak were to be "totally extirpated". The war (1744–47) was conducted with similar brutality and ended when Pavlutsky was killed in March 1747. In 1762, when
Catherine the Great was crowned, Saint Petersburg adopted a different policy. Maintaining the fort at
Anadyrsk had cost some 1,380,000 rubles, but the area had returned only 29,150 rubles in taxes, so the government abandoned Anadyrsk in 1764. The Chukchi, no longer attacked by the Russian Empire, began to trade peacefully with the Russians. From 1788, they participated in an annual trade fair on the lower Kolyma. Another was established in 1775 on the Angarka, a tributary of the
Bolshoy Anyuy. This trade declined in the late 19th century when American whalers and others began landing goods on the coast. The first
Christian missions from the
Eastern Orthodox Church entered Chukchi territory some time after 1815. The strategy worked, and trade flourished between the
Cossacks and the Chukchi. As the annual trade fairs where goods were exchanged continued, a common language between the two peoples was spoken. The Native people, however, never paid
yasak (a fur tribute), and their status as subjects was little more than a formality. The formal annexation of the Chukotka Peninsula did not happen until much later, during the time of the Soviet Union. where they are depicted as primitive, uncivilized, and simple-minded, but clever in their own way.
Post-Soviet period After 1990 and
the fall of the Soviet Union, there was a major exodus of Russians from the area because of the underfunding of the local industry. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the state-run farms were reorganized and nominally privatized. This process was ultimately destructive to the village-based economy in Chukotka. The region has still not fully recovered. Many rural Chukchi, as well as Russians in Chukotka's villages, have survived in recent years only with the help of direct humanitarian aid. Some Chukchi have attained university degrees, becoming poets, writers, politicians, teachers and doctors. In the context of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine since 2022, the Chukchis have been reported as one of Russia's
ethnic minority groups suffering from a disproportionally large casualty rate among Russian forces. ==See also==