Salawat Yulayev was born in the village of Tekeyevo,
Orenburg Governorate in the Urals (now
Salavatsky District,
Bashkortostan). Tekeyevo no longer exists, as it was burned down in 1775. Salawat Yulayev was at the head of the
Bashkortostan uprising from the very beginning of the country war of 1773–1775. The Russian imperial authorities seized him on 24 November 1774, and his father, Yulay Aznalin, was captured even earlier. They were sent to
Moscow in chains. Yulay Aznalin was a
votchinnik (holder of the patrimonial estate), a rich, intelligent and influential man. He was held in general esteem among
Bashkirs and was a Bauermeister (district foreman). The local authorities gave credence to him; his fidelity to the Imperial Russian government could not be doubted. In 1768 the
Orenburg governor prince
Putyatin himself appointed Yulay as the foreman of the Bashkir command. But soon the merchant Tverdyshev was granted collegiate accessory rank and deprived Yulay Aznalin of his land to build Simsky plant and villages. The Bashkir land was falling to ruin, and so Yulay Aznalin and his nineteen-year-old son Salawat stood up under
Yemelyan Pugachev’s banners. Ten months after Salawat's capture, in September 1775, he and his father were publicly lashed in those places where the largest battles with the Russian governmental armies took place. In that month they were both dragged by their nostrils, and their foreheads and faces were branded. On 2 October 1775, their hands and legs chained, Salawat and Yulay were sent on two carts under "protection" to the Baltic fortress Rogervik (nowadays the city of
Paldiski in Estonia) for life. The transport with convicts passed
Menzelinsk,
Kazan,
Nizhni Novgorod, Moscow, reaching
Tver on 14 November and then continuing on through
Novgorod,
Pskov, and
Revel and arriving finally in Rogervik on 29 November. The Baltic port Rogervik had been founded by
Peter the Great. However, when participants of the Bashkir uprising arrived in Rogervik, the fortress was practically deserted. There was only a small garrison and a small number of prisoners. Here Salawat and Yulay met their brothers-in-arms in struggle: Pugachev Colonel I.S. Aristov, Colonel Kanzafar Usaev, and others. Salawat Yulayev and his father lived the rest of their lives in Rogervik. When
Paul I ascended the throne, the commandant of the fortress Langel submitted an inquiry about moving the remaining participants of the Pugachev Uprising to
Taganrog or to
Irkutsk to a cloth factory. The resolution came from the Senate:
The aforementioned convicts are subject to be moved… For their villainies they are banished by imperial command, and it is ordered to keep them in this port with possible caution that they could not run away." There was a special manifest on 17 March 1775 which was published by the late empress
Catherine II. By her order all participants of the Pugachev revolt were to be imprisoned forever, and their names should "be condemned to eternal oblivion and deep silence." Under this manifest, local authorities pursued everyone who pronounced the names of the freedom fighter rebels against Russian overlordship. Salawat was literate. He wrote in
Old Tatar, which used to be a common written language for Turkic peoples in the Volga-Ural region. Documents signed by him have been preserved. People of different nationalities could be found in Salawat's army. Despite the ban on mentioning Salawat, the peoples of the region passed on word-of-mouth legends and songs about him. == Family ==