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Grigory Potyomkin

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Grigory Aleksandrovich Potemkin

Grigory Potemkin, engraving by James Walker, 1789, after a portrait by Johann Baptist Lampi.
(click to enlarge)
Grigory Potemkin, engraving by James Walker, 1789, after a portrait by Johann Baptist Lampi. (credit: Reproduced by courtesy of the trustees of the British Museum; photograph, J.R. Freeman & Co., Ltd.)
(born Sept. 24, 1739, Chizovo, Russia — died Oct. 16, 1791, near Iasi, Moldavia) Russian army officer. He entered the horseguards (1755) and helped bring Catherine II to power (1762). He fought with distinction in the Russo-Turkish War (1768 – 74), then became Catherine's lover (1774 – 76) and was made governor-general of "New Russia" (southern Ukraine). In 1783 she made him prince of Tauris. As a field marshal from 1784, he introduced reforms in the army, built the harbour of Sevastopol, and constructed a fleet in the Black Sea. He attempted to colonize the Ukrainian steppes, but he underestimated the costs, leaving many projects half-complete; his successful disguising of the weak points of his administration led to the claim that he erected mere facades — "Potemkin villages" — to show Catherine on her tour of the region. He commanded the Russian army in the second Russo-Turkish War.

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Military History Companion: Prince Grigoriy Aleksandrovich Potemkin
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Potemkin, Prince Grigoriy Aleksandrovich (1739-91), Russian diplomat and military reformer. Potemkin was born in Yassy (now in Romania). He enlisted as a trooper in the Horse Guards where he had a chance meeting with Empress Catherine II who was impressed by his energy, passion, and colossal height, and was appointed an officer in her personal bodyguard. He remained a favourite and personal adviser throughout her reign, ‘the only man that the Empress stands in awe of’, according to one contemporary.

He served in the 1768-74 Russo-Turkish war, rising rapidly to the rank of general. He was ennobled in 1774 and put in charge of irregular forces. He proved a talented if unorthodox administrator and commander and suppressed the Pugachev revolt the following year. In 1776 he was made governor of Novorossiysk, Azov, and Astrakhan and in 1783 realized his aim of incorporating the Crimea into Russia, for which he was made ‘Tauride (Tavricheskiy) Prince’, after the ancient Greek name for the tribes of the region. He presided over the development of the area including the great naval base of Sevastopol and the development of the Russian naval and merchant fleets on the Black Sea, for which historians have dubbed him ‘the Russian Nelson’.

The apocryphal tale of his erecting false house fronts to deceive Catherine about the success of his colonization efforts in the Ukraine (hence ‘Potemkin villages’) contains a grain of truth, in that his plan was too grandiose and poorly executed. However, he did radically reform the appearance and comfort of the Russian army, doing away with the pigtails and powder and maintaining that uniforms were for ‘dressing a soldier and not for loading him with a burden’. The workmanlike uniform, with a short dark green tunic and round black leather cap, was much admired by foreign observers.

— Christopher Bellamy

Biography: Grigori Aleksandrovich Potemkin
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The Russian administrator and field marshal Grigori Aleksandrovich Potemkin (1739-1791), a favorite of Catherine the Great, is best known for his work in the economic development of southern Russia.

Grigori Potemkin the son of a minor nobleman, was born on Sept. 13, 1739, in Chizhovo, a village of western Russia. At an early age he was taken to Moscow, where his formal education began. Intelligent and alert, he did commendably well in his preparatory studies. Later, while attending the University of Moscow, he lost all interest in scholarly pursuits and became so negligent that, in 1760, he was expelled. He left Moscow then, going to St. Petersburg to serve in the Horse Guards Regiment.

Two years later Potemkin took part in the coup that placed Catherine II (the Great) on the throne. In so doing, he gained the favorable attention of the new empress, who was inclined to be very generous to her supporters. She promoted Potemkin in rank and rewarded him with both money and land. In addition, she admitted him to her small circle of friends, where his charm and vivacity easily won him acceptance. Potemkin, both ambitious and able, took advantage of every opportunity for advancement.

As a military man, Potemkin moved ahead rapidly. By the end of the Russo-Turkish War of 1768-1774, during which he fought with distinction, he had attained the high rank of lieutenant general.

Potemkin's career then took a new turn: Catherine II began an affair with him and began to treat him with the lavishness that had marked her treatment of previous lovers. She gave him vast estates, large sums of money, and high honors. She also persuaded Joseph II of Austria to make Potemkin a prince of the Holy Roman Empire. Potemkin differed from other lovers of the Empress in having not only the inclination to assume governmental responsibilities but also the ability to carry them out successfully. Consequently, since Catherine was eager to entrust him with important tasks, he soon became one of the major forces in the empire. He became also one of the richest men in Russia; but, being profligate in his habits, he often had to appeal to the Empress for funds to meet his debts.

Although Catherine ended her affair with Potemkin in 1776, she continued to respect his capabilities and to trust his judgment (even in the selection of her lovers). He therefore retained his importance in the empire and continued to serve her - as diplomat, general, and administrator. His most important service was in the posts of governor general and military head of the region including New Russia (an expanse north of the Black Sea that Russia had taken from Turkey), Azov, and Astrakhan. Potemkin's task was to make this area militarily secure and to strengthen its economy. In order to accomplish these ends, he initiated and carried out ambitious projects for attracting settlers from Russia and abroad, building cities (including Sevastopol, Kherson, Nikolaev, and Yekaterinoslav), establishing a Russian fleet on the Black Sea, and improving the military units under his command. Meanwhile, with Catherine's approval, he conquered the Crimea and added it to the area he administered. As a reward for these achievements, he was advanced to the rank of field marshal and given the title of prince of Taurida.

The many activities connected with his work in the south did not consume all of Potemkin's energies. He made frequent trips to St. Petersburg, where he advised Catherine, served on the State Council, helped to reorganize the imperial army, and acted in diplomatic negotiations.

Nevertheless, Potemkin's chief concern remained Russia's southern affairs, and he continued to maintain a dominant place in them. He faced an important test when, in 1787, Catherine named him commander in chief of the army to oppose the Turks, who had declared war on Russia. Although an able officer and a conscientious commander, Potemkin was not a strategist, and the course of his exceptionally successful career might have been altered at this time had he not been fortunate enough to have two brilliant generals, Aleksandr Suvorov and Mikhail Kutuzov, serving under him. The war was a long and hard one. By mid-1791, however, the Turks were ready to discuss peace terms.

Potemkin was selected to negotiate with the Turkish representatives. He met them in Jassy (laši) to undertake this assignment, which proved to be his last. While negotiations were still underway, he died on Oct. 5, 1791, of malaria complicated by exhaustion.

Further Reading

George Soloveytchik, Potemkin: A Picture of Catherine's Russia (1938), is a well-balanced biography. Another study is Jerome Dreifuss, Catherine and Potemkin: An Imperial Romance (1937). There is also extensive material on Potemkin in lan Grey, Catherine the Great: Autocrat of All Russia (1962).

Russian History Encyclopedia: Grigory Alexandrovich Potemkin
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(1739 - 1791), prince, secret husband of Catherine II, statesman, commander, imperial viceroy, eccen tric.

Grigory Potemkin's life contains many mysteries. His year of birth and paternity are both disputed. His father, Alexander Vasilievich Potemkin (c. 1690 - 1746), an irascible retired army officer from the Smolensk region, courted young Daria Skuratova (1704 - 1780) while she was still married. Grigory was the fifth born and sole male of seven children. A Moscow cousin provided care for the family after the father's death. At school in Moscow, Potemkin displayed remarkable aptitude in classical and modern languages and Orthodox theology. Clerical friends led him to consider a church career. Potemkin entered the Horse Guards while continuing school at age sixteen. In 1757 he was one of a dozen students presented at court by Ivan Shuvalov, curator of Moscow University. Despite a gold medal, his academic career ceased with expulsion for laziness and truancy. He began active service with the Guards in Petersburg, participating in Catherine's coup of July 1762, for which he was promoted to chamber-gentleman and granted six hundred serfs. Accidental loss of an eye - mistakenly blamed on his patrons, the Orlov brothers - lent mystique to his robust physique and ebullient personality. He became assistant procurator of the Holy Synod in 1763 and spokesman for the non-Russian peoples at the Legislative Commission of 1767 - 1768. On leave from court for active army service in the Russo-Turkish War of 1768 - 1774, he fought with distinction under Field Marshal Peter Rumyantsev from 1769 to December 1773. At Petersburg he dined at court in autumn 1770, enhancing a reputation for devilish intelligence and wit, hilarious impersonations, and military exploits.

After Catherine's break from Grigory Orlov in 1772 - 1773, she sought a fresh perspective amid multiple crises. In December 1773 she invited Potemkin to Petersburg to win her favor. Installation as official favorite swiftly followed. He sat beside her at dinner and received infatuated notes several times per day. He was made honorary sub-colonel of the Preobrazhensky Guards, member of the Imperial Council, vice-president (later president) of the War Department, commander of all light cavalry and irregular forces, and governor-general of New Russia, and given many decorations capped by Catherine's miniature portrait in diamonds - only Grigory Orlov had another. Potemkin helped to conclude the war on victorious terms, to over-see the end of the Pugachev Revolt, and to craft legislation strengthening provincial government against renewed disorders.

Apparently the lovers arranged a secret wedding in Petersburg on June 19, 1774. They spent most of 1775 in Moscow to celebrate victories over the Turks and Pugachev, ceremonies that Potemkin choreographed. Catherine supposedly gave birth to Potemkin's daughter, Elizaveta Grigorevna Temkina (a tale debunked in Simon Montefiore's biography). From early 1776, despite elevation to Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, Potemkin drifted away as a result of persistent quarrels over power and rivals. In New Russia he supervised settlement and arranged annexation of the Crimea, finally accomplished with minimal bloodshed in 1783 and renamed the Tauride region. This was part of the Greek Project that Potemkin and Catherine jointly pursued in alliance with Austria and that foresaw expulsion of the Turks from Europe and reconstitution of the Byzantine Empire under Russian tutelage. The couple constantly corresponded about all matters of policy and personal concerns, especially hypochondria. She regretted his ailments however petty, but when she fell into depression from favorite Alexander Lanskoi's death in 1784, Potemkin rushed back to direct her recovery. He planned the flamboyant Tauride Tour of 1787 that took her to Kiev, then by galley and ship to the Crimea, and then back via Moscow. This inspired the myth of "Potemkin villages," a term synonymous with phony display. He was awarded the surtitle of Tavrichesky ("Tauride") during the tour.

The Turks declared war in August 1787, Potemkin taking supreme command of all Russian forces in the south. He panicked for some weeks when the new Black Sea fleet was scattered by storms and Ottoman invasion threatened, but Catherine kept faith in his military abilities, and Potemkin led Russia to land and sea victories that eventually won the war in 1792. He missed the final victory, however, dying theatrically in the steppe outside Jassy on October 16, 1791.

Bibliography

Alexander, John T. (1989). Catherine the Great: Life and Legend. New York: Oxford University Press.

Madariaga, Isabel de. (1981). Russia in the Age of Catherine the Great. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Montefiore, Simon Sebag. (2000). Prince of Princes: The Life of Potemkin. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.

Raeff, Marc. (1972). "In the Imperial Manner." In Catherine the Great: A Profile, ed. Marc Raeff. New York: Hill and Wang.

—JOHN T. ALEXANDER

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Grigori Aleksandrovich Potemkin
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Potemkin, Grigori Aleksandrovich (pōtĕm'kĭn, Rus. grĭgô'rē əlyĭksän'drəvĭch pŭtyôm'kĭn), 1739-91, Russian field marshal and favorite of Catherine II. He studied at Moscow Univ. and then entered the army. His part in the coup (1762) that made Catherine czarina brought him to her notice. Having distinguished himself in Catherine's first war with the Ottoman Empire (1768-74), he was created count (1774). About the same time he became Catherine's lover. Even after others had taken his place, he remained one of Catherine's closest friends and chief advisers, particularly with regard to her foreign policy, and he retained a uniquely great influence at her court. He encouraged Catherine in the so-called Greek project, which aimed at breaking up the Ottoman Empire and reestablishing a Christian empire in the conquered area. Catherine's grandson Constantine was to be emperor and Potemkin ruler of an independent kingdom comprising Moldavia, Walachia, and Bessarabia, but the scheme did not succeed. Potemkin played an important part in the annexation (1783) of the Crimea, for which he was created prince. As governor of the new province, he organized Catherine's fabulous Crimean tour of 1787. The allegation that he had sham villages ("Potemkin villages") built along her route is, at best, an extreme exaggeration, for Potemkin was in fact an able administrator, and he did much to develop the Crimea.

Bibliography

See biography by S. Sebag Montefiore (2001).

Wikipedia: Grigory Potyomkin
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His Serene Highness Prince Potyomkin of Tauris

Prince (Reichsfürst) Grigori Alexandrovich Potyomkin-Tavricheski (Russian: Григо́рий Алекса́ндрович Потёмкин, pronounced Patyómkin) (September 24 [O.S. September 13] 1739) – October 16 [O.S. October 5] 1791) was a Russian general-field marshal, statesman, and favourite of Catherine II the Great. He is primarily remembered for his efforts to colonize the sparsely populated wild steppes of Southern Ukraine, which passed to Russia under the Treaty of Kuchuk-Kainarji (1774). Among the towns founded by Potyomkin are Kherson, Nikolaev (Mykolayiv), Sevastopol, and Yekaterinoslav (now Dnipropetrovsk). He is also widely associated with the "Potemkin village", a method of ruse that may or may not be grounded in historical events. Son of Alexander Potyomkin and Daria Skuratowa.

Contents

Early life

A descendant of the Muscovite diplomat Pyotr Potyomkin, Grigory was born in the village of Chizhovo near Smolensk into the family of a minor army officer. After studying at the University of Moscow, he enlisted in the Chevalier Guard. He participated in the palace coup in 1762 that ousted Peter III and enthroned Catherine II. He was promoted to second lieutenant of the Guards. Catherine needed reliable assistants and appreciated Potyomkin's energy and organizational abilities. The biographical anecdotes relating to him during the next few years, such as his participation in the assassination of the deposed emperor, are obscure and mostly apocryphal.

Catherine II's lover

In 1774, their relationship took on a more intimate character. Potyomkin became a favorite of the tsarina; he received many awards, and was given the highest posts. For the next 17 years, he was the most powerful man in Russia. Potyomkin found pleasure in ostentatious luxury and personal wealth. Like Catherine, he gave in to the temptation of absolute power; however, in many dealings, he was guided by the spirit of Enlightenment. He showed tolerance of religious differences, and gave protection to national minorities. As commander-in-chief of the Russian army (nominally from 1784), he espoused a more humane type of discipline, demanding that officers take care of soldiers in a paternal way.

In 1776, at Catherine's request, Emperor Joseph II raised Potyomkin to the rank of a prince of the Holy Roman Empire. In 1775, he was superseded in the empress's graces by Zavadovsky, but the relationship between Catherine and her former lover continued to be most friendly, and his influence with her was never seriously disturbed by any of her subsequent favorites. Based on contemporary rumors it is sometimes suggested that Catherine and Potyomkin contracted a secret marriage at some point during this time, though this has been neither proven nor disproven. In any case, there is much evidence of his enormous and extraordinary influence over the Empress during the next ten years. His correspondence with her was uninterrupted, and the most important state documents passed through his hands.

Governing of Novorossiya

Catherine II had Potyomkin buried at the Catherine Cathedral of Kherson, the city he founded.
Burial place in Kherson
Burial place in Kherson
Burial place in Kherson
Burial place in Kherson
Burial place in Kherson
Burial place in Kherson

Potyomkin achieved appreciable success in Russia's newly won southern provinces, in which he was an absolute ruler. He supported a stream of both Russian and foreign colonists, he founded some new cities, and created the Black Sea Fleet. In 1783 he carried out the project of annexing Crimea to Russia, for which he received the victory title of His Serene Highness Knyaz Tavrichesky (Светлейший князь Таврический), or prince of Tauris, after an ancient name for Crimea. Four years later he organized Catherine's widely advertised ceremonial travel with her retinues to the southern provinces. The purpose of the trip was the intimidation of Russia's enemies, and it led to a war for which the country appeared poorly prepared (Russo-Turkish War, 1787-1792). As commander, Potyomkin was guided by a cautious strategy that was militarily justified but did not win him popularity. When he was commanding Russian troops in the 6-month long Siege of Ochakov, he faced the opposition of general Alexander Suvorov, who called for immediate action.

His colonizing system was exposed to very severe criticism, yet it is impossible not to admire the results of his stupendous activity. The arsenal of Kherson, begun in 1778, the harbour of Sevastopol and the new fleet of fifteen ships-of-the-line and twenty-five smaller vessels, were monuments of his genius. But there was exaggeration in all he attempted. He spared neither men, money, nor himself in attempting to carry out his gigantic scheme for the colonization of the south Ukrainian steppes; but he never calculated the cost, and more than three-quarters of the design had to be abandoned when but half finished.

In 1790 he conducted the military operations on the Dniester and held his court at Iaşi with more than Asiatic pomp. In 1791 he returned to St. Petersburg where, along with his friend Bezborodko, he made vain efforts to overthrow the new favourite, Prince Platon Zubov, and in four months spent 850,000 rubles in banquets and entertainments at the Tauride Palace, a sum subsequently reimbursed to him from the treasury. Then the empress grew impatient and compelled him (1791) to return to Iaşi to conduct the peace negotiations as chief Russian plenipotentiary.

Near the end of his life, it became apparent he was suffering from a mental disorder, probably due to a complications following an STD.[1] This behavior included a series of violent assaults on the members of his staff and public declarations that he will conquer Poland, Turkey and Egypt.[1] On October 5, 1791, while on his way to Nikolayev, he died in the open steppe, 40 miles from Iaşi, in consequence of eating a whole goose while in a high state of fever. Polish historian Jerzy Łojek notes that his death might have been a result of a poison, as his continuing madness made him a liability to the Russian court.[1]

His death was lamented in Derzhavin's great ode Waterfall.

Potyomkin's Tauride Palace in St. Petersburg.


Family

One of his sisters was married with senator Samoylov. A niece from that marriage, herself married firstly colonel Raievski and secondly the landowner Davidov. Potemkin's great-nephews included general Nicholas Raievski.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Jerzy Łojek, Geneza i obalenie Konstytucji 3 Maja, Wyd.Lubelskie 1986r., p.180-181

References

See also


This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.


 
 

 

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