Paskevich, Ivan Fyodorovich, Graf Yerevansky, Knyaz Varshchavsky

Paskevich, Ivan Fyodorovich, Graf Yerevansky, Knyaz Varshchavsky

▪ Russian military officer
born May 19 [May 8, old style], 1782, Poltava, Russia
died Feb. 1 [Jan. 20, O.S.], 1856, Warsaw

      military officer and administrator in the Russian government who suppressed the Polish insurrection of 1830–31.

      Having entered the Russian Army through the imperial institution for pages in 1800, Paskevich gained combat experience fighting against the Turks (1806–12) and against the French during 1812–14 in the Napoleonic Wars. He eventually became one of the emperor Nicholas I's (Nicholas I) closest associates.

      After the revolutionary Decembrists (Decembrist) tried to establish a constitutional regime in Russia at the time of Nicholas' accession to the throne, Paskevich participated in their trial; later, appointed governor and military commander in chief of the Caucasus (1827), he treated the Decembrist exiles under his jurisdiction with particular severity. After the Russo-Persian war broke out in 1826, he seized the military initiative from the Persians and captured the fortress of Erivan (Yerevan; (Yerevan) October 1827) and was rewarded with the title count of Erivan. With successive victories he forced the Persians to cede the provinces of Nakhichevan and Erivan (i.e., Persian Armenia) to Russia (1828; Treaty of Turkmanchay).

      Immediately afterward, with the onset of the Russo-Turkish War (Russo-Turkish wars) of 1828–29, Paskevich captured strategic Turkish strongholds, enabling Russia, when it concluded the Treaty of Adrianople with the Turks (1829), to annex territory around the mouth of the Danube River and in eastern Asia Minor. Promoted to the rank of field marshal (1829), he was transferred to Poland (June 1831) to command the Russian forces suppressing the Polish rebels. Despite his overcautiousness and indecisiveness, Paskevich defeated the rebels and was given the title prince of Warsaw. He was subsequently appointed viceroy of Poland and from 1832 to 1856 ruled dictatorially there, trying to Russify the country both culturally and administratively.

      When the Hungarian Revolution broke out in March 1848 and the Austrian government requested military assistance from Russia, Paskevich commanded the Russian troops that invaded Hungary in June 1849. Although his forces suffered badly from disease and his leadership was less effective than it had been during the Polish uprising, the rebels were finally suppressed; hoping to receive better treatment from the Russians than from the Austrians, they surrendered directly to Paskevich at Világos (Aug. 13, 1849). For a brief period during the Crimean War he commanded the Russian armies in the western war zone (April–June 1854), but after being defeated by the Turks at Silistria (June 8, 1854) he was relieved of his post.

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Universalium. 2010.

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