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Alexander Griboyedov

Alexander Sergeyevich Griboyedov (Russian: Александр Сергеевич Грибоедов, Aleksandr Sergeevich Griboedov or Sergeevich Griboyedov; 15 January 1795 – 11 February 1829), formerly romanized as Alexander Sergueevich Griboyedoff,[2] was a Russian diplomat, playwright, poet, and composer. His one notable work was the 1823 verse comedy Woe from Wit. He was Russia's ambassador to Qajar Persia, where he and all the embassy staff were massacred by an angry mob as a result of the rampant anti-Russian sentiment that existed through Russia's imposing of the Treaty of Gulistan (1813) and Treaty of Turkmenchay (1828), which had forcefully ratified for Persia's ceding of its northern territories comprising Transcaucasia and parts of the North Caucasus. Griboyedov had played a pivotal role in the ratification of the latter treaty.

Alexander Griboyedov
Portrait by Ivan Kramskoi
Russian Ambassador to Iran
In office
1828[1]–1829
MonarchNicholas I of Russia
Personal details
Born
Alexander Sergeyevich Griboyedov

(1795-01-04)4 January 1795
Moscow, Russian Empire
Died11 February 1829(1829-02-11) (aged 34)
Tehran, Qajar Iran
Resting placeTbilisi, Georgia
NationalityRussian
SpouseNino Chavchavadze
Alma materImperial Moscow University (1808)
OccupationDiplomat, Playwright, Poet, and Composer
Signature

Early life

Griboyedov was born in Moscow, the exact year unknown, with biographers debating whether it was in 1790 or 1795. Griboyedov received a Masters in philology from Moscow University, and subsequently enrolled in the doctorate program. In 1812, he quit the program and enrolled in the military.[3] He obtained a commission in a hussar regiment, which he resigned in 1816. The next year, he entered the civil service. In 1818 he was appointed secretary of the Russian legation in Persia, and transferred to Georgia.[4]

He possessed musical talent, played the piano and composed several waltzes. Only two of his waltzes survive to the present day, although it is recorded that he composed several, including vaudevilles in association with stage plays. He is best known for his literary compositions and poetic verses.

His verse comedy The Young Spouses (Russian: Молодые супруги, Molodye Suprugi), which he staged in St. Petersburg in 1816, was followed by other similar works. Neither these nor his essays and poetry would have been long remembered but for the success of his verse comedy Woe from Wit (Russian: Горе от ума, Gore ot Uma), a satire on Russian aristocratic society.[4]

As a high official in the play puts it, this work is "a pasquinade on Moscow". The play depicts certain social and official stereotypes in the characters of Famusov, who hates reform; his secretary, Molchalin, who fawns over officials; and the aristocratic young liberal and Anglomaniac, Repetilov. By contrast the hero of the piece, Chatsky, an ironic satirist just returned from western Europe, exposes and ridicules the weaknesses of the rest. His words echo the outcry of the young generation in the lead-up to the armed insurrection of 1825.[4]

In Russia for the summer of 1823, Griboyedov completed the play and took it to St. Petersburg. It was rejected by the censors. Many copies were made and privately circulated, but Griboyedov never saw it published.[4] After his death the manuscript was jointly owned by his wife Nina Alexandrovna Griboyedova and his sister Maria Sergeyevna Durnovo (Griboyedova).[5] The first edition was not published until 1833, four years after his death. Only once did he see it on the stage, when it was performed by the officers of the garrison at Yerevan. Soured by disappointment, he returned to Georgia. During the Russo-Persian War of 1826–1828, he put his linguistic expertise at the service of general Ivan Paskevich, a relative; after which he was sent to St. Petersburg where he worked on the Treaty of Turkmenchay negotiations. There, thinking to devote himself to literature, he started work on a romantic drama, A Georgian Night (Russian: Грузинская ночь, Gruzinskaya noch), based on Georgian legends.[4]

Musical life

Alexander Griboyedov's education was not only extensive, continuing into Doctoral work before shifting to military training, but had included musical study as well. Although producing only a small output of work during his lifetime, he was well experienced in an array of instruments including piano, organ, and flute. During his musical study, it is recorded that he studied with the Irish pianist, composer, and ostensible "creator" of the nocturne form John Field, along with Johann Heinrich Müller (also known as Johann Heinrich Miller) in the field of Music Theory.[6][7]

Although his compositional life was minor in regards to others during his time, he was regarded as a "very good musician" by the likes of Mikhail Glinka, and had routine salons at his residence which were attended by many musical luminaries of his time, although relatively minor in the contemporary decade, including Vladimir Odoevsky, Alexander Alyabyev, Mikhail Vielgorsky, and Alexey Verstovsky.

Out of work as a composer, only two compositions survive to the present, those being his two waltzes in Ab major and E minor. He is known to have composed the musical score to the opera-vaudeville [or operetta] called "Who is a Brother, Who is a Sister, or Deception for Deception" (1824), written by the composer himself in collaboration with Pyotr Vyazemsky.[8]

Death

 
Monument erected in Soviet times in Dilijan, Armenia commemorating the location where Alexander Pushkin (on his way to meet his brother) stopped the carriage with Alexander Griboyedov's body being transported to Tiflis. An inscription in Russian and Armenian says: "Here A. S. Pushkin saw the body of A. S. Griboyedov".

Memorial stone for A.S. Griboyedov in the Armenian St Thaddaeus church, Tehran, Iran

 
Memorial stone for A.S. Griboyedov in the Armenian St Thaddaeus Church, Tehran, Iran

Several months after his wedding to Nino, 16-year-old daughter of his friend Prince Chavchavadze, Griboyedov was suddenly sent to Persia as Minister Plenipotentiary.[9] In the aftermath of the war and the humiliating Treaty of Turkmenchay, there was strong anti-Russian sentiment in Persia. Upon arrival in Tehran, the Order of the Lion and the Sun was conferred on him. Soon after Griboyedov's arrival, a mob stormed the Russian embassy.

The incident began when an Armenian eunuch escaped from the harem of the Persian shah, and at the same time two enslaved Armenian women escaped from the harem of the Shah's son-in-law. All three sought refuge at the Russian legation. As agreed in the Treaty of Turkmenchay, Georgians and Armenians living in Persia at that time were permitted to return to Georgia and Eastern Armenia.[10] However, the Shah demanded that Griboyedov return the three escapees. Griboyedov refused. His decision caused an uproar throughout the city and several thousand Persians encircled the Russian compound demanding their release.

Soon after, urged on by the mullahs, the mob stormed the building. A high-ranking Muslim scholar with the title of Mojtahed, Mirza Masih Astarabadi known as Mirza Masih Mojtahed, issued a fatwa saying that freeing Muslim women from the claws of unbelievers is allowed.[11]

Griboyedov and other members of his mission had prepared for a siege and sealed all the windows and doors. Armed and in full uniform, they were resolved to defend to the last drop of blood. Although small in number, the Cossack detachment assigned to protect the legation held off the mob for over an hour until finally being driven back to Griboyedov's office. There, Griboyedov and the Cossacks resisted until the mob broke through the roof of the building, and then through the ceiling, to slaughter them. The escaped eunuch and Griboyedov, who fought with his sword, were among the first to be shot to death; the fate of the two Armenian women remains unknown.[10][12] Second secretary of the mission Karl Adelung and, in particular, a young doctor whose name is not known, fought hard, but soon the scene was one of butchered, decapitated corpses.

Griboyedov's body, thrown from a window, was decapitated by a kebab vendor who displayed the head on his stall.[11] The mob dragged the uniformed corpse through the city's streets and bazaars, to cries of celebration. It was eventually abandoned on a garbage heap after three days of ill-treatment by the mob, such that in the end it could be identified only by a duelling injury to a finger. The following June, Griboyedov's friend Alexander Pushkin, travelling through the southern Caucasus, encountered some men from Tehran leading an oxcart. The men told Pushkin they were conveying the ambassador's remains to Tiflis (now Tbilisi). Griboyedov was buried there, in the monastery of St. David (Mtatsminda Pantheon).[11]

When Nino, Griboyedov's widow, received news of his death she gave premature birth to a child who died a few hours later. Nino lived another thirty years, rejecting all suitors and winning universal admiration for her fidelity to her husband's memory.

In a move to compensate Russia for the attack and the death of its ambassador, the Shah sent his grandson Khosrow Mirza to St. Petersburg to avoid another war with Tsar Nicholas I.[11][13] and also gifted to him the Shah Diamond.[14]

Russian sources claim that[15] British agents, who feared Russian influence in Tehran, and Persian reactionaries, who were not satisfied with the Turkmenchay treaty, were responsible for inciting the mob.[15] The death of Griboyedov, who was a liberal and who advocated regional autonomy for the Christians in Transcaucasia, was probably not a great loss for Tsar Nicholas or General Paskevich, both of whom wished to Russianize the minorities in the Caucasus.[citation needed] The Russo-Turkish War (1828–29) might have been another reason for the Russian inaction.[15] His wife had written on his tombstone in Tiflis: “Your mind and works are immortal in Russian memory, but why has my love outlived you?”.[14]

Legacy

 
Monument in Moscow
 
Griboyedov's statue in Yerevan, Armenia

Author Angela Brintlinger has said that "not only did Griboyedov's contemporaries conceive of his life as the life of a literary hero—ultimately writing a number of narratives featuring him as an essential character—but indeed Griboyedov saw himself as a hero and his life as a narrative. Although there is not a literary artifact to prove this, by examining Griboyedov's letters and dispatches, one is able to build a historical narrative that fits the literary and behavioural paradigms of his time and that reads like a real adventure novel set in the wild, wild East."

One of the main settings for Mikhail Bulgakov's satirical novel The Master and Margarita is named after Griboyedov, as is the Griboyedov Canal in Central Saint Petersburg. One of the central streets of Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia, is named after Griboyedov. This street is crossed by Alexander Chavchavadze street, named after Griboyedov's father-in-law, famous Georgian poet, Alexander Chavchavadze.

On 17 April 1944 Pravda ran a lengthy feature on the commemoration of Griboyedov's 150th birthday when high-ranking officials, military leaders, diplomats, writers, and artists had attended a celebration in the Bolshoi Theatre. Novelist and Stalin deputy Leonid Leonov eulogized Griboyedov, mentioning especially his love of his fatherland.

The reception to the Shah's grandson Khosrow Mirza in the Winter Palace, and Tsar Nicholas receiving from him the Shah Diamond, are featured in the 2002 Russian film Russian Ark.

Commemoration

Monuments

  • In Saint Petersburg, the monument of A.S. Griboyedov (sculptor V.V. Lishev, 1959) is located on Zagorodny Prospekt on Pionerskaya Square (in front of the Bryantsev Youth Theatre)
  • In the center of Yerevan there is a monument of A.S. Griboyedov (author - Hovhannes Bejanyan, 1974).
  • In Alushta, a monument of A.S. Griboyedov was erected in 2002, on the 100th anniversary of the city.
  • In Moscow, the monument of A.S. Griboyedov is located on Chistoprudny Boulevard.
  • In Veliky Novgorod, A.S. Griboyedov was immortalized in the monument “Millennium of Russia”, in the group of sculptures “Writers and Artists”.
  • In Volgograd, at the expense of the Armenian community of the city, a bust of A.S. Griboyedov was installed on Sovetskaya Street, in front of Polyclinic №3.
  • In Tbilisi, a monument of A.S. Griboyedov is located on the Kura embankment (sculptor M. Merabishvili, architect G. Melkadze, 1961).
  • In Tehran, the Russian embassy has a monument of A.S. Griboyedov (sculptor V. A. Beklemishev, 1912).
  • A bust of A. S. Griboyedov is installed on the facade of the Odessa Opera and Ballet Theater.

Streets

There are streets n.a. Griboyedov in many cities of Russia and neighboring countries.

Theaters

  • Smolensk Drama Theater. A.S. Griboyedov.[16]
  • Tbilisi has a theater named after A.S. Griboyedov, a monument (author - M.K. Merabishvili).[17]

Museum

  • The State Historical, Cultural and Natural Museum-Reserve of A.S. Griboyedov “Khmelita” in Vyazemsky District, Smolensk Oblast, Russia.
  • In Crimea, in the Red Cave (Kizil-Koba), a gallery is named in honor of A.S. Griboyedov's stay.

Libraries

  • Library of National Literature named after A.S. Griboyedov in Saint-Peterburg.
  • The Central Library named after A.S. Griboyedov of the Centralized Library System # 2 of the Central Administrative District of Moscow. On the 100th anniversary of the founding of the library, a memorial museum was opened in it, giving A.S. Griboyedov award there.[18]
     
    Commemorative coin of the Bank of Russia dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the birth of A.S. Griboedov. 2 rubles, silver, 1995

Other

  • The last years of the life of A. S. Griboyedov, Yury Tynyanov devoted the novel "The Death of Wazir-Mukhtar" (1928).
  • On April 22, 2014, in St. Petersburg, the Grand Lodge of Russia created the Lodge of A.S. Griboyedov (No. 45 in the register of VLR).[19]
  • Secondary School named after A. S. Griboyedov (Stepanakert).
  • Secondary school No. 203 named after A. S. Griboyedov in St. Petersburg.
  • Annual the Moscow City Humanitarian Conference called "Griboyedov readings" for research and design work of students.[20]
  • Moscow gymnasium No. 1529 named after A. S. Griboyedov.
  • In Moscow there is a higher educational institution - Institute of International Law and Economics named after A.S. Griboyedov.
  • Scholarship named after A. S. Griboyedov, established by the Academic Council of Lomonosov Moscow State University.[21]
  • The Airbus 330-243 (VQ-BBF) aircraft of Aeroflot Airlines is named after A.S. Griboyedov.
  • In 1995, the Central Bank of Russia issued a coin (2 rubles, silver 500) from the series “Outstanding Personalities of Russia” with the image on the reverse of the portrait of A.S. Griboedov - on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of his birth.
  • Medal "A.S. Griboedov, 1795-1829" that was established by the Moscow City Organization of the Union of Writers of the Russian Federation and is awarded to writers, prominent philanthropists and famous publishers for their ascetic activities for the benefit of Russian culture and literature.[22]
  • The Soviet Union released two stamps depicting Griboyedov: 125th Death Anniversary of Alexander Griboyedov stamp (issued in 1954[23]) and a stamp from the Russian Writers series (issued in 1959[24]

Compositions

Waltzes

  • Waltz in E minor
  • Waltz in Ab major

Opera

  • 1824: Who is a Brother, Who is a Sister, or Deception for Deception (Wrote the accompanying score to the stage play by the composer and P. A. Vyazemsky)

See also

  • Vatslav Vorovsky, Soviet envoy at the Conference of Lausanne, assassinated in 1923
  • Pyotr Voykov, Soviet ambassador to Poland, assassinated in 1927
  • Andrei Karlov, Russian ambassador to Turkey, assassinated in 2016

References

  1. ^ Borrero, Mauricio (2009). Russia: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present. Infobase Publishing. p. 169. ISBN 978-0816074754.
  2. ^ "Griboyedoff, Alexander Sergueevich" in the Encyclopædia Britannica, 9th ed., Vol. XI 1880.
  3. ^ Griboyedov, Alexander (2017). Woe from Wit. Montpelier, VT: Russian Life Books. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-1-880100-52-3.
  4. ^ a b c d e   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Griboyedov, Alexander Sergueevich". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 593.
  5. ^ Записка Об А. С. Грибоедове [A note about A. S. Griboyedov]. Russian Messenger (in Russian). No. 8 (reprint ed.). 1892. pp. 335–347. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  6. ^ Charles Alexander Ward (1989). Moscow and Leningrad. K.G. Saur. p. 31. ISBN 9783598108341. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  7. ^ Neil Cornwall (November 2015) [First published in Great Britain in 1986 by The Athlone Press]. V.F. Odoevsky. Bloomsbury. p. 124. ISBN 9781474241410. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  8. ^ "Александр Сергеевич Грибоедов (Aleksandr Griboyedov) | Belcanto.ru". www.belcanto.ru. Retrieved 2021-08-27.
  9. ^ Chisholm 1911.
  10. ^ a b Hopkirk, Peter. The Great Game: The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia. New York: Kodansha Globe, 1997 p. 122 ISBN 1-56836-022-3
  11. ^ a b c d Hopkirk, Peter (2006). The Great Game. London: John Murray. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-7195-6447-5.
  12. ^ Baron K. K. Bode. "Griboyedov's Death". www.feb-web.ru.
  13. ^ George Bournoutian (2014) From Tabriz to St. Petersburg: Iran's Mission of Apology to Russia in 1829
  14. ^ a b Tharoor, Ishaan (22 December 2016). "A Russian ambassador was murdered: The apology came in the shape of a huge diamond". The Washington Post. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  15. ^ a b c Bournoutian, George. "Griboyedov, Alexander Sergeevich". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 2016-02-02.
  16. ^ "Smolensk State Drama Theater. A.S. Griboyedov". dram-teatrsm.ru. Retrieved 2020-02-14.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-04-25. Retrieved 2020-02-14.
  18. ^ "Griboyedov award". Retrieved 2020-02-14.
  19. ^ S.P. Karpachov «The Art of Freemasons», «IPC Pareto-Print», 2015, p. 475. 2000 ISBN 978-5-9905493-1-9
  20. ^ ""Griboyedov readings" project" (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  21. ^ (in Russian). www.law.msu.ru. Archived from the original on 2019-04-27. Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  22. ^ "Medal "A. S. Griboedov 1795 - 1829" Writers' Union of Russia" (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  23. ^ "Alexander S. Griboyedov (1795-1829), Russian playwright". colnect.com. Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  24. ^ "A.S. Griboyedov". colnect.com. Retrieved 2020-02-23.

Sources

  • Brintlinger, Angela. "The Persian Frontier: Griboyedov as Orientalist and Literary Hero". Canadian Slavonic Papers 45, no. 3 (2003): 371–393.
  •   This article incorporates text from D.S. Mirsky's "A History of Russian Literature" (1926-27), a publication now in the public domain.
  • Pravda, April 17, 1944, page 4

Further reading

  • Yuri Tynyanov: Смерть Вазир-Мухтара, 1928
  • A. S. Griboyedov: Woe from Wit (A Four-Act Comedy). Translated from the Russian by A. S. Vagapov.
  • El mal de la razón ("Горе от ума"), comedia en cuatro actos, traducción en verso y notas de Oleg Shatrov (incluye una biografía detallada de A. Griboiédov), Madrid, 2010
  • Mary Hobson; Aleksandr Sergeyevich Griboyedov. Aleksandr Griboyedov's Woe from wit: a commentary and translation. Edwin Mellen Press; 2005. ISBN 978-0-7734-6146-8.
  • Woe from Wit: A Verse Comedy in Four Acts, Columbia University Press, 2020 (The Russian Library). Translated by Betsy Hulick.
  • Laurence Kelly: Diplomacy and Murder in Tehran: Alexander Griboyedov and Imperial Russia’s Mission to the Shah of Persia , Tauris Parke , New York 2002, ISBN 1 84511 196 6

External links

  • Works by or about Alexander Griboyedov at Internet Archive
  • Works by Alexander Griboyedov at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

alexander, griboyedov, alexander, sergeyevich, griboyedov, russian, Александр, Сергеевич, Грибоедов, aleksandr, sergeevich, griboedov, sergeevich, griboyedov, january, 1795, february, 1829, formerly, romanized, alexander, sergueevich, griboyedoff, russian, dip. Alexander Sergeyevich Griboyedov Russian Aleksandr Sergeevich Griboedov Aleksandr Sergeevich Griboedov or Sergeevich Griboyedov 15 January 1795 11 February 1829 formerly romanized as Alexander Sergueevich Griboyedoff 2 was a Russian diplomat playwright poet and composer His one notable work was the 1823 verse comedy Woe from Wit He was Russia s ambassador to Qajar Persia where he and all the embassy staff were massacred by an angry mob as a result of the rampant anti Russian sentiment that existed through Russia s imposing of the Treaty of Gulistan 1813 and Treaty of Turkmenchay 1828 which had forcefully ratified for Persia s ceding of its northern territories comprising Transcaucasia and parts of the North Caucasus Griboyedov had played a pivotal role in the ratification of the latter treaty Alexander GriboyedovPortrait by Ivan KramskoiRussian Ambassador to IranIn office 1828 1 1829MonarchNicholas I of RussiaPersonal detailsBornAlexander Sergeyevich Griboyedov 1795 01 04 4 January 1795Moscow Russian EmpireDied11 February 1829 1829 02 11 aged 34 Tehran Qajar IranResting placeTbilisi GeorgiaNationalityRussianSpouseNino ChavchavadzeAlma materImperial Moscow University 1808 OccupationDiplomat Playwright Poet and ComposerSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Musical life 3 Death 4 Legacy 5 Commemoration 5 1 Monuments 5 2 Streets 5 3 Theaters 5 4 Museum 5 5 Libraries 5 6 Other 6 Compositions 6 1 Waltzes 6 2 Opera 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditGriboyedov was born in Moscow the exact year unknown with biographers debating whether it was in 1790 or 1795 Griboyedov received a Masters in philology from Moscow University and subsequently enrolled in the doctorate program In 1812 he quit the program and enrolled in the military 3 He obtained a commission in a hussar regiment which he resigned in 1816 The next year he entered the civil service In 1818 he was appointed secretary of the Russian legation in Persia and transferred to Georgia 4 He possessed musical talent played the piano and composed several waltzes Only two of his waltzes survive to the present day although it is recorded that he composed several including vaudevilles in association with stage plays He is best known for his literary compositions and poetic verses His verse comedy The Young Spouses Russian Molodye suprugi Molodye Suprugi which he staged in St Petersburg in 1816 was followed by other similar works Neither these nor his essays and poetry would have been long remembered but for the success of his verse comedy Woe from Wit Russian Gore ot uma Gore ot Uma a satire on Russian aristocratic society 4 As a high official in the play puts it this work is a pasquinade on Moscow The play depicts certain social and official stereotypes in the characters of Famusov who hates reform his secretary Molchalin who fawns over officials and the aristocratic young liberal and Anglomaniac Repetilov By contrast the hero of the piece Chatsky an ironic satirist just returned from western Europe exposes and ridicules the weaknesses of the rest His words echo the outcry of the young generation in the lead up to the armed insurrection of 1825 4 In Russia for the summer of 1823 Griboyedov completed the play and took it to St Petersburg It was rejected by the censors Many copies were made and privately circulated but Griboyedov never saw it published 4 After his death the manuscript was jointly owned by his wife Nina Alexandrovna Griboyedova and his sister Maria Sergeyevna Durnovo Griboyedova 5 The first edition was not published until 1833 four years after his death Only once did he see it on the stage when it was performed by the officers of the garrison at Yerevan Soured by disappointment he returned to Georgia During the Russo Persian War of 1826 1828 he put his linguistic expertise at the service of general Ivan Paskevich a relative after which he was sent to St Petersburg where he worked on the Treaty of Turkmenchay negotiations There thinking to devote himself to literature he started work on a romantic drama A Georgian Night Russian Gruzinskaya noch Gruzinskaya noch based on Georgian legends 4 Musical life EditAlexander Griboyedov s education was not only extensive continuing into Doctoral work before shifting to military training but had included musical study as well Although producing only a small output of work during his lifetime he was well experienced in an array of instruments including piano organ and flute During his musical study it is recorded that he studied with the Irish pianist composer and ostensible creator of the nocturne form John Field along with Johann Heinrich Muller also known as Johann Heinrich Miller in the field of Music Theory 6 7 Although his compositional life was minor in regards to others during his time he was regarded as a very good musician by the likes of Mikhail Glinka and had routine salons at his residence which were attended by many musical luminaries of his time although relatively minor in the contemporary decade including Vladimir Odoevsky Alexander Alyabyev Mikhail Vielgorsky and Alexey Verstovsky Out of work as a composer only two compositions survive to the present those being his two waltzes in Ab major and E minor He is known to have composed the musical score to the opera vaudeville or operetta called Who is a Brother Who is a Sister or Deception for Deception 1824 written by the composer himself in collaboration with Pyotr Vyazemsky 8 Death Edit Monument erected in Soviet times in Dilijan Armenia commemorating the location where Alexander Pushkin on his way to meet his brother stopped the carriage with Alexander Griboyedov s body being transported to Tiflis An inscription in Russian and Armenian says Here A S Pushkin saw the body of A S Griboyedov Memorial stone for A S Griboyedov in the Armenian St Thaddaeus church Tehran Iran Memorial stone for A S Griboyedov in the Armenian St Thaddaeus Church Tehran Iran Several months after his wedding to Nino 16 year old daughter of his friend Prince Chavchavadze Griboyedov was suddenly sent to Persia as Minister Plenipotentiary 9 In the aftermath of the war and the humiliating Treaty of Turkmenchay there was strong anti Russian sentiment in Persia Upon arrival in Tehran the Order of the Lion and the Sun was conferred on him Soon after Griboyedov s arrival a mob stormed the Russian embassy The incident began when an Armenian eunuch escaped from the harem of the Persian shah and at the same time two enslaved Armenian women escaped from the harem of the Shah s son in law All three sought refuge at the Russian legation As agreed in the Treaty of Turkmenchay Georgians and Armenians living in Persia at that time were permitted to return to Georgia and Eastern Armenia 10 However the Shah demanded that Griboyedov return the three escapees Griboyedov refused His decision caused an uproar throughout the city and several thousand Persians encircled the Russian compound demanding their release Soon after urged on by the mullahs the mob stormed the building A high ranking Muslim scholar with the title of Mojtahed Mirza Masih Astarabadi known as Mirza Masih Mojtahed issued a fatwa saying that freeing Muslim women from the claws of unbelievers is allowed 11 Griboyedov and other members of his mission had prepared for a siege and sealed all the windows and doors Armed and in full uniform they were resolved to defend to the last drop of blood Although small in number the Cossack detachment assigned to protect the legation held off the mob for over an hour until finally being driven back to Griboyedov s office There Griboyedov and the Cossacks resisted until the mob broke through the roof of the building and then through the ceiling to slaughter them The escaped eunuch and Griboyedov who fought with his sword were among the first to be shot to death the fate of the two Armenian women remains unknown 10 12 Second secretary of the mission Karl Adelung and in particular a young doctor whose name is not known fought hard but soon the scene was one of butchered decapitated corpses Griboyedov s body thrown from a window was decapitated by a kebab vendor who displayed the head on his stall 11 The mob dragged the uniformed corpse through the city s streets and bazaars to cries of celebration It was eventually abandoned on a garbage heap after three days of ill treatment by the mob such that in the end it could be identified only by a duelling injury to a finger The following June Griboyedov s friend Alexander Pushkin travelling through the southern Caucasus encountered some men from Tehran leading an oxcart The men told Pushkin they were conveying the ambassador s remains to Tiflis now Tbilisi Griboyedov was buried there in the monastery of St David Mtatsminda Pantheon 11 When Nino Griboyedov s widow received news of his death she gave premature birth to a child who died a few hours later Nino lived another thirty years rejecting all suitors and winning universal admiration for her fidelity to her husband s memory In a move to compensate Russia for the attack and the death of its ambassador the Shah sent his grandson Khosrow Mirza to St Petersburg to avoid another war with Tsar Nicholas I 11 13 and also gifted to him the Shah Diamond 14 Russian sources claim that 15 British agents who feared Russian influence in Tehran and Persian reactionaries who were not satisfied with the Turkmenchay treaty were responsible for inciting the mob 15 The death of Griboyedov who was a liberal and who advocated regional autonomy for the Christians in Transcaucasia was probably not a great loss for Tsar Nicholas or General Paskevich both of whom wished to Russianize the minorities in the Caucasus citation needed The Russo Turkish War 1828 29 might have been another reason for the Russian inaction 15 His wife had written on his tombstone in Tiflis Your mind and works are immortal in Russian memory but why has my love outlived you 14 Legacy Edit Monument in Moscow Griboyedov s statue in Yerevan Armenia Author Angela Brintlinger has said that not only did Griboyedov s contemporaries conceive of his life as the life of a literary hero ultimately writing a number of narratives featuring him as an essential character but indeed Griboyedov saw himself as a hero and his life as a narrative Although there is not a literary artifact to prove this by examining Griboyedov s letters and dispatches one is able to build a historical narrative that fits the literary and behavioural paradigms of his time and that reads like a real adventure novel set in the wild wild East One of the main settings for Mikhail Bulgakov s satirical novel The Master and Margarita is named after Griboyedov as is the Griboyedov Canal in Central Saint Petersburg One of the central streets of Tbilisi the capital of Georgia is named after Griboyedov This street is crossed by Alexander Chavchavadze street named after Griboyedov s father in law famous Georgian poet Alexander Chavchavadze On 17 April 1944 Pravda ran a lengthy feature on the commemoration of Griboyedov s 150th birthday when high ranking officials military leaders diplomats writers and artists had attended a celebration in the Bolshoi Theatre Novelist and Stalin deputy Leonid Leonov eulogized Griboyedov mentioning especially his love of his fatherland The reception to the Shah s grandson Khosrow Mirza in the Winter Palace and Tsar Nicholas receiving from him the Shah Diamond are featured in the 2002 Russian film Russian Ark Commemoration EditMonuments Edit In Saint Petersburg the monument of A S Griboyedov sculptor V V Lishev 1959 is located on Zagorodny Prospekt on Pionerskaya Square in front of the Bryantsev Youth Theatre In the center of Yerevan there is a monument of A S Griboyedov author Hovhannes Bejanyan 1974 In Alushta a monument of A S Griboyedov was erected in 2002 on the 100th anniversary of the city In Moscow the monument of A S Griboyedov is located on Chistoprudny Boulevard In Veliky Novgorod A S Griboyedov was immortalized in the monument Millennium of Russia in the group of sculptures Writers and Artists In Volgograd at the expense of the Armenian community of the city a bust of A S Griboyedov was installed on Sovetskaya Street in front of Polyclinic 3 In Tbilisi a monument of A S Griboyedov is located on the Kura embankment sculptor M Merabishvili architect G Melkadze 1961 In Tehran the Russian embassy has a monument of A S Griboyedov sculptor V A Beklemishev 1912 A bust of A S Griboyedov is installed on the facade of the Odessa Opera and Ballet Theater Streets Edit There are streets n a Griboyedov in many cities of Russia and neighboring countries List of placesRussia Almetyevsk Petrozavodsk Perm Chelyabinsk Krasnoyarsk Kaliningrad Surgut Simferopol Sevastopol Bryansk Ekaterinburg Novokuznetsk Novorossiysk Novosibirsk Ryazan Dzerzhinsk Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Irkutsk Makhachkala Gelendzhik Kovrov Tver Tyumen Kirov Essentuki Belarus Brest Vitebsk MinskUkraine Khmelnitsky Vinnitsa Kharkiv Kherson Irpin Bila Tserkva ChernivtsiArmenia Yerevan Yerevan Gyumri SevanOther places Bălți Moldova Ribnița Transnistria Alma Ata Kazakhstan Batumi Georgia Tbilisi Georgia Ashgabat Turkmenistan Theaters Edit Smolensk Drama Theater A S Griboyedov 16 Tbilisi has a theater named after A S Griboyedov a monument author M K Merabishvili 17 Museum Edit The State Historical Cultural and Natural Museum Reserve of A S Griboyedov Khmelita in Vyazemsky District Smolensk Oblast Russia In Crimea in the Red Cave Kizil Koba a gallery is named in honor of A S Griboyedov s stay Libraries Edit Library of National Literature named after A S Griboyedov in Saint Peterburg The Central Library named after A S Griboyedov of the Centralized Library System 2 of the Central Administrative District of Moscow On the 100th anniversary of the founding of the library a memorial museum was opened in it giving A S Griboyedov award there 18 Commemorative coin of the Bank of Russia dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the birth of A S Griboedov 2 rubles silver 1995Other Edit The last years of the life of A S Griboyedov Yury Tynyanov devoted the novel The Death of Wazir Mukhtar 1928 On April 22 2014 in St Petersburg the Grand Lodge of Russia created the Lodge of A S Griboyedov No 45 in the register of VLR 19 Secondary School named after A S Griboyedov Stepanakert Secondary school No 203 named after A S Griboyedov in St Petersburg Annual the Moscow City Humanitarian Conference called Griboyedov readings for research and design work of students 20 Moscow gymnasium No 1529 named after A S Griboyedov In Moscow there is a higher educational institution Institute of International Law and Economics named after A S Griboyedov Scholarship named after A S Griboyedov established by the Academic Council of Lomonosov Moscow State University 21 The Airbus 330 243 VQ BBF aircraft of Aeroflot Airlines is named after A S Griboyedov In 1995 the Central Bank of Russia issued a coin 2 rubles silver 500 from the series Outstanding Personalities of Russia with the image on the reverse of the portrait of A S Griboedov on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of his birth Medal A S Griboedov 1795 1829 that was established by the Moscow City Organization of the Union of Writers of the Russian Federation and is awarded to writers prominent philanthropists and famous publishers for their ascetic activities for the benefit of Russian culture and literature 22 The Soviet Union released two stamps depicting Griboyedov 125th Death Anniversary of Alexander Griboyedov stamp issued in 1954 23 and a stamp from the Russian Writers series issued in 1959 24 Compositions Edit Griboyedov Waltz in E minor source source Performed by Constantin Stephan Problems playing this file See media help Waltzes Edit Waltz in E minor Waltz in Ab majorOpera Edit 1824 Who is a Brother Who is a Sister or Deception for Deception Wrote the accompanying score to the stage play by the composer and P A Vyazemsky See also EditVatslav Vorovsky Soviet envoy at the Conference of Lausanne assassinated in 1923 Pyotr Voykov Soviet ambassador to Poland assassinated in 1927 Andrei Karlov Russian ambassador to Turkey assassinated in 2016References Edit Borrero Mauricio 2009 Russia A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present Infobase Publishing p 169 ISBN 978 0816074754 Griboyedoff Alexander Sergueevich in the Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th ed Vol XI 1880 Griboyedov Alexander 2017 Woe from Wit Montpelier VT Russian Life Books pp 6 7 ISBN 978 1 880100 52 3 a b c d e One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Griboyedov Alexander Sergueevich Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 593 Zapiska Ob A S Griboedove A note about A S Griboyedov Russian Messenger in Russian No 8 reprint ed 1892 pp 335 347 Retrieved 29 January 2017 Charles Alexander Ward 1989 Moscow and Leningrad K G Saur p 31 ISBN 9783598108341 Retrieved 29 October 2022 Neil Cornwall November 2015 First published in Great Britain in 1986 by The Athlone Press V F Odoevsky Bloomsbury p 124 ISBN 9781474241410 Retrieved 29 October 2022 Aleksandr Sergeevich Griboedov Aleksandr Griboyedov Belcanto ru www belcanto ru Retrieved 2021 08 27 Chisholm 1911 a b Hopkirk Peter The Great Game The Struggle for Empire in Central Asia New York Kodansha Globe 1997 p 122 ISBN 1 56836 022 3 a b c d Hopkirk Peter 2006 The Great Game London John Murray p 113 ISBN 978 0 7195 6447 5 Baron K K Bode Griboyedov s Death www feb web ru George Bournoutian 2014 From Tabriz to St Petersburg Iran s Mission of Apology to Russia in 1829 a b Tharoor Ishaan 22 December 2016 A Russian ambassador was murdered The apology came in the shape of a huge diamond The Washington Post Retrieved 29 January 2017 a b c Bournoutian George Griboyedov Alexander Sergeevich Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 2016 02 02 Smolensk State Drama Theater A S Griboyedov dram teatrsm ru Retrieved 2020 02 14 Griboyedov Theatre of Tbilisi Archived from the original on 2020 04 25 Retrieved 2020 02 14 Griboyedov award Retrieved 2020 02 14 S P Karpachov The Art of Freemasons IPC Pareto Print 2015 p 475 2000 ISBN 978 5 9905493 1 9 Griboyedov readings project in Russian Retrieved 2020 02 23 Nominal and advanced scholarships awards and grants for students and post graduate students of the Faculty of Law Faculty of Law Moscow State University in Russian www law msu ru Archived from the original on 2019 04 27 Retrieved 2020 02 23 Medal A S Griboedov 1795 1829 Writers Union of Russia in Russian Retrieved 2020 02 23 Alexander S Griboyedov 1795 1829 Russian playwright colnect com Retrieved 2020 02 23 A S Griboyedov colnect com Retrieved 2020 02 23 Sources EditBrintlinger Angela The Persian Frontier Griboyedov as Orientalist and Literary Hero Canadian Slavonic Papers 45 no 3 2003 371 393 This article incorporates text from D S Mirsky s A History of Russian Literature 1926 27 a publication now in the public domain Pravda April 17 1944 page 4Further reading EditYuri Tynyanov Smert Vazir Muhtara 1928 A S Griboyedov Woe from Wit A Four Act Comedy Translated from the Russian by A S Vagapov El mal de la razon Gore ot uma comedia en cuatro actos traduccion en verso y notas de Oleg Shatrov incluye una biografia detallada de A Griboiedov Madrid 2010 Mary Hobson Aleksandr Sergeyevich Griboyedov Aleksandr Griboyedov s Woe from wit a commentary and translation Edwin Mellen Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 7734 6146 8 Woe from Wit A Verse Comedy in Four Acts Columbia University Press 2020 The Russian Library Translated by Betsy Hulick Laurence Kelly Diplomacy and Murder in Tehran Alexander Griboyedov and Imperial Russia s Mission to the Shah of Persia Tauris Parke New York 2002 ISBN 1 84511 196 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aleksandr Griboyedov Works by or about Alexander Griboyedov at Internet Archive Works by Alexander Griboyedov at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Griboyedov amp oldid 1147120827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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