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Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov

Count Alexei (Alexey) Grigoryevich Orlov-Chesmensky (Russian: Алексей Григорьевич Орлов-Чесменский; 5 October [O.S. 24 September] 1737 – 5 January [O.S. 24 December 1807] 1808)[2] was a Russian soldier, general-in-chief,[3] general admiral and statesman, who rose to prominence during the reign of Catherine the Great. His joint victory with Grigory Spiridov and Samuel Greig in the Battle of Chesma put him in the ranks of the outstanding Russian military commanders of all time; and although he lacked naval experience, he was the only authority in those circumstances who could ensure proper co-ordination of action.[4]

Count

Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov

Chesmensky
Born5 October [O.S. 24 September] 1737
Lyutkino, Bezhetsky Uyezd, Moscow Governorate (now Tver Oblast), Russian Empire
Died5 January [O.S. 24 December 1807] 1808 (aged 70)
Moscow, Moskovsky Uyezd, Moscow Governorate, Russian Empire
Allegiance Russian Empire
Service/branch
Years of service1749–1775
RankGeneral-in-Chief
(army)
General Admiral
(naval)
UnitSemyonovsky Life Guards Regiment
Preobrazhensky Life Guards Regiment
Commands heldBaltic Fleet
Known forGovernment work, diplomacy, horse breeding.[1]
Battles/wars
AwardsOrder of St. Andrew
Order of St. George
Alma materFirst Cadet Corps
ChildrenAnna Orlova-Chesmenskaya
Relations

Orlov served in the Imperial Russian Army, and through his connections with his brother, became one of the key conspirators in the plot to overthrow Tsar Peter III and replace him on the Russian throne with his wife, Catherine. The plot, carried out in 1762, was successful, and Peter was imprisoned under Alexei Orlov's guard. He died shortly afterwards under mysterious circumstances, and it was popularly believed Orlov had either ordered, or personally carried out, his murder. Handsomely rewarded by Catherine after her accession, the Orlovs became powerful at court. Alexei was promoted and took part in the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–74, commanding a naval expedition to the Mediterranean in 1770, which destroyed the Ottoman fleet at the battle of Chesma. For his success he was granted the honorific Chesmensky. The Russian victory sparked off the Orlov Revolt in the Greek territories of the Ottoman Empire soon afterwards.

Orlov remained in the Mediterranean, and received the unusual commission of seducing and then capturing Princess Tarakanoff, a pretender to the Russian throne. Orlov was successful in doing so, and tricked her into boarding a Russian ship at Livorno, where she was arrested and transported to Russia. Alexei's brother, Grigory, Catherine's lover before and after the coup overthrowing Tsar Peter III took place, fell from favour soon afterwards, and the Orlovs' power at court diminished. Alexei became a renowned breeder of livestock at his estates, developing the horse breed known as the Orlov Trotter and popularising the Orloff breed of chicken. He left Russia after the death of Catherine and the accession of her son, Tsar Paul I, but returned after Paul's death and lived in Russia until his death in 1808.

Family and early life edit

Alexei was born into the noble Orlov family in Lyubini in Tver Oblast on 5 October [O.S. 24 September] 1737, the son of Grigory Ivanovich Orlov, governor of Novgorod, and brother of Grigory Grigoryevich Orlov.[5] He entered the Preobrazhensky Regiment and by 1762 had reached the rank of sergeant. He was involved in the Seven Years' War. He was described as a giant of a man, over two meters tall, and a celebrated duellist, with a scar across his cheek.[6] The scar earned him the nickname 'scarface'.[7]

Involvement in the 1762 coup edit

Together with his brother Grigory, Alexei Orlov became involved in the palace coup to overthrow Tsar Peter III and place his wife, Catherine, on the Russian throne. In the coup, carried out in July 1762, Alexei went to meet Catherine at the Peterhof Palace, and finding her in bed, announced 'the time has come for you to reign, madame.'[6][8] He then drove her to St Petersburg, where the guards regiments there proclaimed their loyalty to her.[9] The Tsar was arrested and imprisoned at Ropsha, under the guard of Alexei Orlov.[6] There Peter died in mysterious circumstances on 17 July [O.S. 6 July] 1762. Orlov is popularly supposed to have murdered him, either on his own initiative or on Catherine's orders.[6][8] One account has Orlov giving him poisoned wine to drink which caused

... flames [to course] through his veins. This aroused suspicion in the overthrown emperor and he refused the next glass. But they used force, and he defended himself. In that horrible struggle, in order to stifle his cries, they threw him on the ground and grabbed his throat. But he defended himself with the strength that comes from final desperation, and they tried to avoid wounding him. They placed a rifle strap on the emperor's neck. Alexei Orlov kneeled with both legs on his chest and blocked his breathing. He passed away in their hands.[6]

They thought that Orlov apparently wrote a letter to Catherine after Peter's death, confessing that Peter had been killed in a drunken brawl with one of his jailers, Feodor Bariatynsky, and taking the blame.[7][10][11] The authenticity of this letter has been questioned nowadays. It was announced that the Tsar had died from an attack of haemorrhoidal colic.[10]

Service under Catherine II edit

 
Oval portrait of Alexei Orlov by Carl-Ludwig Christinek, 1779

The Orlovs were rewarded after Catherine's accession, and Alexei was promoted to the rank of major-general, and given the title of count. He and his brother received 50,000 roubles and 800 serfs.[7][10][12] Despite a lack of formal education and his ignorance of foreign languages, he maintained an interest in science, patronizing Mikhail Lomonosov and Denis Fonvizin, and corresponding with Jean Jacques Rousseau. He was one of the founders of the Free Economic Society and its first elected chairman. Rewarded with large estates, he took an interest in horse breeding, developing the Orlov Trotter, and popularising the breed of chicken now known as the Orloff.[13][14]

He became involved in military operations during the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774, organising the First Archipelago Expedition, and commanding of a squadron of the Imperial Russian Navy, having been promoted[3] to the rank of general admiral. He fought and won the Battle of Chesma against an Ottoman fleet on 5 July 1770, with the help of British naval expertise, and received the right to add the honorific 'Chesmensky' to his name.[15][16] He was also awarded the Order of St. George First Class. His expedition sparked off the Orlov Revolt in Greece, which despite initial successes, lacked continued Russian support, and was eventually put down by the Ottomans.[15] Orlov was sent as plenipotentiary to the talks at Focşani in 1772, but his impatience caused the breaking off of negotiations, which led to dissatisfaction from the Empress.

Catherine then commissioned Orlov to make contact with Yelizaveta Alekseyevna, a pretender to the throne claiming to be the daughter of Empress Elizabeth of Russia, and deliver her to Russia.[17] Orlov did so by pretending to be a supporter of hers, and successfully seducing her. He then lured her aboard a Russian ship at Livorno in May 1775, where she was arrested by Admiral Samuel Greig and taken to Russia, where she was imprisoned and later died.[17][18] Shortly after this service, the Orlovs fell from favour at court, and Alexei and Grigory were dismissed from their positions. Orlov retired to the Sans Ennui Palace near Moscow, and gave luxurious balls and dinners, making himself 'the most popular man in Moscow.'[19]

Old age and death edit

 
Alexey Orlov by an unknown artist of the 18th century.
Hermitage Museum

After Catherine's death in 1796 the new ruler, Tsar Paul I ordered that his father, Peter III, be reburied in a grand ceremony. Alexei Orlov was ordered to carry the Imperial Crown in front of the coffin.[20] Orlov was briefly suspected of having been one of the assassins of Peter III.[21] Orlov left Russia during the reign of Paul I, but returned to Moscow after his death and the accession of Tsar Alexander I.[5] Orlov commanded the militia of the fifth district during the War of the Fourth Coalition in 1806–07, which was placed on a war footing almost entirely at his own expense.[14]

Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov died in Moscow on 5 January [O.S. 24 December 1807] 1808. He left an estate worth five million roubles and 30,000 serfs.[5] His marriage with Eudokia Nikolayevna Lopukhina (contracted on 6 May 1782) produced a daughter, Anna Orlova-Tshesmenskaja (1785–1848), and a son, Ivan (1786–1787). Eudokia died while giving birth to Ivan in 1786. Orlov also is believed to have had an illegitimate son named Alexander (1763–1820).

Notes edit

  1. ^ Fedyunina 2023.
  2. ^ Dates indicated by the letters "O.S." are Old Style.
  3. ^ a b Polovtsov 1905.
  4. ^ [A hundred great military commanders]. 100.histrf.ru. Russian Military Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2023-03-25. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  5. ^ a b c The English Cyclopædia. pp. 588–9.
  6. ^ a b c d e Radzinsky. Alexander II: The Last Great Tsar. pp. 11–2.
  7. ^ a b c Moss. A History of Russia: Since 1855. p. 296.
  8. ^ a b Black. The Chinese Palace at Oranienbaum. pp. 17–8.
  9. ^ Julicher. Renegades, Rebels and Rogues Under the Tsars. p. 139.
  10. ^ a b c Streeter. Catherine the Great. pp. 41–3.
  11. ^ Julicher. Renegades, Rebels and Rogues Under the Tsars. p. 140.
  12. ^ Julicher. Renegades, Rebels and Rogues Under the Tsars. p. 142.
  13. ^ Murrell. Discovering the Moscow Countryside. p. 100.
  14. ^ a b Tull. Horse Hoeing Husbandry. p. 665.
  15. ^ a b Papalas. Rebels and Radicals. p. 26.
  16. ^ Reynolds. Navies in History. p. 77.
  17. ^ a b King & Wilson. The Resurrection of the Romanovs. p. 5.
  18. ^ Ritzarev. Eighteenth-century Russian Music. pp. 118–9.
  19. ^ Tolstoy. War and Peace. pp. 1321–2.
  20. ^ Heinze. Baltic Sagas. p. 179.
  21. ^ "Died". The Evening Post. New York. 1801-12-14. Retrieved 2017-07-27.

References edit

alexei, grigoryevich, orlov, nobility, orlov, family, count, alexei, alexey, grigoryevich, orlov, chesmensky, russian, Алексей, Григорьевич, Орлов, Чесменский, october, september, 1737, january, december, 1807, 1808, russian, soldier, general, chief, general, . For the nobility see Orlov family Count Alexei Alexey Grigoryevich Orlov Chesmensky Russian Aleksej Grigorevich Orlov Chesmenskij 5 October O S 24 September 1737 5 January O S 24 December 1807 1808 2 was a Russian soldier general in chief 3 general admiral and statesman who rose to prominence during the reign of Catherine the Great His joint victory with Grigory Spiridov and Samuel Greig in the Battle of Chesma put him in the ranks of the outstanding Russian military commanders of all time and although he lacked naval experience he was the only authority in those circumstances who could ensure proper co ordination of action 4 CountAlexei Grigoryevich OrlovChesmenskyBorn5 October O S 24 September 1737Lyutkino Bezhetsky Uyezd Moscow Governorate now Tver Oblast Russian EmpireDied5 January O S 24 December 1807 1808 aged 70 Moscow Moskovsky Uyezd Moscow Governorate Russian EmpireAllegiance Russian EmpireService wbr branch Imperial Russian Army Imperial Russian NavyYears of service1749 1775RankGeneral in Chief army General Admiral naval UnitSemyonovsky Life Guards RegimentPreobrazhensky Life Guards RegimentCommands heldBaltic FleetKnown forGovernment work diplomacy horse breeding 1 Battles warsSeven Years War Russo Turkish War Orlov revolt Battle of Chesma Napoleonic WarsAwardsOrder of St AndrewOrder of St GeorgeAlma materFirst Cadet CorpsChildrenAnna Orlova ChesmenskayaRelationsHouse of Orlov Grigory Grigoryevich Orlov brother Orlov served in the Imperial Russian Army and through his connections with his brother became one of the key conspirators in the plot to overthrow Tsar Peter III and replace him on the Russian throne with his wife Catherine The plot carried out in 1762 was successful and Peter was imprisoned under Alexei Orlov s guard He died shortly afterwards under mysterious circumstances and it was popularly believed Orlov had either ordered or personally carried out his murder Handsomely rewarded by Catherine after her accession the Orlovs became powerful at court Alexei was promoted and took part in the Russo Turkish War of 1768 74 commanding a naval expedition to the Mediterranean in 1770 which destroyed the Ottoman fleet at the battle of Chesma For his success he was granted the honorific Chesmensky The Russian victory sparked off the Orlov Revolt in the Greek territories of the Ottoman Empire soon afterwards Orlov remained in the Mediterranean and received the unusual commission of seducing and then capturing Princess Tarakanoff a pretender to the Russian throne Orlov was successful in doing so and tricked her into boarding a Russian ship at Livorno where she was arrested and transported to Russia Alexei s brother Grigory Catherine s lover before and after the coup overthrowing Tsar Peter III took place fell from favour soon afterwards and the Orlovs power at court diminished Alexei became a renowned breeder of livestock at his estates developing the horse breed known as the Orlov Trotter and popularising the Orloff breed of chicken He left Russia after the death of Catherine and the accession of her son Tsar Paul I but returned after Paul s death and lived in Russia until his death in 1808 Contents 1 Family and early life 2 Involvement in the 1762 coup 3 Service under Catherine II 4 Old age and death 5 Notes 6 ReferencesFamily and early life editAlexei was born into the noble Orlov family in Lyubini in Tver Oblast on 5 October O S 24 September 1737 the son of Grigory Ivanovich Orlov governor of Novgorod and brother of Grigory Grigoryevich Orlov 5 He entered the Preobrazhensky Regiment and by 1762 had reached the rank of sergeant He was involved in the Seven Years War He was described as a giant of a man over two meters tall and a celebrated duellist with a scar across his cheek 6 The scar earned him the nickname scarface 7 Involvement in the 1762 coup editTogether with his brother Grigory Alexei Orlov became involved in the palace coup to overthrow Tsar Peter III and place his wife Catherine on the Russian throne In the coup carried out in July 1762 Alexei went to meet Catherine at the Peterhof Palace and finding her in bed announced the time has come for you to reign madame 6 8 He then drove her to St Petersburg where the guards regiments there proclaimed their loyalty to her 9 The Tsar was arrested and imprisoned at Ropsha under the guard of Alexei Orlov 6 There Peter died in mysterious circumstances on 17 July O S 6 July 1762 Orlov is popularly supposed to have murdered him either on his own initiative or on Catherine s orders 6 8 One account has Orlov giving him poisoned wine to drink which caused flames to course through his veins This aroused suspicion in the overthrown emperor and he refused the next glass But they used force and he defended himself In that horrible struggle in order to stifle his cries they threw him on the ground and grabbed his throat But he defended himself with the strength that comes from final desperation and they tried to avoid wounding him They placed a rifle strap on the emperor s neck Alexei Orlov kneeled with both legs on his chest and blocked his breathing He passed away in their hands 6 They thought that Orlov apparently wrote a letter to Catherine after Peter s death confessing that Peter had been killed in a drunken brawl with one of his jailers Feodor Bariatynsky and taking the blame 7 10 11 The authenticity of this letter has been questioned nowadays It was announced that the Tsar had died from an attack of haemorrhoidal colic 10 Service under Catherine II edit nbsp Oval portrait of Alexei Orlov by Carl Ludwig Christinek 1779The Orlovs were rewarded after Catherine s accession and Alexei was promoted to the rank of major general and given the title of count He and his brother received 50 000 roubles and 800 serfs 7 10 12 Despite a lack of formal education and his ignorance of foreign languages he maintained an interest in science patronizing Mikhail Lomonosov and Denis Fonvizin and corresponding with Jean Jacques Rousseau He was one of the founders of the Free Economic Society and its first elected chairman Rewarded with large estates he took an interest in horse breeding developing the Orlov Trotter and popularising the breed of chicken now known as the Orloff 13 14 He became involved in military operations during the Russo Turkish War of 1768 1774 organising the First Archipelago Expedition and commanding of a squadron of the Imperial Russian Navy having been promoted 3 to the rank of general admiral He fought and won the Battle of Chesma against an Ottoman fleet on 5 July 1770 with the help of British naval expertise and received the right to add the honorific Chesmensky to his name 15 16 He was also awarded the Order of St George First Class His expedition sparked off the Orlov Revolt in Greece which despite initial successes lacked continued Russian support and was eventually put down by the Ottomans 15 Orlov was sent as plenipotentiary to the talks at Focsani in 1772 but his impatience caused the breaking off of negotiations which led to dissatisfaction from the Empress Catherine then commissioned Orlov to make contact with Yelizaveta Alekseyevna a pretender to the throne claiming to be the daughter of Empress Elizabeth of Russia and deliver her to Russia 17 Orlov did so by pretending to be a supporter of hers and successfully seducing her He then lured her aboard a Russian ship at Livorno in May 1775 where she was arrested by Admiral Samuel Greig and taken to Russia where she was imprisoned and later died 17 18 Shortly after this service the Orlovs fell from favour at court and Alexei and Grigory were dismissed from their positions Orlov retired to the Sans Ennui Palace near Moscow and gave luxurious balls and dinners making himself the most popular man in Moscow 19 Old age and death edit nbsp Alexey Orlov by an unknown artist of the 18th century Hermitage MuseumAfter Catherine s death in 1796 the new ruler Tsar Paul I ordered that his father Peter III be reburied in a grand ceremony Alexei Orlov was ordered to carry the Imperial Crown in front of the coffin 20 Orlov was briefly suspected of having been one of the assassins of Peter III 21 Orlov left Russia during the reign of Paul I but returned to Moscow after his death and the accession of Tsar Alexander I 5 Orlov commanded the militia of the fifth district during the War of the Fourth Coalition in 1806 07 which was placed on a war footing almost entirely at his own expense 14 Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov died in Moscow on 5 January O S 24 December 1807 1808 He left an estate worth five million roubles and 30 000 serfs 5 His marriage with Eudokia Nikolayevna Lopukhina contracted on 6 May 1782 produced a daughter Anna Orlova Tshesmenskaja 1785 1848 and a son Ivan 1786 1787 Eudokia died while giving birth to Ivan in 1786 Orlov also is believed to have had an illegitimate son named Alexander 1763 1820 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alexey Orlov Chesmensky Notes edit Fedyunina 2023 Dates indicated by the letters O S are Old Style a b Polovtsov 1905 Sto velikih polkovodcev Istoriya RF A hundred great military commanders 100 histrf ru Russian Military Historical Society Archived from the original on 2023 03 25 Retrieved 2023 07 30 a b c The English Cyclopaedia pp 588 9 a b c d e Radzinsky Alexander II The Last Great Tsar pp 11 2 a b c Moss A History of Russia Since 1855 p 296 a b Black The Chinese Palace at Oranienbaum pp 17 8 Julicher Renegades Rebels and Rogues Under the Tsars p 139 a b c Streeter Catherine the Great pp 41 3 Julicher Renegades Rebels and Rogues Under the Tsars p 140 Julicher Renegades Rebels and Rogues Under the Tsars p 142 Murrell Discovering the Moscow Countryside p 100 a b Tull Horse Hoeing Husbandry p 665 a b Papalas Rebels and Radicals p 26 Reynolds Navies in History p 77 a b King amp Wilson The Resurrection of the Romanovs p 5 Ritzarev Eighteenth century Russian Music pp 118 9 Tolstoy War and Peace pp 1321 2 Heinze Baltic Sagas p 179 Died The Evening Post New York 1801 12 14 Retrieved 2017 07 27 References editBain Robert Nisbet 1911 Orlov s v Alexis Grigorievich Orlov Count In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 293 Black Will 2003 The Chinese Palace at Oranienbaum Catherine the Great s Private Passion Bunker Hill Publishing Inc ISBN 1 59373 001 2 Julicher Peter 2003 Renegades Rebels and Rogues under the Tsars McFarland ISBN 0 7864 1612 2 King Greg Wilson Penny 2010 The Resurrection of the Romanovs Anastasia Anna Anderson and the World s Greatest Royal Mystery John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 470 44498 6 Heinze Karl G 2003 Baltic Sagas Events and Personalities That Changed the World Virtualbookworm Publishing ISBN 1 58939 498 4 Charles Knight ed 1857 The English Cyclopaedia A New Dictionary of Universal Knowledge Vol 4 Bradbury amp Evans Moss Walter 2005 A History of Russia Since 1855 Vol 2 Anthem Press ISBN 1 84331 023 6 Murrell Kathleen Berton 2001 Discovering the Moscow Countryside A Travel Guide To the Heart Of Russia I B Tauris ISBN 1 86064 673 5 Papalas Anthony J 2005 Rebels and Radicals Icaria 1600 2000 Bolchazy Carducci Publishers ISBN 0 86516 605 6 Radzinsky Edvard 2005 Alexander II The Last Great Tsar Trans Antonina Bouis Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 7432 8197 7 Reynolds Clark G 1998 Navies in History Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 715 5 Ritzarev Marina 2006 Eighteenth century Russian Music Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7546 3466 3 Streeter Michael 2007 Catherine the Great Haus Publishing ISBN 978 1 905791 06 4 Tolstoy Leo 2010 War and Peace Trans Louise Maude Aylmer Maude 2 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 923276 5 Tull Jethro Brachfeld Aaron Choate Mary Horse Hoeing Husbandry 5 ed Coastalfields Press Polovtsov Alexander 1905 Russian Biographical Dictionary Vol XII Obezyaninov Ochkin St Petersburg Tipografiya Glavnogo Upravleniya Udelov pp 322 330 Fedyunina T N 2023 ORLOV ChESMENSKIJ ALEKSEJ GRIGOREVICh Great Russian Encyclopedia Electronic version Retrieved 18 September 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexei Grigoryevich Orlov amp oldid 1184628086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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