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COUNT ALEKSYEI ANDREEVICH ARAKCHEEV (1769-1834) , See also: Russian soldier and statesman, was descended from an See also: ancient See also: family of See also: Great Novgorod
.
From his See also: mother, See also: Elizabeth Vitlitsaya, he inherited most of his characteristics, an insatiable love of
See also: work, an almost pedantic love of See also: order and the most rigorous sense of duty
.
In 1788 he entered the corps of See also: noble cadets in the artillery and See also: engineering department, where his ability, especially in See also: mathematics, soon attracted See also: attention
.
In See also: July 1791 he was made an adjutant on the staff of Count N
.
I
.
Saltuikov, who (See also: September 1792) recommended him to the See also: cesarevich See also: Paul Petrovich as the artillery officer most capable of reorganizing the army corps maintained by the See also: prince at See also: Gatchina
.
Arakcheev speedily won the entire confidence of Paul by his scrupulous zeal and undeniable technical ability
.
His inexorable discipline (magnified into cruelty by later legends) soon made the Gatchina corps a See also: model for the rest of the Russian army
.
On the accession of Paul to the See also: throne Arakcheev was promptly summoned to St See also: Petersburg, appointed military commandant in the capital, and major-general in the See also: grenadier See also: battalion of the Preobrazhenskoe Guard
.
On the 12th of See also: December 1796, he received the ribbon of St See also: Anne and a See also: rich estate at Gruzina in the See also: government of Novgorod, the only substantial gift ever accepted by him during the whole of his career
.
At the See also: coronation (5th of See also: April 1797) Paul created him a baron, and he was, subsequently made quartermaster-general and colonel of the whole Preobrazhenskoe Guard
.
It was to Arakcheev that Paul entrusted the reorganization of the army, which during the latter days of See also: Catherine had fallen into a See also: state of disorder and demoralization
.
Arakcheev remorselessly applied the iron Gatchina discipline to the whole of the imperial forces, beginning with theSee also: Guards
.
He soon became generally detested by the army, but pursued his course unflinchingly and introduced many indispensable hygienic reforms
.
" Clean barracks are healthy barracks," was his motto
.
Nevertheless, the opposition of the See also: officers proved too strong for him, and on the 18th of See also: March 1798 he was dismissed from all his appointments
.
Arakcheev's first disgrace only lasted six months
.
On the r th of
See also: August he was received back into favour, speedily reinstated in all his former offices, and on the 5th of May 1799 was created a count, the emperor himself selecting the motto: " Devoted, not servile." Five months later he was again in disgrace, the emperor dismissing him on the strength of a denunciation subsequently proved to be false
.
It was a fatal step on Paul's See also: part, for everything goes to prove that he would never have been assassinated had Arakcheev continued by his
See also: side
.
During the earlier years of See also: Alexander, Arakcheev was completely overlooked
.
Only on the 27th of April 1803, was the count recalled to St Petersburg, and employed as inspector-general of the artillery
.
His wise and thorough reorganization of the whole department contributed essentially to the victories of the Russians during the
See also: Napoleonic See also: wars
.
All critics agree, indeed, that the Arakcheev administration was the See also: golden era of the Russian artillery
.
The activity of the inexhaustible inspector knew no See also: bounds, and he neglected nothing which could possibly improve this arm
.
His See also: principal reforms were the subdivision of the artillery divisions into See also: separate See also: independent See also: units, the formation of artillery brigades, the establishment of a committee of instruction (18o8), and the See also: publishing of an Artillery Journal
.
At See also: Austerlitz he had the satisfaction of witnessing the actual results of his artillery reforms
.
The See also: commissariat scandals which came to See also: light after the See also: peace of See also: Tilsit convinced the emperor that nothing See also: short of the stern and incorruptible energy of Arakcheev could reach the See also: sources of the evil, and in See also: January 1808 he was appointed inspector-general and war See also: minister
.
When, on the outbreak of the See also: Swedish war of 1809, the emperor ordered the army to take See also: advantage of an unusually severe See also: frost and See also: cross the ice of the Gulf of Finland, it was only the presence of Arakcheev that compelled an unwilling general and a semi-mutinous army to begin a See also: campaign which ended in the See also: conquest of Finland
.
On the institution of the "Imperial Council" (1st of January 1810), Arakcheev was made a member of the council of ministers and a senator, while still retaining the war office
.
Subsequently Alexander was alienated from him owing to the intrigues of the count's enemies, who hated him for his severity and regarded him as a dangerous reactionary
.
The alienation was not, however, for long
.
It is true, Arakcheev took no active part in the war of 1812, but all the See also: correspondence and despatches See also: relating to it passed through his hands, and he was the emperor's inseparable companion during the whole course of it
.
At See also: Paris (31st of March 1814) Alexander, with his own See also: hand, wrote the See also: ukaz appointing him a See also: field-marshal, but he refused the dignity, accepting, instead, a
See also: miniature portrait of his master
.
From this See also: time Alexander's confidence in Arakcheev steadily increased, and the emperor imparted to him, first of all, his many projects of reform, especially his project of military colonies, the carrying out of the details of which was committed to Arakcheev (1824)
.
The failure of the scheme was due not to any fault of the count, but to the inefficiency and insubordination of the See also: district officers
.
In Alexander's last years Arakcheev was not merely his chief counsellor, but his dearest friend, to whom he submitted all his projects for consideration and revision
.
The most interesting of these projects was the See also: plan for the emancipation of the peasantry (1818)
.
On the accession of See also: Nicholas I., Arakcheev, thoroughly broken in See also: health, gradually restricted his immense sphere of activity, and on the 26th of April 1826, resigned all his offices and retired to See also: Carlsbad
.
The 50,000 roubles presented to him by the emperor as a parting gift he at once handed to the See also: Pavlovsk Institute for the See also: education of the daughters of poor gentlemen
.
His last days he spent on his estate at Gruzina, carefully See also: collecting all his memorials of Alexander, whose memory he most piously cherished
.
He also set aside 25,000 roubles for the author of the best biography of his imperial friend
.
Arakcheev died on the 21st of April 1834, with his eyes fixed to the last on the See also: late emperor's portrait
.
" I have now done every-thing," he said, " so I can go and make my report to the emperor Alexander." In 1806 he had married Natalia Khomutova, but they lived apart, and he had no See also: children by her
.
See Vasily Ratch, Memorials of Count Arakcheev (Rus.) (St Peters-See also: burg, 1864) ; Mikhail Ivanovich Semevsky, Count Arakcheev and the Military Colonies (Rus.) (St Petersburg, 1871); Theodor Schiemann, Gesch
.
Russland's unter Kaiser Nikolaus I., vol. i., Alexander I., &c
.
(Berlin, 1904)
.
(R
.
N
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