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PRINCE GRIGORY ALEKSANDROVICH POTEMKI...

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 205 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PRINCE GRIGORY ALEKSANDROVICH POTEMKIN (1739-1791)  ,
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Russian statesman, was born at Chizheva near
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Smolensk . He was educated at the Moscow University, and in 1755 entered the " Reiter " of the Horse Guards . His participation in the coup d'etat of the 8th of
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July 1762 attracted the attention of the new empress, Catherine II., who made him a Kammerjunker and gave him a small estate . The
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biographical anecdotes
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relating to him during the next few years are obscure and mostly apocryphal . In 1768 he quitted the Guards and was attached to the court as a Kammerherr, but in 1769 he volunteered for the
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Turkish War and distinguished himself at Khotin, Focshani and Larga, besides routing the
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Turks at Oita . It was not till 1971 that he became Catherine's prime favourite . In that
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year he was made an adjutant-general,
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lieutenant-colonel of the Preobrazhensky Guards, a member of the council of state, and, in the words of a
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foreign contemporary diplomatist, " the most influential personage in Russia." Somewhat later he was created a count, and appointed
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commander-in-chief and governor-general of " New Russia," as the conquered provinces in the Ukraine were then called . In . 1776, at Catherine's request, the emperor Joseph II. raised Potemkin to the rank of a prince of the
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Holy
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Roman
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Empire . I,n 1775 he was superseded in the empress's graces by Zavadovsky; but the relations between Catherine and her former lover continued to be most friendly; and his influence with her was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 favourites . A whole mass of facts testify to the enormous and extraordinary influence of Potemkin during the next ten years . His correspondence with the empress was uninterrupted .

The most important state documents passed through his hands . Catherine loaded him with gifts: He was deeply interested in the question of the

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southern boundaries of Russia and consequently in the
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fate of the Turkish Empire . It was he who, in 1776, sketched the plan for the
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conquest of the Crimea which was subsequently realized; and about the same period he was busy with the so-called " Greek project," which aimed at restoring the
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Byzantine Empire under one of Catherine's grandsons . In many of the
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Balkan states he had well-informed agents . After he became field marshal, in 1784, he introduced many reforms into the army, and built a
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fleet in the Black Sea, which, though constructed of very
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bad materials, did excellent service in Catherine's second Turkish War (1787—92) His colonizing
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system was exposed to very severe criticism, yet it is impossible not to admire the results of his stupendous activity . The
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arsenal of
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Kherson, begun in 1778, the harbour of Sevastopol and thenew fleet of fifteen liners and twenty-five smaller vessels, were monuments of his genius . But there was exaggeration in all he attempted . He spared neither men,
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money, nor himself in attempting to carry out his gigantic scheme for the colonization of the south Russian
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steppes; but he never calculated the cost, and more than three-quarters of the design had to be abandoned when but
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half finished . Catherine's famous expedition to the south in 1787 was a veritable triumph for Potemkin; for he contrived to conceal all the weak points of his administration and to
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present everything in a rose-coloured
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light . On this occasion he received the title of prince of Tauris . The same year the second Turkish War began, and the founder of New Russia took upon himself the responsibilities of commanderin-chief . But the army was
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ill-equipped and unprepared; and Potemkin in an hysterical
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fit of depression gave everything up for lost, and would have resigned but for the steady encouragement of the empress .

Only after

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Suvarov had valiantly defended Kinburn did he take heart again, and besiege and capture
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Ochakov and Bender . In 1990 he conducted the military operations on the Dniester and held his court at
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Jassy with more than
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Asiatic pomp . In 1791 he returned to St
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Petersburg where, along with his friend Bezborodko (q.v.), he made vain efforts to overthrow the new favourite, Zubov, and in four months spent 85o,000 roubles in banquets and entertainments, a sum subsequently reimbursed to him from the
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treasury . Then the empress grew impatient and compelled him (1791) to return to Jassy to conduct the peace negotiations as chief Russian plenipotentiary . On the 5th of
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October, while on his way to
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Nikolayev, he died in the open steppe, 40 M. from Jassy, in
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con-sequence of eating a whole goose while in a high state of fever . Very various are the estimates of Potemkin . Neither during his
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life nor after his
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death did any two
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people agree about him . The German pamphlet: Pansalim Fiirst der Finsterniss and seine Geliebte, published in 1794, is a
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fair specimen of the opinion of those who regarded him as the evil genius of Catherine and of Russia . But there were many, including the empress herself, who looked upon him as a man of manifold and commanding genius . He was indubitably the most extraordinary of all the Catherinian favourites . He was an able
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administrator, but wanting in self-control . Licentiousness, extravagance and an utter disregard for human life were his weak points, but he was loyal, generous and magnanimous .

Nearly all the anecdotes related of him by Helbig, in the

biography contributed by him to the journal
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Minerva (1797—1800), and freely utilized by later biographers, are absolutely worthless . See V . A . Bilbasov, Geschichte Katharinas II . (Berlin, 1891—1893); C. de Lariviere, Catherine la Grande d'apres sa correspondance (Paris, 1895) ;
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Anonymous, La Cour de Catherine II . Ses collaborateurs (St Petersburg, 1899) ; A . V . Lopukhin, Sketch of the Congress of Jassy, 1791 (Rus.; St Petersburg, 1893) ; The Papers of Prince Potemkin, 1744—170 (Rus.; St Petersburg, 1893—1895) . (R . N .

End of Article: PRINCE GRIGORY ALEKSANDROVICH POTEMKIN (1739-1791)
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