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See also: Russian general, and one of the collaborators of See also: Peter the See also: Great, with whom he See also: grew up
.
On the occasion of the Sophian insurrection of 1689, he carefully guarded Peter in the Troitsa monastery, and subsequently took, See also: part in the See also: Azov expedition, during which he was raised to the grade of general
.
He took part in all the See also: principal engagements of the Great See also: Northern War
.
Defeated by See also: Charles XII. at Holowczyn, he was degraded to the ranks, but was pardoned as a
See also: reward for his valour at Lyesna and recovered all his lost dignities
.
At See also: Poltava he commanded the centre
.
From the See also: Ukraine he was transferred to the Baltic Provinces and was made the first governor-general of See also: Riga after its capture in 1710
.
In 1724 he succeeded the temporarily disgraced favourite, See also: Menshikov, as war See also: minister
.
See also: Catherine I. created him a See also: field-marshal
See A
.
Bauman, Russian Statesmen of the Olden
See also: Time (Rus.), vol. i
.
(See also: Petersburg, 1877)
.
His See also: grandson, See also: PRINCE NIKOLAI VASILEVICH See also: REPNIN (1734—18o1), Russian statesman and general, served under his See also: father, Prince Vasily Anikitovich, during the Rhenish See also: campaign of 1748 and subsequently resided for some time abroad, where he acquired " a thoroughly See also: sound See also: German See also: education." He also participated in the Seven Years' War in a subordinate capacity
.
Peter III. sent him as ambassador in 1763 to Berlin
.
The same See also: year Catherine transferred him to Warsaw as minister plenipotentiary, with especial instructions to See also: form a Russian party in Poland from among the dissidents, who were to receive equal rights with the Catholics
.
Repnin convinced himself that the dissidents were too poor and insignificant to be of any real support to See also: Russia, and that the whole agitation in their favour was factitious
.
At last, indeed, the dissidents themselves even petitioned the empress to leave them alone
.
It is clear from his See also: correspondence that Repnin, a singularly proud and high-spirited See also: man, much disliked the very dirty See also: work he was called upon to do
.
Nevertheless he faithfully obeyed his instructions, and, by means more or less violent or discreditable, forced the See also: diet of 1768 to concede everything
.
The immediate result was the Confederation of See also: Bar, which practically destroyed the ambassador's handiwork
.
Repnin resigned his See also: post for the more congenial occupation of fighting the See also: Turks
.
At the See also: head of an See also: independent command in See also: Moldavia and See also: Walachia, he prevented a large See also: Turkish army from See also: crossing the Pruth (1770); distinguished himself at the actions of Larga and Kagula; and captured See also: Izmail and See also: Kilia
.
In 1771 he received the supreme command in Walachia and routed the Turks at See also: Bucharest
.
A See also: quarrel with the See also: commander-in-chief, Rumyantsev, then induced him to send in his resignation, but in 1774 he participated in the capture of See also: Silistria and in the negotiations which led to the See also: peace of Kuchuk-Kainarji,, In 1775—76 he was ambassador at the See also: Porte
.
On the outbreak of the war of the Bavarian Succession he led 30,000 men to See also: Breslau, and at the subsequent congress of Teschen, where he was Russian plenipotentiary, compelled See also: Austria to make peace with Prussia
.
During the second; Turkish war (1787—92) Repnin was, after See also: Suvarov, the most successful of the Russian commanders
.
He defeated the Turks at Salcha, captured the whole See also: camp of the seraskier, See also: Hassan See also: Pasha, shut him up in Izmail, and was preparing to reducethe place when he was forbidden to do so by Potemkin (1789)
.
On the retirement of Potemkin (q.v.) in 1791, Repnin succeeded him as commander-in-chief, and immediately routed the See also: grand See also: vizier at Machin, a victory which compelled the Turks to accept the truce of See also: Galatz (31st of See also: July 1791)
.
In 1794 he was made governor-general of the newly acquired Lithuanian provinces
.
The emperor See also: Paul raised him to the See also: rank of field-marshal (1796), and, in 1798, sent him on a See also: diplomatic See also: mission to Berlin and Vienna in See also: order to detach Prussia from See also: France and unite both Austria and Prussia against the See also: Jacobins
.
On his return unsuccessful, he was dismissed the service
.
See A
.
Kraushar, Prince Repnin in Poland, z764—8 (Pol.) (Warsaw, 1900) ; " Correspondence with See also: Frederick the Great and others " (Rus. and Fr.), in Russky Arkhiv (1865, 1869, 1874, Petersburg); M
.
Longinov, True Anecdotes of Prince Repnin (Rus.) (Petersburg, 1865)
.
(R
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