- Pavel Kiselyov
Count Pavel Dmitrievich Kiselyov (Павел Дмитриевич Киселёв), also spelled Kiseleff (
8 January ,1788 ,Moscow —14 November ,1872 ,Paris ), is generally regarded as the most brilliant Russian reformer during Nicholas I's generallyreactionary reign.Early military career
Kiselyov first distinguished himself during the
Napoleonic Wars , serving asCount Miloradovich 's "aide-de-camp " in theBattle of Borodino , marching with the Russian army all the way toParis and gaining promotion to Alexander I's "aides-de-camp" at the close of the campaign.Five years later, Kiselyov was appointed Chief of Staff of the Second Army, stationed in
Tulchyn ,Podolia . It was there that he first tried to implement his liberal reforms, including the mitigation and condemnation ofcorporal punishment , which aroused the animosity of the powerful War Minister,Count Arakcheyev .Pavel Pestel and other Decembrists who formed the southern revolutionary league served under Kiselyov and were patronized by him, although the extent to which their collusion was encouraged by Kiselyov's liberalism has been disputed.Administration of the Danubian Principalities
During the Russo-Turkish War of 1828-1829 Kiselyov was appointed to command the Russian occupying troops in
Wallachia andMoldavia , and appointed "Plenipotentiary President of the Divans in Wallachia and Moldavia" ("de facto " governor) onOctober 19 ,1829 (he was present inZimnicea upon his nomination). He remained the most powerful man in theDanubian Principalities until 1834, whenMahmud II , the Ottoman Sultan, appointed newhospodar s -Alexandru II Ghica in Wallachia andMihail Sturdza in Moldavia.Under his administration, the two states got their first constitutions, named "
Regulamentul Organic " ("Organic Statute", French: "Règlement Organique", Russian: "Oрганический регламент", "Organichesky reglament"), introduced in Wallachia in 1831 and in Moldavia in 1832, which remained valid until the 1859 union of the principalities, with a short intermission in Wallachia during the 1848 Revolution. The "Statute", despite its shortcomings, had a beneficient effect over the economy and politics of the Principalities.He was also responsible for the creation of one of the most important arteries in
Bucharest , which nowadays bears his name asŞoseaua Kiseleff ("Kiseleff Highway" or "Kiseleff Road"). It was a northward continuation ofCalea Victoriei (then known as "Podul Mogoşoaiei"). Nowadays,Piaţa Victoriei andCasa Presei Libere stand at its two extreme points, with numerous museums, parks, grand residences, andArcul de Triumf in between.Emancipation projects
Back in
Saint Petersburg in 1835, Kiselyov was admitted to theState Council of Imperial Russia and to all the secret committees deliberating on effective ways to emancipate the serfs. The same year, Kiselyov submitted to the tsar a comprehensive programme for reforms, which scared conservative landowners so much that the monarch had it laid to rest. It is believed that the programme was based on Kiselyov's own memorandum, which he had first prepared as early as 1816.Two years later, Kiselyov was appointed Imperial Minister of State Properties, a key post which he filled with great efficiency for 18 years. In 1839, Kiselyov became a count and reformed the administration of state-owned peasants. He also instituted a system of schools for peasant children, popularly known as the Kiselyov Schools. The minister could not persevere with other reform plans as the ascendancy of reactionary forces lasted until Nicholas's death in 1855. Nicholas's successor, Alexander II, dispatched Kiselyov to
Paris in the capacity ofMinister Plenipotentiary to smooth the effects of theCrimean War .Kiselyov was married to Countess Sofia,
Stanisław Szczęsny Potocki 's daughter, but their only son died in infancy. As a result, the old courtier spent much time with his nephews and heirs from the Milyutin family. Although he hoped to see Nicholas Milyutin presiding over the emancipation reform that followed, his aspirations in this regard were only partially rewarded. His other nephew,Dmitry Milyutin , was responsible for the sweeping reforms of the Russian military in the 1870s. Kiselyov remained in diplomatic service until 1862, when failing health compelled him to lay down his offices. He never returned to Russia and died in Paris ten years later.References
*A.P. Zablotsky-Desyatovsky. "Count P.D. Kiselyov and His Time", vol. 1-4. SPb, 1884.
*N.M. Druzhinin. "State-owned Peasants and the Kiselyov Reforms", vol. 1-2. Moscow-Leningrad, 1946, 1958.
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