- Andrey Fedorovich Budberg
Andreas Feodorowitsch Budberg - also known as Baron Andreas Ludwig Karl Theodor von Budberg-Bönninghausen (born
Riga ,1 January 1817 , diedSt Petersburg ,28 January 1881 was aRussia ndiplomat .His father was Theodor Otto von Bönninghausen, a colonel in the
Imperial Russian Army and his mother was Helene Juliane von Budberg, from an old Baltic family. After attending the cathedral school atReval , Budberg continued his education at St Petersburg and entered the Russian diplomatic service in 1841.In 1845 he was joined the Russian embassy at the German
Bundestag inFrankfurt , becoming chargé d'affaires there in 1848. In 1850 he played the same role forPrussia inBerlin , being promoted to ambassador in 1851. In 1856 he became the Russian ambassador toAustria atVienna , returning to Berlin between 1858 and 1862. Then he was appointed Russian ambassador toFrance , a role he fulfilled until 1868.In 1862 with Budberg's agreement the French political police arrested in emissaries of Central National Commitee ("Komitet Centralny Narodowy"), a secret Polish organization, who were returning from
London . Just before theJanuary Uprising , the French handed Budberg a list of all conspiring regiments and a description of roads used to smuggle weapons for polish insurgents from abroad [Paweł Jasienica : "Dwie drogi", Warsaw, 1992, ISBN 83-07-02299-1] .Whilst in Berlin he lived in the former
Amalienpalais , inUnter den Linden .He was greatly interested in
Japan and knewPhilipp Franz von Siebold . He was also closely connected with CountKarl Robert von Nesselrode , Grand Duke Konstantin and Baron Wadenstierna.
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