Jump to content

Fyodor Alexeyevich Golovin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fyodor Golovin
Фёдор Головин
Portrait of Golovin
Head of the Posolsky Prikaz
In office
1700–1706
Preceded byLev Naryshkin
Succeeded byPeter Shafirov
Personal details
Born1650
Died10 August 1706
NationalityRussian
Military service
RankField marshal

Count Fyodor Alexeevich Golovin (Russian: Фёдор Алексеевич Головин; 1650 – 10 Aug [O.S. 30 July] 1706) was the last Russian boyar and the first Chancellor of the Russian Empire. He was also a field marshal and general admiral (1700).[1][2]

Biography

[edit]

Golovin descended from a family of Russian treasurers of Byzantine Greek descent.[citation needed]

Monument to Fyodor Alekseevich Golovin in St. Petersburg, Vasilievsky Island.

Military career

[edit]

During the regency of Sophia Alekseyevna, sister of Peter the Great, Golovin was sent to the Amur to defend the new fortress of Albazin against the Chinese Qing Empire. In 1689, he was the Tsardom of Russia's signatory to the Treaty of Nerchinsk between the Tsardom and the Qing Empire, by which the line of the Amur, as far as its tributary the Gorbitsa, was retroceded to China because of the impossibility of seriously defending it.[3]

In Peter the Great's Grand Embassy to the West in 1697, Golovin occupied the second place, immediately after Franz Lefort. It was his duty to hire foreign sailors and obtain everything necessary for the construction and complete equipment of a fleet. On Lefort's death in March 1699, he succeeded him as Field Marshal, and during that same year he was granted the title of the first Russian Count and was also the first to be decorated with the newly instituted Russian Order of St. Andrew.[3]

Foreign affairs

[edit]

The conduct of foreign affairs was entrusted to him in 1699, and from then to his death he was the premier minister of the Tsar.[citation needed] Golovin's first achievement as foreign minister was to add to the Treaty of Karlowitz, by which peace with the Ottoman Empire had only been secured for three years, through the forging of a new treaty at Constantinople, on 13 June 1700. In the treaty, the term of Russian-Ottoman peace was extended to thirty years, and the Azov district and a strip of territory extending into Kuban were seceded to Russia. Golovin also managed the activities of the new Russian diplomats at foreign courts with great skill.[3]

Death

[edit]

Golovin died on 30 July, 1706 (O.S), on the road from Moscow to Kiev. His remains were delivered to the Simonov monastery.[4] Historian R. N. Bain claims his death was an irreparable loss to the Tsar, who wrote that "Peter was filled with grief" at the news of his death.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "About: Fyodor Alexeyevich Golovin". dbpedia.org. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
  2. ^ "Fyodor Alekseyevich, Count Golovin | Tsar's advisor, diplomat, military leader | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
  3. ^ a b c d Bain 1911.
  4. ^ "Головин Федор Алексеевич". www.mid.ru. November 10, 2014. Retrieved 2024-07-06.

Sources

[edit]