Jump to content

Ivan Osterman: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 35: Line 35:
[[Category:18th-century people of the Russian Empire]]
[[Category:18th-century people of the Russian Empire]]
[[Category:18th-century diplomats of the Russian Empire]]
[[Category:18th-century diplomats of the Russian Empire]]
[[Category:18th-century Russian military personnel]]
[[Category:18th-century military personnel of the Russian Empire]]





Revision as of 03:11, 12 August 2022

Ivan Osterman

Count Ivan Andreyevich Osterman (Russian: Иван Андреевич Остерман; 1725–1811) was a Russian statesman and the son of Andrei Osterman.[1]

After Osterman's father fell into disgrace, Ivan Osterman was transferred from the Imperial Guards to the regular army and then sent abroad, where he continued his education. In 1757, Osterman was in the Russian service again. He held diplomatic posts in Paris and Stockholm, where he would exercise considerable influence on Gustav III of Sweden. In 1774, Osterman was appointed a member of the Governing Senate.

In 1783, Osterman was appointed Minister of foreign affairs of Imperial Russia, but would play only a secondary role in this post. His closest associates - Count Bezborodko, Prince Zubov, Fyodor Rostopchin - were the ones with real power, but they lacked the fluency in languages and oleaginous manner of address which Osterman was famed for.

In 1796, Osterman was appointed the Chancellor of the Russian Empire, again as a puppet of real policy-makers. A year later, the new Emperor Paul dismissed him from office. Ivan Osterman spent the last years of his life in Moscow. As he had no children of his own, his title and last name were inherited by a nephew, the celebrated General Tolstoy.

References

  1. ^ "Count Ostermann House". Retrieved 3 January 2014.
Preceded by Imperial Chancellor of Russia
1796 — 1797
Succeeded by