Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politics

When the Crimea acquired the status of Russian territory in 1783, it became an imperial ‘borderland’ a long way from Saint Petersburg. However, in the geopolitical aspirations of European powers, and, also, from the viewpoint of the Russian Empire, the Crimea was not a remote periphery. The Russian...

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Main Author: Denis V. Konkin
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2019-12-01
Series:RUDN Journal of Russian History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/russian-history/article/viewFile/21630/17148
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spelling doaj-a26fbc74de0f49eba7e9529708f0ded92020-11-24T22:19:27ZrusPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)RUDN Journal of Russian History2312-86742312-86902019-12-0118354055910.22363/2312-8674-2019-18-3-540-55917819Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politicsDenis V. Konkin0V.I. Vernadsky Crimean Federal UniversityWhen the Crimea acquired the status of Russian territory in 1783, it became an imperial ‘borderland’ a long way from Saint Petersburg. However, in the geopolitical aspirations of European powers, and, also, from the viewpoint of the Russian Empire, the Crimea was not a remote periphery. The Russian government consistently sought to attract colonists from abroad to the thinly-populated Black Sea region. Several attempts to do so ended in failure; one of these was the organization of farming colonies at the Sea of Azov for French royalist emigrants and military men from Condé’s army. In the era of Napoleon, France paid particular attention to the peninsula; in the complicated foreign policy conditions, France did not miss any opportunity to reconnoitre the internal situation of this potentially unstable province of Russia, with the goal to infl uence the position of the Ottomans towards this territory which at that time was largely populated by Muslims. The author emphasizes that an important aspect of Napoleon’s foreign policy was supporting anti-Russian sentiment in the Ottoman Empire. One of the obvious means to achieve this goal was focusing on the Crimea issue and promising assistance for returning the peninsula into the Ottoman sphere of infl uence. The Russian authorities did not neglect these attempts and countered them skilfully. The author argues that the success of Russia’s policy in the Crimea was mainly related to certain Frenchmen in Russian service. During the Russian-Ottoman confl ict of 1806-1812, the military and administrative measures conducted by Armand de Richelieu, the Governor of New Russia, and Jean de Traversay, the commander of the Black Sea Navy, became an important factor for providing a stable situation within the peninsula.http://journals.rudn.ru/russian-history/article/viewFile/21630/17148CrimeaCondé’s corpsFrench spiesAlexander INapoleon IV.P. KochubeyA. RichelieuJ. TraversayS.A. Bekleshov
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Denis V. Konkin
spellingShingle Denis V. Konkin
Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politics
RUDN Journal of Russian History
Crimea
Condé’s corps
French spies
Alexander I
Napoleon I
V.P. Kochubey
A. Richelieu
J. Traversay
S.A. Bekleshov
author_facet Denis V. Konkin
author_sort Denis V. Konkin
title Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politics
title_short Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politics
title_full Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politics
title_fullStr Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politics
title_full_unstemmed Crimea in the Era of Napoleon: the ‘French trace’ in regional politics
title_sort crimea in the era of napoleon: the ‘french trace’ in regional politics
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
series RUDN Journal of Russian History
issn 2312-8674
2312-8690
publishDate 2019-12-01
description When the Crimea acquired the status of Russian territory in 1783, it became an imperial ‘borderland’ a long way from Saint Petersburg. However, in the geopolitical aspirations of European powers, and, also, from the viewpoint of the Russian Empire, the Crimea was not a remote periphery. The Russian government consistently sought to attract colonists from abroad to the thinly-populated Black Sea region. Several attempts to do so ended in failure; one of these was the organization of farming colonies at the Sea of Azov for French royalist emigrants and military men from Condé’s army. In the era of Napoleon, France paid particular attention to the peninsula; in the complicated foreign policy conditions, France did not miss any opportunity to reconnoitre the internal situation of this potentially unstable province of Russia, with the goal to infl uence the position of the Ottomans towards this territory which at that time was largely populated by Muslims. The author emphasizes that an important aspect of Napoleon’s foreign policy was supporting anti-Russian sentiment in the Ottoman Empire. One of the obvious means to achieve this goal was focusing on the Crimea issue and promising assistance for returning the peninsula into the Ottoman sphere of infl uence. The Russian authorities did not neglect these attempts and countered them skilfully. The author argues that the success of Russia’s policy in the Crimea was mainly related to certain Frenchmen in Russian service. During the Russian-Ottoman confl ict of 1806-1812, the military and administrative measures conducted by Armand de Richelieu, the Governor of New Russia, and Jean de Traversay, the commander of the Black Sea Navy, became an important factor for providing a stable situation within the peninsula.
topic Crimea
Condé’s corps
French spies
Alexander I
Napoleon I
V.P. Kochubey
A. Richelieu
J. Traversay
S.A. Bekleshov
url http://journals.rudn.ru/russian-history/article/viewFile/21630/17148
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