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Zakhar Grigoryevich Chernyshev (Template:Langx; 1722Template:Spaced en dash31 August 1784) was a Russian noble, courtier to Catherine the Great, Imperial Russian Army officer, and Imperial Russian politician in the 18th century.

After made a courtier to then-Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst in 1744, Chernyshev remained a favorite of the future Russian monarch into the 1770s. An Imperial Russian Army officer during the Seven Years' War, Chernyshev retired in 1764, and would be ultimately promoted to general field marshal by Catherine II. At her appointment, Chernyshev led the College of War from 1764 to 1774, served as her governor-general of the Pskov and Mogilev Governorates, and was the mayor of Moscow until his death.

Personal lifeEdit

Born a Russian count in 1722, Zakhar Grigoryevich Chernyshev (Template:Langx)<ref name="1840 Биографии" /> was the older brother of Ivan<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Coronation" /> and Andrei Chernyshev.<ref name="2011 Catherine the Great: Peepholes" /> By 1744, Chernyshev spoke Russian, French, and German.<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Education" />

When Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst was betrothed to Peter III of Russia in 1744, Chernyshev was chosen by Empress Elizabeth of Russia as one of three nobles to join the princess' personal court as a gentleman of the chamber.<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Education" /> In 1745, Chernyshev's mother begged Empress Elizabeth to send her son away because she feared his infatuation with the Grand Duchess Catherine Alekseievna of Russia; Chernyshev was given a diplomatic assignment.<ref name="2011 Catherine the Great: Peepholes" /> When he returned to Saint Petersburg six years later, Chernyshev began actively courting the then-grand duchess: flattering Catherine, sending love letters, and finding occasion to recreate with the royal.<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Education" />

Chernyshev died unexpectedly on 31 August 1784<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Succession" /> in Moscow.<ref name="1840 Биографии" />

MilitaryEdit

Ranks held
Year Name Insignia
1741 Kapitan File:1904ic-p05r.png
1750 Polkovnik File:1904-a-p15r.png
1750 General-major File:1904ic-p08r.png
by 1762 General File:1904ic-p10r.png
1773 General-feldmarshal File:Imperial Russian Army 1904ic-p11r.png

At the age of 13, Chernyshev joined the Imperial Russian Army in 1735, and was promoted to kapitan in 1741.<ref name="1840 Биографии" /> In 1748, he was assigned to a regiment in Moscow,<ref name="2011 Catherine the Great: Moscow" /> and in 1750, he was promoted to the ranks of polkovnik<ref name="2011 Catherine the Great: Reading" /> and general-major.<ref name="1840 Биографии" />

As an Imperial Russian general officer, Chernyshev commanded soldiers in the Seven Years' War. In 1757, he was at the Battle of Kolín, and in 1758, he joined forces with the Austrian army. For his leadership in the 1758 Battle of Zorndorf and the 1760 occupation of Berlin—capital of the Kingdom of Prussia, Chernyshev was awarded the Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky.<ref name="1840 Биографии" /> In early 1762, then-General Chernyshev commanded a Russian corps of 16,000 infantry in Silesia that was attached to the Austrian army, fighting the Prussian kingdom. With the 1762 Treaty of Saint Petersburg, Peter III withdrew from the war and instead threw Russia's lot in with Prussia.<ref name="2011 Catherine the Great: Brief" /> Chernyshev was given command of the Russian forces now attached to the Prussian Army, and the Prussian monarch (Frederick the Great) awarded him the Order of the Black Eagle.<ref name="1840 Биографии" /> When Emperor Peter III was replaced by Empress Catherine II later that year on 28 June, one of her first orders was to Chernyshev: immediately return to Russia with his corps, and if King Frederick interfered, "join the nearest army corps of her Imperial Roman Majesty, the empress of Austria Template:Bracket."<ref name="2011 Catherine the Great: Dura" /> Upon this change in alliances, Catherine II awarded Chernyshev with the Order of St. Andrew.<ref name="1840 Биографии" />

In November 1762, Chernyshev was one of ten military commanders convened by Catherine II for the purposes of reforming the Imperial Russian military. Chernyshev retired from the military in early 1764, citing "weak health and straitened finances."<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Coronation" />

PoliticsEdit

In 1742, Kapitan Chernyshev was sent to the Holy Roman Empire city of Vienna, where he worked under the Russian ambassador there, Ludovic Lanczynski. At his mother's urging, Empress Elizabeth next sent Chernyshev as her representative to the sejm of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1745.<ref name="1840 Биографии" />

File:Zakhar Chernyshev by F. Shubin (GTG, 1774) by shakko 01.jpg
Bust of General Field Marshal Chernyshev (1774) by Fedot Shubin

On 4 March 1764, Catherine II appointed Chernyshev to the College of War's top post of vice-president.<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Coronation" /> He was a Governing Senator in March 1765 when he was awarded Template:Currency by Catherine II for his governmental service.<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Crisis" /> When it first met on 4 November 1768, Chernyshev was on Catherine II's advisory council for the Russo-Turkish War, and in autumn 1773, he was appointed to the new position of War College president,<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Foreign" /> along with a commiserate promotion to general field marshal,<ref name="2005 Russian Officer Corps" /> and advised Catherine II regarding Pugachev's Rebellion.<ref name="2011 Catherine the Great: Return" /> Having lost Catherine II's favor to Lieutenant-General Grigory Potemkin, Chernyshev resigned from the College of War in August 1774.<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Foreign" />

AdministrationEdit

Upon the 1772 First Partition of Poland, the Russian Partition consisted mostly of former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth territory in the drainage basin of the Vistula river:<ref name="1911 Encyclopædia Britannica" /> Template:Convert that became the Pskov and Mogilev Governorates.<ref name="2001 География" /> On 28 May 1772, Chernyshev was appointed these new governorates' governor-general.<ref name="1941 Готье" /> He still held this office in May 1780 when Catherine II met with Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II in Mogilev.<ref name="1989 Catherine the Great: Succession" />

In 1782, Chernyshev was recalled to Moscow to serve as that city's mayor.<ref name="1840 Биографии" /> He commissioned Matvey Kazakov, and had a luxury home built on Tverskaya Street that would house Muscovite mayors into the 20th century.<ref name="mos.ru" /> During his tenure, he "renewed [and] decorated the ancient capital with many buildings". For his service, he was awarded the Order of Saint Vladimir by Catherine II.<ref name="1840 Биографии" />

ReferencesEdit

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