Alexander Timashev
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Alexander Yegorovich Timashev (15 April 1818 – 1 February 1893) was a Russian statesman. He served as Adjutant General (1859), Cavalry General (1872); Chief of Staff of the Gendarme Corps and Manager of the
Third Section The Third Section of His Imperial Majesty's Own Chancellery (, or ''III otdeleniye sobstvennoy E.I.V. kantselyarii'' - in full: Третье отделение Собственной Его Императорского Величества кан ...
of
His Imperial Majesty's Own Chancellery His Imperial Majesty's Own Chancellery or H.I.M. Own Chancellery () began as personal chancellery of Paul I and grew into a kind of regent's office, run by Count Arakcheyev from 1815 and until the death of Alexander I of Russia. Under Nicholas ...
(1856–1861); Minister of Posts and Telegraphs (1867–1868); and
Minister of Internal Affairs An interior minister (sometimes called a minister of internal affairs or minister of home affairs) is a cabinet official position that is responsible for internal affairs, such as public security, civil registration and identification, emergency ...
of the Russian Empire (1868–1878).


Biography

Alexander Timashev came from an old noble family. Born 3 April 1818, in the Orenburg Province, where at that time his father served and owned the estate. The son of Major General Yegor Timashev and his wife Ekaterina Alexandrovna, née Zagryazhskaya. Educated at the Noble Boarding School at the Imperial Moscow University and at the School of Guards Ensigns and Cavalry Junkers. On 27 September 1835, he was released from the School and enlisted as a non–commissioned officer in the
Izmailovsky Life Guards Regiment The Izmaylovsky Regiment (), also Izmailovsky, was one of the oldest regiments of the Imperial Russian Army, a subdivision of the 1st Guards Infantry Division of the Imperial Russian Guard. It was formed in Moscow on 22 September 1730 as Empres ...
, and a year later, on 3 December 1836, he was promoted to sub–ensign. On 1 September 1837, he received his first officer rank –
ensign Ensign most often refers to: * Ensign (flag), a flag flown on a vessel to indicate nationality * Ensign (rank), a navy (and former army) officer rank Ensign or The Ensign may also refer to: Places * Ensign, Alberta, Alberta, Canada * Ensign, Ka ...
, on 12 September of the same year, he was transferred to the Life Guards Grenadier Regiment. On 29 April 1840, he was transferred to the Cavalry Guard Regiment and renamed into
cornet The cornet (, ) is a brass instrument similar to the trumpet but distinguished from it by its conical bore, more compact shape, and mellower tone quality. The most common cornet is a transposing instrument in B. There is also a soprano cor ...
. On 21 April 1842, he was promoted to
lieutenant A lieutenant ( , ; abbreviated Lt., Lt, LT, Lieut and similar) is a Junior officer, junior commissioned officer rank in the armed forces of many nations, as well as fire services, emergency medical services, Security agency, security services ...
. On 19 February 1844, Timashev was sent to the Separate Caucasian Corps, where he arrived in April. On 17–18 September of the same year, he took part in his first battle with the highlanders, for which he was awarded the Order of Saint Anne of the 3rd Degree With a Bow. Having received the rank of adjutant wing on 6 December 1844, in January 1845, he returned to Saint Petersburg. On 21 April 1845, he was promoted to staff captain, and on 1 July 1848, to
captain Captain is a title, an appellative for the commanding officer of a military unit; the supreme leader or highest rank officer of a navy ship, merchant ship, aeroplane, spacecraft, or other vessel; or the commander of a port, fire or police depa ...
. During these years, with the rank of adjutant wing, he was regularly sent around the empire to carry out various assignments, such as monitoring the progress of recruits, conducting investigations in case of incidents, examining troops affected by the cholera epidemic, and others. He also accompanied Emperor Nicholas I on numerous trips around Russia. On 18 June 1849, he was sent to the detachment of Lieutenant General Grotengelm, who participated in the campaign in Transylvania against the rebellious Hungarians. Arriving at the detachment, on 26–27 June, he took part in the battle near the village of Koshno, the attack on Bystritsa and in the pursuit of the Hungarians to Seredfilvo. On 3 July, he participated in the battle at Galati, on 9 July – in the capture of the town of Safhegan and the pursuit of the enemy to the village of Sharonberk, and on 24 July, commanding two squadrons of the Elisavetgrad Uhlan Regiment, defeated the enemy rear guard near the village of Shariot. On 7 August 1849, Timashev was promoted to colonel, and on 10 August he was sent to Shabo, where he accepted the surrender of a 15–thousandth detachment of Hungarians. On 12 August, he left Hungary and went to Warsaw, where Nicholas I was at that time. On 6 December 1850, Colonel Timashev was appointed to the correcting position of Chief of Staff of the 3rd Reserve Cavalry Corps, with whom he took part in the campaign of 1854–1855 after the start of the
Crimean War The Crimean War was fought between the Russian Empire and an alliance of the Ottoman Empire, the Second French Empire, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Kingdom of Sardinia (1720–1861), Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont fro ...
. On 29 August 1855, he was appointed correcting the post of Chief of Staff of the 3rd Army Corps, which fought in the Crimea. On 13 September, he was confirmed in office. On 22 September 1855, he was promoted to major general with an appointment to the Retinue of His Majesty, with the retention of his post. On 16 February 1856, Timashev was instructed to hold a meeting at the Stone Bridge across the Black River with representatives of the Anglo–French troops to agree on the final terms of the armistice and determine the demarcation line. On 11 May 1856, he was dismissed from the post of Chief of Staff of the 3rd Army Corps, and on 26 August of the same year, he was appointed Chief of Staff of the Gendarme Corps and Manager of the 3rd Department of
His Imperial Majesty's Own Chancellery His Imperial Majesty's Own Chancellery or H.I.M. Own Chancellery () began as personal chancellery of Paul I and grew into a kind of regent's office, run by Count Arakcheyev from 1815 and until the death of Alexander I of Russia. Under Nicholas ...
. On 24 September 1856, he was also appointed a member of the General Directorate of Censorship, and on 20 December 1858, a member of the Committee of Railways. On 17 April 1859, he was awarded the rank of Adjutant General. From 10 September 1859, he temporarily served the duties of the Chief of Gendarmes and the Chief of the 3rd Department. Not getting along with his immediate superior, the Chief of the Gendarmes, Prince Vasily Dolgorukov, finding him too liberal, and also not agreeing with the basic principles of peasant reform, Timashev submitted a petition to relieve him of his post. On 18 March 1861, he was dismissed on indefinite leave. On 29 May 1863, he was appointed interim Governor–General of Kazan, Perm and Vyatka. On 30 August of the same year, he was promoted to
lieutenant general Lieutenant general (Lt Gen, LTG and similar) is a military rank used in many countries. The rank traces its origins to the Middle Ages, where the title of lieutenant general was held by the second-in-command on the battlefield, who was norma ...
. On 19 October 1864, he was dismissed from his post of Governor–General, due to its abolition. On 28 February 1865, Timashev received permission to leave "to Russia and abroad, until the illness was cured", with the preservation of his salary. Due to poor health, he left for the south of France, where he was engaged in sculpture and photography. After the death of Count Ivan Tolstoy, on 12 December 1867, Timashev received the post of Minister of Posts and Telegraphs, but already on 9 March 1868, the ministry was abolished, with the inclusion of its departments in the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and Timashev was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs, instead of Peter Valuev. On 12 June 1870, he was appointed Chairman of the Committee on Provincial and Uyezd Institutions, on 1 January 1872, he was promoted to General From the Cavalry, on 30 April 1872, he was appointed a member of the Committee for the Affairs of the Kingdom of Poland, in 1876 – Chairman of the Committee on the Application of the City Regulation of 1870 in the Baltic Cities Provinces. During Timashev's tenure as Minister of Internal Affairs, a city regulation was introduced in 1870, the transformation of peasant institutions in 1874 was made, the postal part was improved to a large extent, some General Governorships were abolished, the provinces of the
Kingdom of Poland The Kingdom of Poland (; Latin: ''Regnum Poloniae'') was a monarchy in Central Europe during the Middle Ages, medieval period from 1025 until 1385. Background The West Slavs, West Slavic tribe of Polans (western), Polans who lived in what i ...
were subordinated to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and the introduction of the Russian language in the Baltic provinces as an official and business language has begun. He was an opponent of bourgeois transformations, one of the active organizers of the struggle against the revolutionary and terrorist movement. On 27 November 1878, he was dismissed from the post of Minister of the Interior, leaving him in the Suite and being appointed a member of the
State Council State Council may refer to: Government * State Council of the People's Republic of China, the national cabinet and chief administrative authority of China, headed by the Premier * State Council of the Republic of Korea, the national cabinet of S ...
, in which he was a member of the committee on prison reform. In May 1883, he took part in the coronation ceremony of Emperor Alexander III and Empress Maria Feodorovna. On 15 May, during the Imperial exit to the Assumption Cathedral, he, together with Count Login Heyden, carried the Empress's purple. On the same day, he was enlisted in the lists of Her Majesty's Cavalry Regiment with the right to wear the regimental uniform. On 15 February 1885, he was appointed a member of the Special Committee to develop a draft regulation on the special advantages of the civil service in the distant parts of the empire. He died on 20 January 1893, in Saint Petersburg, was buried at the
Nikolskoe Cemetery Nikolskoe Cemetery () is a historic cemetery in the centre of Saint Petersburg. It is part of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, and is one of four cemeteries in the complex. The third cemetery to be established in the monastery complex, the Nikolskoe ...
of the
Alexander Nevsky Lavra Saint Alexander Nevsky Lavra or Saint Alexander Nevsky Monastery was founded by Peter I of Russia in 1710 at the eastern end of the Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg, in the belief that this was the site of the Neva Battle in 1240 when Alexa ...
(according to other sources, in the Tashla Family Estate in the Orenburg Province). According to the recollections of contemporaries, "a beautiful appearance, with a significant fortune, which multiplied after his marriage to Pashkova, skillfully dancing and possessing the talent for drawing caricatures, Timashev soon acquired great success and made a successful career". Timashev was fond of sculpting equestrian figurines and busts. Among his works are busts of Grand Duke
Mikhail Pavlovich Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich of Russia (; – ) was a Russian grand duke, the tenth child and fourth son of Paul I of Russia and his second wife, Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg, who took the name Maria Feodorovna. He was the younger brothe ...
and Emperor Alexander II, figures of Empresses Alexandra Feodorovna and Maria Feodorovna. Timashev's works were exhibited at academic exhibitions. In 1869, he was elected an honorary member of the Academy of Arts, and in 1889, he was awarded the title of academician of sculpture for the bust of Alexander II and statuettes made of terracotta and marble.


Awards and honorary titles

During his service, Adjutant General Timashev was awarded numerous awards.List of Generals by Seniority. Compiled on 1 January 1893 – Saint Petersburg, 1893 – Page 9


Russian


Foreign

Timashev was elected and approved an honorary citizen of the cities: Kazan (13 August 1864), Vyazma (3 January 1869), Kharkov (30 May 1869), Skopin (26 December 1869), Belgorod (10 April 1870), Orenburg (26 July 1870) Kaluga (25 December 1870),
Petrozavodsk Petrozavodsk (, ; Karelian language, Karelian, Veps language, Vepsian and ) is the capital city of the Republic of Karelia, Russia, which stretches along the western shore of Lake Onega for some . The population of the city is 280,890 as of 2022. ...
(19 June 1871), Saratov (29 October 1871), Nizhny Novgorod (9 August 1873), Tambov (9 August 1873), Gzhatsk (8 March 1874), Rybinsk (12 April 1874), Odessa (12 April 1874), Novgorod (14 June 1874),
Kamyshin Kamyshin ( rus, Камышин, p=kɐˈmɨʂɨn) is a city in Volgograd Oblast, Russia, located on the right bank of the Volgograd Reservoir of the Volga River, in the estuary of the Kamyshinka River. Its population was Past populations for Kam ...
(22 May 1875), Rostov (25 July 1875), Yekaterinoslav (9 January 1876), Penza (25 January 1876), Saransk (25 January 1876), Smolensk (1878). On 27 February 1873, he was elected an honorary member of the Pskov Ioanno–Ilyinsky Community of Sisters of Mercy, on 29 June 1873 – an honorary member of the Society of Zealots of Orthodoxy and Charity in the Northwest Territory, and on 25 November 1878 – an honorary member of the Imperial Society of Agriculture of Southern Russia.


Family

Wife (from 10 November 1848) – Ekaterina Pashkova (2 October 1829 – 15 October 1899), maid of honor of the court, daughter of Major General Alexander Pashkov (1792–1868) from a marriage with Elizaveta Kindyakova (1805–1854). According to Mikhail Osorgin, Madame Pashkov "was, if not a beauty in the full sense of the word, then, in any case, a very prominent, attractive person, and, as they said, was the subject of platonic adoration of her cousin Nikolai Mezentsev's entire life". She was "a sweet and gentle creature; she was engaged in children and housekeeping", wrote
Alexandra Smirnova Alexandra Osipovna Smirnova (, née Rosset, known also as Smirnova-Rosset, Russian: Смирнова-Россет; (6 March 1809, in Odessa, Russian Empire – 7 June 1882, in Paris, France) was a Russian Imperial court lady-in-waiting who served ...
about her. For the merits of her husband, on 28 March 1871, she was awarded a knightly lady of the
Order of Saint Catherine The Imperial Order of Saint Catherine () was an award of Imperial Russia. Instituted on 24 November 1714 by Peter the Great on the occasion of his marriage to Catherine I of Russia. For the majority of the time of Imperial Russia, it was the onl ...
(Lesser Cross). She was buried in the church fence of the village of Tashla, Orenburg Province, in the family crypt. Born in marriage: *Nikolai (1849–1877), was single; *Alexander (1857–1904), Orenburg Provincial Leader of the Nobility, equestrian; *Maria (1857–1943), married to the Cavalry Guard Ivan Musin–Pushkin; *Elizabeth (born 17 October 1861, Paris), goddaughter of Vasily Pashkov.


Poem by Alexey Tolstoy

Alexander Timashev entered the history of literature as the hero of the satirical poem by Alexey Tolstoybr>"History of the Russian State from Gostomysl to Timashev"
written in the year of his appointment as Minister of Internal Affairs (1868). The humorously exaggerated figure of the minister, as presented by Tolstoy, crowns the thousand–year–old Russian history and finally brings the "order" that was absent in Russia all this time, about which the narrator narrates in the "chronicle syllable":


Remembrance

On 30 October 2019, in Orenburg, opposite the building of the Office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the Orenburg Region, a bust of Alexander Timashev was installed.


References


Sources

*Pyotr Dolgorukov. Petersburg Sketches. Emigrant Pamphlets. 1860–1867 / Pyotr Dolgorukov; Executive Editor Nikolay Chulkov – Moscow: Yurayt, 2019 – pp. 71–75 – (Anthology of Thought) – *Ministry of the Interior. 1802–1902. Historical Sketch – Saint Petersburg, 1902 – pp. 108–109 *Collection of Biographies of Cavalry Guards. 1826–1908: On the Occasion of the Centenary of the Her Majesty's Cavalry Guards Regiment, Empress Maria Feodorovna / Edited by Sergei Panchulidzev – Saint Petersburg, 1908 – Volume 4 – pp. 134–135
Timashev, Alexander Egorovich
//
Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary The ''Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopaedic Dictionary'' (35 volumes, small; 86 volumes, large) is a comprehensive multi-volume encyclopaedia in Russian. It contains 121,240 articles, 7,800 images, and 235 maps. It was published in the Russian Em ...
: In 86 Volumes (82 Volumes and 4 Additional) – Saint Petersburg, 1890–1907 *Denis Shilov. Statesmen of the Russian Empire. 1802–1917: Bibliographic Reference – Edition 2 – Saint Petersburg, 2002 – pp. 724–727


External links


Timashev Alexander Egorovich
* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Timashev, Alexander Egorovich 1818 births 1893 deaths Recipients of the Order of St. Vladimir, 1st class Recipients of the Order of the White Eagle (Russia) Recipients of the Order of St. Vladimir, 2nd class Recipients of the Order of St. Anna, 1st class Recipients of the Order of Saint Stanislaus (Russian), 1st class Recipients of the Order of St. Vladimir, 3rd class Recipients of the Order of St. Anna, 2nd class Commanders Grand Cross of the Order of the Sword Knights Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus Grand Crosses of the Order of the Dannebrog Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour People of the Caucasian War Members of the State Council (Russian Empire)