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Karl Nesselrode

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Karl von Nesselrode
Foreign Minister of the Russian Empire
In office
August 1816 – 15 April 1856
Serving with Ioannis Kapodistrias
(1816–1822)
Preceded byNikolay Rumyantsev
Succeeded byAlexander Gorchakov
Personal details
Born(1780-12-14)14 December 1780
Lisbon, Kingdom of Portugal
Died23 March 1862(1862-03-23) (aged 81)
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
SpouseMaria Guryeva
ChildrenElena von Nesselrode
Dimitri von Nesselrode
Marie von Nesselrode
Parent(s)Count Wilhelm Karl von Nesselrode (father)
Louise Gontard (mother)

Karl Robert Reichsgraf[1] von Nesselrode-Ehreshoven, also known as Charles de Nesselrode (Russian: Карл Васильевич Нессельроде, romanizedKarl Vasilyevich Nesselrode; 14 December 1780 – 23 March 1862), was a Russian diplomat of German noble descent. For 40 years (1816–1856), Nesselrode guided Russian policy as foreign minister. He was also a leading European conservative statesman of the Holy Alliance.

Coat of arms of the comital Nesselrode family of 1710, in the Baltic Coat of arms book by Carl Arvid von Klingspor in 1882.[2]
Coat of arms of the Huguenot Gontard family of Karl's mother, Louise Gontard (1746–1785)

Early life

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Karl was born at sea[3][4] near Lisbon, Portugal into the prominent Uradel German House of Nesselrode, which originated in the Bergisches Land near the Rhine. His father Count Wilhelm Karl von Nesselrode (1724–1810), a Count of the Holy Roman Empire, served at the time as the ambassador to Portugal for the German-born Russian empress. His mother was Louise Gontard (1746–1785), whose family belonged to Huguenot noble families from Dauphiné that fled from France to Germany in 1700. In deference to his mother's Protestantism he was baptized in the chapel of the British Embassy, thus becoming a member of the Church of England.[5]

Biography

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After his father became the Russian ambassador to the Prussian court about 1787, Nesselrode's education in a Berlin gymnasium reinforced his Germanic roots.[6] Even though Nesselrode would work for the Russians for the next few decades of his life, he could neither read nor write Russian and spoke it only brokenly.

In 1788, at the age of 8, he officially entered the Imperial Russian Navy. With his father's influence, he secured the position of naval aide-de-camp to Emperor Paul (r. 1796–1801).[6]

He then transferred to the Imperial Russian Army, and entered diplomatic service under Paul I's son and successor, Emperor Alexander I. He was attached to the Russian embassy at Berlin, and transferred thence to The Hague.[6]

In August 1806 Nesselrode received a commission to travel in southern Germany to report on the French troops there; he was then attached as diplomatic secretary to General Mikhail Kamensky, and then to (ethnic German) generals Friedrich Wilhelm von Buxhoeveden and Levin August von Bennigsen in succession.[6]

He was present at the inconclusive Battle of Eylau in January 1807, fought by Count von Bennigsen, and assisted at the negotiations of the Peace of Tilsit[6] (July 1807), for which he was commended by Spanish Bonapartist Diego Fernandez de Velasco, 13th Duke of Frías (who in 1811 would die in exile in Paris). During negotiations he was seated at the table with Napoleon I.

Following the Congress of Erfurt in 1808, Nesselrode was secretly accredited by Alexander to serve as his unofficial channel of information between himself and Talleyrand and the marquis de Caulaincourt, formerly ambassador in St Petersburg, both of whom were hostile to Napoleon's policy of aggression. After the breach of diplomatic relations with Russia in 1811, Nesselrode returned to St Petersburg by way of Vienna in order to exchange views with Metternich. He sought to persuade Alexander to open negotiations with Napoleon, if only to throw the onus of breaking the peace entirely on the French side. He joined the tsar's headquarters at Vilna in March 1812 and, though Rumiantzov was still foreign minister, it was Nesselrode who directed the foreign policy of Russia from this time forward.[6]

Nesselrode's tomb in the Smolensky Lutheran Cemetery

Nesselrode was present at the battle of Leipzig and accompanied the invading army to Paris; he negotiated the capitulation of Auguste de Marmont and Édouard Mortier at Clichy, and signed the Treaty of Chaumont on 1 March 1814. His former relations with Talleyrand facilitated negotiations in Paris, and his influence with the emperor was used in favour of the restoration of the Bourbons, and, after the Battle of Waterloo, against the imposition of a ruinous war indemnity on France.[6]

Nesselrode became State Secretary in 1814 and was the head of Russia's official delegation to the Congress of Vienna, but for the most part Alexander I acted as his own foreign minister. In 1816, Nesselrode became Russian foreign minister, sharing the position with Count Ioannis Kapodistrias until the latter's retirement in 1822.

For forty years, Nesselrode guided Russian policy and was a leading European conservative statesman of the Holy Alliance. He was a key contributor in the construction of the peaceable congress system after the Napoleonic Wars. Between 1845 and 1856, he served as Chancellor of the Russian Empire. As Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1824, he was a plenipotentiary during negotiations with the United States in defining the boundary between Russian America and the American claims known as the Oregon Country, which were resolved with the Russo-American Treaty of 1824, and a parallel treaty with Britain concerning British claims which overlapped with those of the U.S. A century later in 1924, Mount Nesselrode in the Boundary Ranges of the Alaska-British Columbia boundary was named for him.[7]

Nesselrode is credited as the person who first coined the name "Tournament of Shadows", which was the Russian name for the long rivalry that existed between the Russian Empire and the British Empire beginning in the late 18th and lasting well into the 19th centuries, caused primarily by border tension in Central Asia and India.[8]

In 1849 Nesselrode sent Russian troops to aid Austria in putting down the Hungarian Revolution led by Lajos Kossuth.

One frequently-overlooked facet of Nesselrode's activity involved his attempts to penetrate Japan's self-isolation. In 1853 he dispatched Yevfimiy Putyatin with a letter to the shōgun; Putyatin returned to Saint Petersburg with the favorable Treaty of Shimoda (signed 1855).

Nesselrode's efforts to expand Russia's influence in the Balkans and Mediterranean led to conflicts with the Ottoman Empire, Britain, France, and the Kingdom of Sardinia, which all became allies opposing Russia in the Crimean War (1853–1856). Britain and France, unhappy with Russia's growing influence, determined to support Turkey and so restrict Russia.

Nesselrode's autobiography was published posthumously in 1866.

Marriage and issue

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He was married to Russian noblewoman Maria Guryeva (1786–1849) and had issue:

  • Countess Elena von Nesselrode (1815–1875) married Count Michail Chreptowicz (1809–1892); didn't have issue
  • Count Dimitri von Nesselrode (1816–1891) married Countess Lydia Zakrevskaya (1826–1884); had issue
  • Countess Marie von Nesselrode (1820–1888) married Count Albin Leo von Seebach (1811–1884); had issue[9]

Honours

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Cuisine legacy

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Foods named in his honour but devised by his chef M. Jean Mouy[11] using chestnut puree[12] are-

  • Nesselrode Pudding (Pouding à la Nesselrode), a thick custard cream with sweet puree of chestnut, raisins, candied fruit, currants, cherry liquor and whipped cream molded and served chilled as a bombe with maraschino custard sauce.[13]
  • Nesselrode Pie, a chestnut custard cream pie

References

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  1. ^ Regarding personal names: Reichsgraf is a title, usually translated as 'Imperial Count', not a first or middle name. The female form is Reichsgräfin. Titles using the prefix Reichs- were not created after the fall of the Holy Roman Empire.
  2. ^ von Klingspor, Carl Arvid, ed. (1882). "Baltisches Wappenbuch : Wappen sämmtlicher der Ritterschaften von Livland, Estland, Kurland und Oesel zugehöriger Adelsgeschlechter | DIGAR". www.digar.ee (in Estonian). F & G Beijer.
  3. ^ Appletons' annual cyclopaedia and register of important events of the year: 1862. New York: D. Appleton & Company. 1863. p. 641. NESSELRODE, Count Karl Robert von, a Russian statesman, born on board of a Russian frigate in the harbor of Lisbon, Dec. 14, 1770 [...].
  4. ^ Golovin, Ivan Gavrilovich (1854). "Menshikoff, Orloff, Nesselrode". The Nations of Russia and Turkey and Their Destiny. London: Trübner. p. 149. Retrieved 21 March 2019. Charles Albert, Count Nesselrode, was born in 1770, on board an English vessel in sight of Lisbon.
  5. ^ Compare: Golovin, Ivan Gavrilovich (1854). "Menshikoff, Orloff, Nesselrode". The Nations of Russia and Turkey and Their Destiny. London: Trübner. p. 149. Retrieved 21 March 2019. His parents were Germans in the Russian service, and as there was no Protestant minister in the vessel, he was baptized according to the Anglican rite. England therefore, may claim the honour of reckoning him among her citizens.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Nesselrode, Karl Robert, Count". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 405–406.
  7. ^ "Nesselrode, Mount". BC Geographical Names.
  8. ^ "Great Game | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 3 February 2024.
  9. ^ "Karl Robert (Karl Vasil'evich) von Nesselrode". 2 December 1780.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q 1824/diploamtic Code /treaty with russia in: Diplomatic Code of the United States of America: Embracing a Collection of ... Door Jonathan Elliot
  11. ^ p.76 Loohuizen, Ria On Chestnuts: The Trees and Their Seeds Prospect, 2006
  12. ^ "DE GUSTIBUS; the Culinary Mystery of Nesselrode Pie". The New York Times. 7 December 1988.
  13. ^ p. 128 The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets Oxford University Press, 1 Apr 2015

Further reading

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  • Cowles, Loyal. "The Failure to Restrain Russia: Canning, Nesselrode, and the Greek Question, 1825–1827." International History Review 12.4 (1990): 688–720.
  • Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy. The foreign ministers of Alexander I: political attitudes and the conduct of Russian diplomacy, 1801–1825 (University of California Press, 1969)
  • Ingle, Harold N. Nesselrode and the Russian rapprochement with Britain, 1836–1844 (University of California Press, 1976)
  • Jelavich, Barbara. St. Petersburg and Moscow: Tsarist and Soviet Foreign Policy, 1814–1974 (1974)
  • Schroeder, Paul W. The transformation of European politics, 1763–1848 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994)
Preceded by Foreign Minister of Russia
1816–1856
with Ioannis Kapodistrias (1816–1822)
Succeeded by