Nikolay Baranov (1837) Explained

Nikolay Mikhailovich Baranov
Native Name:Николай Михайлович Баранов
Native Name:instead.-->
Term Start:July 16, 1881
Term End:July 27, 1882
Predecessor:Modest Koniar
Successor:Pyotr Poltoratsky
Term Start2:July 31, 1882
Term End2:May 16, 1897
Predecessor2:Nikolay Bezak
Term Start3:1897
Term End3:1901
Birth Date:August 18, 1837
Death Date:August 25, 1901 (aged 64)
Branch:Navy
Awards:is not set -->

Nikolay Mikhailovich Baranov (August 6, 1837 – August 12, 1901) was a lieutenant general, Mayor of Saint Petersburg (from March 21 to August 24, 1881), Nizhny Novgorod Military Governor (from July 31, 1882, to May 16, 1897), and a senator. He was also inventor of the Baranov Rifle, Model 1869.

Biography

Baranov was born on the Luchkino Family Estate of the Kologriv Uyezd of the Kostroma Governorate in an old but not rich noble family.

Navy career

Following the example of his father and uncle, Nikolai Baranov chose the career of a naval officer. Educated at the Naval Cadet Corps, from where he was graduated in 1854. He took part in the Crimean War, in 1856, he was promoted to the first officer's rank. In 1858, he transferred from the navy to the Russian Society of Shipping and Trade, then returned to the navy, headed the model workshop of the Petersburg Port. In 1866–1877, he headed the Maritime Museum, brought it to a brilliant state, was engaged in the creation of naval expositions at various Russian and international exhibitions. He carried out work on deepening the Kronstadt Harbor.

On the eve of the Russian–Turkish War of 1877–1878, he proposed, based on his experience in the Russian Society of Shipping and Trade, to arm and use high–speed commercial ships for attacks on enemy sea communications. He was one of the first to realize such an idea, having received under his command the steamer "Vesta". On July 15, 1877, he was awarded the Order of Saint George of the 4th Degree for the distinction and then granted to the adjutant wing. During the campaign on the Black Sea, this ship withstood an unequal battle with the Turkish battleship "Fehti–Bulen" (another transcription – "Fehti–Bulend"). Subsequently, commanding the steamer "Russia", he seized the Turkish transport "Mersin" with numerous enemy troops. Received all–Russian fame and was promoted to Captain of the 1st Rank. However, this was followed by a scandal: Lieutenant Zinovy Rozhestvensky published an article in which he described the battle as a "shameful flight" and accused Nikolai Baranov of exaggerating the merits of Vesta.[1] In July 1878, a trial of this episode was scheduled, but a year later the Naval Ministry terminated the process against Rozhestvensky, suggesting that Baranov sue the lieutenant for civil insult. The offended captain asked for resignation, but he was refused, after which he submitted a memorandum to General Admiral Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich, in which he listed all the offenses inflicted on him, including the unpaid prize money for the seizure of the Mersina. The enraged General Admiral brought the note to the attention of Alexander II, after which Baranov was put on trial "for indecent and offensive expressions" used in this note.[2] In December 1879, Baranov was found guilty by the Saint Petersburg Naval Court and dismissed from service. On January 14, 1880, "it was most mercifully commanded to consider dismissed from service in consideration of his military merits".

In Saint Petersburg, he lived at 25 Znamenskaya Street.

Public service

In 1880, at the request of Mikhail Loris–Melikov, Captain 1st Rank Nikolai Baranov was pardoned and transferred to the police, "with the renaming of a colonel", and sent abroad to organize supervision of Russian revolutionaries.

At the beginning of 1881, Baranov was appointed Acting Governor of the Kovno Governorate.

After the assassination of Emperor Alexander II, he took up the post of Saint Petersburg Mayor in March–August 1881, to fight the terror of "Narodnaya Volya". His candidacy to Alexander III was advised by the Chief Prosecutor Konstantin Pobedonostsev, who wrote:

The metropolitan police, together with the gendarmes, arrested everyone who, in one way or another, was involved in the murder of the emperor. Five of the main terrorists were publicly executed on the Semyonovsky Parade Ground, the rest received various sentences.

After resigning from the post of Saint Petersburg Mayor, he tried to return to "big politics", proposing various projects. Later he was appointed governor of Arkhangelsk.

In 1882–1897, the Nizhny Novgorod Governor. In Nizhny Novgorod, Baranov was not called "eagle" for nothing, because they knew that Baranov always took responsibility and knew how to protect his subordinates. He was the first to call the consequences of the poor harvest of 1891 a famine, and he fought against this famine as required by emergency circumstances. Formally acting "outside the law", Baranov saved his province. When a cholera epidemic began in Nizhny Novgorod in 1892, Baranov, with the same decisiveness, with the same enthusiasm, saved the All–Russian Fair not only from the epidemic, but also from the panic associated with it. On the Volga, floating hospitals–barracks were organized; when there was not enough space in them, Baranov, without hesitation, took his residence under the cholera hospital. When the first signs of cholera riots appeared, Baranov gave a short order:

A man with an iron will in matters to which he attached importance to the state, Baranov in his private life was a gentle and extremely kind person. All in debt, pawning his own things, he helped not only his acquaintances, but even more often his subordinates. Respect for the press was a characteristic feature of Baranov. Perfectly owning the pen, he appeared with articles in periodicals at different times and on different issues. He insisted that the newspapers print accurate information about the course of the epidemic at a time when these figures were hidden in other cities: Baranov himself believed and knew how to convince others that truth saves, and lies and deception always only ruin.

Since 1897 – Senator.

Some contemporaries considered him a tyrant, an intriguer, a charlatan, but others were convinced that Baranov...

He died on July 30, 1901, abroad, was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery[3] in Saint Petersburg; the grave is lost.[4] The grandson, Nikolai Voronovich, devoted several chapters to his grandfather in his memoirs.

Interesting Facts

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Alexander Vitmer. What I Saw, I Heard, Whom I Knew – Saint Petersburg, 2005
  2. Pobedonostsev's Letters to Alexander III, Volume 1. Moscow, 1925 – Page 223
  3. [Media:План Новодевичьего кладбища, 1914.jpg|The Grave on the Plan of the Novodevichy Cemetery (No. 29)]
  4. Book: Arseny Dubin. Alexander Kobak, Yuri Piryutko. Historical Cemeteries of Saint Petersburg. Moscow; Saint Petersburg. Centerpolygraph; MiM Delta. 2009. 978-5-9524-4025-8. Korostelev. 472–503.