Aleksandr Nelidov

Aleksandr Nelidov (1838–1910) was a Russian diplomat.

Aleksandr Nelidov.

Early life

He was born in St. Petersburg.[1] He studied law and Oriental languages in St. Petersburg University.

Career

He entered diplomatic service in 1855. He was Secretary to the Russian embassies at Athens, Munich and Vienna.

In 1872 he became Councillor to the Russian embassy in Constantinople. He directed the diplomatic office at the headquarters of the Russian army during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878. He was an active part in negotiations that led to the Peace treaty of San Stefano and later the Treaty of Berlin.

He was Ambassador to Saxony in 1879. Nelidov helped settle the Armenian question and Balkan difficulties. He was Ambassador to Italy (1897–1903) and Ambassador to France (1903–1910).

He presided over the 1907 Hague Peace Conference.

He died from apoplexy on 18 September 1910, which he contracted while passing through Munich on 8 August.[2]

gollark: The machine code for them is excessively complex too, now, but I suppose you mostly write Haskell and whatnot which is then compiled to that.
gollark: They have ridiculously complex manufacturing processes because the transistors are on the scale of a few hundred atoms, it's crazy.
gollark: Also, with your processor comment, you are kind of underselling the complexity involved. It's not separate transistors, they're all just made on large bits of silicon together and wired up. Billions of them per processor.
gollark: In the case of games, which are basically just *information*, though, you can both use it because it can be copied (assuming no DRM meddling).
gollark: Quantum electrodynamics is still an important field of study.

References

  1. "RUSSIAN DIPLOMAT DYING IN FRANCE OF APOPLEXY". Los Angeles Herald. 37 (351). 17 September 1910. Retrieved 22 January 2015 via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  2. "A.DE NELIDoFF, DIPLOMAT, DEAD". The New York Times. 18 September 1910. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  • Out of My Past: The Memoirs of Count Kokovtsov Edited by H.H. Fisher and translated by Laura Matveev; Stanford University Press, 1935.
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