Friedrich von der Pahlen

Friedrich Alexander Graf[1] von der Pahlen (Russian: Фёдор Петрович Пален, Fyodor Petrovich Palen; September 2, 1780 in Mitau January 8, 1863 in Saint Petersburg) was a Baltic German diplomat and administrator.

Biography

Friedrich was the youngest son of Peter Ludwig von der Pahlen, a prominent Russian courtier. He worked at Russian diplomatic missions in Sweden, France and Great Britain. In 1809-1811 he was Imperial Russia's Ambassador to the United States, in 1811-1815 he was the Ambassador to Brazil and in 1815-1822 he was the Ambassador to Bavaria.

Later, he became the General-Governor of Novorossiya and the namestnik (deputy) of Bessarabia (following the departure of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov to the Caucasus). He was also a member of the State Council of Imperial Russia. In the context of the Russo-Turkish War of 1828-1829, Pahlen served as governor of the Danubian Principalities, which were administered by Russia pending the payment of war reparations by the Ottoman Empire (his official title was that of Plenipotentiary President of the Divans in Moldavia and Wallachia); he was replaced by Pyotr Zheltukhin on February 2, 1829.[2]

In Jewish history, Pahlen is credited with opening of the first secular Jewish school in Odessa.[3]

Notes

  1. Regarding personal names: Until 1919, Graf was a title, translated as Count, not a first or middle name. The female form is Gräfin. In Germany since 1919, it forms part of family names.
  2. Giurescu, p.122
  3. Sem40.ru Archived 2006-10-09 at the Wayback Machine
gollark: And economists say that getting closer to *full* employment increases inflation, which is bad, so you could sell off your excess employment to reduce inflation!
gollark: They can just have negative GDP.
gollark: Small ones with undeveloped economies or ones with unelected leaders!
gollark: You could do this with GDP too, and other metrics, actually.
gollark: They would *look* more stable on graphs.

References



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