Baron Georg Andreas von[a] Rosen (Grigory Vladimirovich Rosen; Russian: Григорий Владимирович Розен, romanized: Grigoriy Vladimirovich Rozen; 1782–1841) was a general of the Russian Imperial Army who served as (de facto) Viceroy of the Caucasus from 1831 to 1837. He was one of the key figures of the Caucasian War.
A baron (Freiherr) of Baltic German ancestry (his father's name was Vladimir Ivanovich Rosen [ru] and his mother was Olimpiada Fyodorovna Raevskaya[1]), he was formally enlisted in the army at the age of seven. He took part in the Napoleonic Wars, the Finnish War, fought at Borodino and served with Russian forces all the way to Paris.[2] Promoted to major general in 1809, he quickly rose through the ranks and in 1826 was promoted to a full general of infantry rank.
Rosen was designated the commanding officer of the 6th Lithuanian Corps in 1827. He was thrust into prominence by the Uprising of 1831, participated at Wawer, and acted decisively at Grochów, winning the Czar's admiration; but Rosen was then defeated at Iganie and at Międzyrzec Podlaski.
In 1831, he succeeded Ivan Paskevich as commander in chief of the Caucasus Army and remained in charge of the vast area stretching from Astrakhan to Yerevan (including all of Georgia) until 1837. In this capacity he neutralized the 1832 Georgian plot and eliminated the threat of Ghazi Muhammad (whom he besieged at his native village of Gimry).[3] In the same year he took part in assault on Germenchuk. He also forced Shamil to leave Avaria for two years. He suffered a debilitating stroke in 1839. Rosen died in Moscow and was buried in the Danilov Monastery.[2]
Baron Rosen married Countess Elizaveta Zubova in 1812. She was Platon Zubov's niece. Their daughter Praskovia became a nun under the name of Mitrophania and was in charge of the Vladychny Convent between 1861 and 1874. A domineering and highly influential person, she was arrested for faking promissory notes and, after a highly publicized trial, was sentenced to exile in Siberia. Alexander Ostrovsky based his play Wolves and Sheep on his impressions of attending the court proceedings in 1874.
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Transcription
You seem to have had a special experience in the Poland campaign? Haven't you just been sent to West Prussia? Yes. So you had the opportunity to liberate your own homeland as a soldier of our leader! Where have you been the last time? Ulrich Wilhelm Graf Schwerin von Schwanenfeld has witnessed the atrocities in the East with his own eyes. Before his execution, he states in his testament that in his forest in East Prussia a wooden cross shall be placed, with the following inscription: Here rest 1,400 Christians and Jews. God rest their souls and be gracious to the souls of their murderers. You only can have been driven by a pervert love of Germany. Pervert! Mr. President, my personal political experiences have brought many difficulties for me, because I've been working very long for the germanisme in Poland and have noticed multiple back-and-forth in the attitude towards the Poles. Hmm. That's a... ...multiple back-and-forth, and you are blaming the national socialism for that? I was thinking of the many murders... Murders?! ... that happened at home as abroad... You are just a shabby lump! Do you break under your meanness? Yes or no, do you break? Mr. President... Yes or no! A clear answer! No! Of course not. You can also no longer break, cause you're just a pile of misery that has no respect for himself.
Notes
- ^ In German personal names, von is a preposition which approximately means of or from and usually denotes some sort of nobility. While von (always lower case) is part of the family name or territorial designation, not a first or middle name, if the noble is referred to by his last name, use Schiller, Clausewitz or Goethe, not von Schiller, etc.
References
- ^ Genealogisches Handbuch der baltischen Ritterschaften. Teil Estland. Görlitz, 1930. Bd 1. pp. 221–222
- ^ a b "Словарь русских генералов".
- ^ "РОЗЕН ГРИГОРИЙ ВЛАДИМИРОВИЧ ФОН • Большая российская энциклопедия - электронная версия".