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  1. In 1816 the Emperor Alexander I appointed his confidant, Aleksei Petrovich Yermolov 1 as Governor and Chief Administrator of Georgia and the Cauacus, Commander-in-Chief of the Separate Georgian Army Corps (soon to be renamed the ‘Independent Caucasian Infantry Corps’) and Ambassador Extraordinary to the Court of Fath `Ali Shah, the second Qajar ruler of what was known than as ‘Persia’.

  2. Aleksey Petrovich Yermolov (Russian: Алексе́й Петро́вич Ермо́лов; 4 June [O.S. 24 May] 1777 – 23 April [O.S. 11 April] 1861) was a Russian Imperial general of the 19th century who commanded Russian troops in the Caucasian War. He served in all the Russian campaigns against the French, except for the 1799 campaigns of Alexander Suvorov in northern Italy and ...

  3. Alexander Petrovič Yermolov (v ruštině : Александр Петрович Ермолов ; 1754-24. března 1835), je ruský generál. Byl oblíbencem a milovníkem Velké Kateřiny. Životopis. Yermolov byl představen k Catherine by Grigorij Potěmkin, testováno Anna Protassova, a stal se Kateřiny milenkou

  4. Yermolov, Alexey. The Czar's General: The Memoirs of a Russian General in the Napoleonic Wars. Translated and edited by Alexander Mikaberidze. Welwyn Garden City: Ravenhall Books, 2005. 252 Pages. ISBN# 1905043058. Hardcopy. $34.95. Dr. Alexander Mikaberidze has opened another door to the Russian Army of the Napoleonic Wars following on his ...

  5. Emperor Alexander I was outraged and ordered three officers arrested and put in military confinement, which at that the time was guarded by the English. Ermolov stepped up, explaining to the Emperor that it was inappropriate to humiliate the Russian military in such a way in the eyes of foreigners and that the arrested officers should be transferred to Russian military quarters.

  6. Honoured and advanced by his new patron, the dashing Emperor Alexander, Yermolov then made rapid progress. He witnessed firsthand Napoleon's invasion of Russia in 1812 and went on to see revenge completed when the Russians marched into Paris in April 1814. Yermolov was a talented general who captured the spirit of his times in his engaging memoirs.

    • Alexander Mikaberidze
  7. 16 de nov. de 2010 · Extremely wary and expansive, he accused many gifted Russian officers, Alexei Yermolov among them, of treason and scheming against him as the head of state. Yermolov spent several years in a prison cell at the famous Petropavlovsk fortress in St. Petersburg and was released only in 1801, when Paul I was succeeded by Alexander I as Emperor.