Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. In office. 4 March 1764 – August 1774. Monarch. Catherine II of Russia. Zakhar Grigoryevich Chernyshev ( Russian: Захаръ Григорьевичь Чернышевъ; 1722 – 31 August 1784) was a Russian noble, courtier to Catherine the Great, Imperial Russian Army officer, and Imperial Russian politician in the 18th century.

  2. Zakhar Grigoryevich Chernyshev ( Russian: Захаръ Григорьевичь Чернышевъ; 1722 – 31 August 1784) was a Russian noble, courtier to Catherine the Great, Imperial Russian Army officer, and Imperial Russian politician in the 18th century.

  3. Wikipedia "Ivan Grigoryevich started his career serving under his more illustrious brother Zakhar Chernyshyov at the Russian missions in Copenhagen (1741) and Berlin (1742–45). In 1749 he was commanded to resign from diplomatic service and to marry Countess Elizabeth Yefimovskaya, a cousin of Empress Elizabeth.

    • November 24, 1726
    • February 26, 1797
  4. Count Zakhar Grigoryevich Chernyshov or Tchernyshov (Russian: Захар Григорьевич Чернышёв; 1722 - 1784), best known for the 1760 raid on Berlin, rose to become Minister of War to the empress Catherine the Great of Russia. He left no children and the Tchernyshov majorat, instituted by him, passed...

  5. In 1782 he was appointed governor of the Moscow Count Zakhar Chernyshyov, a famous military leader who lived on his estate in Tver. For him, the house was built, the palace became the residence of the governor general of Moscow, and after the revolution, occupied by Moscow City Council , now - the building of the Moscow City Hall.

    • 0.65 km (0.40 mi)
    • Вознесенский переулок (Russian)
    • 125032 , 125009 (single building)
  6. 7 de feb. de 2024 · Zakhar Chernyshyov was appointed the Governor General of the new territories on May 28, 1772. By the first partition the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth ...

  7. Life and career. He started his career serving under his more illustrious brother Zakhar Chernyshyov at the Russian missions in Copenhagen (1741) and Berlin (1742–45). In 1749 he was commanded to resign from diplomatic service and marry Countess Elizabeth Yefimovskaya, a cousin of Empress Elizabeth .