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  1. Pyotr Stepanovich Kotlyarevsky (23 June 1782 – 2 November 1852) was a Russian military hero of the early 19th century. Biography. He was born in the village of Olkhovatka near Kharkiv into a cleric's family. Kotlyarevsky was brought up in an infantry regiment quartered near Mozdok.

    • 17th Jäger Regiment, Georgian 14th Grenadier Regiment
    • Imperial Russian Army
  2. 2 de abr. de 2019 · Kotlyarevsky, Pyotr Stepanovich. Russian military man, infantry general. Born June 12 (23), 1782, in the village of Olkhovatka, Kupyansky County, Kharkov Province, in the family of a clergyman. Studied in Kharkov Clerical College. Since 1793, was raised in the infantry regiment in Mozdok.

  3. Pyotr Kotlyarevsky, general ruso (n. 1782) Pyotr Stepanovich Kotlyarevsky (23 de junio de 1782 - 2 de noviembre de 1852) fue un héroe militar ruso de principios del siglo XIX.

  4. Piotr Stepanovich Kotlyarevsky; Apodo: Meteoro General, Caucásico Suvorov: Fecha de nacimiento: 12 (23) de junio de 1782: Lugar de nacimiento: Olkhovatka, Kupyansky Uyezd, Virreinato de Voronezh, Imperio Ruso; Fecha de muerte: 21 de octubre ( 2 de noviembre) de 1851 (69 años) Un lugar de muerte: Feodosia, Gobernación de Tauride, Imperio Ruso ...

    • Historical Context
    • Poland
    • A Deteriorating Relationship
    • Austrian Involvement
    • The Role of Sweden
    • Prussian Indecision
    • Russian Military Preparations
    • Final Preparations

    This timeline forms part of our close-up on: Napoleon's Russian campaign: the march to the Niemen. Following Napoleon's victory at Austerlitz, Russia declared war on the Ottoman Empire, intent on capturing vast swathes of Turkish territory after Ottoman forces had deposed the pro-Russian rulers of Wallachia and Moldavia. Russian troops overran Mold...

    Poland was to prove a key point of contention between Russia and France. Any potential alliance discussed by the two rulers was stymied by their respective reluctance to compromise. Alexander wanted a clear and forthright declaration that Napoleon would support no independent Polish state, whilst Napoleon saw no need to make such a commitment, and ...

    The grievances were beginning to stack up. At the end of 1810, a large number of vessels from a convoy carrying British goods and proceeding through the Baltic successfully landed in Russian ports as neutral ships or were simply left to continue their journey. Napoleon realised that Alexander no longer had any intention of respecting what they had ...

    By 25 April 1811, Napoleon had made it clear to Metternich that – contrary to initial indications to von Schwarzenberg in September 1810 – any coming conflict would require active participation from Austria. This gave Austria and Francis I understandable cause for concern, particularly with regards to Galicia (part of modern day Poland and Ukraine)...

    On 19 January 1812, Napoleon authorised Davout to invade and occupy Swedish Pomerania, ostensibly to reinforce the Continental Blockade that was being flouted and secure the French flank for the upcoming campaign. Napoleon also saw the occupation as punishment for Sweden's lax enforcement of his blockade system. French troops under General Friant c...

    After months of dithering, Prussia – caught between Russia and France – finally came down on the side of the French. Alexander I's decision to pursue a defensive policy in the upcoming conflict effectively pushed Prussia into a reluctant alliance with Napoleon. Frederick William III explained to Alexander in a letter dated 19 (Julian)/31 (Gregorian...

    Russian planning for the war began as early as 1810, with the publication of Barclay de Tolly's memorandum “The Defence of Russia's Western Frontiers” in March 1810. There was a distinct lack of fortifications along the vast western border of the empire (the last threat to this wing of the empire had been mounted by Sweden's Charles XII, who was de...

    On 25 April, Napoleon dispatched Count Narbonne to Alexander's side to try and buy some more time for the French emperor to further the military preparations already in progress. On 27 April, Russia's ambassador in Paris, Prince Kurakin, threatened to leave the capital if a definitive answer to his note demanding the withdrawal of French troops fro...

  5. Pyotr Stepanovich Kotlyarevsky (June 23, 1782 – November 2, 1852) was a Russian military hero of the early 19th century. He was born in the village of Olkhovatka near Kharkov into a cleric's family. Kotlyarevsky was brought up in an infantry regiment quartered near Mozdok.

  6. The poet and playwright Kotlyarevsky was the creator and father of modern Ukrainian literature. He devoted the major part of his life to the creation, in burlesque travesty style, of the poem Aeneid, which parodies Virgil’s epic.