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Pushchin, Ivan Petrovich, quartermaster general of the fleet, lieutenant general, senator; descended from the nobility and was the son of Pyotr Ivanovich P., also the quartermaster general of the fleet; born in 1754, mind. October 7, 1842 in St. Petersburg, buried at the Smolensk cemetery. In 1765, P. entered the Naval gentry corps as a cadet, on December 15, 1769 he was promoted to midshipmen, from 1769 to 1772 he sailed annually from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk on kicks "Elephant" and "Narchin" and from Arkhangelsk to Kronstadt on ship No. 1, and on September 15, 1771 he was promoted to midshipman. In 1772, on the ship Graf Orlov, in the squadron of Rear Admiral Chichagov, he moved from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk, and on October 28 he participated in the battle of Patras; from 1773 to 1775 on the same ship he was cruising in the Archipelago, in 1775 and 1776. on the frigate "Bohemia" he moved from Livorno to Kronstadt, and on April 21, 1777 he was promoted to lieutenant. In 1778, P. was appointed to command the court yacht "Peterhof", from 1779 to 1786 he annually sailed on the ships of the galley fleet, on May 1, 1783 he was promoted to captain-lieutenant, from March 18, 1784 to On April 25, 1785, he was on a business trip in Smolensk to build ships, of which he built 52; for these works, P. on April 29, 1785 was awarded the Order of St.. Vladimir 4th degree. On May 17, 1787, P. was promoted to captain of the 2nd rank; in the same year, commanding the Dnepr galley, he sailed from Kyiv to Yekaterinoslavl as part of a flotilla on which the Empress was, and on May 5, 1788, he was appointed captain over the galley port; in 1788, under his supervision, 27 ships were prepared and sent to the campaign, in 1789 - 79 ships, in 1790 - 72 ships; in addition, 30 landing craft and 50 boats were built for them. For his work on equipping ships, P. in 1789 was awarded the order St. Vladimir of the 3rd class, on January 1, 1790, he was promoted to captain of the 1st rank, in 1793 (February 28), by definition of the Admiralty College, he was sent to Kronstadt and there (on the 8th March) assumed the position of captain over the port of Kronstadt, where ships and frigates were repaired under his supervision, as well as ships were equipped for the campaign. On November 13, 1796, P. was promoted to captain of the brigadier rank; the same year he returned from Kronstadt to St. Petersburg and took up the post of present in the Quartermaster's Expedition. On September 23, 1798, he was promoted to major general, on November 13, 1802 - to lieutenant general, in the same year he was the manager of the Executive Expedition with the rank of quartermaster general, and on April 4, 1805 - to lieutenant general. appointed temporary member of the Admiralty College. On March 10, 1806, P. was appointed manager of the Economic Expedition of the Naval General-Kriegs Commissariat; on December 23, 1808, he was awarded the Order of St. Anna of the 1st class, in October 1809, together with the Economic Expedition of the Admiralty College, he was entrusted with the management of the Executive Expedition. On May 1, 1810, P. Handed over the Economic Expedition to Major General Shishmarev, and on August 10, 1821, he was ordered to be present in the Governing Senate. On August 29, 1821, P. was appointed to the Land Survey Department of the Senate, in 1832 - to the temporary general meeting, and in 1834 he was awarded the Knight of the Order of the White Eagle.

Official list on the service of Senator I.P. Pushchin for 1834; "General Marine List", part IV, the reign of Catherine II, S.-Pb. 1890, p. 636; Monthly calendar for 1844, p. 167; "Proceedings of the Ryazan Scientific Archival Commission" 1888, vol. III, p. 92; "Inventory of cases of the Ryazan Historical Archive", Vol. II; V. V. Rummel, Genealogical collection, vol. II, S.-Pb. 1887

lieutenant general, participant in the Russian-Turkish war of 1769-1774, senator

Origin

He came from the nobility of the Ostashkovsky district of the Tver province. Son of Admiral Pyotr Ivanovich Pushchin (1723-1812).

Biography

In 1765 he entered the Naval gentry corps as a cadet and on December 15, 1769 he was promoted to the rank of midshipman. In 1769-1772 he made training voyages from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk on the ships "Elephant" and "Narchin" and on September 15, 1772 he was promoted to the rank of midshipman.

In 1772, on the 66-gun ship Graf Orlov as part of a squadron under the command of Rear Admiral V. Ya. Chichagov, he moved from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk, and on October 28 he participated in the battle of Patras. In 1773-1775 on the same ship he was cruising in the Archipelago, and in 1775-1776 on the frigate Bohemia he moved from Livorno to Kronstadt and on April 21, 1777 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant.

In 1778, Pushchin was appointed to command the Peterhof court yacht, and in 1779-1786 sailed on the ships of the galley fleet. On May 1, 1783, he was promoted to lieutenant commander. From March 18, 1784 to April 25, 1785 he was on a business trip in Smolensk to build ships. For these works, Pushchin was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th degree.

On May 17, 1787, Pushchin was promoted to the rank of captain of the 2nd rank and in the same year, commanding the Dnepr galley, sailed from Kyiv to Yekaterinoslav as part of the flotilla on which Catherine II was.

On May 5, 1788, Ivan Petrovich was appointed captain of the galley port, and in the same year, under his supervision, twenty-seven ships were prepared and sent to the company, the next - seventy-nine ships, and in 1790 - seventy-two ships. In addition, thirty landing craft and fifty boats were built for them. In 1789, Pushchin was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir of the 3rd degree for his work on equipping ships, and on January 1, 1790 he was promoted to the rank of captain of the 1st rank.

Since 1793, by definition of the Admiralty Board, he was sent to Kronstadt and there he assumed the position of captain over the Kronstadt port, where ships and frigates were repaired under his supervision, as well as ships were equipped for the company. November 13, 1796 Pushchin was promoted to the rank of captain of the brigadier rank. In 1797, Pushchin was awarded a patent for the command of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem.

On March 26, Ivan Petrovich was appointed chief quartermaster, on April 6 he surrendered the port and took charge of the quartermaster expedition. On September 23, 1798, he was promoted to the rank of major general, in 1802 to the rank of lieutenant general, and on April 4, 1805, he was appointed a temporary member of the Admiralty Board. In 1806, Pushchin was appointed manager of the Economic Expedition of the Naval General-Kriegs Commissariat, and in October 1808 he was appointed manager of the Executive Expedition, leaving his previous position. December 23, 1808 he was awarded the Order of St. Anne 1st degree. On May 1, 1810, Pushchin was released from the management of the Economic Expedition.

On August 10, 1821, he was ordered to be present in the Government Senate, with a subsequent appointment to the Land Survey Department of the Senate. In 1834 Pushchin was awarded the Order of the White Eagle.

Family

Wife, Alexandra Mikhailovna, nee Ryabinina, sister Novgorod governor E. M. Ryabinina (1768-1827).

He had 4 sons: Mikhail (died in 1869) - a Decembrist, later a commandant in Bobruisk; Ivan - collegiate assessor, former officer, Decembrist; Nicholas - Privy Councilor; Peter - court adviser, and 6 daughters.



Plan:

    Introduction
  • 1 Origin
  • 2 Biography
  • 3 Family
  • Sources

Introduction

Ivan Petrovich Pushchin (1754(1754 ) - October 19, 1842, St. Petersburg) - lieutenant general, participant Russian-Turkish war 1769-1774, senator.


1. Origin

He came from the nobility of the Ostashkovsky district of the Tver province. Son of Admiral Pyotr Ivanovich Pushchin (1723-1812).

2. Biography

In 1765 he entered the Naval gentry corps as a cadet and on December 15, 1769 he was promoted to the rank of midshipman. In 1769-1772 he made training voyages from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk on the ships "Elephant" and "Narchin" and on September 15, 1772 he was promoted to the rank of midshipman.

In 1772, on the 66-gun ship Graf Orlov as part of a squadron under the command of Rear Admiral V. Ya. Chichagov, he moved from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk, and on October 28 he participated in the battle of Patras. In 1773-1775 on the same ship he was cruising in the Archipelago, and in 1775-1776 on the frigate Bohemia he moved from Livorno to Kronstadt and on April 21, 1777 he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant.

In 1778, Pushchin was appointed to command the Peterhof court yacht, and in 1779-1786 sailed on the ships of the galley fleet. On May 1, 1783, he was promoted to lieutenant commander. From March 18, 1784 to April 25, 1785 he was on a business trip in Smolensk to build ships. For these works, Pushchin was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th degree.

On May 17, 1787, Pushchin was promoted to the rank of captain of the 2nd rank and in the same year, commanding the Dnepr galley, sailed from Kyiv to Yekaterinoslav as part of the flotilla on which Catherine II was.

On May 5, 1788, Ivan Petrovich was appointed captain of the galley port, and in the same year, under his supervision, twenty-seven ships were prepared and sent to the company, the next - seventy-nine ships, and in 1790 - seventy-two ships. In addition, thirty landing craft and fifty boats were built for them. In 1789, Pushchin was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir of the 3rd degree for his work on equipping ships, and on January 1, 1790 he was promoted to the rank of captain of the 1st rank.

Since 1793, by definition of the Admiralty Board, he was sent to Kronstadt and there he assumed the position of captain over the Kronstadt port, where ships and frigates were repaired under his supervision, as well as ships were equipped for the company. November 13, 1796 Pushchin was promoted to the rank of captain of the brigadier rank. In 1797, Pushchin was awarded a patent for the command of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem.

On March 26, Ivan Petrovich was appointed chief quartermaster, on April 6 he surrendered the port and took charge of the quartermaster expedition. On September 23, 1798, he was promoted to the rank of major general, in 1802 to the rank of lieutenant general, and on April 4, 1805, he was appointed a temporary member of the Admiralty Board. In 1806, Pushchin was appointed manager of the Economic Expedition of the Naval General-Kriegs Commissariat, and in October 1808 he was appointed manager of the Executive Expedition, leaving his previous position. December 23, 1808 he was awarded the Order of St. Anne 1st degree. On May 1, 1810, Pushchin was released from the management of the Economic Expedition.

On August 10, 1821, he was ordered to be present in the Government Senate, with a subsequent appointment to the Land Survey Department of the Senate. In 1834 Pushchin was awarded the Order of the White Eagle.


3. Family

Wife, Alexandra Mikhailovna, nee Ryabinina, sister of the Novgorod governor E. M. Ryabinin (1768-1827).

He had 4 sons: Mikhail (died in 1869) - a Decembrist, later a commandant in Bobruisk; Ivan - collegiate assessor, former officer, Decembrist; Nicholas - Privy Councillor; Peter - court adviser, and 6 daughters.

Sources

  • Patent to I.P. Pushchin for the command of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem (1797). CHARACTERISTICS FOR ESTATES, RANKS AND NOBILITY F. 154, 2211 items. ridge , 1474-1914 (copied from 1389) . Op. 1 - 4 // INTERNAL MANAGEMENT CASES. Central State Archive of Ancient Acts of the USSR. Guide. In four volumes. Volume 1. 1991
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This abstract is based on an article from the Russian Wikipedia. Synchronization completed on 07/12/11 18:26:21
Similar abstracts: Pavel Petrovich Pushchin, Ivan Pushchin, Ivan Ivanovich Pushchin, Ivan Ivanovich Pushchin, Ivan Petrovich Yarkin, Ivan Petrovich Lobysevich, Ivan Petrovich Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich Miller, Ivan Petrovich Arkharov.

Categories: Persons in alphabetical order , Born in 1754 , Cavaliers of the Order of St. Anne 1st class ,

Connections

In 1772, on the 66-gun ship Graf Orlov, as part of a squadron under the command of Rear Admiral V. Ya. Chichagov, he moved from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk, and on October 28 he participated in the battle of Patras. In 1773-1775, he was cruising in the Archipelago on the same ship, and in 1775-1776, on the Bohemia frigate, he moved from Livorno to Kronstadt and on April 21, 1777 was promoted to the rank of lieutenant.

In 1778, Pushchin was appointed to command the Peterhof court yacht, and in 1779-1786 sailed on the ships of the galley fleet. On May 1, 1783, he was promoted to lieutenant commander. From March 18, 1784 to April 25, 1785 he was on a business trip in Smolensk to build ships. For these works, Pushchin was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir, 4th degree.

On May 17, 1787, Pushchin was promoted to the rank of captain of the 2nd rank and in the same year, commanding the Dnepr galley, sailed from Kyiv to Yekaterinoslavl as part of the flotilla on which Catherine II was.

On May 5, 1788, Ivan Petrovich was appointed captain over the galley port, and in the same year, under his supervision, twenty-seven ships were prepared and sent to the company, the next - seventy-nine ships, and in 1790 - seventy-two ships. In addition, thirty landing craft and fifty boats were built for them. In 1789, Pushchin was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir of the 3rd degree for his work on equipping ships, and on January 1, 1790 he was promoted to the rank of captain of the 1st rank.

Since 1793, by definition of the Admiralty Board, he was sent to Kronstadt and there he assumed the position of captain over the Kronstadt port, where ships and frigates were repaired under his supervision, as well as ships were equipped for the company. November 13, 1796 Pushchin was promoted to the rank of captain of the brigadier rank. In 1797, Pushchin was awarded a patent for the command of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem.

On March 26, Ivan Petrovich was appointed chief quartermaster, on April 6 he surrendered the port and took charge of the quartermaster expedition. On September 23, 1798, he was promoted to the rank of major general, in 1802 to the rank of lieutenant general, and on April 4, 1805, he was appointed a temporary member of the Admiralty College. In 1806, Pushchin was appointed manager of the Economic Expedition of the Naval General-Kriegs Commissariat, and in October 1808 he was appointed manager of the Executive Expedition, leaving his previous position. On December 23, 1808, he was awarded the Order of St. Anne, 1st class. On May 1, 1810, Pushchin was released from the management of the Economic Expedition.

On August 10, 1821, he was ordered to be present in the Government Senate, with a subsequent appointment to the Land Survey Department of the Senate. In 1834 Pushchin was awarded the Order of the White Eagle.

Family

Children:

Sources

  • Patent to I.P. Pushchin for the command of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem (1797). CHARACTERISTICS FOR ESTATES, RANKS AND NOBILITY F. 154, 2211 items. ridge , 1474-1914 (copied from 1389) . Op. 1 - 4 // INTERNAL MANAGEMENT CASES. Central State Archive of Ancient Acts of the USSR. Guide. In four volumes. Volume 1. 1991

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Links

  • at Rodovod. Tree of ancestors and descendants
    • I. Marchenko.// Russian biographical dictionary: in 25 volumes. - St. Petersburg. -M., 1896-1918.

    Notes

  • An excerpt characterizing Pushchin, Ivan Petrovich

    The source of this extraordinary power of insight into the meaning of occurring phenomena lay in that popular feeling, which he carried within himself in all its purity and strength.
    Only the recognition of this feeling in him made the people, in such strange ways, from an old man who was in disfavor, elect him, against the will of the king, as representatives people's war. And only this feeling put him on that highest human height, from which he, the commander-in-chief, directed all his forces not to kill and exterminate people, but to save and pity them.
    This simple, modest and therefore truly majestic figure could not fit into that deceitful form of a European hero, supposedly controlling people, which history invented.
    For a lackey there can be no great person, because the lackey has his own idea of ​​greatness.

    November 5 was the first day of the so-called Krasnensky battle. Before evening, when, after many disputes and mistakes of the generals, who went to the wrong place; after dispatches of adjutants with counter-orders, when it had already become clear that the enemy was fleeing everywhere and that there could not be and would not be a battle, Kutuzov left Krasnoye and went to Dobroe, where the main apartment had been transferred that day.
    The day was clear and frosty. Kutuzov, with a huge retinue of generals who were dissatisfied with him, whispering after him, rode on his fat white horse to Good. All along the road crowded, warming themselves by the fires, lots of French prisoners taken this day (there were seven thousand of them taken that day). Not far from Dobry, a huge crowd of ragged, bandaged and wrapped with whatever prisoners buzzed in conversation, standing on the road near a long line of unharnessed French guns. As the commander-in-chief approached, the conversation fell silent, and all eyes stared at Kutuzov, who, in his white hat with a red band and a wadded overcoat, sitting with a hump on his stooped shoulders, slowly moved along the road. One of the generals reported to Kutuzov where the guns and prisoners were taken.
    Kutuzov seemed to be preoccupied with something and did not hear the words of the general. He screwed up his eyes in displeasure and peered attentively and intently into those figures of prisoners who presented a particularly pitiful appearance. Most of the faces of the French soldiers were disfigured by frostbitten noses and cheeks, and almost all had red, swollen and festering eyes.
    One group of Frenchmen stood close by the road, and two soldiers - the face of one of them was covered with sores - were tearing a piece of raw meat with their hands. There was something terrible and animal in that cursory glance that they threw at the passers-by, and in that vicious expression with which the soldier with sores, glancing at Kutuzov, immediately turned away and continued his work.
    Kutuzov looked at these two soldiers for a long time; Wrinkling even more, he narrowed his eyes and shook his head thoughtfully. In another place, he noticed a Russian soldier, who, laughing and patting the Frenchman on the shoulder, said something affectionately to him. Kutuzov again shook his head with the same expression.
    - What are you saying? What? he asked the general, who continued to report and drew the attention of the commander-in-chief to the French taken banners that stood in front of the front of the Preobrazhensky regiment.
    - Ah, banners! - said Kutuzov, apparently with difficulty breaking away from the subject that occupied his thoughts. He looked around absently. Thousands of eyes from all sides, waiting for his word, looked at him.
    In front of the Preobrazhensky Regiment he stopped, sighed heavily and closed his eyes. Someone from the retinue waved for the soldiers holding the banners to come up and place them around the commander-in-chief with flagpoles. Kutuzov was silent for several seconds and, apparently reluctantly, obeying the necessity of his position, raised his head and began to speak. Crowds of officers surrounded him. He scanned the circle of officers with a keen eye, recognizing some of them.
    – Thank you all! he said, addressing the soldiers and again to the officers. In the silence that reigned around him, his slowly spoken words were clearly audible. “Thank you all for your hard and faithful service. The victory is perfect, and Russia will not forget you. Glory to you forever! He paused, looking around.
    “Bend down, bend down his head,” he said to the soldier who held the French eagle and accidentally lowered it in front of the banner of the Transfiguration. “Lower, lower, that’s it. Hooray! guys, - with a quick movement of your chin, turn to the soldiers, he said.
    - Hooray ra ra! roared thousands of voices. While the soldiers were shouting, Kutuzov, bent over in his saddle, bowed his head, and his eye lit up with a meek, as if mocking, gleam.
    “That’s what, brothers,” he said when the voices fell silent ...
    And suddenly his voice and facial expression changed: the commander-in-chief stopped talking, and a simple one spoke, an old man, it is obvious that he now wanted to inform his comrades of the most necessary thing.
    There was a movement in the crowd of officers and in the ranks of the soldiers in order to hear more clearly what he would say now.
    “Here’s the thing, brethren. I know it's hard for you, but what can you do! Be patient; not long left. We'll send the guests out, then we'll have a rest. For your service, the king will not forget you. It is difficult for you, but you are still at home; and they - see what they have come to, ”he said, pointing to the prisoners. - Worse than the last beggars. While they were strong, we did not feel sorry for ourselves, but now you can feel sorry for them. They are also people. So guys?
    He looked around him, and in the stubborn, respectfully bewildered glances fixed on him, he read sympathy for his words: his face became brighter and brighter from the senile meek smile, puckering up in stars at the corners of his lips and eyes. He paused and lowered his head as if in bewilderment.
    - And then say, who called them to us? Serves them right, m ​​... and ... in g .... he suddenly said, raising his head. And, waving his whip, he galloped, for the first time in the whole campaign, away from the joyfully laughing and roaring cheers, upsetting the ranks of the soldiers.
    The words spoken by Kutuzov were hardly understood by the troops. No one would have been able to convey the contents of the first solemn and at the end of the ingenuously old man's speech of the field marshal; but the heartfelt meaning of this speech was not only understood, but that same, that same feeling of majestic triumph, combined with pity for the enemies and the consciousness of one’s rightness, expressed by this, precisely this old man’s, good-natured curse, is the very (feeling lay in the soul of every soldier and was expressed in a joyful, long-lasting cry.When after that one of the generals turned to him with the question of whether the commander-in-chief would order the carriage to arrive, Kutuzov, answering, unexpectedly sobbed, apparently being in great agitation.

    November 8 is the last day of the Krasnensky battles; it was already getting dark when the troops arrived at the place of lodging for the night. The whole day was quiet, frosty, with light, rare snow falling; By evening it became clear. A black-purple starry sky was visible through the snowflakes, and the frost began to intensify.
    The musketeer regiment, which had left Tarutino at the number of three thousand, now, at the number of nine hundred men, was one of the first to arrive at the appointed place of lodging for the night, in the village on high road. The quartermasters, who met the regiment, announced that all the huts were occupied by sick and dead Frenchmen, cavalrymen and headquarters. There was only one hut for the regimental commander.
    The regimental commander drove up to his hut. The regiment passed through the village and at the outermost huts on the road put the guns in the goats.
    Like a huge, multi-membered animal, the regiment set to work arranging its lair and food. One part of the soldiers dispersed, knee-deep in snow, into the birch forest, which was to the right of the village, and immediately the sound of axes, cleavers, the crack of breaking branches and cheerful voices was heard in the forest; another part busied about the center of the regimental carts and horses, put in a pile, taking out boilers, crackers and giving food to the horses; the third part scattered in the village, arranging quarters for headquarters, picking out the dead bodies of the French that lay in the huts, and taking away boards, dry firewood and straw from the roofs for fires and wattle for protection.

    Quartermaster general of the fleet, lieutenant general, senator; descended from the nobility and was the son of Pyotr Ivanovich P., also the quartermaster general of the fleet; born in 1754, mind. October 7, 1842 in St. Petersburg, buried at the Smolensk cemetery. In 1765, P. entered the Naval gentry corps as a cadet, on December 15, 1769 he was promoted to midshipmen, from 1769 to 1772 he sailed annually from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk on kicks "Sion" and "Narchin" and from Arkhangelsk to Kronstadt on ship No. 1, and on September 15, 1771 he was promoted to midshipman. In 1772, on the ship "Graf Orlov", in the squadron of Rear Admiral Chichagov, he moved from Kronstadt to Arkhangelsk, and on October 28 he participated in the battle of Patras; from 1773 to 1775 on the same ship he was cruising in the Archipelago, in 1775 and 1776. on the frigate "Bohemia" he moved from Livorno to Kronstadt, and on April 21, 1777 he was promoted to lieutenant. In 1778, P. was appointed to command the court yacht "Peterhof", from 1779 to 1786 he annually sailed on the ships of the galley fleet, on May 1, 1783 he was promoted to captain-lieutenant, from March 18, 1784 to On April 25, 1785, he was on a business trip in Smolensk to build ships, of which he built 52; for these works, P. on April 29, 1785 was awarded the Order of St.. Vladimir 4th degree. On May 17, 1787, P. was promoted to captain of the 2nd rank; in the same year, commanding the Dnepr galley, he sailed from Kyiv to Yekaterinoslavl as part of a flotilla on which the Empress was, and on May 5, 1788, he was appointed captain over the galley port; in 1788, under his supervision, 27 ships were prepared and sent to the campaign, in 1789 - 79 ships, in 1790 - 72 ships; in addition, 30 landing craft and 50 boats were built for them. In 1789, he was awarded the Order of St. for his work in equipping ships. Vladimir of the 3rd class, on January 1, 1790, he was promoted to captain of the 1st rank, in 1793 (February 28), by definition of the Admiralty College, he was sent to Kronstadt and there (on the 8th March) assumed the position of captain over the port of Kronstadt, where ships and frigates were repaired under his supervision, as well as ships were equipped for the campaign. On November 13, 1796, P. was promoted to captain of the brigadier rank; the same year he returned from Kronstadt to St. Petersburg and took up the post of present in the Quartermaster's Expedition. On September 23, 1798, he was promoted to major general, on November 13, 1802 - to lieutenant general, in the same year he was the manager of the Executive Expedition with the rank of quartermaster general, and on April 4, 1805 - to lieutenant general. appointed temporary member of the Admiralty College. On March 10, 1806, P. was appointed manager of the Economic Expedition of the Naval General-Kriegs Commissariat; on December 23, 1808, he was awarded the Order of St. Anna of the 1st class, in October 1809, together with the Economic Expedition of the Admiralty College, he was entrusted with the management of the Executive Expedition. On May 1, 1810, P. Handed over the Economic Expedition to Major General Shishmarev, and on August 10, 1821, he was ordered to be present in the Governing Senate. On August 29, 1821, P. was appointed to the Land Survey Department of the Senate, in 1832 - to the temporary general meeting, and in 1834 he was awarded the Knight of the Order of the White Eagle.
    Official list on the service of Senator I.P. Pushchin for 1834; "General Marine List", part IV, reign of Catherine II, St. Petersburg. 1890, p. 636; Monthly calendar for 1844, p. 167; "Proceedings of the Ryazan Scientific Archival Commission" 1888, vol. III, p. 92; "Inventory of the affairs of the Ryazan Historical Archive", Vol. II; V. V. Rummel, Genealogical collection, vol. II, St. Petersburg. 1887
    AND.
    general-crig commissar, 1809


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    Aksakov Ivan Sergeevich- (1823-1886) - Russian publicist and public figure. Brother K.S. Aksakov. One of the ideologists of Slavophilism. Editor of the magazines "Day", "Moscow", "Russian conversation", "Rus"........
    Political vocabulary

    Akselrod Ivan Yakovlevich- (c. 1888 -?). Socialist revolutionary. From the townspeople. Member of the AKP since 1917. Lower education. At the end of 1921 he lived in the Irkutsk province. He was characterized by local Chekists as an "active" party ........
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    Aksyutin Ivan Fyodorovich- (? - ?). Socialist revolutionary. Member of the AKP since 1917. Primary education. At the end of 1921 he lived in Ufa, worked in the depot of the Ufa station. He was characterized by local Chekists as a "private" ........
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    Aleksandrov Ivan Grigorievich- (ca. 1896 -?). Socialist revolutionary. From the townspeople. Member of the AKP since 1912. He graduated from the "trading school". At the end of 1921 he lived in the Krasnoyarsk province. He was characterized by local Chekists as "Chernovets", ........
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    Aleksin Agafangel Petrovich- (1906 -?). Anarchist. Lived in Arkhangelsk. He worked as a mechanic at Sevpromstroy. Arrested 9/2/1932. on charges of "creating a counter-revolutionary-anarchist group". 16.5.1932 Special........
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    Anastasin (Anastastin, Anastasiev) Ivan Grigorievich- (1880 - not earlier than April 1956). Member of the RSDLP since 1908. Lower education. He worked as a tailor in Vladikavkaz. In 1908, he was exiled to Petrovsk for participation in the tailors' strike, from where soon........
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    Argunov Ivan Gavrilovich- (c. 1883 -?). Socialist revolutionary. Member of the AKP since 1917. Secondary education. At the end of 1921 he lived in the Irkutsk province. He was characterized by local Chekists as an "active" party worker .........
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    Asanov Evdokim Petrovich- (c. 1883 -?). Socialist revolutionary. Worker. Member of the AKP since 1918. Lower education. At the end of 1921 he lived in the Ufa province, worked on the Zlatoust railway. Local Chekists ........
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    Akhmatov Ivan Ivanovich- (19.12.1886, Tula - 8.5.1939). Member of the RSDLP since 1905, since 1927 - a communist. Higher education. Member of the Constituent Assembly of the FER. At the end of 1921 he lived in the Irkutsk province. Local Chekists characterized, ........
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    Akhtyrsky Ivan- (? - 1923?). Anarchist communist. In 1921 he was kept in the Butyrskaya prison (Moscow), in April 1921 he was transferred to the Ryazan prison. In 1922, he fled with D. Kogan, participated in the underground ........
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    Babaev Ivan Dmitrievich- (1898 - ?). Socialist revolutionary. Member of the AKP. Arrested 18/9/1920 during a strike. In the same year he was sentenced to 3 years of forced labor. Arrested again in Moscow on May 13, 1921. Further........
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    Bazhanov [bozhanov] Ivan Vasilievich- (1893 - ?). Socialist revolutionary. Member of the AKP. Higher education. Agronomist. Arrested on September 21, 1920 in the Tver province, in November 1920 he was kept in the Butyrka prison. In November 1921 he was again ........
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    Balakin Ivan- (? - ?). Member of the AKP since 1905, then left SR. From peasants. At the end of 1921 he lived in the Bryansk province and worked in the regional food commission. He was characterized by local Chekists as an "agitator" ........
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    Balandin Ivan Matveevich- (c. 1881 -?). Social Democrat. Member of the RSDLP. At the end of 1921, he worked in the Office of the People's Commissariat for Commissariat of Civil Aviation as deputy head of the ZNO (?). He was characterized by local Chekists as "private" and "active" ........
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    Balashov Ivan- (? - ?). Anarchist. Office clerk. Since 1917 he was an activist of the Saratov Association of Anarchist Groups. He gave lectures in workers' clubs, criticizing the Soviet government, for which ........
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    Barankevich Ivan Mikhailovich- (1888, village of Trostyanets, Mogilev province. - not earlier than May 1941). Social Democrat. Arrested in 1932 in Leningrad, exiled to Tashkent. In the same year he was in exile in Samarkand. At the end........
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    Baskakov Ivan Petrovich- (1890 - ?). Member of the PLSR. From peasants. He graduated from the 3-class rural school. Shoemaker. In 1913 he was administratively exiled for 3 years to Narym. In 1921 he lived in the village of Smykovo, Barangor volost ........
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    Baskin Vladimir Petrovich- (ca. 1895 -?). Social Democrat. From the middle peasants. Higher education. Member of the RSDLP. At the end of 1921 he lived in the Perm province, worked as a teacher of the 2nd stage. He was characterized by local Chekists ........
    Political vocabulary

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