Eugene Mikhailovich Subbotkin ( August 29, 1840 - April 21, 1913 ) - Russian statesman, long-term Sedletsky governor, senator.
| Evgeny Mikhailovich Subbotkin | |||||||||||||
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| Predecessor | Alexander Vikentievich Fribes | ||||||||||||
| Successor | Mikhail Alexandrovich Milevsky | ||||||||||||
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| Predecessor | Nikolai Alekseevich Zinoviev | ||||||||||||
| Successor | Vladimir Filippovich Tkhorzhevsky | ||||||||||||
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| Predecessor | Mikhail Alexandrovich Zinoviev | ||||||||||||
| Successor | Alexander Nikolaevich Volzhin | ||||||||||||
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| Birth | 8/8/1840 | ||||||||||||
| Death | 04/21/1913 | ||||||||||||
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| Kind | Saturday | ||||||||||||
| Education | Mikhailovsky Artillery Academy | ||||||||||||
| Religion | Orthodoxy | ||||||||||||
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Content
Biography
From an old noble family of the Pskov province. His ancestor served as a raider with Tsars Peter and John , was awarded land in the Pskov province, under Opochka .
He graduated from the Polotsk cadet corps , was released as an officer in the 5th artillery brigade . In 1863 he graduated from the Mikhailovsky Artillery Academy . The following year he switched to civil service.
Ranks: state councilor (no later than 1880), current state councilor (no later than 1882), privy councilor (1893), active privy councilor (1912).
He served as commissar for peasant affairs in the Kingdom of Poland until 1879, when he was appointed an indispensable member of the Kalish provincial presence for peasant affairs. As a commissar for peasant affairs, he contributed to the development of a network of public schools in the region and ensured the rights of Polish peasant widows to own a land plot of a deceased husband.
He held the posts of the Kieletsky vice-governor (1880-1884), the Suwalki (1884-1885) and the Siedletsky (1885-1904) governors. Over the nearly twenty-year rule, he has done a lot for the Siedlec province: model highways were built in it, wooden bridges were replaced by stone, new schools and hospitals appeared, model shelters for the elderly and churches, prisons and barracks. When Yevgeny Mikhailovich left the province, its grateful society, both Russian, Polish and Jewish, arranged for him and his family warm farewell with many offerings.
January 1, 1904 was appointed senator , present in the department of heraldry. Subsequently, he was present in the 2nd department, where he took an active part in the organization of the rural population of the empire.
He died on April 21, 1913. He was buried at the Novodevichy cemetery in St. Petersburg .
Rewards
- Order of St. Stanislav 3rd century;
- Order of St. Anne , 3rd century;
- Order of St. Stanislav , 2nd art. with imperial crowns;
- Order of St. Anne , 2nd century;
- Order of St. Vladimir , 4th century;
- Order of St. Vladimir , 3rd art .;
- Order of St. Stanislav 1st st .;
- Order of St. Anne 1st Art .;
- Order of St. Vladimir , 2nd century;
- Order of the White Eagle ;
- Order of St. Alexander Nevsky .
- Bronze medal “For the suppression of the Polish rebellion of 1863–64” ;
- The highest favor (1886);
- The highest gratitude for the exemplary order during the emperor's stay in the province (1898).
Sources
- Almanac of modern Russian statesmen . - SPb. : Type of. Isidore Goldberg, 1897 .-- S. 736.
- Murzanov N. A. Dictionary of Russian Senators, 1711-1917 .. - St. Petersburg. : Dmitry Bulanin, 2011 .-- S. 414. - 736 p. - ISBN 978-5-86007-666-2 .
- The memorial book of the Suvalk province in 1885. - Suwalki, 1884 .-- S. 23
- Governing Senate. St. Petersburg: Typographic lithography of the St. Petersburg Solitary Prison, 1912. - P. 104-105