Usage example
| Andrey Maksimovich Runovsky | |||||||
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| Predecessor | Egor Fedorovich Kudryavtsev | ||||||
| Successor | Stepan Antipovich Bykhovets | ||||||
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| Predecessor | position established | ||||||
| Successor | Philip Prokhorovich Chetverikov | ||||||
| Birth | October 1, 1761 | ||||||
| Death | March 5, 1813 (51 years old) | ||||||
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Andrei Maksimovich Runovsky (October 1, 1761 - March 5, 1813) - Russian statesman, current state adviser , governor of the Nizhny Novgorod province .
Content
Biography
He began his service as a clerk in the Novorossiysk provincial office (January 22, 1780), from where he was transferred by the registrar to the Kharkov Treasury (June 28, 1781); then moving on April 26, 1782, the actuary to the College of Foreign Affairs , he was in secret affairs entrusted by Prince Alexander Bezborodko , and was subsequently promoted to protocol (March 21, 1784), secretaries (April 30, 1785), college assessors (21 April 1787) and court counselors (September 8, 1790). In addition, on September 2, 1793, for the work "by peaceful negotiation with the Ottoman Porta incurred", Runovsky was awarded the Order of St. Vladimir 4th degree.
In 1793-1794 he was for special assignments under Senator Timofey Tutolmin , who then governed the Minsk , Izyaslav and Bratslav provinces, and on December 20, 1794 he was appointed Director of Economy of the Chernigov province ; two years later (January 6, 1797) he was promoted to college adviser with the appointment of vice governor of the Kiev province .
Then granted the rank of state adviser (February 19, 1799), Runovsky on June 29 of the same year was awarded the Order of St. Anne of the 2nd degree and was appointed vice-governor of the Little Russian province .
On July 26, 1802, he was promoted to full state councilor and in 1803 he was appointed governor of Nizhny Novgorod . Here he served ten years, having shown great activity in 1812 in connection with the military events of the time , which flooded Nizhny Novgorod with a large number of refugees and Moscow institutions; somewhat earlier, in March 1812, he had to take Mikhail Speransky , who was exiled to Lower, into his care, and then send him to Perm .
He died of a cold on March 5, 1813 and was buried in the Nizhny Novgorod Pechersky Monastery .
Rewards
- Order of St. Vladimir 3 degrees (September 22, 1796)
- Order of St. Anne 2 degrees (February 19, 1799)
- Order of St. Anne 1 degree (April 20, 1809)
Family
Runovsky was single and did not leave offspring after himself.
Literature
- Andrei Runovsky // Russian Biographical Dictionary / Ed. Russian Historical Society: ed. B. L. Modzalevsky. - Petrograd: type. Acc. Kadima Island, 1918. - V. 17. - S. 606. - 817 p.
- The court of the month of the summer of Christmas 1810