Kuzma Petrovich Kozlov (d. After 1702 ) - a tenant , solicitor , steward and governor .
| Kuzma Petrovich Kozlov | |
|---|---|
| Date of death | |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | tenant , solicitor , steward and governor |
| Father | Peter Fedorovich Kozlov |
| Children | childless |
Biography
The representative of the seedy noble family of the Kozlovs . The only son of a nobleman Pyotr Fedorovich Kozlov.
First mentioned in 1656 in discharge books with the rank of tenant . In 1658, Kuzma Kozlov was granted a solicitor .
In the 1660s, K.P. Kozlov was in the voivodship in Astrakhan , and in the 1670s he served in the Terek city , where he established good relations with the Kalmyks, protecting them from oppression by the Don Cossacks. In 1675, Kuzma Kozlov escorted to Terek the serving Kabardian prince Kasbulat Mutsalovich Cherkassky .
January 7, 1678 was granted from solicitors to stewards . In 1678, during the Russo-Turkish war, the captain Kuzma Petrovich Kozlov, the second regimental commander in the regiment of Prince Kasbulat Mutsalovich Cherkassky , distinguished himself in a number of battles with the Turks and Crimean Tatars. In January 1679, Kuzma Kozlov was sent to Kalmyk nomads and sent Kalmyks to the regiment of Prince G. G. Romodanovsky . In 1680, together with the boyar P.V. Sheremetyev, K.P. Kozlov built fortresses along the Kalmus Sakma. At the same time he was accused of allowing the Tatars to Usmani and was sent to the regiment of Prince B.M. Cherkassky near Kiev .
In September 1682, Kuzma Kozlov was appointed to the Voivodeship in Tsaritsyn . In 1691 - 1693 years - the second voivode in Tsaritsyno .
In 1698 - 1702, K.P. Kozlov was in the Voivodship in Verkhoturye . Here the governor Kuzma Kozlov built several ironworks on the river. Neve , one of which was ceded to Nikita Demidov . In 1702, on behalf of the tsarist government, Kuzma Kozlov was engaged in the exploration of silver ore. Finding 100 miles from Sulemskaya Sloboda deposits he accepted for silver ore, he sent it up to 1½ pounds. to Moscow. The metal sent turned out to be a magnet, but Tsar Peter the Great ordered to continue its development.
Sources
- Rummel V.V. Pedigree collection of Russian noble families, St. Petersburg, volume 1, 1886
- Russian Biographical Dictionary : In 25 volumes / under the supervision of A. A. Polovtsov. 1896-1918.