Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. The Caucasus Viceroyalty was the Russian Empire 's administrative and political authority in the Caucasus region exercised through the offices of glavnoupravlyayushchiy ("high commissioner") (1801–1844, 1882–1902) and namestnik ("viceroy") (1844–1882, 1904–1917), situated in the modern areas of the Russian Federation, Armenia ...

  2. The Viceroy of the Caucasus, Grand Duke Nicholas, initially expressed his support for the new government, yet he was forced to resign his post as imperial power eroded. [19] The provisional government created a new temporary authority, the Special Transcaucasian Committee (known by its Russian abbreviation, Ozakom [ e ] ) on 22 March 1917 [ O.S ...

    • Alexander Khatisian
    • Noe Ramishvili
    • Akaki Chkhenkeli
    • Akaki Chkhenkeli
  3. From the turn of the nineteenth century, Russia continued its incorporation of territories in the northern and southern Caucasus. The Astrakhan and Caucasus Viceroyalty was eliminated under Pavel 1 in 1796, and reorganised under Alexander I in 1801 and 1802.

  4. One of the most serious struggles within The Caucasus Viceroyalty during the period of the first Russian revolution was the ArmenianTatar (Armenian-Azerbaijani) conflict, whose acute phase started with the clashes in Baku on 6–9, February, 1905. Let us briefly outline them.

  5. Nov 15, 2022 · The Russians had reached the Caucasus via Astrakhan, and the city was the seat of a military governor at the end of the eighteenth century, with jurisdiction over the entire northern Caucasus.

    • jledonne@fas.harvard.edu
  6. After the 1917 February Revolution, which dispossessed Tsar Nicholas II of the Russian crown, the Viceroyalty of the Caucasus was abolished by the Russian Provisional Government on March 18, 1917, and all authority, except in the zone of the active army, was entrusted to the civil administrative body called the Special Transcaucasian Committee ...

  7. People also ask

  8. During his viceroyalty in the Caucasus, M. S. Vorontsov aspired to realize his project of “a new service man” for employment in the southern region of the Russian empire.