Mikhail Kutuzov

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Prince Mikhail Illarionovich Golenishchev-Kutuzov-Smolensky (Template:Langx;Template:Efn Template:OldStyleDateTemplate:OldStyleDate)Template:Sfn was a field marshal of the Russian Empire. He served as a military officer and a diplomat under the reign of three Romanov monarchs: Empress Catherine II, and Emperors Paul I and Alexander I. Kutuzov was shot in the head twice while fighting the Turks (1774 and 1788) and survived the serious injuries seemingly against all odds. He defeated Napoleon as commander-in-chief using attrition warfare in the Patriotic War of 1812. For the Battle of Krasnoi against Napoleon, Kutuzov (or more correctly Golenishchev-Kutuzov) received the victory title of Smolensky to add to his surname; the word Smolensky literally means "of Smolensk". Alexander I, the incumbent Tsar during Napoleon's invasion, would write that he would be remembered amongst Europe's most famous commanders and that Russia would never forget his worthiness.Template:Sfn

Early career

Youth

Mikhail Kutuzov was born in Saint Petersburg on 16 September 1745.Template:Sfn His father, Lieutenant-General Template:Ill (1717–1784), had served for 30 years with the Corps of Engineers, had seen action against the Turks and served under Peter the Great. His mother was Anna Illarionovna Beklemisheva (b. 1728), whose family was also part of the Russian nobility. Given his father's distinguished service and his mother's high birth, Kutuzov had contact with the imperial Romanov family from an early age.Template:Sfn

In 1757, at the age of 12, Kutuzov entered an elite military-engineering school as a cadet private. He quickly became popular with his peers and teachers alike, proving himself to be highly intelligent, and showed bravery in his school's numerous horse-races. Kutuzov studied military and civil subjects there, learned to speak French, German and English fluently, and later studied Polish, Swedish, and Turkish; his linguistic skills served him well throughout his career. In October 1759, he became a corporal. In 1760, he became a mathematics instructor at the school.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In 1762, Kutuzov, by then a captain, became part of the Astrakhan Infantry Regiment, which was commanded by Colonel Alexander Suvorov.Template:Sfn Kutuzov studied Suvorov's style of command and learned how to be a good commander in battle. Suvorov believed that an effective order should be simple, direct, and concise, and that a commander should care deeply about the health and training of his soldiers. Kutuzov also adopted Suvorov's conviction that a commander should lead his troops from the front (instead of from the rear) to provide an example of bravery for the troops to follow. Suvorov also taught Kutuzov the importance of developing close relationships with those under his command. Kutuzov followed this advice to the benefit of his career. This advice contributed to Kutuzov's appointment as Commander-in-Chief in 1812.Template:Sfn

Late in 1762, Kutuzov became aide-de-camp to the military governor of Reval, the Prince of Holstein-Beck, in which role he showed himself to be a capable politician. In 1768 Kutuzov fought in Poland, after the Polish szlachta—the Polish noble class—rebelled against Russian influence. In this conflict, Kutuzov captured several strong defensive positions, thereby proving his skill on the battlefield.Template:Sfn

First Russo-Turkish war (1768–1774) and beyond

In October 1768, the Ottoman Empire declared war on the Russian Empress Catherine the Great. Two years later, Kutuzov, now a major, joined the army of the soon-to-be-famous Count Pyotr Rumyantsev in the south to fight against the Turks. Though Kutuzov served valiantly in this campaign, he did not receive any medals, as another officer reported to Rumyantsev that Kutuzov mocked Rumyantsev behind his back. Rumyantsev had Lieutenant-Colonel Kutuzov transferred into Prince Vasily Dolgorukov-Krymsky's Russian Second Army fighting the Turks and the Tatars in the Crimea. During this campaign Kutuzov learned how to use the deadly Cossack light cavalry, another skill which would prove useful in the defence of Russia against Napoleon's invading armies in 1812. In 1774 he was ordered to storm the well-defended town of Alushta on the southern coast of the Crimean peninsula. When his troops' advance faltered, Kutuzov grabbed the fallen regimental standard and led the attack. While charging forward, he was shot in the left temple—an almost certainly fatal wound at the time.<ref>Two bullets to the head and an early winter: fate permits Kutuzov to defeat Napoleon at Moscow (2016)</ref> The bullet went right through his head and exited near the right eye. However, Kutuzov slowly recovered, though frequently overcome by sharp pains and dizziness, and his right eye remained permanently twisted. He left the army later that year due to his wound.Template:Sfn

Kutuzov's pain did not subside, and so he decided to travel to Western Europe for better medical care. He arrived in Berlin in 1774, where he spent much time with King Frederick the Great of Prussia, who took great interest in Kutuzov. They spent long periods of time discussing tactics, weaponry, and uniforms. Kutuzov then travelled to Leyden, Holland and to London in England for further treatment. In London Kutuzov first learned of the American Revolutionary War. He would later study the evolution of American general George Washington's attrition campaign against the British. The American experience reinforced the lesson that Rumyantsev had already taught Kutuzov; that one does not need to win battles in order to win a war.Template:Sfn

File:Kutuzov in 1777.jpg
Kutuzov between 1777 and 1780, the Pietro Rotari's copy of Template:Ill

Kutuzov returned to the Russian Army in 1776 and again served under Suvorov—in the Crimea—for the next six years. He learned that letting the common soldier use his natural intellect and initiative made for a more effective army. Suvorov also taught him how to use mobility in order to exploit the constantly changing situation on the battlefield. By 1782 Kutuzov had been promoted to brigadier general as Suvorov recognised Kutuzov's potential as a shrewd and intelligent leader. Indeed, Suvorov wrote that he would not even have to tell Kutuzov what needed to be done in order for him to carry out his objective. In 1788 Kutuzov was again wounded in the left temple, in almost exactly the same place as before, and again doctors feared for his life.<ref>Two bullets to the head and an early winter: fate permits Kutuzov to defeat Napoleon at Moscow (2016)</ref> However, Kutuzov recovered, though his right eye was even more twisted than before and he had even worse head-pains.Template:Sfn

Second Russo-Turkish war (1787–1792) and beyond

In 1784 he became a major general, in 1787 governor-general of the Crimea; and under Suvorov, whose disciple he became, he won considerable distinction in the Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792), at the taking of Ochakov, Odessa, Bender, and Izmail, and in the battles of Rymnik (1789) and Mashin (July 1791). He became a lieutenant-general (March 1791) and successively occupied the positions of ambassador at Istanbul, commander of Russian forces in Finland,Template:Sfn commandant of the corps of cadets at Saint Petersburg, ambassador at Berlin, and governor-general of Saint Petersburg (1801–1802). In 1798 he became a general of the infantry.<ref>Template:Russian Biographical Dictionary</ref>

Kutuzov was a favourite of Tsar Paul I (reigned 1796–1801), and after that emperor's murder he was temporarily out of favour with the new monarch Alexander I, though he remained loyal.

Napoleonic Wars

File:Kutuzov2 by Daw.jpg
M. I. Golenishchev-Kutuzov by G. Dawe.
Hermitage Museum, Winter Palace, Military Gallery

Austerlitz

Template:Main In 1805, Kutuzov commanded the Russian corps to oppose Napoleon's advance on Vienna, but the Austrians were quickly defeated at Ulm in mid-October before they could meet up with their Russian allies.

Kutuzov was present at the battle of Austerlitz on 2 December 1805. On the eve of battle, Kutuzov tried to convince the Allied generals of the necessity of waiting for reinforcements before facing Napoleon.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> Alexander believed that waiting to engage Napoleon's forces would be seen as cowardly. Kutuzov quickly realised that he no longer had any power with Alexander and the Austrian chief of staff General-Major Franz von Weyrother. When he asked Alexander where he planned to move a unit of troops, he was told "That's none of your business."Template:Sfn Though Alexander's orders made it clear that the Russians should move off the strategic Pratzen Plateau, Kutuzov stalled for as long as possible as he recognised the advantage that Napoleon would gain from this high ground. Finally, Alexander forced Kutuzov to abandon the Plateau. Napoleon quickly seized the ridge and broke the Allied lines with his artillery which now commanded the battlefield from the Pratzen Plateau. The battle was lost, and over 27,000 Russian and Austrian soldiers became casualties. Kutuzov was put in charge of organising the army's retreat across Hungary and back into Russia as Alexander was overcome by grief.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Third Russo-Turkish war

Template:Main Kutuzov was then put in charge of the Russian army operating against the Turks in the Russo-Turkish War, 1806–1812. Understanding that his armies would be badly needed in the upcoming war with the French, he hastily brought the prolonged war to a victorious end (Battle of Slobozia), concluded the favourable Treaty of Bucharest, which stipulated the incorporation of Bessarabia into the Russian Empire, and earned the title of graf (1811).

The Patriotic War (1812)

Template:Main

File:Кутузов перед битвой при Бородино (литография Н.С. Самокиша).jpg
Kutuzov before the Battle of Borodino. Lithograph by N. S. Samokish. 1912
File:Ermolov-borodino.jpg
Yermolov at the Battle of Borodino in 1812 (by Safonov)
File:Kutuzov fili.jpg
Kutuzov at the Fili conference decides to spare the army and leave Moscow to Napoleon. Painting by Aleksey Kivshenko.
Tretyakov Gallery
File:Manoeuvre of Tarutino - ru.svg
Manoeuvre of Tarutino

Appointment as supreme commander

When Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812, Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly (then Minister of War), with his army being outnumbered 2:1, chose to follow the scorched earth principle and retreat rather than to risk a major battle. His strategy aroused grudges among most of the generals and soldiers. As Alexander after the Battle of Smolensk had to choose a new general, there was only one choice: Kutuzov. He was popular among the troops mainly because he was Russian (most of the generals commanding Russian troops at that time were foreign), he was brave, had proven himself in battle, strongly believed in the Russian Orthodox Church, and he looked out for the troops' well-being. The nobles and clergy also regarded Kutuzov highly. Therefore, when Kutuzov was appointed commander-in-chief on the 17th and joined the army on 29 August 1812 at Tsaryovo-Zaymishche,Template:Sfn Russians supported his appointment. Only Alexander, repulsed by Kutuzov's physique and irrationally holding him responsible for the defeat at Austerlitz, did not celebrate Kutuzov's commission.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The day before he left he met with Madame de Stael, a strong opponent of Napoleon.

Borodino

Template:Main Within a week Kutuzov decided to give major battle on the approaches to Moscow. He withdrew the troops still further to the east, deploying them for the upcoming battle.Template:Sfn Two huge armies clashed near Borodino on 7 September 1812, involving nearly a quarter of a million soldiers, with a ratio about 1.1 French soldiers to 1 Russian soldier. The result of the battle of Borodino was a kind of pyrrhic victory for Napoleon, with near a third of the French army killed or wounded. Although the Russian losses were nearly 50% higher, the Russian army had not been destroyed.

On 10 September the main quarter of the Russian army was situated at Bolshiye Vyazyomy.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Kutuzov settled in a manor on the high road to Moscow. The owner was Dmitry Golitsyn, who entered military service again. The next day Template:OldStyleDate Tsar Alexander signed a document that Kutuzov was promoted General Field Marshal, the highest military rank. Russian sources suggest Kutuzov wrote a number of orders and letters to Rostopchin, the Moscow military governor, about saving the city or the army.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Sfn On Template:OldStyleDate, the main forces of Kutuzov departed from the village, now Golitsyno and camped near Odintsovo, 20 km to the west, followed by Mortier and Joachim Murat's vanguard.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> On Sunday afternoon the Russian military council at Fili discussed the risks and agreed to abandon Moscow without fighting.

Further events

Template:See also This came at the price of losing Moscow, whose population was evacuated. After a council at the village of Fili, Kutuzov withdrew to the rich southeast of Moscow. On 19 September Murat lost sight of Kutuzov who changed direction and turned west to Podolsk and Tarutino where he would be more protected by the surrounding hills and the Nara river.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 3 October Kutuzov and his entire staff arrived at Tarutino. He wanted to go even further in order to control the three-pronged roads from Obninsk to Kaluga and Medyn, so that Napoleon could not turn south or southwest.Template:Blockquote Kutuzov avoided frontal battles involving large masses of troops in order to reinforce his Russian army and to wait there for Napoleon's retreat.<ref>Template:YouTube</ref> This tactic was sharply criticised by Chief of Staff Bennigsen and others, but also by Emperor Alexander (Barclay de Tolly interrupted his service for five months and settled in Nizhny NovgorodTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn).Template:Sfn Each side avoided the other and seemed no longer to wish to get into a fight. On 5 October, on order of Napoleon, the French ambassador Jacques Lauriston left Moscow to meet Kutuzov at his headquarters near Tarutino. Kutuzov agreed to meet, despite the orders of the Tsar.Template:Sfn On 18 October, at dawn during breakfast, Murat's camp in a forest was surprised by an attack by forces led by Bennigsen, known as Battle of Winkovo. Bennigsen was supported by Kutuzov from his headquarters at distance. Bennigsen asked Kutuzov to provide troops for the pursuit. However, the General Field Marshal refused.Template:Sfn Napoleon's goal was to get around Kutuzov, but on the 24th he was stopped at Maloyaroslavets on his way to Medyn and forced to go north on the 26th.

After the Battle of Maloyaroslavets, fought with a 1:1 ratio of French and Russian soldiers, Napoleon decided to avoid a decisive battle and marched north via Mozhaisk to Smolensk into a higher probability of starvation, as it was the devastated route of his advance. The old general "escorted" Napoleon on the more southern roads but attacked him at the Battle of Vyazma, at the Battle of Krasnoi, fought with a ratio of 1 French soldier to 1.4 Russian soldiers, and at the Battle of Berezina, fought with a ratio of 1 French soldier to 1.75 Russian soldiers. In parallel Cossack bands and peasants assaulted isolated French units during their whole retreat. With Kutuzov's strategy of attrition warfare, on 14 December the remainder of the French main army left Russia. The only remaining troops were the flanking forces (43,000 under Schwarzenberg, 23,000 under Macdonald), about 1,000 men of the Guard and about 40,000 stragglers. About 110,000 soldiers were all that were left of the 612,000 (including reinforcements) that had entered Russia.Template:Sfn

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Alexander I awarded Kutuzov the victory title of His Serene Highness Knyaz Golenischev-Kutuzov-Smolensky (Светлейший князь Голенищев-Кутузов-Смоленский, pre-1918: Свѣтлѣйшій князь Голенищевъ-Кутузовъ-Смоленскій; "Smolensky" means "of Smolensk") on Template:OldStyleDate, for his victory at the Battle of Krasnoi at Smolensk in November 1812.Template:Sfn

Death and legacy

File:Monument to Kutuzov in SPB.jpg
1837 Russian monument to Kutuzov in Saint Petersburg
File:Stamp of USSR 0997.jpg
Kutuzov on a 1945 Soviet stamp

Early in 1813, Kutuzov fell ill, and he died on 28 April 1813 at Bunzlau, Silesia, then in the Kingdom of Prussia, now Bolesławiec, Poland.Template:Sfn Memorials have been erected to him there, at the Poklonnaya Hill in Moscow and in front of the Kazan Cathedral, Saint Petersburg, where he is buried, by Boris Orlovsky. He had five daughters with his spouse Princess Catherine Ilytchina Kutuzova née Bibikova (1754–1824); his only son Nicolay died of smallpox as an infant. As he had no male heir, his estates passed to the Tolstoy family, as his eldest daughter, Princess Praskovya Kutuzova (1777–1844), had married Count Matvei Fyodorovich Tolstoy (1772–1815).

Today, Kutuzov is still held in high regard, alongside Barclay and his mentor Suvorov.<ref name="KUTUZOVBARCLAYSUVOROV">Template:Cite web</ref>

Alexander Pushkin addressed the Field Marshal in the famous elegy on Kutuzov's sepulchre. The novelist Leo Tolstoy clearly idolised Kutuzov. In his influential 1869 novel War and Peace, the elderly, sick Kutuzov plays a major role in the war sections. He is portrayed as a gentle spiritual man, far removed from the cold arrogance of Napoleon, but with a much clearer vision of the true nature of warfare.<ref name="SPARK">Template:Cite web</ref> Tolstoy wrote of Kutuzov's insight and the national sentiment, "... this sentiment elevated Kutuzov to the high pinnacle of humanity from which he, the general-in-chief, employed all his efforts, not to kill and exterminate men, but to save and have pity on them."Template:Sfn

During World War II (known as "The Great Patriotic War" in Russia), the Soviet government established the Order of Kutuzov which, among several other decorations, was preserved in Russia upon the dissolution of the Soviet Union, thus remaining among the highest military awards in Russia,<ref name="orderkutuzov">Template:Cite web</ref> only second to the Order of Soviet Marshall Zhukov.<ref>Decree of the President of the Russian Federation of 16 December 2011 No 1631</ref>

Also, during World War II, one of the key strategic operations of the Red Army, the Orel Strategic Offensive Operation "Kutuzov" was named after the Field Marshal (Template:Langx) (12 July – 18 August 1943).

File:Памятник Кутузову Смоленск.jpg
1954 Soviet monument to Kutuzov in Smolensk

No less than ten Russian towns have been named "Kutuzovo" during the Soviet era in honour of the general. Notable among them is the former German town of Schirwindt (now Kutuzovo in the Krasnoznamensky District of the Kaliningrad Oblast) – the first town in Germany proper that was reached by Soviet infantry in 1945. One of the largest prospekts of Moscow, Kutuzovsky Prospekt, bears Kutuzov's name since 1952.

A Sverdlov-class cruiser named for Kutuzov was commissioned in the Soviet Navy in 1954. It is now preserved, thanks to the efforts of Evgeny Primakov, as a museum ship in Novorossiysk.<ref name="CNM">Template:Cite web</ref> From May 1813 to 2020, at least 24 ships were identified in the United Kingdom, the United States, the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and Russia, named after Kutuzov.<ref>Patriotic War of 1812 about the liberation campaigns of the Russian Army of 1813–1814. Sources. Monuments. Problems. Materials of the XXIII International Scientific Conference, 3–5 September 2019. Borodino, 2020. // S. Yu. Rychkov. The historical memory about the participants of the Borodino battle in the names of ships. Pp.302–329.</ref>

The monument to Kutuzov in the city of Brody in Western Ukraine was demolished in February 2014 as part of the Euromaidan demonstrations.<ref>"Ukraine: Russia Angry as Another Soviet Hero Statue Toppled". International Business Times. 25 February 2014.</ref> Due to decommunization policies (although Kutuzov is not related to communism, his image was used by the Soviets for propaganda purposes) the street named after Kutuzov in (Ukraine's capital) Kyiv was renamed after Template:Ill and a lane dedicated to his legacy was renamed after Yevhen Hutsalo (both) in 2016.<ref>Template:In lang Bandera Avenue in Kyiv to be – the decision of the Court of Appeal, Ukrayinska Pravda (22 April 2021)</ref>

The Russian national airline Aeroflot named one of its planes after Kutuzov.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Praise and criticism

  • Napoleon: "the sly old fox from the north"Template:Sfn
  • Leo Tolstoy: "a simple, modest and therefore truly great figure"Template:Sfn
  • Suvorov: "he is crafty. And shrewd. No one will fool him"Template:Sfn
  • Jean Colin: "Napoleon's audacity succeeded at Austerlitz, but only because Kutuzov was ignored"Template:Sfn
  • Alexander I: "a hatcher of intrigues and an immoral and thoroughly dangerous character"Template:Sfn
  • Barclay de Tolly: "get the answer in writing. One has to be careful with Kutuzov"Template:Sfn
  • Clausewitz: "a true Russian, a slightly reduced Suvorov"Template:Sfn
  • General Bennigsen: "he, Bennigsen, would be a far better leader for the army"Template:Sfn
  • Alexander's sister: "the inaction of his army is the result of his laziness"Template:Sfn
  • Langeron: "No-one had more spirit but less character than Kutuzov. Nor could be found in an individual such a combination of address and shrewdness, of so few veritable talents and such immortality. A prodigious memory, highly educated, a rare amiability, pleasing and interesting conversation, good-naturedness (admittedly a little false but warm to those who preferred to be duped by it): such were Kutuzov's charms. Violent, an impropriety akin to that of a peasant when angry or when he deemed that the individual whom he was addressing mattered little, a baseness – often to the point of demeaning – towards individuals he believed to be in favour, an overwhelming laziness, an apathy that dominated everything, a most repulsive selfishness, a libertinism as contemptible as it was disgusting, little discretion when it came to acquiring money: such were the flaws of this same man."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • Wilson: "Kutuzov was utterly lazy, incompetent and perhaps even a friend of the French"Template:Sfn
  • Richard K. Riehn: "Napoleon was the master of the short run, Kutuzov understood the long"Template:Sfn

Personality

All citations taken from "The Fox of the North" by Roger Parkinson unless otherwise stated:

  • He was handsome, strong, an excellent horseman and highly intelligent.
  • He became proficient in mathematics, fortifications and engineering.
  • He was well-informed in theology, philosophy, law, and social sciences.
  • He spoke Russian, French, German, Polish, Swedish, English and Turkish.
  • He was popular, entertaining, brave, quick-witted and efficient.
  • He displayed courage and decisiveness in the attack.
  • Kutuzov owned more than 3,000 serfs.
  • He visited Berlin and discussed tactics with Frederick the Great.
  • He had an eye treatment in Leiden in 1775.<ref>Two bullets to the head and an early winter: fate permits Kutuzov to defeat Napoleon at Moscow (2016)</ref>
  • He studied in London the attrition warfare of the American colonies against Britain.
  • He became ambassador in Constantinople and survived his visit of the sultan's harem.
  • He was a happy grandfather.
  • After his appointment in 1812 he went into a cathedral, bent his knees grunting from his rheumatism, and prayed.
  • He was a member of the Moscow Freemason lodges "Sphinx" and "Three Banners".<ref>С. П. Карпачёв Путеводитель по масонским тайнам. 174 стр. — М.: Центр гуманитарного образования (ЦГО), 2003. Template:ISBN.</ref>
  • He was described to Napoleon as a cool and selfish calculator, dilatory, vindictive, artful, pliable, patient, preparing an implacable war with caressing attention.
  • Kutuzov reported to Alexander I that he had won the Battle of Borodino.Template:Sfn
  • The partisan leader Denis Davydov reported to him in filthy peasant clothing.
  • He supported Aleksandr Figner despite his barbarism and even increased the guerilla warfare.
  • He appreciated the value of armed peasant groups.
  • He sobbed "Russia is saved" when he was informed that Napoleon had left Moscow.
  • Kutuzow said to Robert Wilson, "I am by no means sure that the total destruction of the Emperor Napoleon and his army would be such a benefit to the world; his succession would not fall to Russia or any other continental power, but to that which already commands the sea (i.e. Britain), and whose domination would then be intolerable."Template:Sfn
  • Philippe Paul, comte de Ségur, reported: ...emerging from the white ice-bound wilderness only 1,000 infantrymen under arms, 20,000 stragglers, dressed in rags, with bowed heads, dull eyes, ashen, cadaverous faces and long ice-stiffened beards. This was the Grande Armee...

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See also

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Notes

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References

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Sources

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