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Count Pavel Alexandrovich Stroganov (Russian: Граф Павел Александрович Строганов; 18 June 1774 – 22 June 1817) was a Russian military commander and statesman, Lieutenant General, Adjutant General to Alexander I of Russia. He took part in the Privy Committee that outlined Government reform of Alexander I.
The Deputy Minister became Count Pavel Stroganov. According to Count Speransky, the ministry should have been in charge of the country's productive forces while being completely alien to the functions of the security police. This character of the Ministry of Internal Affairs changed with the accession of the Ministry of Police in 1819.
Pavel Sergeyevich Stroganov (1850s) Count Pavel Sergeyevich Stroganov ( Russian : Па́вел Серге́евич Стро́ганов ; 13 April 1823 – 17 December 1911) was an art collector, philanthropist , and cup-bearer at the Imperial Court.
Pavel Alexandrovich Stroganov (1772–1817) was a member of the Private Committee (Негласный комитет) of Alexander I and assistant to the minister of the interior. Sergei Grigoryevich Stroganov (1794–1882) was the governor general of Moscow in 1859–1860. He founded Stroganov Moscow Arts and Industrial Institute in 1825.
After Alexander Stroganov died in 1811, the palace passed to his son Pavel. Pavel Stroganov had four daughters, but his only son was killed in the Battle of Craonne. He then established the Stroganov entail, i.e., a non-divisible estate which would pass to the oldest family member. This chain of ownership was preserved until 1919 when the last ...
The Private Committee was operational from June 1801 until late 1803. It comprised the closest associates of the tsar (the so-called "young friends"), including Count Pavel Stroganov, Prince Adam Jerzy Czartoryski, Counts Viktor Kochubey and Nikolay Novosiltsev. Mikhail Speransky took an active part in the Committee, although he wasn't a formal ...
These were former members of the grand-ducal circle: Count Pavel Stroganov, Count Victor Kochubey, Prince Adam Chartorysky and Nikolay Novosiltsev. These people formed the so-called " Secret Committee ", which gathered in the secluded room of the emperor during 1801–1803 and worked out a plan of necessary transformations with it.
The Danube Army, commanded by Admiral Pavel Chichagov, included the: 1st Corps (General of cavalry Count Andrault de Langeron); made up of the: 22nd Infantry Division; 2nd Corps (Lieutenant General Count Pyotr Essen); 3rd Corps (Lieutenant General Alexander Voinov);