
Eduard de Stoeckl
'Eduard Andreevich Stoeckl' () (
Istanbul 1804 –
Paris 1892) was a
Russian diplomat best known today for having negotiated the American
purchase of Alaska on behalf of the Russian government. He was son of Andreas von Stoeckl, Austrian diplomat in
Istanbul, and Maria Pisani, daughter of
Nicolas Pisani, Russian
dragoman in Istanbul. He died in Paris on the 26th of january
1892. He occasionally used the bogus title of Baron.
In
1850 he became ''
chargé d'affaires'' of the Russian embassy in
Washington, and in
1854 held the post of minister, vacant after death of
Aleksandr Bodisko. Like his predecessor, Stoeckl married an American woman, miss Elisa Howard.
Stoeckl established close friendly relations with many American officials and politicians, including the senator and the future
Secretary of State William H. Seward, with whom he would later negotiate the Alaska purchase.
Stoeckl advocated the sale of
Alaska (then known as Russian America) to the
United States, asserting that this would allow the Russian government to concentrate its resources on Eastern
Siberia, particularly the
Amur River area. He insisted that by doing so, Russia would avoid any future conflict with the United States, viewing further US expansion in North America as inevitable.
Later life
Stoeckl signed the Alaska Treaty in March 1867. For successfully carrying out the negotiation, Tsar
Alexander II rewarded him with 25,000 dollars and an annual pension of 6000 dollars.
Due to worsening health, Stoeckl resigned in 1869. He spent the final years of his life in
France and died in
Paris.
Bibliography
★ Marie de Testa & Antoine Gautier, ''Le diplomate russe Edouard de Stoeckl (ca 1805-1892) et la cession de l'Alaska aux Etats-Unis'', in Drogmans et diplomates européens auprès de la Porte ottomane, éditions ISIS, Istanbul, 2003, pp. 463-469.