(Redirected from Great Embassy)
A statue of Peter I working incognito at a Dutch wharf.
'The Grand Embassy' (''Великое посольство'' in
Russian) was a
Russian
diplomatic mission, sent to
Western Europe in
1697-
1698 by
Peter the Great.
The goal of this mission was to strengthen and broaden the
Holy League,
Russia's
alliance with a number of
European countries against
Turkey in its struggle for the northern coastline of the
Black Sea, hire foreign specialists for Russian service, order and acquire military supplies and weapons. Officially, the Grand Embassy was headed by the "grand
ambassadors"
Franz Lefort,
Fedor Golovin and
Prokopy Voznitsyn. In fact, it was led by Peter the Great, who went along under the name of Peter Mikhailov.
Peter I conducted negotiations with
Duke of
Courland and concluded an alliance with
Kurfürst of
Brandenburg. After unsuccessful negotiations in the
Netherlands, the Grand Embassy had to limit itself to acquiring different equipment and hiring foreign specialists. Peter the Great and part of the mission also went to
Great Britain for 3 months, where the
tsar conducted negotiations with
William III of England, acquainted himself with
shipbuilding, visited
shipyards and
artillery plants, and recruited foreign specialists.
On the way back to Russia, the Grand Embassy conducted fruitless negotiations in
Vienna with Russia's former allies in the
Holy League,
Austrian
foreign minister and
Venetian ambassador, trying to prevent
Austria's separate peace treaty with Turkey. An intended visit to
Venice was cancelled due to the news about the
Streltsy Uprising in
Moscow and Peter's hasty return to Russia.
The Grand Embassy failed to accomplish its main goal, but it gathered valuable information about the international situation, ascertained the impossibility of strengthening of the anti-Turkish coalition due to the imminent
War of the Spanish Succession, and brought back the plans for gaining access to the
Baltic Sea. On his way back to Russia, Peter the Great met with
Augustus II of Poland and conducted negotiations with him, which would form the basis for the Russo-Polish alliance against
Sweden in the
Great Northern War.
References