'Mikhail Grigorievich Chernyayev' (
24 October 1828 -
16 August 1898) was a
Russian general, who, together with
Konstantin Kaufman and
Mikhail Skobelev, led the Russian conquest of
Central Asia under
Alexander II.
A member of a noble family, he was educated at the
Nicholas Staff College, entered the army in
1847, and distinguished himself in the
Crimean War and in the
Caucasus. After serving as divisional Chief of Staff in
Poland, he went to
Orenburg in
1858 as assistant to the commander of the line of the
Syr-Darya, and the following year commanded an expedition to support the
Kazakh tribes on the borders of the
Aral Sea against the
Khanate of Khiva. He did duty on the staff of the Army of the Caucasus for a time, and returned to Orenburg as Chief of Staff.
In
1864, having reached the rank of
Major-General, Chernyayev made his famous march with 1000 men across the steppes of
Turkestan to
Chimkent (Shymkent) in the
Khanate of Kokand, to meet another Russian column from
Semipalatinsk (Semey), in
Siberia, in conjunction with which he successfully stormed Chimkent, and then unsuccessfully attacked
Tashkent, 130
km farther south. Wintering at Chimkent, he captured Tashkent the following year. This was contrary to his instructions, and although he was received in
St. Petersburg with enthusiasm, and presented with a sword of honor by the emperor, he was not again employed in the military service, and retired from it in July
1874.
He bought, and edited with great success, the ''Russkiy Mir'' in Slavonic interests, devoting himself to the
Pan-Slavism. In the summer of
1876 he was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the
Serbian army, but on entering
Turkey was driven back by
Osman Pasha, who followed him into Serbia, defeating him at
ZajeÄar and
Javor in July and the campaign in Serbia proved disastrous. He rashly proclaimed
Milan Obrenović IV King Milan I of Serbia in September, and in October
Aleksinac and
Deligrad were in the hands of the Turks, and the road open to
Belgrade. An armistice was concluded, and Chernyayev resigned his command.
In
1877 he visited
Austria in connection with his propaganda, but was expelled, and lived for a time in
France. In
1879 he organized a
Bulgarian rising, but was arrested at
Adrianople (Edirne) and sent back to Russia. He succeeded Kaufmann as Governor of
Turkestan in
1882, but his bellicose plans for the
Great Game with the
British Empire forced his retirement two years later, when he was appointed a member of the council of war at St. Petersburg. In
1886 his opposition to the
Central Asian Military railway caused him to lose his seat in the council. Chernyayev died in
1898 at his country seat in the
governorate of
Mogilev (Mahilyow).
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