Admiral Mikhail Petrovich Lazarev (; ) was a Russian Naval fleet commander and explorer.
Education and early career
Lazarev was born in Vladimir city, a scion of the old
Russian nobility from the Vladimir province.
[V.V. Rummel, V.V. Golubtsov, Rodoslovnyi sbornik russkikh dvorianskikh familii, vol. 1, Sankt Petersburg, 1886, p. 504. The Russian noble family Lazarevs shall not be confused with the Armenian family Lazariants who russified their surname from Lazariants into Lazarevs.] In 1800, he enrolled in
Russian Empire's Naval College. Three years later he was sent to the
United Kingdom Royal Navy, where he would stay for a continuous five-year navigation. From 1808 to 1813, Lazarev served in the
Baltic Fleet. He took part in the
Finnish War and Patriotic War of 1812.
Career as an explorer
Lazarev first
circumnavigation the
globe in 1813–1816, aboard the vessel
Suvorov; the expedition began at
Kronstadt and reached
Alaska. During this voyage, Lazarev discovered the
Suwarrow.
As a commander of the ship and Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen's deputy on his world cruise in 1819–1821 (Bellingshausen commanded ), Lazarev took part in the discovery of Antarctica and numerous islands. On 28 January 1820 the expedition discovered the Antarctic mainland, approaching the Antarctic coast at the coordinates and seeing ice-fields there.
In 1822–1825, Lazarev circumnavigated the globe for the third time on his frigate Kreyser, conducting broad research in the fields of meteorology and ethnography.
Wartime commands
In 1826, Lazarev became commander of the ship , which would sail to the Mediterranean Sea as the flagship of the First Mediterranean Squadron under command of Admiral Login Petrovich Geiden and participated in the Battle of Navarino in 1827. Lazarev received the
Military rank of
rear admiral for his excellence during the battle.
In 1828–1829, he was in charge of the Dardanelles blockade. In 1830, Lazarev returned to Kronstadt and became a commander of naval units of the Baltic Fleet. Two years later, he was made Chief of Staff of the Black Sea Fleet. In February–June 1833, Lazarev led a Russian squadron to the Bosporus and signed the Treaty of Hünkâr İskelesi with the Ottoman Empire. In 1833, Lazarev was appointed Commander of the Black Sea Fleet, the Black Sea ports, and also military governor of Sevastopol and Mykolayiv.
Influence and legacy
Admiral Lazarev exercised great influence both in technical matters and as a mentor to younger officers. He advocated the building of a
steam engine fleet, but Russia's technical and economic backwardness hindered his plans. He tutored a number of Russian fleet commanders, including
Pavel Nakhimov (1802-1855), Vladimir Alexeyevich Kornilov (1806-1854),
Vladimir Istomin (1810-1855), and
Grigory Butakov (1820-1882).
An atoll in the Pacific Ocean, capes in the Amur Liman and on the Unimak Island, a former island in the Aral Sea, a bay and a port in the Sea of Japan, Lazarev Bay and Lazarev Sea in the South Ocean, a settlement near Sochi and other locations bear Lazarev's name.
Russian and Soviet navies had ships named after the admiral:
-
, a monitor of the Imperial Russian Navy built in 1867 and lead ship of her class
-
A light cruiser ordered for the Imperial Russian Navy in 1914, completed and renamed after the Russian Revolution of 1917
-
, a built in the early 1950s
-
The , renamed Admiral Lazarev after the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union
Lazarev is buried with his disciples Nakhimov, Kornilov and Istomin in the Admirals' Burial Vault in Sevastopol. A minor planet 3660 Lazarev, discovered by Soviet Union astronomer Nikolai Stepanovich Chernykh in 1978, is named after him.[
]
Honours and awards
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Order of St. George, IV class
-
Order of St. Vladimir, 1st class
-
Order of St. Alexander Nevsky
-
Order of White Eagle
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Companion of the Order of the Bath (United Kingdom)
-
Military Order of St. Louis (France)
References and notes
External links