Georgy Lvov

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Georgy Lvov
Георгий Львов
Georgy Lvov 1917.jpg
Georgy Lvov as Prime Minister in March 1917
Minister-Chairman of the Russian Provisional Government
In office
15 March 1917 – 20 July 1917
Preceded byNikolai Golitsyn
(As Prime Minister of Russia)
Nicholas II
(As Emperor of Russia)
Succeeded byAlexander Kerensky
Minister of Interior
In office
15 March 1917 – 20 July 1917
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byAlexander Protopopov
Succeeded byNikolai Avksentiev
8th Prime Minister of Russia
In office
15 March 1917 – 20 July 1917
MonarchVacant
Preceded byNikolai Golitsyn
Succeeded byAlexander Kerensky
Personal details
Born
Georgy Yevgenyevich Lvov

2 November 1861
Dresden, Kingdom of Saxony, German Confederation
Died7 March 1925 (1925-03-08) (aged 63)
Paris, France
NationalityRussian
Political partyConstitutional Democratic (1905 – 1911)
Progressive (since 1911)
Alma materMoscow State University
ProfessionPolitician

Prince Georgy Yevgenyevich Lvov[a] (2 November [O.S. 21 October] 1861 – 7/8 March 1925) was a Russian aristocrat and statesman who served as the first prime minister of democratic Russia from 15 March to 20 July 1917. He was the last Muscovite and the last Rurikid head of the Russian state.

Early life and education[]

Georgy Lvov was born on 2 November 1861[1] (21 October, Old Style, Julian Calendar) in Dresden, then part of the German Confederation.[2] The Lvov princely family were among the oldest Russian noble families, tracing their roots from the sovereign Rurik dynasty princes of Yaroslavl.[3] His father was a reform-minded liberal who spent almost all his income on his children's education; Lvov and his five brothers were sent off to the most prestigious Moscow schools. Throughout his youth, Georgy lived with his family at their ancestral home at in Tula province, less than 120 miles (190 km) away from Moscow and only a few miles away from Yasnaya Polyana, the home of writer Leo Tolstoy. The Lvovs counted Tolstoy as one of their closest friends.[4]

By the standards of the Russian noble class, the Lvovs lived a frugal lifestyle. Luxuries were minimal and their estate was considered small at only 1,000 acres (400 ha).[4] The Lvovs generated massive debts in excess of around 150,000 roubles by the end of the 1870s. With the abolition of serfdom, the Lvov family fell into the category of landowners who did not have the means to live in the manner to which many other Russian nobles had been accustomed. In order to pay off their arrears, the family were forced to sell their other landed estates, a brewery in Briansk, and their flat in Moscow.[4] Despite this, the family remained heavily in debt and were faced with the prospect of either having to sell Popovka or convert it into a profitable farm. The Lvovs opted for the latter, with Georgy later recalling: "The idea of giving up the home of our ancestors was unthinkable".[5] The farm at Popovka had become so dilapidated after decades of neglect that it required strenuous work to restore it. By this time his father was too ill to work, leaving Georgy's four older brothers and only sister to take charge of the farm while he studied law at the University of Moscow. The family laid off all their servants and lived like peasants ― Lvov would later recall this time as a source of his own emancipation: "It separated us from the upper crust and made us democratic". As a result of their labour, all debts were repaid by the late 1880s and their ancestral home saved.[5]

Lvov later married Countess Julia Alexeievna Bobrinskaya (1867–1903), great-great-granddaughter of Grigory Orlov and Catherine the Great, without issue.

Pre-revolution[]

Lvov, deputy of the State Duma of the I convocation, 1906

During the Russo-Japanese War he organized relief work in the East and in 1905 joined the liberal Constitutional Democratic Party. A year later he won election to the First Duma, and was nominated for a ministerial position. He became chairman of the All-Russian Union of Zemstvos in 1914, and in 1915 he became a leader of the Union of Zemstvos as well as a member of Zemgor, a joint committee of the Union of Zemstvos and the Union of Towns that helped supply the military and tend to the wounded from World War I. In December 1916, after Prince Lvov's tirades at the Congress of Zemstvos, the Voluntary Organisations would allow no one to work for the government unless their collaboration were purchased by political concessions.[6]

Later years[]

During the first Russian Revolution and the abdication of Nicholas II, emperor of Russia, Lvov was made head of the provisional government founded by the Duma on 2 March 1917. Unable to rally sufficient support, he resigned in July 1917 in favour of his Minister of War, Alexander Kerensky.

Georgy Lvov, 1919

After the October Revolution he settled in Tyumen. In the winter of 1917 he was arrested and transferred to Yekaterinburg. Three months later, Lvov and two other prisoners (Lopukhin and Prince Golitsyn) were released before the court under a written undertaking not to leave the place. The local war commissar, Filipp Goloshchekin, intended to execute Lvov and the other prisoners, but was ordered not to by Isaac Steinberg, the People's Commissar for Justice, a Left-Socialist Revolutionary while they were still in coalition with the Bolsheviks. Lvov immediately left Yekaterinburg, made his way to Omsk, occupied by the anti-Bolshevik Czechoslovak Legion. The Provisional Siberian Government, headed by Pyotr Vologodsky, was formed in Omsk and instructed Lvov to leave for the United States (since it was believed that this country was capable of providing the fastest and most effective assistance to anti-Bolshevik forces) to meet with President Woodrow Wilson and other statesmen to inform them on the aims of the anti-Soviet forces and receiving assistance from former allies of Russia in the First World War. In October 1918 he travelled to the United States but was late as in November of the same year the First World War ended and preparations began for the peace conference in Paris, where the centre of world politics moved.

Having failed to achieve any practical results in the USA, Lvov returned to France, where in 1918–1920 he was at the head of the Russian political meeting in Paris. He was at the source of the labor exchanges system to help Russian emigrants, transferred to their disposal the funds of Zemgor, stored in the National Bank of the United States. Later he left politics, living in Paris in poverty, working at handicraft and writing his memoirs.

Memorials[]

There is a memorial to Prince Lvov in Aleksin as well as a small exhibition on him in the town museum. In Popovka there is another memorial opposite his local church and a plaque on the wall of the local school he founded. He died in Boulogne-sur-Seine and is buried in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois Russian Cemetery in France.

A relative of his by the name of Prince (1901–1933), variously described as either Georgy Lvov's son or nephew, is buried in the old cemetery in Menton.

Further reading[]

Lvov wrote an autobiography, 'Воспоминания' ("Memories"), while in exile and a biography was also written in 1932 by Tikhon Polner entitled 'Жизненный путь князя Георгія Евгеніевича Львова. Личность. Взгляды. Условія дѣятельности' ("The Life Course of Prince Georgy Yevgenievich Lvov. Personality. Views. Conditions of Activity"). Neither has been translated but both have been reprinted and are still available in Russian.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Russian: Гео́ргий Евге́ньевич Львов

Note on transliteration: An older French form, Lvoff, is used on his tombstone. Georgy can be written as Georgi and is sometimes seen in its translated form, George or Jorge.

References[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ Porter 2015, p. 101.
  2. ^ Tucker 2014, pp. 1003-4.
  3. ^ Porter 1997, p. 375.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c Figes 2017, p. 49.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Figes 2017, p. 50.
  6. ^ G. Katkov (1967) Russia 1917. The February Revolution, p. 228.

Bibliography[]

  • Figes, Orlando (2017). A people's tragedy: the Russian Revolution (100th anniversary ed.). London: Bodley Head. pp. 46–816. ISBN 9781847924513.
  • Porter, Thomas Earl (Winter 1997). "Prince Georgii Evgenevich Lvov: A Russian public servant" (harv). Canadian-American Slavic Studies. Greensboro. 31 (4): 375–6. doi:10.1163/221023997X00825.
  • Porter, Thomas Earl (16 January 2015). "Prince Georgii E. Lvov: The Zemstvo, and the failure of Russian liberalism". Международный научно-исследовательский журнал. Greensboro: North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. 31 (12): 101–8. ISSN 2227-6017.
  • Tucker, Spencer (2014). World War I: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection (2nd ed.). Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. pp. 1003–4. ISBN 978-1851099641.

External links[]

Political offices
Preceded by
Nikolai Golitsyn
(Prime Minister)
Nicholas II of Russia
(Emperor)
Minister-Chairman of the Russian Provisional Government
15 March 1917 – 20 July 1917
Succeeded by
Alexander Kerensky
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