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  • Remembering Armenians who fought Napoleon

    Remembering Armenians who fought Napoleon
    by Georgiy Saakov

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-09-29-remembering-armenians-who-fought-napoleon-
    Published: Saturday September 29, 2012


    Depictions of Pavel Melikov (left) and Valerian Madatov.

    Tashkent, Uzbekistan - The 200th anniversary of the Battle of
    Borodino, which became a pivotal point in Napoleon's invasion of
    Russia, is being celebrated with conferences and exhibits. New
    biographies of the top Russian strategists of what is known in Russia
    as the Patriotic War of 1812- Mikhail Kutuzov, Mikhael Barclay de
    Tolly and Pyotr Bagration - have been published.

    "There was a thunder of two thousand cannons and two hundred thousand
    guns that shook the ground beneath our feet. It was spewing death with
    such hellish speed that any rescue seemed impossible." This is how Lev
    Tolstoy famously described the Borodino battle in his novel "War and
    Peace."

    The war brought out unprecedented unity to the Russian empire, at the
    time strictly segregated by class, with high-ranking nobles, Cossacks
    and large forces of popular militia fighting the invading army side by
    side.

    The war effort was also joined by non-Russian subjects of the empire.
    Incidentally, Bagration came from the royal family of Georgia, which
    was incorporated into Russia only a decade earlier, and Barclay de
    Tolly was a German noble from Riga.

    Among those who fought with Napoleon's armies and shed blood in the
    field of Borodino, were also Armenians, including General Pavel
    Arapetov, colonels (later, generals) Dmitry Ashkharumov and David
    Delianov, officers Pavel Melikov, Zoan Firalov, brothers Ivan and
    David Abamelik, Don Armenian volunteers led by Nikita Abramov, and
    others

    Their merits were highly esteemed with ranks and even knighthood by
    the highest will of the emperor, and today their portraits can be seen
    in the series of 333 portraits exhibited in the War Gallery of St.
    Petersburg's Hermitage museum. The glorified military commanders of
    the 1812 Patriotic War look down on us with their handsome and brave
    faces "full of military courage," as Alexander Pushkin wrote about
    them.

    Karabakhi prince Madatov
    In that row there is a portrait of Valerian Madatov (1782-1829) in
    hussar uniform. He was born in Karabakh's Chanahchi (Avetaranots)
    settlement not far from Shushi and at the age of 15 arrived in Russia.

    In St. Petersburg the ambitious young man joined the military service.
    Soon afterwards he became an ensign with the Preobrajensky Regiment of
    Imperial Guards. His fist campaign was with Bagration's regiment
    during the Russian-Turkish War of 1807-1812. After the 26-year-old
    officer with two squadrons of hussars routed the much larger cavalry
    corps of Khosrov Pasha in the Balkan theater, Madatov was awarded with
    the golden sword inscribed "For Bravery". He was subsequently
    decorated with a number of medals, including the Cross of St. George.

    In years prior to his invasion of Russia, Napoleon defeated the armies
    of Europe and his force appeared unstoppable. As the Patriotic War
    began in June 1812, the Russian army was retreating. Madatov led a
    battalion of hussars in the first Russian success of the war at Kobrin
    in present-day Belarus.

    Although his unit was not engaged in the Borodino battle, Madatov left
    his mark in a number of other engagements of the 1812 war and Russian
    army's subsequent campaign against Napoleon in Poland and Germany.
    Later, Madatov served in the Caucasus, including his native Karabakh
    which was incorporated into Russia in 1813.

    Following wars against Persia, Madatov fought he last campaign against
    Turks in the Balkans. He succumbed to illness during the Russian
    campaign in Bulgaria in 1829 and was buried with honors in St.
    Petersburg. In 2007 sculptor Georgiy Frangulyan inaugurate a monument
    to Madatov in Shumen, Bulgaria.

    The old man of Borodino
    When one visits the fields near the village of Borodino, which today
    is an open air historical memorial complex, it is hard to imagine that
    this verdant area was once a battlefield, where famous heroes stood in
    face of artillery and musket fire.

    On Borodino's 25th anniversary, Mikhail Lermontov romanticized the
    bloodiest single-day action of Napoleon's invasion in a poem studied
    to this day by Russian elementary school students. It famously begins
    with:

    "- HEY tell, old man, had we a cause

    When Moscow, razed by fire, once was

    Given up to Frenchman's blow?

    Old-timers talk about some frays,

    And they remember well those days!

    With cause all Russia fashions lays

    About Borodino!"

    The "old man" - whom Lermontov calls the "uncle" - in whose name the
    rest of the poem is told is believed to be Lermontov family's friend
    Pavel Melikov, another Russian general with Karabakhi roots who lost
    his arm at Borodino. Melikov subsequently commanded the Baku garrison
    and served in Central Asia.

    Upon retirement Melikov settled near the Armenian street in Moscow,
    which at the time hosted the Lazarev Institute of Eastern Language
    (and today houses the Armenian embassy). He shared his war time
    memories with the young Lermontov, helping in the creation of one of
    the most well known poems in the anthology of Russian literature.

    The role of Armenians in the Patriotic War of 1812 foreshadowed the
    role their descendants played in subsequent campaigns, culminating in
    the World War II - known in Russia as the Great Patriotic War.
    Karabakh-born Hovhanes Bagramyan and Hamazasp Babajanyan, and
    countless others, in effect walked in the footsteps of their
    ancestors.

    Today, Armenian-Russian relations are a subject of constant attack and
    pressure and these crucial events may be fading in time.

    But it is said that heroes remain alive as long as they are
    remembered. Two centuries that passed since the battle of Borodino
    have not erased the admiration and reverence for the heroism of those
    days.

    - Georgiy Saakov is editor in chief for "Depi Apaga," a magazine of
    Armenians in Uzbekistan

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