Vilna Governorate-General

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Map of the six governorates of the Northwestern Krai – three western governorates constituted Vilna Governorate-General

Vilna Governorate-General (Russian: Литовское генерал-губернаторство, Lithuanian: Vilniaus generalgubernatorija), known as Lithuania Governorate-General before 1830, was a Governorate-General of the Russian Empire from 1794 to 1912. It primarily encompassed the Vilna, Grodno, and Kovno Governorates. Governors General were also commanders of the Vilna Military District. According to the Russian Empire Census, the Governorate-General had 4,754,000 residents in 1897.[1]

Composition[edit]

The Governorate-General was established in November 1794 when territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were incorporated into the Russian Empire following the Third Partition of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The core of the Governorate-General was the present-day territory of Lithuania and western Belarus. In 1794–1797, the Governorate-General was composed of two governorates, Vilna Governorate and Slonim Governorate, which were merged into the Lithuania Governorate by Paul I of Russia. After his assassination, the governorate was again divided into Vilna and Grodno Governorates. In 1834, Kovno Governorate was formed from the seven western powiats of the Vilna Governorate.[1]

The Governorate-General temporarily included other territories as well:[1]

Governors General[edit]

Governor[1] From To Tenure
Nicholas Repnin November 10, 1794 December 7, 1798 4 years, 27 days
Maurice de Lacy December 7, 1798 November 6, 1799 334 days
Ivan Gorich November 24, 1799 December 30, 1799 36 days
Mikhail Kutuzov December 30, 1799 July 23, 1801 1 year, 205 days
Levin August von Bennigsen July 23, 1801 October 2, 1806 5 years, 71 days
Alexander Korsakov October 17, 1806 July 15, 1809 2 years, 271 days
Mikhail Kutuzov July 15, 1809 April 29, 1812 2 years, 289 days
Alexander Korsakov April 29, 1812 January 5, 1831 18 years, 251 days
Matvey Khrapovitsky [ru] January 5, 1831 April 4, 1831 89 days
Nikolay Dolgorukov [ru] April 4, 1831 March 30, 1840 8 years, 361 days
Fedor Mirkovich April 13, 1840 March 11, 1850 9 years, 332 days
Ilya Bibikov [ru] March 27, 1850 December 22, 1855 5 years, 270 days
Vladimir Nazimov [ru] December 22, 1855 May 13, 1863 7 years, 142 days
Mikhail Muravyov-Vilensky May 13, 1863 April 29, 1865 1 year, 351 days
Konstantin von Kaufman April 29, 1865 October 21, 1866 1 year, 175 days
Eduard von Baranoff [ru] October 21, 1866 March 15, 1868 1 year, 146 days
Aleksandr Potapov March 15, 1868 August 3, 1874 6 years, 141 days
Pyotr Albedinsky August 3, 1874 May 30, 1880 5 years, 301 days
Eduard Totleben May 30, 1880 July 1, 1884 4 years, 32 days
Ivan Kakhanov [ru] September 18, 1884 January 13, 1893 8 years, 117 days
Peter Orzhevsky [ru] January 13, 1893 April 12, 1897 4 years, 89 days
Vitaly Trotsky [ru] December 18, 1897 May 22, 1901 3 years, 155 days
Vacant May 23, 1901 September 29, 1902 1 year, 129 days
Pyotr Dmitrievich Sviatopolk-Mirsky September 30, 1902 September 8, 1904 1 year, 344 days
Alexander Frese [ru] October 25, 1904 January 1, 1906 1 year, 68 days
Konstantin Krshivitsky [ru] January 1, 1906 March 26, 1909 3 years, 84 days

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Mulevičius, Leonas (2014-06-26). "Vilniaus generalgubernatorija". Visuotinė lietuvių enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidybos centras.