The Imperiia Project: a spatial history of the Russian EmpireMain MenuProjectsDashboardsData CatalogMapStoriesGalleriesGamesWho said history was boring?Teach Our ContentCiting the ProjectKelly O'Neilldc20b45f1d74122ba0d654d19961d826c5a557f5The Imperiia Project // Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University
Aleksey Mikhailovich Obreskov
12020-04-09T21:37:15-04:00Kelly O'Neilldc20b45f1d74122ba0d654d19961d826c5a557f591Portrait by Fyodor Stepanovich Rokotov (public domain)plain2020-04-09T21:37:15-04:00Kelly O'Neilldc20b45f1d74122ba0d654d19961d826c5a557f5
This page is referenced by:
12020-04-09T21:29:38-04:00Russia goes to war18On October 6, 1768 Sultan Mustafa III imprisons Aleksey Mikhailovich Obreskov, Russia's representative in Constantinople. The act is a declaration of war.plain2020-04-10T17:02:25-04:0010-06-1768On October 6, 1768 Sultan Mustafa III imprisons Aleksey Mikhailovich Obreskov, Russia's representative in Constantinople. The act is a declaration of war.
The Russian-Ottoman war would last six years. It came to a close with the signing of a peace treaty (1774) that made Russia a Black Sea power and fundamentally altered the geopolitical balance of Eurasia.