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Ukraine Sightseeing Information Sights of Ukraine. Odessa, Kiev Lvov, Sevastopol in Crimea |
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Sights
of Ukraine. Travel Guide |
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Odessa Sightseeing Information |
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Monument to Richelieu / The Potemkin Stairs / Don Josef de Ribas / Primorsky Boulevard / Monument to A. Pushkin / Monument to Vorontsov / Colonnade of the Vorontsov Palace / Opera and Ballet Theatre / City Hall / Odessa Sea Port / Catacombs / Museums / Old Stock Exchange / Deribasovskaya St. / City park / Vorontsov Palace / Beaches of Odessa / Odessa Cathedrals & Monasteries |
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Monument to Richelieu, Armand-Emmanuel du Plessis, duke (duc) de. |
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(b. Sept. 25, 1766, Paris, Fr.--d. May 17, 1822, Paris), French nobleman, soldier, and statesman who, as premier of France (1815-18 and 1820-21), obtained the withdrawal of the Allied occupation army from France. Earlier, he had served Russia as governor of Odessa and was notable for his progressive administration there. The son of Louis-Antoine-Armand du Plessis, duc de Fronsac, and grandson
of Louis-François-Armand de Vignerot du Plessis, duc de Richelieu
and marshal of France, Armand took over his grandfather's duties at court
as first gentleman of the bedchamber (1785). On a visit to Germany and
Austria in 1790 he joined the Russian army, fighting against the Turks
at Izmail, and then visited Russia. Succeeding his father as duc de Richelieu
(1791), he fought with the royalists under the Prince de Condé
(1792) and with the Austrians (1793-94). Visiting |
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Russia in 1795, Richelieu was appointed lieutenant colonel of the Cuirassiers of St. George, and later Tsar Alexander I appointed him governor of Odessa (1803) and governor general of New Russia, the area between the Dniester River and the Caucasus (1805). After cleaning up a corrupt administration, Richelieu transformed the Black Sea village of Odessa into a modern city. He constructed port facilities and encouraged agriculture and commerce. Richelieu returned to France in 1814, but on Napoleon's return from Elba
in 1815 he joined the Tsar's forces against Napoleon. He succeeded Talleyrand
as prime minister with control of foreign affairs in September 1815. His
friendship with the Tsar helped him to mitigate the demands of the Allies
on France, and at the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle (1818) he obtained the
withdrawal of the Allied occupying army and the inclusion of France into
the Quadruple Alliance. He resigned in 1818, became prime minister again
in 1820, but was forced by political opponents to resign again in 1821. |
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