Alexey Buturlin


Alexey Petrovich Buturlin was a Russian lieutenant general, Governor of Yaroslavl, senator; brother of Dmitry and Mikhail Buturlin. The owner of the large family estate Marinka.

Biography

The son of a retired captain of the Izmailovsky Life Guards Regiment Pyotr Buturlin and Maria Shakhovskaya.
Received a good education at home. Having started his service in 1819 as a cadet in the Life Guards Jaeger Regiment, he soon, of his own free will, was transferred to the Chevalier Guard Regiment and in 1822, he was promoted to cornet.
In 1829, with the rank of His Majesty's aide–de–camp, after the conclusion of peace with Turkey, Buturlin was sent to the active army to be handed over from the Sovereign Field Marshal's baton to the Commander–in–Chief Count Diebitsch. Since 1830, he was under the Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich in Poland, where the next year he took part in the suppression of the uprising and, for the storming of Warsaw, was awarded the Order of Saint Vladimir, 4th Degree.
In 1839, Colonel Buturlin was entrusted with overseeing the recruitment process in the Yekaterinoslav Governorate, which was carried out according to the new, first introduced in Russia, lottery system. In 1841, he was entrusted with the destruction of the riots that arose between the peasants of the Livonian Governorate.
On January 12, 1846 he was awarded the Order of Saint George, 4th Degree. On July 1, 1846, Buturlin was promoted to major general, enrolled in the retinue of His Majesty, and was appointed military and civilian Governor of Yaroslavl. He remained in this position for 15 years. On August 26, 1856, Buturlin was promoted to lieutenant general, and in 1861, he was appointed a senator and assigned to the 1st Department of the 5th Department of the Governing Senate, where he remained until his death "from softening of the brain" on January 26, 1863. He was buried in Saint Petersburg, in the Feodorovskaya Church of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra.

Awards

Family

From 1835, he was married to the maid of honor Olga Sukhtelen, daughter of General Pavel Sukhtelen and Countess Varvara Zubova, who abandoned her husband and daughter, and "had other children from other men". About their marriage, Alexander Bulgakov wrote to his daughter:
They had two daughters in marriage:
  • Alexandra Alekseevna, married to Vasily Popov ;
  • Maria Alekseevna, married to Naydenov.