Peter Chelishchev
Peter Ivanovich Chelishchev ; August 14, 1745 – September 25, 1811) was a Russian writer, ethnographer, traveler from the Chelishchev family.
Biography
Peter Chelishchev was born on August 14, 1745, in the Smolensk province; was a second cousin to Senator Alexei Chelishchev. He had a brother Alexei, three of whose grandchildren rose to the rank of general.Since 1757 he studied at the Moscow University Gymnasium. He graduated from the Page Corps in 1766. Then he was sent together with Alexander Radishchev and other pages to complete his education at the University of Leipzig, where he stayed from 1766 to 1770. Here he attended lectures on philosophy, sociology and physiology of Professor Ernst Platner.
Upon his return from abroad, his service did not work out. On October 11, 1773, he was assigned to the Kurinsky Infantry Regiment. On May 18, 1774, he was transferred as lieutenant to the Life Guards Grenadier Regiment. On October 9, 1778, he submitted a report on the transfer to the Arkhangelsk Infantry Regiment, but in 1790 he retired with the rank of second major. He lived in Saint Petersburg, brought his estates to an upset state. In 1773 he was a member of the Masonic Muz Lodge, which was led by Ivan Elagin. On the recommendation of the same Elagin, he was consecrated to the degree of a master freemason in the Urania Lodge, of which Alexander Radishchev was a member at the same time.
His materials served as the basis for writing some chapters of "Journey from Saint Petersburg to Moscow". Pyotr Chelishchev was considered an accomplice of Alexander Radishchev in the compilation of his famous book "Journey from Saint Petersburg to Moscow", but, on the basis of the unprovenness of the prosecution, he escaped prosecution.
In 1791 he traveled to the north of Russia. There he collected material on history and ethnography, which he combined in the book "Traveling to the North of Russia in 1791", published in 1886 and 1889. Despite the brevity of the presentation, the facts communicated by him, especially concerning the state of trade and industry, the spread of latrines and handicrafts, are of great historical significance.
In addition to "Traveling to the North of Russia in 1791", he wrote the "Message to the Russian Academy", which contains a collection of a large number of North Russian provincialisms, and the Russian translation of the German dramatic cantata: "Feliza, Mutter der Völker", which appeared in Saint Petersburg in 1793.
At the end of his life he became blind, died in poverty. He was buried at the Lazarevskoe Cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra in Saint Petersburg.
Works
- Message to the Russian Academy – Saint Petersburg, 1793
- Feliza, Mutter der Völker / translated from German by Peter Chelishchev – Saint Petersburg, 1793
- – Saint Petersburg, 1886