College of War
The College of War was a Russian executive body, created in the government reform of 1717. It was the only one of the six original and three later colleges to survive the decentralising reforms of Catherine II of Russia. Under Paul I, it became the model for a newly centralised government.
The College of War contained several functional departments which operated independently, but under the overall supervision of the college and its President; after 1798 there were to be seven sections. In 1802 it became the Ministry of Land Forces, although this resulted in no fundamental change to the nature of the institution.
History
has established it by the decree, in 1719, was announced it establishing, following the example of foreign powers to control military and ground forces, from January 1, 1720, it began to operate.It had a president, a vice president, 4 advisers and 4 assessors. The Military Board had the Chancellery divided into expeditions for the management of cavalry and infantry, for garrison affairs, fortification and artillery management, for keeping logs of incoming and outgoing papers. The procedure for the proceedings in cases was determined by the General Regulation of February 28 of 1720. In 1720, in the Military Collegium there were 13 class officials, 47 clerics and 8 other servants, and 454 soldiers and non-commissioned officers attached to the college. In 1720, three foreigners served in the Military Collegium, but 82 full-time members of the college were still vacant due to the lack of qualified specialists .
The military board was divided into three expeditions:
- army;
- garrison;
- artillery and fortification.
Subsequently, with the increase in the number of troops, the duties of the higher military administration were to increase too, thus, the new expeditions were established under the military board. In 1798, it was divided into army, garrison, foreign, recruitment, repair and training expeditions; in addition, it has military, counting, inspecting, commissariat, food and artillery, general auditorium, drawing with the archive and Moscow artillery depot expeditions.
A few decades later under Alexander I, the military board was transformed into a military ministry.
Presidents
The highest official in the management body was the president.- Prince Alexander Menshikov
- Prince Anikita Repnin
- Prince Mikhail Golitsin
- Prince Vasily Vladimirovich Dolgorukov
- Count Burkhard Christoph von Munnich
- Prince Nikita Trubetskoy
- Count Zakhar Chernyshev
- Prince Grigory Potemkin
- Count Nikolay Saltykov
Vice presidents
- Herman Jensen Bohn
- Burkhard Christoph von Münnich
- Stepan Fyodorovich Apraksin
- Zakhar Chernyshev
- Nikolai Saltykov
- Grigory Potemkin
- Valentin Platonovich Musin-Pushkin