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Abraham Hannibal - 9-th, 2004 - 17: 0 (Posted By: Webmaster)
Abraham Hannibal
RUSSIAN GENERAL AND COMRADE OF PETER THE GREAT (d. 1782)
HISTORY CONTAINS FEW FIGURES more extraordinary than Abraham Hannibal. Stolen
from his parents in Africa and sold into slavery, he became general-in-chief
of one of the leading white empires of his day. His great-grandson became one
of the world's greatest poets, while other of his descendants became members
of the leading royal families of Europe.
Destiny was kind to Hannibal from the beginning; instead of being sent to America,
where he would have been at best a house servant, he was taken to Turkey. At
that time, while Africans were languishing in slavery in America, some of their
brothers, also from the jungles, were the pampered pets of European royalty,
especially at the court of Russia.
Still a child, Hannibal was sold as a slave to Sultan Selim IV at Constantinople,
where he attracted the attention of Count Raguinsky, the Russian ambassador.
Wishing to take an unusual gift to the czar, Raguinsky secured Hannibal either
by kidnapping or as a gift, and took him back to Russia.
Merry, vivacious,
and intelligent, the ten-year-old boy captivated Peter the Great, who adopted
him
immediately. With Christina, Queen of Poland, as his
godmother, Hannibal was baptized into the Christian faith. Peter gave him his
own name, but the boy, whose real name was Ibrahim, wept so bitterly at the
change that thereafter he was called Abraham, the Christian equivalent of his
own name. Hannibal was later added as a tribute to his military skill. However,
his parents, who later appeared on the scene, claimed that he was descended
from the great Carthaginian and that his real name was Hannibal. The lad showed
special talent for mathematics and engineering and Peter sent him to Paris
to study. There, as the czar's protégé, he was received
in the highest circles. His exotic appearance won him the favor of the ladies
of the gay court of the Duke of Orleans, who was then regent; indeed the duke
himself offered Hannibal a high position if he would transfer his allegiance
to him. But Hannibal, though preferring the gayer and more cultured French
atmosphere, remained loyal to his master, even though at this time Peter, preoccupied
with the affairs of state, had quite forgotten Hannibal who, finding himself
without money, thought of returning on foot to Russia.
While Hannibal was pursuing
his studies war broke out between France and Spain. He accepted a commission
in the French army, serving with valor until he was
wounded in the head. Soon afterward he returned to Russia where he became
an officer in the engineers' corps, winning rapid promotion on his own merits.
About this time his people in Africa, discovering his whereabouts, sent a
rich
ransom
for him, but he refused to leave his benefactor. Peter appointed him
tutor in mathematics to the crown prince, later Peter II. As this post gave
him great influence with the future ruler, he became of considerable importance
to those engaged in court intrigue. As a result of this, fortune was to turn
against him after the death of Peter the Great for the next sixteen years.
On Peter's death in 1735 the throne was seized by his wife, Catherine I, grandmother
of Peter, the real heir, who was set aside, the chief power being in the
hands of Prince Menshikov. Menshikov, who was of humble origin, having started
as
a common soldier, wanted to marry his daughter to the young Peter. Knowing
Hannibal's influence with
Peter, he tried to bribe him. Hannibal, who had sworn to Peter the Great
that he would protect his grandson, refused, and Menshikov, to stop his influence
with the prince, sent him on a military mission to Siberia. Then to lengthen
his stay he ordered him to take the exact measurements of the Great Wall
of
China, which was 1,500 miles long. Menshikov hoped that Hannibal would
not survive the hardships of this undertaking. Hannibal remained in Siberia
until
the death of Catherine in 1737. Learning that young Peter had ascended
the throne, that Menshikov had been exiled, and
that Dolgouriki, a former favorite of Peter the Great, was in control,
he decided to return. But at Tomsk he was arrested. Dolgouriki feared his influence
with
Peter no less than Menshikov-and he was held there until Peter's death
two
years later.
Peter was succeeded by Anna the Bloody, a niece of Peter the Great.
Once more Hannibal started for St. Petersburg, but when he reached it he was
compelled
to go into hiding, as he was suspected of belonging to the faction that wanted
to put Elisabeth, daughter of Peter the Great and rightful heir, on the throne.
Hannibal escaped, thanks to his friend Field-Marshal Munich, who smuggled him
out of the city and sent him to inspect the fortifications on the Swedish border.
This duty done, he was sent to a little village near the city of Reval where
he spent the next twelve years of Anna's reign, almost forgotten.
On Anna's death, Elisabeth came to the throne, and grateful to Hannibal for
his unswerving loyalty to the family of Peter the Great, she showered honors
on him. Among her gifts were ten villages with thousands of white serfs. She
wished him to remain at court, but remembering what his influence there had
once cost him, he declined, and asked permission to return to Reval, where
he was made commander. But his retirement was short. He was one of the empire's
leading engineers, and when a dispute arose with Sweden over the boundary in
1752, he was appointed
head of the Russian commission to settle the matter. Still later, he was appointed
commander-in-chief of the army. But in spite of all these honors, the title
he cherished the most was "The Negro of Peter the Great."
Hannibal
had other troubles, too--domestic ones. He had married a very beautiful woman,
the daughter of a Greek captain named Dioper. During his long absences
she had found consolation elsewhere and had presented to him a daughter who
showed no African blood. Hannibal sued for divorce and the ensuing trial was
one of the most celebrated of its day. It dragged on for fifteen years while
scientists discussed at great length the question of whether the offspring
of a black and white couple could be "pure" white. Hannibal finally
won, whereupon the unfaithful wife, seeking to justify her actions, said, "That
Negro is not of our race," She was punished severely. In addition to the
court's censure, she was forced to do public penance and to spend the remainder
of her life in a convent. As for the white daughter, Hannibal kept her in his
house, gave her a good education, and left her considerable property but never
permitted her to come into his presence.
While the case was pending, he married a titled German woman, Regina von Schellberg,
by whom he had eleven children, all bonafide mulattoes, five of whom were sons,
and all of whom attained distinction. The cidest, Ivan, was a naval commander
who was victorious over the Turks at Navarin and was also the hero of the battle
of Chesma. Later he was Governor of Ukraine and founded the city of Kherson.
After a quarrel with Potemkin, the powerful favorite of Catherine the Great,
he retired to his estates.
Another son, Joseph, was a naval commander and a
navigator. His daughter, Nadejda, married Count Pushkin, whose grandfather
had been privy counsellor to Peter
the Great and whose father had borne the scepter at the coronation of Catherine
the Great. Her son, Alexander Pushkin, was the famous poet. Hannibal continued
in favor under Catherine the Great, who appointed him to draw up plans for
a canal linking St. Petersburg with Moscow. Finally he retired
to his estates, immensely rich, and died there in 1782, over ninety years old.
Pushkin, who was born seventeen years after Hannibal's death, and who, in preparation
for his book The Negro of Peter the Great, had gathered details from those
who had known his illustrious ancester, describes him as "A pure Negro--flat
nose, thick lips, woolly hair."
D. M. Wallace, British ambassador to Russia,
says of him. "Hannibal, who
died with the rank of Commander-in-Chief, was a Negro."
[Marcus Garvey]
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