Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Abram Petrovich Gannibal
Episode Date: December 28, 2022Abram Petrovich Gannibal was one of the most notable Russians of the 18th century. He was the godson of Peter the Great. He was among the most educated men and best engineers in the Russian Empire.... He served as a general to Catherine the Great. ..and one of his great-grandsons was the greatest poet in the history of the Russian Language. There was, however, one thing that set him apart from all other Russians. He came from Africa. Learn more about Abram Petrovich Gannibal and his incredible story on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Abram Petrovich Ganibal was one of the most notable Russians of the 18th century.
He was the godson of Peter the Great.
He was among the most educated men and best engineers in the Russian Empire.
He served as a general to Catherine the Great.
And one of his great grandsons was the greatest poet in the history of the Russian language.
There was, however, one thing that set him apart from all other Russians.
He came from Africa.
Learn more about Abram Petrovich Ganibal and his incredible story on this episode of
everything everywhere daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may
have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
The story of Auburn Petrovich Ganabal, hereby just referred to as Auburn Petrovich
using the Russian Patrionic Naming Convention, is too unbelievable to possibly be fiction.
His story starts sometime around the year 1696. Details surrounding his early life are very
sketchy. Originally it was said he came from the modern day country of Sudan, and others have
placed his birth somewhere in what is either today Eritrea or Ethiopia. However, subsequent research
has placed his birth near Lake Chad in what is today the nation of Cameroon. His father was, by all
accounts very wealthy. He was a Muslim, had multiple wives, owned multiple slaves, and had 19 children.
Abram's birth name was probably Ibrahim, which is just the name Abraham in Arabic. When he was
around six years old, he was captured by Ottoman slavers and sold into slavery. He was sent to
Constantinople to serve in the household of the Sultan Ahmed III. It is possible that he had a sister
by the name of Lagan, who was captured with him and drowned on the way to Constantinople in an attempt to
save Ibrahim's life.
Ibrahim served in the house of the Sultan for about a year, and during this year, despite
his youth, he distinguished himself by proving to be clever and intelligent.
He caught the eye of the Russian ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, Sava Vladislavich Raguzynski.
The ambassador was always looking for gifts to send back to Tsar Peter I first, or as we know
him, Peter the Great.
Having clever African children had become a very trendy thing at European courts at the time,
So Sava Vladislavich bribed one of the viziers in the sultan's palace to let Ibrahim go so he could go to Moscow and be presented to the Tsar.
When he arrived in Moscow, the Tsar took a liking to the boy.
Peter saw in Ibrahim not a mere toy that would be an adornment at court, but an intelligent young man who could be an actual asset to the Russian Empire.
He was taken into the Tsar's house, was educated alongside the Tsar's children, and he was baptized into the Russian Orthodox Church in 1705.
After his baptism, he went by the name Abram Petrovich.
Abram, being the Russianized version of his birth name, Ibrahim, and Petrovich being the Russian
patriotic name that refers to his father.
In this case, it referred to his godfather, who was none other than the Tsar himself, Peter
the Great.
For the rest of his life, he used the date of his baptism as his birthday because he didn't
know the day he was born.
Peter's initial suspicion about Abram turned out to be correct.
He was incredibly intelligent, arguably.
the smartest person in the Russian court. Peter invested in Abram's education, and in return,
Abram became fiercely loyal to both the Tsar and his family. When he was in his early 20s, Peter
sent Abram to France for further education. Peter was a urofile and wanted Russia, which he saw as a
backwards country, to adopt the best practices of the countries in Europe. In 1717, he went to Mets to
continue his studies. By this time, he had already become fluent in multiple languages and had mastered
mathematics. In 1718, he joined the French army to learn about military engineering. He excelled in his
position and in 1720 was appointed to the French Royal Artillery Academy. During his time in the
academy, war broke out between France and Spain, and Abram served in the French army, rising to the
rank of captain. During one battle, he received a head wound and was captured by the Spanish,
but after recovering, he returned to France to complete his education. And while he was in France,
he made an important decision. He adopted. He adopted.
a surname. The name he chose was Hannibal, or as it's pronounced in Russian, Gannibal.
The decision to go by Hannibal reflected the pride he had in his African heritage. He decided
to adopt the name of the most famous African and one of the most famous generals in history.
While in France, he became a regular feature in the salons and got to know many of the French
intellectuals of the era, including Montesquieu and Voltaire. Having finished his studies,
Abram Petrovich returned to Russia in 1723.
He was first assigned to a job as a military engineer,
and then later as the mathematics instructor for the Tsar's personal guard.
Abram's fortune changed for the worst in 1725 with the death of Tsar Peter.
Peter had been Abram's mentor, patron, and for all practical purposes, his father.
Now that he was gone, the throne passed to his wife, then now Tsarina Catherine I.
The problem was, while Catherine was the titular leader of Russia,
The real power behind the throne was Prince Alexander Danielovich Menchikov.
Menchikov appointed himself to the rank of General Isimo, a position that no Russian has held before or since.
Menchikov also did not like Abram Petrovich. He found him too foreign, too French educated, and quite
frankly, he was a threat. Given Abram's talents and the fact that he was a favorite of Peter,
it was better if he was out of the way. So he was exiled to Siberia near the border of Mongolia in
1727. He made the best use of his time in Siberia, putting his engineering skills to use,
building several forts on the Russian frontier. Prince Menchikov eventually was ousted from power and disgrace,
and Abram Petrovich received a full pardon. He continued in Siberia until 1733 when his projects were
finished. Around the time of his exile, he married his first wife, a Greek woman by the name of
Evdokia Diopper. It was a horrible marriage, neither one like the other, and Abram accused.
her of infidelity. In something which could have been taken straight out of the first season of
House of Dragons, his accusations of infidelity were proven true when she later gave birth to a daughter
who was completely white. He had her thrown into prison for 11 years. While she was in prison,
and they were still legally married, he married another woman, Christina Regina Seelberg. He did
eventually divorce his first wife, who was put in a convent for the rest of her life, and went on to
have ten children with his second wife. More on them in a bit. His personal issues aside, now back
in the good graces of the imperial court, his career once again began to blossom. In 1741, his childhood
friend and the daughter of Peter the great Elizabeth ascended to the throne. Abraimpetrovich was
promoted to the rank of Major General and was appointed the superintendent of the city of Ravall,
which is now known as Tallinn Estonia. He held the position for 10 years. And in 1742, he did something
unexpected. He applied to become a member of the Russian nobility. As part of his application,
he submitted a coat of arms for his family that was designed by himself. The crest consisted of
an African elephant with mysterious letters written below, F-V-M-M-O. The elephant was clearly a
reference to his African heritage. The letters have remained a mystery. The two theories are
that it is the word for homeland in his native language, which was probably Kotoko.
The other theory is that the letters represent the Latin phrase,
Fortuna Vitam, Mea Mutavit Omnino,
which means fortune has changed my life entirely.
His application was approved.
He was given an estate by Zarina Elizabeth, complete with 100 serfs.
His career kept going upward.
He was responsible for the completion of the Ladoga Canal,
which was a major project of Peter the Great.
He was appointed the chief engineer of the Russian army in 1756,
and in 1759 he was promoted to the rank of General-in-Chief, the highest military rank possible
in Russia. Finally, in 1762, after Catherine the Great came to power, he retired to his estate.
Abram Petrovich Ghanibal died in 1781 at the age of 85. When he passed away, he was one of the
most distinguished and honored figures in all of Russia. However, this isn't the end of his story.
As I mentioned before, he had 10 children. Many of those children and his descendants went on to have
noteworthy careers themselves. His eldest son Ivan became a distinguished naval officer and was a co-founder
of the Ukrainian city of Kurson. But perhaps his most famous descendant was his great-grandson,
Alexander Pushkin. Pushkin is considered to be the greatest Russian poet ever. He is to the Russian
language, what Shakespeare is to English. Pushkin was very proud of his great-grandfather and his
African ancestry, and often brought it up so he could differentiate himself from other Russians.
In fact, when Pushkin died, he was working on a semi-biographical novel about his great-grandfather
called The More of Peter the Great. There are also many descendants of Abram Petrovich
amongst the aristocracy in Britain today, including cousins of Queen Elizabeth. Before I close,
there is one thing I should mention, because many of you are probably thinking it. There's a
cocktail called a black Russian. Abram Petrovich Ganabal was a black Russian, and there weren't a
whole lot of black Russians. Was the cocktail named in honor of Abram Petrovich? The answer is no.
In fact, the black Russian wasn't invented until 1949, and it was, believe it or not, named after
the U.S. ambassador to Luxembourg, Pearl Mesta. She supposedly threw the best parties in Washington,
D.C., but she was neither black nor Russian. That being said,
If you should ever happen to be somewhere and you or someone you know orders a black Russian,
I think it's an excellent opportunity to raise a toast and tell the incredible story of
Abram Petrovich Ganabal.
The boy who was sold into slavery became the godsend of a czar and then became one of the
greatest engineers and highest ranking military officers in Russian history.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
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