Noble Blood - Fortune Has Changed My Life
Episode Date: March 24, 2026Born in Africa, enslaved, and brought to a foreign land, Abram Petrovich Gannibal forged an incredible path for himself, rising until he became a respected nobleman and member of Russian court. S...upport Noble Blood:—PRE-ORDER 'THE ARCANE ARTS'— Bonus episodes, stickers, and scripts on Patreon— Order Dana's book, 'Anatomy: A Love Story' and its sequel 'Immortality: A Love Story'See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
This Financial Literacy Month, we are talking about the one investment most people ignore,
building a business around the life you actually want.
It was just us, making happen whatever he said was going to happen, and then it happened.
On Those Amigos, entrepreneurs like America Sam and Joe Huff,
get real about money, taking risk, and while your dream might be the smartest move.
At the end of my life, what am I really going to care about?
And the conclusion I came to is what I did to make the world a better place
in whatever way.
Listen to those amigos on the IHare radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change
of plans, a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body having its own program.
Listen to a slight change of plans on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey there, folks, Amy Robach and T.J. Holmes here.
And we know there is a lot of news coming at you these days from the war with Iran to the ongoing Epstein fallout, government shutdowns, high profile trials.
And what the hell is that Blake lively thing about him?
Anyway, we are on it every day, all day.
Follow us, Amy and TJ for news updates throughout the day.
Listen to Amy and TJ on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Welcome to Noble Blood, a production of IHeart Radio and Grim and Mild from Aaron Manky.
Listener discretion advised.
St. Petersburg 1759.
A man in full military dress stands before the court, as a man.
Empress Elizabeth prepares to make him general-in-chief of the imperial Russian army, the second
highest military rank in the empire. The man is black, African-born, and he has risen further than
almost anyone around him. Whatever the assembled nobility thought of the ceremony, there wasn't
much they could say. The man had earned it. Though foreign-born, the man had been in Russia for over
50 years. He had outlasted rivals, survived exile, built fortresses at the edge of the known world,
and engineered his way into the upper ranks of one of Europe's great military powers. But the achievement
is even more remarkable when you pull back and see the full picture of how he got there. He was born in
Africa, most likely in the late 1690s, the son of a local chief. He was captured as a child,
trafficked through the Ottoman Empire, and eventually shipped to Moscow as a gift for Tsar Peter
the Great. The man arrived with nothing, no language, no connections, no guarantee of anything
beyond whatever use someone might find for him. He could have remained a curiosity.
at court, a symbol of the empire's global reach, comfortable maybe, but ultimately ornamental.
He chose otherwise. His name was Abram Petrovich Gannibal, and over six decades he transformed
himself into one of the most formidable military engineers in Russian history. He was a nobleman
with land and titles, a patriarch whose children would go on to distinctions.
careers of their own, and a great-grandfather whose most famous descendant would become
the greatest poet, arguably Russia ever produced. This is the story of a child who had every
conceivable thing taken from him, and who spent the rest of his life quietly and methodically
building something that could not be taken away. A story about what happens when extraordinary
intelligence meets extraordinary circumstances. I'm Dana Schwartz, and this is Noble Blood.
Abram Gannibal's early life is difficult to pin down. His birth year is disputed. His birthplace is
disputed. Even the details of his capture and journey northward exist somewhere between documented
history and educated reconstruction. But what we can piece together,
paints a vivid picture. He was born somewhere between 1696 and 1698, most likely in a small
principality in the region that is modern-day Cameroon. His father was a local minor chief or prince,
not a major power, but a man of standing in his community. He had livestock, land, multiple wives,
and somewhere in the neighborhood of 19 children,
by all accounts a good life for the time and region.
But his world was under pressure.
The neighboring principalities had converted to Islam,
which gave them both ideological cover and practical motivation
to view Abram's people and family as inferior,
even as legitimate targets.
When Ottoman forces moved through,
the region, Abram's father died fighting them. In the chaos that followed, the boy was seized.
His sister, Lagan, reportedly drowned while trying to save him. This heartbreak would not be the last
for young Abram. He was taken to Constantinople, a long and difficult journey that culminated in the
summer of 1703. He was placed in the household of Sultan Ahmed III.
Abram was kidnapped as part of a disturbing trend of that era,
to serve as what European courts of the time called a
Kammer Moore, young black attendants,
kept at court partly as servants and partly as symbols of prestige and global reach,
considered fashionable.
It was a dehumanizing institution dressed up in the language of exoticism,
and it existed across courts from Moscow to London.
If you've listened to our episode on Sarah Forbes Bonetta,
you'll recall that not even Queen Victoria was above it.
It was this custom that brought Abram the next chapter of his life.
After about a year in the Sultan's palace,
Abram caught the eye of a Russian ambassador in Constantinople
looking for prospects to bring back to the court of Tsar Peter the Great.
Abram was selected, bribes were passed to the Sultan's viziers, and in around 1704, the boy was sent to Moscow to be presented to one of the most powerful men in the world.
Peter the Great had spent years dragging Russia into conversation with the rest of Europe, obsessed with modernization, with building things, with finding people who could do things well, regardless of where they came.
from. When he met Abram, he saw something immediately. This kid was sharp, curious, a fast learner.
Peter took him under his wing immediately. That his protege was the victim of what we would now call
human trafficking is an obvious fact when viewed through a modern lens, but we can assume that Peter
had genuine affection for the young man and genuinely thought that he was
helping him by giving him protection and resources he wouldn't have had back home.
In 1705, Abram was baptized in a church in Vilnius.
Peter himself stood as godfather.
The middle name, Petrovich, essentially branded Abram as part of Peter's lineage.
It was a pivotal moment, not just religiously, but practically.
The baptism gave Abram a formal place.
in the social fabric of Peter's court.
He didn't know his actual birthday,
so he used the date of his baptism as a substitute,
a small practical act of self-creation
that somehow feels very in character
for the man he'd become.
Life at court suited Abram.
He traveled with Peter on military campaigns,
serving as valet,
a modest job, perhaps,
but it allowed him to be physically present,
for some of the most consequential military decisions of the era.
He was in the room.
He was watching.
And he grew close not just to Peter, but to Peter's daughter, Elizabeth, a bond that would
matter enormously later in his life.
By his teenage years, he was fluent in several languages and showed a particular gift for
mathematics and geometry, skills that would eventually become the foundation of his military career.
Peter recognized what he had and encouraged him to pursue that path.
In 1717, Abram was sent to Metz, France, for formal training.
This was the highest level of military and scientific instruction available in Europe at the time.
It was an extraordinary investment, and it reflected something real.
Peter saw in this boy not a curiosity to be displayed, but a mind to be developed.
We'll never know if Abram had a genuine passion for military strategy or whether learning was as means to an end of keeping Peter happy.
But either way, he was a star on the rise, a generational talent that would change the course of Russian history.
When Abram started school in France, he was a young man with a powerful godfather.
When he came back six years later, he was something different.
a soldier, an engineer, a man who had chosen his own identity and built it from scratch.
What he didn't know was that the protection he'd always relied on was about to disappear.
But first, France.
In 1718, Abram joined the French Royal Army, the most sophisticated military institution in Europe.
Two years later, he enrolled in the Royal Artillery Academy at Lafair.
where the mathematics of fortification and the physics of artillery were treated as serious intellectual pursuits.
He was exactly where he needed to be, and he thrived.
It was during these years in France that he took a new surname,
a decision that spoke volumes about the man he was becoming.
He chose the name Gannibal, the Russian transliteration of Hannibal,
the great Carthaginian general who crossed the Alps with war elephants and terrified Rome for decades.
This was no accident.
He was a black man uprooted and dragged across continents,
remaking himself as a soldier in Europe, claiming his place among the most brilliant military minds.
He also apparently made friends.
Paris in the early 18th century was a lot of.
with Enlightenment thinking, philosophy, science, and the radical notion that reason could and
should reshape human society. Abraam moved through those circles, and if his biographers are to be
believed, he ended up in conversation with some of the era's greatest minds. It said that Voltaire
called Abram, quote, the dark star of the Enlightenment. Whether or not that actually happened,
it's clear he was quickly growing into a man of distinction, even if that distinction is loaded down
by racist microaggressions. And then war interrupted. During the war of the quadruple alliance,
conflict broke out between Spain and a coalition of European countries. Abraam Gannibal
thought for France, rising to the rank of captain. During one battle, he took a blow to the head
and was captured by Spanish forces.
He spent time as a prisoner of war before he was released in 1722.
Never one to let external circumstances slow him down.
He went right back to his studies.
By 1723, Abram's education was complete.
He returned to Russia, became an engineer,
and took on a role as mathematics tutor,
for one of the Tsar's personal guard units.
He was home, back in Peter the Great's orbit.
Things were good.
And then, in 1725, Peter the Great died.
The court shifted overnight.
The man who had pulled Abram from the Ottoman Sultan's household,
who had stood as his godfather and protector,
sent him to France, and saw his potential before anyone else,
was gone.
And the person who stepped in.
into the vacuum of power was Prince Menshikov, a man with no particular fondness for Abram
Petrovich Gannibal. Menchikov's issues with Gannibal were numerous. Here was a man who was
foreign-born, black, and had received one of the finest educations available anywhere in Europe. He
spoke multiple languages, he had a head wound from actual combat, and as Peter's protégé, he was a
clear symbol of the old regime. In a court suddenly navigating a brutal transition of power,
none of that made Abram an ally to Menchikov. It made him a threat, or at least a convenient
target. In 1727, Gannibal was exiled to Siberia. Dispatched to the far eastern edge of the
Empire near the Mongolian border, Gannibal threw himself into engineering work. He designed and
oversaw massive construction projects, drawing on everything he had learned during his studies in France.
During that exile, he became one of the most capable military engineers in all of Russia. He was
pardoned in 1730, completed his service in 1733, and then came back west. During this time,
he also became a married man.
This is where the story gets considerably more complicated.
In 1731, Gannibal married a Greek woman named Ivdokia Dioper.
The marriage was not voluntary on her part.
She was forced into it and she made her feelings known early and often.
The relationship was volatile from the beginning,
built on mutual hostility and almost no common grubes.
When she gave birth to a white baby who was unmistakably not Gannibal's child,
his suspicions about her fidelity were confirmed in the most public way imaginable.
He had her arrested and imprisoned.
She spent the next 11 years there.
But Gannibal had already moved on.
In 1735, he took up with a woman named Christina Regina Stuyberg,
the daughter of Scandinavian and German nobility.
They married in 1736, a year after the birth of their first child,
while he was still legally bound to Evdokia.
It was technically bigamy,
since his divorce from his first wife wouldn't be finalized until 1753.
At this point, Gannibal received a fine and a formal reprimand,
and Evdokia was sent to a convent for the same.
the rest of her life. His second marriage, meanwhile, was deemed lawful retroactively. The contrast between
the two marriages is stark. With Christina, Ibram found something he clearly hadn't before, genuine
partnership. She was faithful and warm, and he appreciated both qualities enormously,
probably more than most men would, given his history. They went on to have 10 children together.
But Evdokia's story is far more disturbing and not an altogether sympathetic chapter in Gannibal's story.
By her account, Gannibal was a cruel husband prone to physical abuse.
We can't tell if the relationship was marred by racism on Evdokia's part,
the couple's genuine incompatibility or other factors,
but the fact is that a woman was forced to marry a man she didn't want,
was treated badly by him, and when she sought connection elsewhere, was locked up for over a decade.
Whatever the norms of the era, it's worth pointing out the injustices now that we can see them.
But before any of that domestic stability eventually took shape, the political winds shifted again,
this time in Gannibal's favor.
In 1741, Peter's daughter Elizabeth became the Empress of Russia.
The girl Gannibal had grown close to in the early years at court.
The one he'd been loyal to like family was now in charge of everything, and she hadn't forgotten him.
Gannibal was welcomed back into prominent with both arms open.
He became a senior figure in her court receiving major military appointments,
and in 1742 was given a sprawling country estate with land, a manor house and hundreds of
serfs. The man who was brought to Moscow as someone else's property, now owned property of his own,
and lots of it. That same year, he petitioned for and received formal nobility and a coat of arms.
For the crest, he chose an elephant, a nod to the continent of his birth, and perhaps his chosen
namesake, and a single word, Fumo. The meaning has been debated.
ever since. It may be a word in the Kotoko language of his people, meaning homeland,
or it may be an acronym for a Latin phrase, Fortuna vitam mim mutavit amnino.
Fortune has changed my life entirely.
In 1756, he was appointed chief military engineer of the Russian army.
In 1759, he received the rank of the rank of the Russian army.
In 1759, he received the rank of General-in-Chief, the second highest military rank in the Imperial Russian Empire.
The boy from Cameroon, trafficked through Constantinople, exiled to Siberia, had come back and climbed high as the system would allow.
And he wasn't finished yet.
By 1762, Gannibal had served the Russian Empire for the better part of six decades.
He'd survived the chaos after Peter's death, survived Siberia, survived a disastrous first marriage,
outlasted enemies and rivals and entire reigns. When Peter III briefly took the throne that year in
1762, Gannibal was officially retired. The decision was blamed on his advanced age,
but the true meaning was simple. Thanks for everything, but we're done with you.
It stung. He petitioned Catherine the Great, who would overthrow that husband, Peter, within months, asking that neighboring lands be added to his estate in recognition of 57 years of service. No one ever wrote back. He left St. Petersburg and he didn't return. The resentment stayed with him, passed down through family stories long after he was gone, a legend of ingratitude that,
his children and grandchildren kept alive. But retirement, even a bitter one, suited Gannibal in
ways that court life never fully had. He settled into his estate, the one that Empress Elizabeth
had given him, surrounded by land and family and the particular freedom that comes from
having nothing left to prove. He spent his entire adult life navigating a world that required him
to be useful, strategic, indispensable.
Now he could simply exist.
He was, by most accounts, a passionate landlord in his final years,
who took genuine satisfaction in managing his property.
He died on April 20, 1781, likely in his 85th year.
The cause was listed as a cranial illness, traced back, ultimately,
to the head wound he had taken in France,
over 60 years earlier fighting at a Spanish fortress when he was barely in his 20s.
His body had been carrying that injury his entire life.
He left behind 10 children with Christina, a coat of arms with an elephant on it,
and a life so strange and full that it almost defies summary.
His children did well.
His eldest son Ivan became an accomplished naval officer who rose like,
his father to the rank of General-in-Chief. Another son, Ossip, had a daughter named Nadejda,
and Nadezda had a son. That son was Alexander Pushkin. Pushkin is, by most measures the
greatest writer in the history of the Russian language, poet, novelist, playwright, the figure that
most completely captures the essence of Russian literature. And he was Abram Gannibal's great-grandson,
a fact he was deeply aware of and deeply proud of.
After finishing school, Pushkin tracked down his great-grandfather's last surviving son,
a man named Peter, and interviewed him about his great-grandfather's life.
Pushkin came back years later, writing in his diary that he wanted to extract every memory Peter still had.
What came out of those conversations was an unfinished novel called
the more of Peter the Great,
in which a fictionalized version of Abram
navigates the Russian court,
a brilliant outsider in a world
that can't quite decide what to do with him.
Pushkin drew on his great-grandfather's experiences
and woven his own.
The two lives rhymed in ways that clearly meant something to Pushkin,
both men of African descent,
both moving through Russian society
on the strength of their mind, and both aware of how much their difference defined how the world
saw them.
Gannibal's birthplace remains a point of contention. For years, scholars assumed he was from
Ethiopia. Russian researchers favored a region in what is now Eritrea. Both governments
eventually claimed him, naming streets after him and creating monuments in his honor.
It's understandable why they would both want to claim such a remarkable and interesting figure.
But modern research points toward Lagoon Bierney in what is now Cameroon,
the region Gannibal himself referenced in his petition to Empress Elizabeth.
In 2010, representatives from Russia and Estonia, the Cameroonian ambassador,
and the Sultan of Ligone-Birney gathered at the old Royal Artillery Academy,
in Lafair, France. There, at the place where Gannibal had studied nearly 300 years earlier,
they unveiled a commemorative plaque. It identified him as a graduate of the academy, as chief
military engineer and general-in-chief of the Imperial Russian Army, and as the great-grandfather
of Alexander Pushkin, four countries in one place, honoring a man none of them could fully claim.
Ibrahim Gannibal belonged to all of those places and to none of them.
He was stolen from Africa, educated in France, and rose to prominence in Russia.
His life was full of contradictions, a man who had been property and later owned people himself,
someone who could be brutal to those who felt had wronged him, including his first wife,
and also deeply loyal to those he loved.
a person driven by a hunger to belong that never quite left him,
even after he had earned every honor the empire could offer.
What doesn't contradict is the sheer force of what he built.
He made himself impossible to ignore and then impossible to forget.
He was a man with a brilliant analytical mind whose legacy extended all the way
to one of Russia's most expressive and sensitive poet.
fortune has changed my life entirely. That's one reading of Fuma. The other is simply homeland.
Maybe in the end, Gannibal meant both. That's the story of Abram Petrovich Gannibal,
but keep listening after a brief sponsor break to hear a little bit more about his literary legacy outside his great grandson.
Hello, gorgeous, it's Lala Kent, host of Untraditionally Lala. My days of Films. My days of
filling up cups at sir may be over, but I'm still loving life in the valley.
Life on the other side of the hill is giving grown-up vibes, but over here on my podcast,
Untraditionally Lala, I'm still that Lala you either love or love to hate.
I've been full on over sharing with fans, family, and former frenemies like Tom Schwartz.
I had a little bone to pick with Schwarzy when he came on the pod.
You don't feel bad that you told me I was a bootleg housewife?
I almost flipped a pizza in your lap.
Oh my God, I literally forgot about that until just now.
sorry, I don't want to blame alcohol.
I got to blame that one on the alcohol.
This is about laughing and learning
when life just keeps on life in.
Because I make mistakes so that you guys don't have to.
We're growing, we're thriving,
and yes, sometimes we're barely surviving,
but we do it all with love.
It's unruly, it's unafraid,
it's untraditionally la la la.
Listen to Untraditionally Lala on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Iris Palmer, and my new podcast is called Against All Od,
and that's exactly what the show is about doing whatever it takes to be thoughts.
Get ready to hear from some of your favorite entrepreneurs and entertainers
as they share stories about defying expectations, overcoming barriers, and breaking generational patterns.
I'm talking to people like award-winning actress, producer, and director, Eva Longoria.
I think I had like $200 in my savings account and my mom goes, what are you going to do?
And I was like, I'll figure it out.
We got a one-bedroom apartment for like $400 a month and we all could not afford.
Like, I was like, how am I going to make $100 a month?
I'm opening up like I've never before.
For those of you who think you know me from what you've seen on social media,
get ready to see a whole new side of me.
Listen to Against All Odds with Iris Palmer as part of the MyCultura podcast network,
available on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
You can have opinions.
You can have like a strong stance.
And then there's your body.
having its own program.
I'm Dr. Maya Shunker, a cognitive scientist and hosts of the podcast, a slight change of plans,
a show about who we are and who we become when life makes other plans.
We share stories and scientific insights to help us all better navigate these periods of
turbulence and transformation.
There is one finding that is consistent, and that is that our resilience rests on our
relationships.
I wish that I hadn't resisted for so much.
long the need to change.
We have to be willing to live
with a kind of uncertainty
that none of us likes.
Listen to a slight change of plans
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple
podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. Gannibal's story
has a surprising literary
connection that goes beyond his
famous great-grandson.
Decades after Gannibal's death,
Vladimir Nabokhov
sat down to translate
Pushkin's masterwork,
Eugene O'negan and found himself digging into Gannibal's origins in the process.
At the time, the prevailing assumption was that Gannibal had come from Ethiopia.
Nabokhov wasn't convinced and pointed toward regions further west and south.
He was right to be skeptical.
The Ethiopian theory eventually collapsed, partly on its own thin evidence
and partly because researchers exposed the assumption underneath it.
That Ethiopian origins were seen as more prestigious, more capable of explaining Gannibal's brilliance than origins deeper in sub-Saharan Africa.
The people who wanted to honor him had quietly edited him into a more acceptable African.
That pattern extended to his great-grandson, Pushkin, as well.
African-American scholar, literary critic, and historian Henry Lewis Gates Jr., addresses this narrow-minded tendency in the foreword to,
Under the Sky of My Africa, Alexander Pushkin and Blackness.
Quote, many critics and writers, most famously Nabokov, dismissed Pushkin's, quote, Africanness, as a quirk of biographical fate,
as a factor to be acknowledged only barely, if at all,
and to be dismissed as irrelevant to his artistic life.
But these essays make a convincing case
for the merits of a sustained exploration of the role
his African ancestry played in Pushkin's creative life,
in his perception of himself,
and in his perception and interpretation of Russia.
End quote.
Pushkin knew what Gannibal had spent a lifetime
proving, that the truest version of a person is the one they insist on themselves against
every other force that says otherwise. Noble Blood is a production of I-Heart Radio and Grimm and
Mild from Aaron Manke. Noble Blood is hosted by me, Dana Schwartz. Writers for Noble Blood are Hannah
Johnston, Hannah Zwick, Paul Jaffe, Natasha Lasky, and me, Dana Schwartz. The show is edited and
produced by Jesse Funk and
Nome's Gripen with supervising
producer Rima Il
Kali and executive producers
Aaron Manky, Trevor Young, and
Matt Frederick. For more podcasts
from IHeartRadio, visit
the IHeartRadio app, Apple
podcasts, or wherever you listen
to your favorite shows.
This financial literacy month, we are
talking about the one investment most people
ignore, building a business around
the life you actually want. It was just
us, making happen whatever he
said was going to happen and then it happened.
On those amigos, entrepreneurs like
America Sam and Joe Huff get real
about money, taking risk, and while
your dream might be the smartest move.
At the end of my life, what am I really going to care about?
And the conclusion I came to is what I did to make
the world a better place in whatever way.
Listen to those amigos on the IHare Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shunker,
a cognitive scientist and hosts
of the podcast, a slight change of
plans, a show about who we are
and who we become.
makes other plans. I wish that I hadn't resisted for so long the need to change. We have to be
willing to live with a kind of uncertainty that none of us likes. You can have opinions, you can have
like a strong stance, and then there's your body having its own program. Listen to a slight change of
plans on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Hey there, folks, Amy Roboc,
and TJ Holmes here. And we know there is a lot of news coming at you these days from the war with
Iran to the ongoing Epstein fallout, government shutdowns, high-profile trials, and what the
hell is that Blake lively thing about anyway? We are on it every day, all day. Follow us, Amy and
TJ for news updates throughout the day. Listen to Amy and TJ on the IHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. This is an IHeart podcast. Guaranteed Human.
I'm.
