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Robert (Roman) Crown
Портрет к статье «Кроун, Роман Васильевич». Военная энциклопедия Сытина (Санкт-Петербург, 1911-1915)
Roman Vasilievich Crown
Born (1753-12-21)21 December 1753
Died 21 April 1841(1841-04-21) (aged 87)
Place of birth Perth, Scotland
Place of death Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Allegiance Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors) Kingdom of Great Britain
Flag of Russia Russian Empire
Service/branch Royal Navy
Imperial Russian Navy
Years of service 1788–1831 (Russia)
Rank Lieutenant (Britain)
Admiral (Russia)
Battles/wars American Revolutionary War
Russo-Swedish War (1788–1790)
Napoleonic Wars
Awards Order of St. Vladimir (3rd degree)
Order of St. George

Roman (Robert) Vasilievich Crown (Russian: Роман Васильевич Кроун); (21 December 1753 [O.S. 1 January 1754], near Perth, Scotland – 21 April [O.S. 3 May] 1841, Saint Petersburg) was a navy officer in British and Russian service. In the later he eventually became an Admiral and served in the Russo-Swedish War and the Napoleonic Wars.

Life[]

Early naval Career in British Service[]

Robert Crown came from a family of Scottish tenants said to have been related to the Gregor clan. He began his maritime service with the Merchant Navy, joined the British Royal Navy (as a navigator, on the frigate Odeon, in squadrons under Admiral Edward Vernon in India about 1778) [1] and participated in the American Revolutionary War. In early 1788 he became an officer in the Imperial Russian Navy,[2] keeping his rank of a Lieutenant.

Merkuriy vs Venus

Capture of the Venus in 1788

Career in the Russian-Swedish war[]

Already on 10 March 1788 Crown was promoted to Captain-Lieutenant and appointed commander of the 22-gun cutter Merkuriy, which was part of the Baltic fleet squadron Copenhagen. On this ship, Captain Crown carried out patrol services during the Russian-Swedish war in the Baltic Sea. His most important success was the capture of the Swedish 44-gun frigate Venus in the fjord of Christiania on 21 May 1789. Crown was promoted to 2nd rank captain and awarded the Order of St. George 4th class. He received command over the Venus and led it in the battle of Reval and in the battle of Vyborg Bay in 1790. In the course of the latter he captured the ship of the line "Rättvisan" (Justice, built 1783). In recognition of his merits, he was awarded the Order of Saint Vladimir 3rd class and promoted to 1st rank captain (Captain-Commodore). In 1791 Crown, together with many other naval officers of British origin, was transferred to the Black Sea in expectation of war with England.[3]

[]

During the war of the 2nd anti-French coalition, Crown took part in the attempted Anglo-Russian invasion of the Netherlands. He was appointed Rear Admiral in January 1799, while on the 66-gun ship Izyaslav serving in the Baltic, and Vice Admiral in February 1804. In the years 1802-1804 he was in the Baltic fleet on the 74-gun ship Yaroslav. After resting ashore in 1805–1807, he went into a transient retirement on account of the state of war between Russia and England in the years 1808–1812.[4]

In 1812 he led a Russian squadron with six ships from Arkhangelsk to Great Britain and was involved in the blockade of France. In 1814 he was blockading the Dutch coast together with an English squadron, and after the Bourbon Restoration, he transported King Louis XVIII from London to France onboard his flagship. After the Napoleonic Wars, he returned to the Baltic fleet. On 8 February 1824 he was promoted to full admiral. He retired in 1831 and took residence permanently in St. Petersburg, where he died 10 years later.

Family[]

Crown was married three times, first in 1775 to Sarah Primrose (1759-1780), second to Martha Knight (1754-1839). He had several children from the second, and one son from the third marriage. Two of his sons with Martha Knight became Russian Vice-admirals in the 1870s, i.e. Alexander Egorovich (Malclein Alexander Crown; 1823-1900) and Thomas Yegorovich (Thomas Frederick; 1826-1893).

Citations[]

  1. Povarov (2005), p. cf. Website.
  2. Bruzelius (1996), p. year 1788.
  3. Bruzelius (1996), p. year 1791.
  4. Bruzelius (1996), p. year 1808.

References[]

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The original article can be found at Robert Crown and the edit history here.
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