Knyaz (Prince) Georgy Yevgenyevich Lvov (Георгий Евгеньевич Львов, Georgy Evgenyevich Lvov) (November 2, 1861 March 7, 1925) was a Russian statesman and the first post-imperial prime minister of Russia, from March 23 to July 7, 1917.
Pre-Revolution
Prince Lvov was born in
Dresden into a
Rurikid family, descended from sovereign princes of
Yaroslavl. His family moved home to
Popovka in the
Aleksin region near
Tula from Germany soon after his birth. He graduated from the
University of Moscow with a degree in law, then worked in the civil service until 1893. During the
Russo-Japanese War he organized relief work in the East and in 1905, he joined the liberal
Constitutional Democratic Party. A year later he won election to the
First Duma and was nominated for a ministerial position. He became chairman of the All-Russian Union of
Zemstvos in 1914 and in 1915 he became a leader of the Union of Zemstvos as well as a member of
Zemgor, a joint committee of the Union of Zemstvos and the Union of Towns that helped supply the military and tend to the wounded from the
Great War.
Later years
After the
first Russian Revolution and the abdication of
Nicholas II, emperor of Russia, Lvov was made head of the
provisional government. Unable to rally sufficient support, he resigned in July 1917 in favour of his
Minister of Justice,
Alexander Kerensky. Lvov was arrested when the
Bolsheviks seized power later that year. He escaped and settled in
Paris, where he spent the rest of his life.
Memorials
There is a memorial to Prince Lvov in
Aleksin as well as a small exhibition on him in the town museum. In Popovka there is another memorial opposite his local church and a plaque on the wall of the local school he founded. He is buried in
Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois cemetery in France.
Further reading
Lvov wrote an autobiography, 'Воспоминания' while in exile and a biography was also written in 1932 by Tikhon Polner entitled 'Жизненный путь князя Георгія Евгеніевича Львова. Личность. Взгляды. Условія дѣятельности'. Neither have been translated but both have been reprinted and are still available in Russian.
Notes
Note on
transliteration: An older French form, Lvoff, is used on his tombstone. Georgy can be written as Georgi and is sometimes seen in its translated form, George.
External links