Karl Emeryk Alexander Reviczky von Revisnye


Carl Emmerich Aleksander, Baron Reviczky von Revisnye (born 1737, 1793) - Austrian diplomat, Austrian ambassador in Warsaw (until 1779), ambassador in Berlin in 1782-1786 London, Hungary.

In 1772, the king of Czartoryski tried to establish himself in contact with the court in Vienna and to obtain it for the interests of the family and the country. The Diet of 1773-1775 called for the approval of the territory of the Commonwealth during the First Partition of the Commonwealth was convened on April 19, 1773, at the earlier request of the Russian Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Otto Magnus von Stackelberg, Prussian deputy Gédéon Benoît and Karl Reviczky. / p>

With the plenipotentiaries of King Stanislaus Augustus and the Commonwealth, he concluded three treaties on the Partitions (18 September 1773), commercial (16th of March 1775) and containing various arrangements determining the location of the people on the lands surrendered (16 March 1775).

After the partitioning party, the Poles did not have the envoy of Austria as such, as before him, when they hoped that Vienna would defend Poland against the appetites of Russia and Prussia. Revicky's protests against the imprisonment of Baron Karl Julius accused of recruiting Polish soldiers into the Austrian army were silenced.

In 1779 he was dismissed from Warsaw, where only the Chargé d'Affaires Benedikt de Caché remained. The new ambassador in Warsaw was Franz Maria von Thugut.

Ambassador to Berlin in 1782-1786, then to London.

He belonged to the most educated Austrian diplomats. His huge library was sold to Lord Spencer for £ 500. His work was Fragmente über die Literaturgeschichte der Perser, which he wrote in Latin and which was translated into German by Johann Friedrich Unger and published in Vienna in 1783. Bibliography Bibliography

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