Abstract
This article explores the arrival of the first Russian resident ambassador to the Ottoman Empire in a period when Russian diplomacy underwent major transformations. It focuses on Peter A. Tolstoi’s network and the management of information gathered during the first year of his appointment in Adrianople (1702-03). The article revisits the notion of resident ambassador, not as a hallmark of ‘modern European diplomacy’ with an overemphasis on the diplomat as a state-representative and office-holder, on the states system, or on institutional reform, but to suggest that a resident embassy in the early modern period was more than a formal, self-contained, and sovereign institution located in a particular place. The transformation from ad-hoc to resident diplomacy in Russian-Ottoman relations did not originate from the adoption of European diplomatic norms alone: It created new or relied on the existing trans-imperial networks of the ambassador rather than on bilateral inter-state relations. The example of Russian-Ottoman relations demonstrates that while the new diplomacy introduced by Peter I was driven by Europeanization and reform, the transformations emerged from the adaptation to circumstances in different locations and depended on the development of contacts embedded in the geo-cultural and religious entanglements of the region.
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Hennings, J. (2019). Information and confusion: Russian resident diplomacy and peter A. tolstoi’s arrival in the ottoman empire (1702-1703). International History Review, 41(5), 1003–1019. https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2018.1504225
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