Vladimir Pavlovich Titov

For other people named Vladimir Titov, see Vladimir Titov (disambiguation).
Владимир Павлович Титов

Vladimir Titov, Russian envoy to Constantinople
Born 12 March (28 February) 1807
Noviki, now Spassky Rayon, Russian Empire
Died 27 (15) September 1891
Kharkov, Russian Empire

Vladimir Pavlovich Titov (Russian: Владимир Павлович Титов; 12 [O.S. 1807] March, selo Noviki, Spassky Rayon, Ryazan Oblast27 [O.S. 1891] September, Kharkov), better known under the pseudonym Tit Kosmokratov (Russian: Тит Космократов), was a Russian writer, statesman, diplomat. As a writer he is best known for the novella The Remote House on Vasilyevsky Street (Уединённый домик на Васильевском), which was influenced by the writings of Aleksandr Pushkin.

Biography

Vladimir Titov graduated at the Moscow University Noble Boarding School and the Moscow State University. He trained with well-known writers Vladimir Odoevsky and Stepan Shevyryov. From 1823 to 1828 he served at the chancery of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, then in the Asian department.

In his youth he was active in literature. With Odoevsky, Shevyryov, Dmitry Venevitinov and others he participated at the philosophical circle Lyubomudry, which existed from 1823 to 1825. He knew Pushkin, Pyotr Vyazemsky, Vasily Zhukovsky and many more of the leading writers. His fantastic novella The Remote House on Vasilyevsky Street was published in the almanach The Northern Flowers of 1829 (Северные цветы на 1829). As Tit Kosmokratov he also wrote The Monastery of St. Brigit (Монастырь св. Бригиты), issued in the almanach The Northern Flowers of 1829. Also, Titov is the author of the three-volume novel about the Russo-Turkish War from 1828 to 1829, Wrongly Stories of Cicerone del K...o (Неправдоподобные рассказы чичероне дель К…о) (1837).

Titov later served as General-Councilor of the Danubian Principalities, and was an envoy to Constantinople and Stuttgart. From 1873 he commissioned the Archaeographic Commission.

References

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