Sea Stories

An Admiral Who Bettered Admiral Nelson

Weigh anchor, and raise the Saint Andrew’s cross of the Russian Fleet, it’s time to sail back into history. Amongst his feats, this hero can boast over 40 battles without tasting defeat; this is Fyodor Ushakov, Admiral of the Russian Fleet.

Admiral Saint Ushakov was a contemporary of Admiral Lord Nelson. However, unlike his British counterpart, Ushakov was never defeated in over 40 battles he once inflicted 2,000 casualties without taking more than thirty?

His talent was so great that the famous British Vice-Admiral was destined to be placed under Nelson’s command during the joint siege at Malta, to the ire of Nelson, who later sabotaged the alliance.

Ushakov was canonised not for his military heroism that alone does not qualify for canonization, it was instead, how he preserved the spirit of a true Christian in the horrifying conditions of battle, always risking and ready to sacrifice his life for those under his command.

Saints were not magical superhuman without sin, they were normal people, who obtained Holiness and oneness with God. To understand them, we must look at the normal aspects of their life.

Saint Fyodor Ushakov was born into a family of minor nobility, in the village of Burnakovo, in the ancient Yaroslavl region, around 150 km north of Moscow. His parents were religious people of profound faith, who set the early Christian values which he would accept as he grew in the Orthodox way. 

Learning humility from his uncle, a monk, this young nobleman spent much time with the common folk, giving him strength and understanding of the stark realities of the world, unlike sheltered Western aristocrats, who (literally and legally), purchased their military ranks.

By age 14 he was fully capable of hunting Russian bears. He entered the Naval College two years later, graduating as a midshipman in 1765.

He spent his early naval career learning how to survive the cold of the northern seas, and quickly distinguished himself as a worthy sailor.  He learned tricks from the older sailors you cannot learn in schools, as the old Russian military maxim holds true ‘The best practices are passed down by the survivors, there is no better practice than surviving the real thing.’

Ushakov learned one of the most important military rules of all – how to be flexible. He took this flexibility with him for the rest of his life.

These beautiful pink lakes in Crimea are not far from the site of some of his greatest battles.

The Champion of the Black Sea., it was when Russia liberated what is now Southern Ukraine from the Ottoman-Turkish rule, he guarded the coasts of what was then known as New Russia.

One of his most lasting and peaceful contributions to Russian and Ukrainian history was when he oversaw the construction of two significant naval bases at Kherson the Old and Kherson the New.

Ancient Kherson was a Greek colony, the northernmost metropolis of the Eastern Roman Empire. It is situated at the site of the Baptism of Saint Vladimir of Kyiv, the Baptiser of All Russia. Kherson is derived from the Greek word for Peninsula, as in the Crimean Peninsula.

We know Old Kherson by a different name: the Hero-City of Sevastopol, the greatest city in Crimea. Legendary for its battles, Sevastopol is Russia’s most precious warm water port. Ushakov built the first naval base in Sevastopol, which remains to this day crucial to Russia’s national defence.

Since its founding by Potemkin on Catherine the Great’s orders in 1778, modern Kherson is Ukraine’s second most famous port after Odessa. It is located at the mouth of the legendary river Dnipro (the river where all of Russia was baptized upstream in 988) north of Sevastopol where Crimea meets Ukraine. There Ushakov built the famous docks.

It was in this Black Sea that Ushakov became a legend. He was the dread of the Turkish navy who called him Ushak-Pasha. Perhaps an insult or a title of infamy and dread, it was one that carried a modicum of respect: The name Pasha is the highest Turkish honorific, similar to Lord in English, Vladica in Slavonic, or Pan in Ukrainian and Polish.

Ushakov distinguished himself as a brave commander during the Russo-Turkish War in 1788. At the Battle of Fidonisi Island, his fleet supported the infantry of the legendary Aleksandr Suvorov, himself the undefeated victor of over 60 battles.

Second-in-Command Ushakov realised the Turks outnumbered the Russians by almost three to one. Realising this was a fair fight, he did what any Slav would do and charge directly at the Turkish flagship.

In attacking, he made a brilliant but risky decision. He knew his troops were better trained and equipped than the Turks. On the other hand, their numerical advantage could spell the end for him in a battle of attrition. Ushakov decided to leverage his strength while he had it to even the odds swiftly.

Seizing the initiative, he charged the enemy flagship. He awestruck the Turks, winning the day not only for the navy but paving the way for Suvorov and Potemkin to drive the Turks from Ochakov fortress.

At the decisive Battle of Kurch, the now Rear-Admiral Ushakov found himself yet again at a numerical disadvantage. Yet, he took less than 30 casualties and lost no ships while the Turks lost five ships, hundreds of men, and had their admiral and captains captured.

At Tendra he continued this trend but inflicted thousands of casualties on the Turks  At Cape Kaliakra, he won the Naval War. He was soon promoted to Vice-Admiral and given command of the Black Sea fleet.

It’s remarkable his life is not known in the West, and the Russian Navy is thought of as insignificant. However, it must be conceded that the feats of Vice-Admiral Ushakov even Admiral Nelson could not match. He had, for instance, captured the unconquerable fortress of Corfu, Greece, from Napoleon in three months, whereas Nelson spent a year besieging Malta. The power of Orthodox culture aided him at Corfu, as Orthodox Greeks fought on land with their Russian brothers.

Corfu, Greece

Orthodox Greek natives welcomed Ushakov triumphantly. He ordered a thanksgiving service in gratitude to the Lord for saving his people. On Easter, 1799, he led a cross procession with the relics of St. Spyridon Trimifuntsky, a beloved saint to Greeks and Russians.

Pravoslavie.ru describes the meaning of his works: ‘Here, on the islands, the God-loving admiral manifested yet another of his God-given talents: that of statesman and public figure. He not only ensured peace and order for the Greeks, but gave them one of the most democratic for that time constitutions, setting up the Republic of the Seven Islands, opening an episcopal faculty on Corfu and inviting an Orthodox bishop, which they had not had since the sixteenth century.

When the time came for Vice-Admiral Ushakov to leave the Ionic isles, their population turned out with tears in their eyes to see him off. They presented him with medals with the inscription: ‘These peoples unanimously proclaim him to be their father.’ Children were named in his honour, and one and all promised to never let time obliterate his merits and achievements from their memory.’

Ushakov earned his promotion to [full] Admiral for his heroism at Corfu. He was later sent to assist the famous Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson, whom he technically outranked. His English colleague reacted to the idea of cooperating with a Russian equal quite negatively and reacted shamefully.

After Napoleon was finally defeated, Nelson offered the French garrison terms of surrender in such lack of animosity, it could be mistaken for a truce. They would be ferried back by British ships, permitted to bear arms, and, most ridiculous of all, not even forbidden from waging war.

Nelson’s spite at the thought of working with Ushakov was such that he tried unsuccessfully to prevent his Russian counterpart from parading in French-controlled Rome and receiving the praise he deserved. Vice-Admiral Ushakov considered this treason. In return, the Russian commander paraded his troops through Rome, even though the French had already left.

Ushakov behind the Saint Andrews Flag (a white flag with a blue x), the standard ensign of the Russian Navy. The Russian Navy also uses another flag which resembles the British union jack.

Though his military carrier was the thing of song and legend, Ushakov fell out of political favour and was eventually recalled to Russia.  Finishing his service honourably, he withdrew to Sanaksary Monastery, 500 kilometres east of Moscow, and was never to fight again.

He struggled in prayer for the rest of his life, praying for every comrade, and even those wanderers he met by chance. He spent his final years thusly: First in prayer, which led to peace, which leads to mercy in the Kingdom of Heaven.

He died in 1817, at the age of 74, and was buried at the Sanaksary Monastery. In his honour, the local newspapers wrote: ‘You knew him as a great naval commander, we knew him for his outstanding charity to others.’

Cathedral of Saint Ushakov in Saransk, Mordovia

He wasn’t a Saint because he won hundreds of battles, or because he was brilliant, he was a Saint because this highborn officer was never afraid to take a bullet to the heart for the common man. He was merciful and he never forgot what it means to be a Christian ‘There is no greater love than laying down your life for another.’ ~ Matfey Shaheen, Source

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