Knight of the George Cross for the defense of Sevastopol
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Knight of the George Cross for the defense of Sevastopol
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Rosen Baron Hermann Ottonovich
- Senator, Privy Councilor, son of Baron Otto Evgenievich Rosen, nephew of the Decembrist; from the nobles of the Province of Estonia,
Genus. in 1829, he was educated in the Imp. Alexander Lyceum and, at the end of the course, on January 1, 1849, he decided to serve in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; On February 21 he was assigned to the Department of Internal Relations, and a year later (in January 1850) he moved as a junior assistant secretary to the 1st Department of the Senate, where on November 16 he was made senior assistant secretary.
On June 21, 1851, for participating, as a second, in the duel of his brother Henry, cornet of the Cavalry Guard Regiment, with the lieutenant of the same regiment, Count Hendrikov (the latter being mortally wounded), he was put in the guardhouse, and then, on October 15, the Military Court, which tried his brother, sentenced him to a month's arrest in the guardhouse.
After serving his sentence, he left the civil service and on December 17, 1854 entered the Hussar Count Radetzky regiment as a non-commissioned officer. For bravery during the second intensified bombardment of Sevastopol by the allies, he was promoted to ensign on April 7, 1855, on June 18 he was awarded the Order of St. Anna of the 4th degree with the inscription "for bravery", and on September 22 - the Order of St. Stanislaus of the 3rd degree.
Seconded on December 18, 1855 for various assignments to the General Staff, on March 4, 1856, he was transferred as a cornet to the Alexandria Hussar Rail. Kn. Nikolai Nikolaevich regiment, and on July 10 he was appointed adjutant to the commander of the 5th Army Corps, General Bezak, with a transfer to the Ingrian Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar Regiment. At the end of the Crimean campaign, he again switched to the civil service and on June 7, 1857, with the rank of provincial secretary, entered the Office of the Chairman of the Department of Appanages; On July 25 of the same year, he was appointed deputy of the Moscow Specific Office, then, the following year (February 14), he corrected the position of assistant manager of the Nizhny Novgorod Specific Office and on October 31, 1859 he was approved in this position.
From December 12, 1860 to August 9, 1861, he corrected the position of manager of the Specific Office and on August 28, 1861 he retired due to illness, the next year he entered the Ministry of Finance and on June 1 was appointed manager of excise duties of the Penza province, and on September 20, 1866 he was transferred to the same position in the St. Petersburg province;
from May 20 to September 1, 1867, Baron Rosen served as vice-director of the Department of Non-Taxable Fees, and on November 20 he was confirmed in this rank and the following year, from June 20 to January 1, 1869, he temporarily managed the Department, and on October 2 he was appointed a member of the Tax Commission;
On January 1, 1869, he was made manager of the Department with the production of state councilors and, appointed on October 24 as a permanent member of the Commission approved by the Ministry of Finance to revise the system of taxes and fees, on October 16, 1870, he was approved in the rank of Director of the Department of Non-Tax Fees. On December 3, 1871, Rosen was promoted to full state councilor, and on December 23, 1877, to privy councillor.
Having received the Austrian Order of Franz Joseph in 1872 (for participation in the case of the supply of salt for the Kingdom of Poland), in 1874 - the Order of St. Stanislaus of the 1st degree, in 1879 - Anna of the 1st degree and on January 1, 1883 - Vladimir of the 2nd degree, Baron Rosen was appointed senator on May 15, 1883, but a serious illness that brought him to the grave on December 18, 1884, prevented him from taking part in the classes of the Senate.
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