Monument honoring Catherine the Great’s foreign policy chief unveiled in Moscow

15 Dec, 2025 14:23 / Updated 3 hours ago
Ivan Osterman rose from a crucial ambassadorial post in Europe to head Imperial Russia’s diplomatic service

A monument to Ivan Osterman, an 18th-century Russian statesman who was the empire’s minister of foreign affairs during the reign of Empress Catherine the Great, was unveiled on Monday at his former Moscow estate.

The ceremony followed events held earlier this year by the Foreign Ministry to mark the 300th anniversary of his birth.

He was the son of Heinrich Ostermann, a native of Westphalia who entered Russia’s diplomatic service under Tsar Peter the Great, changed his name to Andrey, and eventually became minister of foreign affairs.

Ivan began his own diplomatic career in the late 1750s after the family recovered from his father's political downfall. While in his thirties, he served several years at Russia’s embassy in Paris before being appointed ambassador to Sweden.

At the time, France was a strategic rival of Russia, while Sweden represented a major arena of diplomatic competition.

Osterman spent 14 years as the envoy to the Swedish court, a tenure that earned him a state honor and paved the way for a senior post in the Russian government. In 1783, he was appointed head of the Collegium of Foreign Affairs, the body responsible for Russia’s diplomacy at the time. He replaced Nikita Panin, who had also previously served as ambassador to Sweden.

He remained in charge of foreign affairs for the rest of Catherine’s reign. Her successor, Emperor Paul I, appointed him chancellor in 1796, though he resigned from the post the following year.

The statue was installed at Osterman’s former mansion, now home to the All-Russian Museum of Decorative Arts. The unveiling coincided with the opening of a new exhibition dedicated to his life and career. The event was attended by senior officials, including presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky and Deputy Foreign Minister Evgeny Ivanov.

Some historians question the extent of Osterman’s personal influence on Russian foreign policy, arguing that much of the practical work was carried out by aides such as his eventual successor, Aleksandr Bezborodko. The Foreign Ministry’s Diplomatic Academy nevertheless named Osterman among the most significant figures in the department’s history earlier this year.