Count Frederick Maurice van Heiden was a general of infantry in the Imperial Russian Army.
Background
Count van Heiden was born in Sveaborg, later renamed Suomenlinna, son of Dutch Lodewijk (Ludwig) Sigismund Gustavus van Heiden (bSeptember 6, 1772, Zuidlaren-d November 5, Tallinn), who left Netherlands in 1795 during French invasion and settled in Livonia. His mother was lady Anne-Marie Akeleye from a Danish family. Youngest son of family, count van Heiden, baptized as Friedrich Moritz, took military career, and switched his religion from Protestantism to Eastern Orthodox, after which he was known by a Russian name Fedor Logginovich.
Career
He served as the of Finland 1881–1898. Count van Heiden"s 17-year office in the Grand Duchy of Finland encompassed the entire reign of Alexander III of Russia, who appointed him at the start of his own reign, to succeed the courtly and diplomatic Count Nikolay Adlerberg), and four first years of reign of Nicholas II of Russia. Admiral van Heiden died in 1850.
Young Heiden fought in Caucasus and against the Hungarian Revolutionary Army, whom Nicholas I. assisted Austrian emperor against.
He was promoted to colonel in 1849. During Crimean War Heiden was chief of staff in Baltic Corps, without participation in notable battles.
After the war was he was promoted to Major General in 1855. Her father count Nikolay Dmitrievich Zubov (1801–1871.
Russian: Николай Дмитриевич Зубов) was Steward of the Russian Imperial Court, himself son of princess Paraskeva Viazemskaia and general, count Dmitri Alexandrovich Zubov, one of brothers of prince Platon Zubov.
He participated in Dmitry Milyutin"s military reforms and was appointed as head of the General Staff (Glavni Stab) in 1866. He also chaired the conscription committee that enacted the conscription in Russia in 1874, and was in charge of the mobilization during the Turkish War. He was acting Minister of War during Milyutin"s absence during the Turkish War.
In 1870 Heiden was promoted to full General.
When he was eleven years later appointed as of Finland, he had made a long and successful military career. As it was usual with persons who adopted themselves a new nationality, Heiden was eagerly Russian.
In his position in Finland, the Slavophile Heiden saw his task to Russify the country. However, his reputation among the Finns is not very bad, because of his subtle methods - his successor, general Bobrikov, enjoys a really contrasting fame of a russifying tyrant.
In appointments to public offices in government, administration, justice, and military he favored the conservative and monarchist Finnish Party and persons who had learned the Russian language well and resided longer times there, as opposed to possibly separatist Swedes and liberal Swedish Party.
Heiden furthered trade between Finland and Russia, and had customs formalities reduced. His chief interest was to clarify jurisdiction within Finland: to define what decisions belonged to the imperial government, what to autonomous local governments in Finland.
Membership
After the war Heiden was chiefly a member of the General Staff.