Background
Count Alexander Ivanovich Osterman-Tolstoy was the son of the Lieutenant-General Ivan Matveevich Tolstoy (1746–1808) and his wife Agrafena Ilyinichna, nee Bibikova.
Count Alexander Ivanovich Osterman-Tolstoy was the son of the Lieutenant-General Ivan Matveevich Tolstoy (1746–1808) and his wife Agrafena Ilyinichna, nee Bibikova.
He belonged to the famous Tolstoy family. He began his military service during the Turkish-Russian war of 1787-1791. Count Osterman-Tolstoy did not leave the military service.
In 1798 he was already a major-general, and became Lieutenant General in 1805.
He participated in all major Russian battles of the Napoleonic Wars in 1805-1814. Upon his return from the campaign in northern Germany in 1805, he was named Governor of Saint St. Petersburg.
During 1812-1814 commanded a corps, and distinguished himself in the battle at Kulm 17–18 August 1813. He participated in the 1812 campaigns as a Commander of the 4th Army Corps, under the overall command of Johann von Klenau.
Osterman-Tolstoy was wounded in the Battle of Bautzen (21–22 May 1813), before fighting at Dresden and at the Battle of Leipzig.
During the battle the count lost his left hand, as Emperor Alexander I put it, “by sacrificing his hand he bought us victory”. In 1815, Osterman-Tolstoy briefly had a diplomatic assignment to Paris. In 1817, he was appointed General of the Infantry.
Count Osterman-Tolstoy remained in service until 1826, after Alexander"s I death he retired and started traveling around Europe and the Middle East in the company of the scholar Jakob Philipp Fallmerayer.
In 1831, he was a military consultant to Ibrahim-pasha in Egypt and participated in actions against the Turks. He never returned to Russia and shared his time between Italy and Switzerland.
He loved practical jokes and hoaxes. According to his contemporaries he was “a remarkable and original person, distinguished by his frankness and generosity.
Even among his famous contemporaries he could be singled out.
Fearlessness, courage, and endurance in battle were his characteristics as a military officer”
Count Osterman-Tolstoy was married to Princess Elisabeth Alexeevna Galitzine (1779–1853) from 1799. They had no children. He had foreign mistresses and a lot of illegitimate children.
Osterman-Tolstoy finally settled in Le Petit-Saconnex in Geneva (Switzerland) in 1837, where he died in 1857.
His corps defended the gorges in the mountains of Bohemia and captured General Vandamme.