The Arizona Republic

Russian fable now term for disinforma­tion

False Potemkin legend relevant to today’s war

- Dennis Wagner

Once upon a time, there lived a powerful leader known as Catherine the Great who ruled a vast empire and, over the years, conquered many new lands.

Catherine appointed her boyfriend to oversee one of those conquests – a place now called Ukraine. As time passed, he informed her the citizens were flourishin­g and happy. But, according to a version of the tale passed on for centuries, it was a lie.

In the legend, Catherine decided to launch an expedition, taking a barge down the Dnieper River so she could observe the thriving, joyful subjects. Her boyfriend, Grigory, was fearful his deceit would be exposed, and eager to please his beloved. So, the story goes, he instructed minions to build fake villages along the riverfront – freshly painted facades.

The expedition, with thousands of soldiers and servants, proceeded for six months. According to popular accounts, after Catherine passed each village, the fake buildings were disassembl­ed, placed on carts, rushed downriver and re-created for another viewing.

Catherine, in the story, was mesmerized by the achievemen­ts of her lover, Grigory Potemkin, rewarding him with an appointmen­t as Prince of Tauris (Crimea). And, to this day, people worldwide still refer to fake news and false fronts using his name: “Potemkin villages.”

Over hundreds of years, the insult came to be used for almost any alleged sham, from China’s green energy program to former President Barack Obama’s gun control efforts or former President Donald Trump’s coronaviru­s response.

More recently, as Ukrainian defenses held off Russia’s military invasion, pundits scoffed that Vladimir Putin was duped by his “Potemkin military,” whose leaders misreprese­nted the war outlook. When Putin tried to prop up Russia’s economy amid internatio­nal sanctions, U.S. officials talked of Moscow’s “Potemkin market.” And, after Russia offered to end the war in return for control of southern Ukraine, critics ridiculed the notion of a “Potemkin peace.”

But history and politics are a tangle of lies and intrigue, especially in Russia, so there is a twist to this tale:

There were no fake villages. Potemkin did not scam Catherine II with props. In fact, researcher­s say his accomplish­ments in Ukraine were authentic, and popular claims to the contrary are fiction – a smear spewed by Russian rivals at the time and forever seared into belief and vernacular.

“The very concept of ‘Potemkin village’ is a Potemkin village,” said Simon Sebag Montefiore, author of “Catherine the Great & Potemkin: Power Love & Russian Empire.” “Totally false, a libel without a shred of truth.”

While the legend may be bogus, Sebag Montefiore and other historians believe the Crimea expedition and Potemkin’s fable are at the heart of today’s Ukraine conflict. Put simply, they contend, thousands have been killed and millions displaced in a war based on Putin’s misreprese­ntation of that history.

Marvin Kalb, a Harvard professor emeritus and former journalist who wrote “Imperial Gamble” after Russia’s 2014 invasion of Crimea, suggested the bloody conflict is a product of disinforma­tion, much like the lie that has haunted Catherine’s expedition for 235 years.

“The relevance of that story today is that Putin is creating a Potemkin village in the way he describes his war,” Kalb said.

There is no question that Potemkin took Catherine on a tour through towns that were decorated for royal visitors.

But historical consensus is clear that the prince’s dramatic developmen­ts were real. Proof rests in Russian archives and letters penned by those who took part in the 4,000-mile expedition.

Catherine, who projected an image of enlightenm­ent royalty, correspond­ed daily with her subjects and heirs in a literary style reminiscen­t of “Pride and Prejudice.”

It is fair to ask how this woman, a German-born princess, wound up as a Russian empress. The answer: a wedding. Catherine married Peter III, portrayed by history as a hapless emperor lacking in leadership skills as well as spousal affection.

Thus, in 1762, Catherine conspired with other royals and military officers to stage a coup.

Peter, caught off guard, abdicated the throne and was killed soon thereafter.

Potemkin, among those who aided Catherine, became her paramour and swiftly ascended to military commander and viceroy over half the Russian empire.

At a time when American colonists were fighting for independen­ce from England, Potemkin led Russia’s conquest of the steppes and Crimea, defeating Ottoman sultans and Tatar khans. He successful­ly pressed Catherine to annex the territory of what is now southern Ukraine, writing, “Believe me, with this acquisitio­n you will achieve immortal glory such that no other Sovereign in Russia has ever had.”

With Catherine’s support, Potemkin rapidly developed the territory dubbed Novorossiy­a (New Russia). Greeks, Slavs, Poles, Jews, Italians and others were imported to till the land, build shipyards, erect forts. Cities were founded, including Mariupol, Dnipro and Odesa – places now emblematic of Russian military aggression and alleged war crimes.

By 1787, Potemkin was ready to display Russia’s new colony to the empress. And Catherine welcomed an opportunit­y to survey the conquest while flaunting her power.

The entourage first traveled by land through snow and bitter cold from St. Petersburg to Kyiv.

In “Catherine the Great: Love, Sex and Power,” biographer Virginia Rounding describes an ensemble with 14 enormous carriages and 124 sleighs. The empress’ coach, pulled by 30 steeds, boasted a bedroom, office and library.

After three weeks, the parade pulled into Kyiv and was joined by Potemkin. Catherine held court and threw more parties for two months.

By all accounts, Catherine – who was 60 at the time of the voyage – maintained a revolving door for young lovers, but Potemkin was favored, and most important to her rule.

Sebag Montefiore describes the couple as “the most successful male and female political team in world history.” Their letters, he adds, simultaneo­usly reflect a sensual love affair and “a study in power.”

The expedition concluded at the Bay of Sevastopol on the Black Sea, where Potemkin showed off his new Russian navy fleet and spelled out the empress’ name with fireworks.

Not all Russians were enamored. According to Sebag Montefiore, rivals in the Russian court at St. Petersburg – “including Catherine’s embittered and excluded half-mad son, Paul” – fabricated the village myth to sabotage Potemkin.

Their smear campaign, in turn, was advanced by enemies of Russia’s western expansion, including England and Prussia, giving the Potemkin village story global reach.

In his biography of Catherine, historian Robert K. Massie wrote that the expedition is still regarded by some as “the most remarkable journey ever made by a reigning monarch – and as Gregory Potemkin’s greatest public triumph.” As a result, he added, Potemkin, became “the most powerful man in Russia.”

Those who questioned or mocked the trip did not take part in it, Massie noted. Moreover, Potemkin’s accomplish­ments were verified not just by Catherine, but by “sharp-eyed and sophistica­ted foreigners,” including the emperor of Austria, a prince and France’s ambassador.

“Over two centuries,” Massie concluded, “no one has produced any evidence that what these three said and wrote about their journey was untrue.”

Yet Potemkin’s name today, if it’s recognized at all, is synonymous with propaganda.

Which brings us back to Putin. Russia’s president uses history to justify the war.

He insists that at least the southern part of Ukraine is “Novorossiy­a” – territory conquered by Potemkin, annexed by Catherine II and rightfully part of his empire today.

Researcher­s may reject Putin’s rationale even as they agree the past delivers important insights about what’s happening now to Ukraine’s people and cities.

Andriy Zayarnyuk, a professor of social-cultural heritage of Eastern Europe at the University of Winnipeg, said Putin’s diatribes have been stunning in the way they blend factual errors with political interpreta­tions. For instance, claims that Ukraine has always shared Russia’s language and culture are belied by the fact that Greeks, Romans and Mongols ruled Crimea before Potemkin’s arrival.

Sebag Montefiore said Catherine and Potemkin were unabashedl­y proud of their conquest but would renounce Putin’s claim that Crimean turf is innately Russian.

“They would have hated his ultranatio­nalism,” the author said. “All this shows that history can be a dangerous weapon.”

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