Pyotr Rumyantsev
Pyotr Alexandrovich Rumyantsev-Zadunaisky (15 January 1725 – 19 December 1796) was a Russian field marshal and statesman who rose to prominence through his command in the Seven Years' War and achieved lasting fame as the leader of Russian forces in the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774.[1][2] In that conflict, he orchestrated decisive victories over vastly larger Ottoman armies at the Battle of Larga on 7 July 1770, where 38,000 Russians routed 80,000 enemies, and at the Battle of Cahul on 18 July 1770, defeating up to 150,000 foes with just 20,000 troops, earning promotion to field marshal and the honorific "Zadunaisky" for subsequent Danube crossings and campaigns beyond the river.[2][3] As governor-general of Little Russia from 1764 to 1781, he implemented administrative reforms to integrate the Hetmanate into the empire, including military and fiscal restructuring, while pioneering tactical innovations like mobile divisional columns and reinforced infantry assaults that emphasized shock tactics over rigid linear orders.[2]