Mikhail Andreyevich Miloradovich (Russian:
Михаи́л Андре́евич Милора́дович, Serbian:
Михаил Андрејевић Милорадовић; Mihail Andrejević Miloradović)), Russian military man and politician, member of the State Council of the Russian Empire, born in St. Petersburg on 12 October of 1771. Mikhail Miloradovich was the son of Major General
Andrei Miloradovich (1726–1798). The Miloradovichs descended from an Orthodox Serbian noble family and a katun clan from
Hum, in present-day Herzegovina. Miloradovich was educated in the universities of Göttingen and Königsberg, where he studied fortification and artillery. He also studied in Strasbourg and Metz. In 1788-90 Miloradovich participated in the Russian-Swedish war. In 1798 he was promoted to major general and appointed chief of Absheron Musketeer Regiment. An important role in his development as a military commander played his part in the Italian and Swiss campaigns led by Alexander Suvorov in 1799. In the battle of Novi the troops under the command of M. Miloradovich and P. Bagration made a decisive contribution to victory, defeating the French forces which defended the center position. The blow of Miloradovich’s detachment predestined defeat of French forces defending approaches to the Gotthard Pass near the Lake Ober Alp. For campaigns of 1799 Miloradovich was awarded
the Order of St. Anne, 1st class, of St. Alexander Nevsky and the Order of Malta.
https://en.topwar.ru/17120-zabytyy-general-gubernator-graf-mihail-andreevich-miloradovich.html At the beginning of Russian-Turkish war of 1806-12, Miloradovich, leading a corps, crossed the Dniester, entered into the Danubian principalities, and, having seized Bucharest, rescued Wallachia from ruin. Continuing his service in the Moldavian army led by I. Michelson, Miloradovich distinguished himself at Turbat and Obileshti and
was awarded a gold sword with the inscription "For bravery and rescue of Bucharest." In 1809, for the battle of Rassevat, he was promoted to general of infantry, having
become a full general at the age of 38. 
After the Treaty of Fontainebleau Alexander appointed Miloradovich commander of the Russian Imperial Guard; in 1818 Miloradovich became
Governor of Saint Petersburg, assuming command of all the troops, police, and civil administration of the imperial capital. As chief of police, Miloradovich controlled political surveillance and investigation in Saint Petersburg, but the events of 1825 demonstrated that he ultimately failed to respond to the real threat: he dismissed the evidence against the Decembrists, saying "It's all stuff; leave these young blockheads alone to read to each other their trash of miserable verses."
Alexander Herzen who met Miloradovich in early childhood and
fondly remembered him as a storyteller "with the greatest vivacity, with lively mimicry, with roars of laughter" ridiculed Miloradovich as an administrator yet called him "a warrior poet who understood poetry ... grand things are done by great means." Herzen's memoirs provide a number of anecdotes about Miloradovich the administrator.
In 1820 Miloradovich interrogated
Alexander Pushkin on suspicion of political propaganda. Pushkin said that he burned his "contraband poems" and recited some from memory. Miloradovich said "Ah, c'est chevaleresque", (Translation from French: "Ah, it's chivalrous") dismissed the charges, and sent Pushkin on a well-paid tour of the south.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikhail_MiloradovichThe Serbian genus of Miloradovich, descended from Herzegovina, moved to Russia at the same time as the associate of Peter the Great, Count
Sava Lukić Vladislavich-Raguzinsky. Mikhail was from the family of Cossack "starshyna" and Russian nobility of Serbian origin. The progenitor was a
17th-century Herzegovinian, Rodovan (or Radoje) Miloradović. His grandsons,
Mihajlo, Gavrilo, and Aleksandar Miloradovich, went over to the Russian side during the Russo-Turkish War of 1711, and Peter I rewarded them with high posts and estates in Left-Bank Ukraine. Mihajlo (d 25 September 1726) served as colonel of Hadiach regiment (1715–26) and signed the Kolomak Petitions of 1723. Gavrilo (d 1730) succeeded him as colonel (1727–9). Several lines of the Myloradovych family stemmed from the three brothers and included many Ukrainian and Russian statesmen, military leaders, and cultural figures.
http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages%5CM%5CY%5CMyloradovych.htmhttps://histrf.ru/read/biographies/miloradovich-mikhail-andrieievichhttps://www.prlib.ru/en/history/619623
What Y-DNA haplogroup are Miloradovich/ Милорадович? Које хаплогрупе су ови Милорадовић ?
