Mikhail Nikolayevich, Count Muravyov
- (Count), Muravyov also spelled:
- Muraviëv, or Muraviev
- Died:
- June 21 [June 8, old style], 1900, St. Petersburg (aged 55)
- Also Known As:
- Graf Mikhail Nikolayevich Muraviev
- Graf Mikhail Nikolayevich Muraviëv
- Title / Office:
- foreign minister (1896-1900), Russia
Mikhail Nikolayevich, Count Muravyov (born April 19 [April 7, old style], 1845, Grodno, Russia—died June 21 [June 8, old style], 1900, St. Petersburg) was a Russian diplomat and statesman who at the end of the 19th century directed Russia’s activities in the Far East and played a major role in developments leading to the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War (1904–05).
Muravyov was the grandson of Mikhail Nikolayevich Muravyov, known as the “hangman of Wilno” for his brutal suppression of the Polish uprising of 1863 in the Lithuanian provinces, and the son of the governor of Grodno. Mikhail Nikolayevich entered the Russian foreign ministry in 1864. After serving in various legations throughout Europe, he was appointed Russian minister to Denmark (1893) and then minister of foreign affairs (1896).
An advocate of Russian expansion into Manchuria, Muravyov recommended that the Russian navy seize Port Arthur (now Lü-shun) and Dalny (now Lü-ta) on the Liaotung Peninsula. He then concluded an agreement with China (March 1898) that gave Russia control of the entire peninsula for 25 years and also allowed Russia to build a railroad from Port Arthur to the Chinese city of Harbin, which was connected with the Russian port of Vladivostok (and with the Trans-Siberian Railroad) by the Russian-operated Chinese Eastern Railroad. Russia’s gains in southern Manchuria antagonized both Great Britain and Japan. Muravyov improved relations with Great Britain by concluding an agreement (April 1899) in which the two nations defined and recognized their respective spheres of influence in China. By order of the Russian emperor Nicholas II, Muravyov also called for the convocation of a disarmament conference (Jan. 11, 1899), which assembled at The Hague (May–July 1899), but he was unable to control the increasingly hostile conflict developing between Russia and Japan, which, after his death, erupted into the Russo-Japanese War.