Charles-André, Comte Pozzo di Borgo (born March 8, 1768, Alata, Corsica—died February 15, 1842, Paris, France) was a Corsican nobleman who entered the Russian diplomatic service and promoted French interests after the Napoleonic Wars in the courts of the Russian emperors Alexander I (reigned 1801–25) and Nicholas I (reigned 1825–55).
A native of Corsica, Pozzo favoured its political incorporation into France and, after Corsica was declared a département of France, served as Corsican delegate to the French Legislative Assembly (1791–92). After his return to Corsica, however, he supported a rebellion to make the island a British protectorate (1793). Following the end of British rule (1796), Pozzo accompanied Sir Gilbert Elliot, the former British viceroy in Corsica, to Vienna (1798), where he stayed until, in anticipation of Russia’s entry into an anti-Napoleonic coalition, he entered the Russian service.
Subsequently, Pozzo went on sensitive diplomatic missions to Vienna and Constantinople. When Alexander made peace with Napoleon (Treaty of Tilsit; 1807), however, Pozzo resigned and retired to Vienna. Only after Alexander and Napoleon resumed their hostilities and Alexander had recalled him did Pozzo rejoin the Russian service (1812), obtain Sweden’s collaboration against the French, and become a general in the Russian army.
After Napoleon’s defeat and the accession of Louis XVIII to the throne of France (1814), Pozzo was appointed Russia’s ambassador to the French court and one of the Russian representatives to the Congress of Vienna. During the Hundred Days, when Napoleon returned to France (1815), Pozzo joined Louis at his temporary refuge at Ghent, Belgium. After Napoleon’s final defeat, Pozzo became a champion of French interests, for which service the French government made him a count and peer (1818).
Although his influence in Paris declined during the reactionary reign of Charles X (ruled France 1824–30), Pozzo remained at his post; after the French Revolution of 1830 had deposed Charles, he maintained cordial relations between Russia and France despite Emperor Nicholas’ overt reluctance to recognize Louis-Philippe as the new king of the French. Transferred to London in 1835 because his excessive sympathy for the French was considered potentially damaging to Russian interests, Pozzo became ill and retired to Paris (1839).