From 1875 to 1878, about 3,000
Russian volunteers, including 700 officers, went to the Principality of Serbia to help the Serbs fight the Ottoman Empire. Many of them became commanders of the large Serbian military formations, and many died and were revered in Serbia as national heroes. In particular, Count
Nikolay Rayevsky (1840–1876) willingly joined the army of Russian General
Mikhail Chernyaev, and as a commandant of a detachment of the Serbian army fought in the victorious
battles of Šumatovac and Aleksinac. His death at the battle of Adrovac at the age of 36 allowed the Serbs to portray Rayevsky not only a heroic warrior, but also a young man sacrificing his life for a beloved country. It should be pointed out that Serbs have been drawn to the idea of some scholars that
Leo Tolstoy made Rayevsky a model for Count Alexei Vronsky – the tragic lover of
Anna Karenina – which made the figure of Rayevsky appear even more tragic. He came across to be a noble man with a broken heart, longing for death in a battle. Serbian myth thus associated him with a great number of their own Serbian heroes who – like
Prince Lazar in the
Battle of Kosovo – chose the heavenly kingdom and death in the field of glory.
Pera Todorović, one of the first modern Serbian journalists, dramatically described in his
Diary of a Volunteer the battle of Adrovac and the death of another Russian volunteer:
We saw Russians taking […] poor Kirillov from the battlefield. […] We kissed his gory forehead. […] An old Russian man standing next to me kissed Kirillov and said: “Good-bye, old friend […]. You served an honourable Christian mission”. It is worth mentioning that on the place where Rayevsky was killed, the bishop of
Niš, with the help of the Serbian
Queen Natalie, built a Russian church with frescos commemorating the hero (1903). == References ==