On 16 February, he slowly set out south. ‘I had the good fortune’, wrote a Russian diplomat resident in the capital at the time, ‘to witness his extraordinary departure.
The General was being carried, while some of his retinue travelled in carriages, others on horseback . . . some had bows, others arrows, some carried bed mats, pillows and the like. In Russia, if a man has received orders to carry out an expedition, he just gallops off, but this is not how things are here.18