[2] After receiving his initial home education, he was determined to be in the Page Corps in 1807, where he graduated from the training course in 1809 and was released on May 12 as a warrant officer in the Life Guards.
On November 2, 1820, Panyutin was transferred after the well-known story with Colonel Schwartz to the Sevsky Infantry Regiment, in which on July 4, 1822, he was appointed commander of the battalion.
421 on January 19, 1830 "In return for the distinction made in the war against the Turks of 1829, during the two-day defense of the Bayazet fortress against the numerous corps of Wanskago Pasha, he was seriously injured and after dressing with the help of people again appeared in business and remained until the end of the onago" The wound received by Panyutin deprived him of the opportunity to participate in further hostilities of the Turkish War, which ended in peace on October 1, 1829.
Panyutin was with him at that time and, following the army, was captured by the rebels, in which he remained from June 8 to August 20, 1831, and then, together with a small detachment entrusted to him (regiments of the Sevsky infantry and Lubensky hussars with 4 guns), occupied the town of Petrikau until the very end of this war in 1831.
The rescue of Vienna from death, according to Prince Schwarzenberg (in his letter to Paskevich), consisted solely in the immediate appearance of Russian troops on the right wing of the Hungarians (who had already captured Komorn on the Danube).
The Austrian emperor, Schwarzenberg wrote, cannot doubt the intention of his august ally, but he fears only that the news of the current state of affairs can reach his majesty only when it is too late to help with forces that would now be enough.
Paskevich, who at that time was the viceroy of the Kingdom of Poland, was not slow to report his majesty, but meanwhile he received new, more urgent requests for immediate help from the Austrian government, as Hungarian troops under the command of Artúr Görgei were already approaching Vienna.
Panyutin immediately moved with the division by rail from Kraków to Vienna and, arriving the next day to Uherské Hradiště (between Olomouc and Hodonín), stopped at the request of the Austrians (April 30, 1849), and then moved to join them, since while the Hungarian troops engaged in a siege of Ofen, and the Austrian commander Welden (soon replaced by Field Marshal Baron Haynau) intended to go on the offensive.
For this brilliant work, he was made adjutant general of his majesty, while the Austrian emperor awarded him the Order of the Iron Crown (Austria) of the 1st degree.
After this, Haynau, through Ofen and Pest, moved his troops to the left bank of the Danube to go to the lower Tisza and act against the Hungarian militia.