Biographies Characteristics Analysis

Chapter sixteen. Coats of arms of Russian princely and noble families descended from Rurik

The origin of the ancient boyar family and its appearance in the Grand Duchy of Moscow has not yet been finally clarified. One of the representatives of the family in the middle of the XIV century was the Moscow boyar Yuri Vorobyov, noted in several chronicles of Ancient Russia at once. Yuri Vorobyov was sent by the Grand Duke of Moscow Simeon the Proud to Constantinople to approve the candidacy of St. Alexis for the post of Metropolitan of Moscow and All Russia, and was also one of the patrimonials of the ancient village of Vorobyov near Moscow, now known as Sparrow Hills. The family arrived in Moscow, obviously, from Veliky Novgorod during the reign of Alexander Nevsky or Daniil of Moscow, along with other eminent and noble Novgorod boyar families. With sufficient confidence, it can be argued that the probable ancestor of the ancient boyar family of the Vorobyovs could be the baptizer of Veliky Novgorod, the Novgorod mayor of the 10th century Vorobey Stoyanovich, after whose name the family inherited its surname, although there is no documentary evidence of this to date.

Many representatives of the ancient Moscow boyar family served as boyars, Moscow nobles, tenants, governors, ambassadors and clerks.

Famous representatives of the Moscow boyar family

  • Vorobyov Yuri- Moscow boyar, ambassador of the Grand Duke Simeon the Proud to Constantinople to the Byzantine emperor and patriarch of Constantinople (1352-1353) to approve the candidacy of St. Alexis for the post of Metropolitan of Moscow and All Russia. The votchinnik of the Vorobyov village near Moscow (now the famous Moscow Sparrow Hills), which belonged to the ancient boyar family of the Vorobyovs, later became the property of the grand ducal family in the 15th century.
  • Vorobyov Maxim Gavrilovich- boyar, patrimony-owner of Veliky Novgorod after the annexation of the Novgorod lands by Grand Duke Ivan III Vasilyevich to Moscow (1495-1496).
  • Vorobyov Grigory Alexandrovich(Shemet) - boyar, clerk of Grand Duke Vasily III from March 1532 (clerk from 1514) and Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible. As part of the Russian embassy, ​​he participated in the ratification of an agreement with the Teutonic Order (1517). In January 1526, by order of Vasily III, he was appointed to guard at the stairs of the Western Chambers of the palace at the time of the marriage of the Grand Duke with Elena Glinskaya. The ambassador of Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible in Volokhi, in March 1542, the clerk at the meeting of the Lithuanian ambassador.
  • Vorobyov Dionisiy Shemetovich- Moscow nobleman, son of the boyar Vorobyov Grigory Alexandrovich (Shemet). In 1550, he was included by Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible in the number of the chosen thousand nobles as the Moscow son of the boyars.
  • Vorobyov Vasily Alexandrovich(sc. 05/30/1563) - sovereign boyar, clerk (since 1526) and closest associate of Metropolitan Macarius. Brother of the boyar Vorobyov Grigory Alexandrovich (Shemet). He was buried in the Epiphany Monastery in the city of Moscow.
  • Vorobyov Simeon Alexandrovich- sovereign boyar, clerk of Metropolitan Macarius. Brother of the boyar Vorobyov Grigory Alexandrovich (Shemet).
  • Vorobyov Andrey- Oprichnik of Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible (1573).
  • Vorobyov Nikita Dmitrievich- governor of Belsky (1618-1619) and Oskolsky (1621). On September 3, 1618, together with Prince Boris Khilkov, he was granted by Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich a fur coat, a goblet and a ladle in the Faceted Chamber of the Moscow Kremlin.
  • Vorobyov Ivan Dmitrievich- Governor of Bryansk (1618-1619).
  • Vorobyov Ivan- siege head of Arzamsk (1635). In a petition addressed to Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich, he asks to send a letter confirming his authority with a messenger from Moscow to the newly appointed Arzamas governor. On the reverse side of I. Vorobyov's petition is the tsar's resolution: "Give a letter of commendation." The sovereign's letter was sent to the Arzamas governor in April 1635, in which it is written: "... and how our letter will come to you, and you would have ordered Ivan Vorobyov to continue to be in our siege heads in Arzamas" .
  • Vorobyov Nikita- a tenant in Moscow, the son of a boyar, in 1638 he had a court on Ilyinka in China - the city of Moscow.
  • Vorobyov Ermolai Antonovich- clerk of Reitarsky (1656), Judgment (1665), Printed (1674) and the Great Treasury of Orders (1676). In July 1656 "was at the meeting of the Caesar's ambassadors in Polotsk with the sovereign." Also clerk of Veliky Novgorod (1671-1672, 1677-1681).

Known possessions of the Moscow boyar family

Vorobyovo (Moscow)

Main articles: Vorobyovo (Moscow), Vorobyov, Yuri (Boyar of Moscow)

Vorobyovo is the former ancestral patrimony of the Vorobyov boyars from the beginning of the 14th to the middle of the 15th centuries, located in the south-west of modern Moscow, on the Sparrow Hills and bearing their name. From the middle of the 15th century, the village of Vorobyovo became the property of the grand-ducal family and became a favorite vacation spot for the grand dukes and tsars of Moscow, a grand-ducal and royal summer residence, but retained the name of its first owners, the boyars Vorobyovs until the middle of the 20th century.

Vorobyovo (Moscow region)

Main article: Vorobyovo (estate)

Vorobyovo is the former ancestral patrimony of the Vorobyov boyars on the top of a sloping hill near the banks of the Rozhai River in the now Podolsky district of the Moscow region.

Just like the royal residence, the village of Vorobyovo has its own name after the original owners of the boyars Vorobyovs, which later became the property of other noble families from the 17th century: the Zinovievs, Tatishchevs, Ershovs, although it retained its original name.

Noble families of the Vorobyovs in the 17th - 20th centuries

Five old (ancient) Russian noble families:

1) from Semyon Fedorovich Vorobyov and his son Kalina, made up by the estate in 1673; their offspring is recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Tver province. - 2) from Ivan Melentievich Vorobyov, granted the estate and a salary in 1652; recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Kursk province. - 3) From Kostromitan Semyon Vasilyevich Vorobyov (1662). Recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Kostroma province. - 4) From the reiter Ivan Ivanovich Vorobyov, made up by the estate in 1690, and 5) from Dmitry and Nikita Alekseevich Vorobyov (1670); recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Vologda province. The last three clans, due to the lack of evidence presented, were not approved by Heraldry in the ancient nobility. There are a number of noble families of the Vorobyovs of later origin (II and III parts of the genealogy book).

At the moment, we can say with full confidence that the Tver and Kursk nobles were descendants of the ancient Moscow boyar family, since their representatives are included in the Boyar Books, as well as Kostroma. For other genera, such data are not yet available.

The Vorobyov nobles are included in the genealogical books of the Astrakhan, Vilna, Don Cossack Region, Vologda, Yekaterinoslav, Kostroma, Kursk, Moscow, Novgorod, Orenburg, Oryol, St. Petersburg, Saratov, Simbirsk, Smolensk, Tver, Kherson and Yaroslavl provinces of the Russian Empire.

Description of coats of arms

  • Coat of arms granted to Grigory Vorobyov, Major, and Ivan Vorobyov, Lieutenant

The coat of arms of the Vorobyovs is included in Part 3 of the Collection of diploma coats of arms of the Russian Nobility, not included in the General Armorial, page 64. In the upper small part of the shield in a blue field there is a golden hexagonal star. In the lower spacious part in a red field are two golden hexagonal stars and between them on a silver field are horizontally marked three city walls, on which there is a saber pointed upwards. The shield is crowned with a noble helmet and a crown with three ostrich feathers. The blue shield is lined with gold.

  • Coat of arms granted to Yegor Vorobyov, lieutenant colonel

The coat of arms of the Vorobyovs is included in Part 3 of the Collection of diploma coats of arms of the Russian Nobility, not included in the General Armorial, p. 63. In an azure shield is a silver crane with a scarlet beak, eyes and legs, holding a golden stone in its right paw. The shield is surmounted by a nobleman's helmet and crown. Crest - a hand in azure armor and a golden glove, holding a silver pick. Azure blue with silver.

Famous representatives of the noble families of the Vorobyovs

  • Vorobyov Nefyod Ivanovich - a tenant in Moscow, the Oryol boyar son (1679-1680) (from the Kursk nobles).
  • Vorobyov Modest Evgrafovich - lieutenant, leader of the Bezhetsk district noble assembly of the Tver province (from the Tver nobles).
  • Vorobyov Ivan Dmitrievich - engineer-major general (1851). Daughter Agrafena Ivanovna is married to a court adviser, fleet captain 2nd rank Lev Nikolayevich Yazykov (probably from Kherson nobles?).
  • Vorobyov Yakov Yakovlevich - lieutenant general, commander of the 3rd Smolensk Lancers Emperor Alexander III Regiment (09/01/1839 - 05/22/1848), chief ataman of the Siberian army (1851-1856). On December 1, 1838, with the rank of colonel, he was awarded the Order of St. George of the 4th degree (No. 5712 according to the cavalier list of Grigorovich - Stepanov) (from the Kostroma nobles).
  • Vorobyov Nikolai Mikhailovich - lieutenant general, participant in the Russian-Turkish war of 1877-1878, hero of the First World War. On March 31, 1916 he was awarded the St. George Arms, on December 3, 1916 - the Order of St. George of the 4th degree (until the affiliation is unknown).
  • Vorobyov Andrei Sergeevich (1861-1917) - Major General (until the affiliation is unknown).

Famous estates of the Tver noblemen Vorobyovs

Domotkanovo (Tver region)

Domotkanov The Vorobyovs ruled from the second half of the 18th century for almost a century and a half. This is one of the ancient estates of the Tver noblemen Vorobyovs, located seventeen kilometers from Tver.

The manor as an economic object with a manor house, a park, ponds, a landscape and outbuildings was finally formed during the period of its ownership by the nobles Vorobyovs, including a one-story wooden house, which now houses the house-museum of the famous Russian artist Valentin Aleksandrovich Serov.

In 1886, Domotkanovo was acquired from the landowner Alexander Ivanovich Vorobyov by the artist Vladimir Dmitrievich von Derviz. From that time until the October Revolution of 1917, the estate became the property of the noble family of Derviz.

Notes

  1. Decree of the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR No. 1327, appendix. 2 dated 08/30/1960. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  2. The famous village of Vorobyovo, located on the mountains of the same name, also goes back to the boyar family of the Vorobyovs, known in the middle of the 14th century. - See Tikhomirov M.N. Ancient Moscow (XII-XV centuries): Mosk. state un-t im. M. V. Lomonosov Moscow: Publishing House of Moscow State University, 1947. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  3. Tikhomirov M.N. Proceedings on the history of Moscow. Moscow, Publisher: Languages ​​of Slavonic Culture, 2003 — ISBN 5-94457-165-9
  4. In a book ed. Averyanova K. A. “The History of Moscow Districts” (2005) states that the owner of the village of Vorobyov was supposedly Kirill Voroba. However, then the village would be called Vorobino (stressed second syllable) based on the etymology of his nickname (sparrow - a wooden device for winding yarn, silk - a reel). At the same time, the real name of the village Sparrow yo vo (stressed third syllable) has always had a "bird" etymology and has never been associated with anything else. In addition, the book does not mention the Moscow boyar Yuri Vorobyov (1352-1353) in order to avoid direct associations with the village of Vorobyovo, which does not give grounds to consider the author's version of the book convincing.
  5. The village of Vorobino was located in the southeast, and not in the southwest of Moscow, not far from the Novospassky Monastery, which stands on the site of the ancestral patrimony of the Romanov boyars, whose ancestor was Andrei Kobyla. Cyril Voroba was the nephew of the latter and, therefore, their ancestral lands were nearby.
  6. Ekzemplyarsky A. A. Vorobey Stoyanovich // Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron: in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - St. Petersburg. , 1890-1907.
  7. Tatishchev V. N. Collected works: In 8 volumes: T. 1. Russian history. Part 1: - Reprint from ed. 1963, 1964 — M.: Ladomir, 1994. Retrieved July 13, 2013.
  8. Solovyov S. M. History of Russia since ancient times. Publisher: St. Petersburg. Edition of the Highly Approved Partnership "Public Benefit", 1896. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
  9. Rapov O. M. The Russian Church in the IX - the first third of the XII century. Acceptance of Christianity. M. Russian panorama, 1998
  10. Rapov O. M. On the time of the baptism of the population of Novgorod the Great: Bulletin of Moscow State University. Story. 1988 No. 3. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  11. Kuzmin A. G. The fall of Perun. The rise of Christianity in Russia. Publisher: M.: Young Guard, 1988. ISBN 5-235-00053-6
  12. Vorobyov Yuri. Big Biographical Encyclopedia, 2009. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  13. Complete collection of Russian chronicles: T. 20. 1st half. Lviv chronicle. Part 1. Ed. S. A. Andianova. - St. Petersburg: Printing house of M. A. Alexandrov, 1910
  14. Complete collection of Russian chronicles: T.35. Annals Belarusian-Lithuanian. Supral Chronicle M.: Nauka. 1978. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  15. Tatishchev V.N. Russian History. T.3. Moscow, Ermak Publishing House, 2005. Retrieved January 22, 2014.
  16. Solovyov S. M. History of Russia since ancient times. Publisher: St. Petersburg. Publication of the Highly Approved Partnership "Public Benefit", 1896. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  17. Scribes of the Novgorod Land. Comp. K. V. Baranov. tt. 1-3, 5. M., Ancient storage, 1999-2004. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  18. Complete collection of Russian chronicles: volume 29. Chronicler of the beginning of the kingdom of the Tsar and Grand Duke Ivan Vasilyevich. Alexander Nevsky chronicle. Lebedev Chronicle. M.: Science. 1965. Retrieved April 15, 2014.
  19. Jump to: 1 2 3 4 Veselovsky S. B. Clerks and clerks of the XV—XVII centuries. : Acad. Sciences of the USSR, Department of History, Arch. USSR Academy of Sciences Moscow: Nauka, 1975
  20. Acts of service landowners of the XV-beginning of the XVII century. Volume IV / Comp. A. V. Antonov. - M .: Ancient storage, 2008. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  21. Note. Sometimes the clerk Grigory Shemet Vorobyov is identified as Shemet Motyakin, but these are two different historical figures; the latter was never a deacon. - See Index of personal names of the Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles: T). Chronicler of the beginning of the kingdom of the Tsar and Grand Duke Ivan Vasilyevich. Alexander Nevsky chronicle. Lebedev Chronicle. M.: Science. 1965: (p. 364 - Shemet Motyakin), (p. 369 - Shemet Vorobyov Grigory Alexandrov, clerk - Complete collection of Russian chronicles: T). Chronicler of the beginning of the kingdom of the Tsar and Grand Duke Ivan Vasilyevich. Alexander Nevsky chronicle. Lebedev Chronicle. M.: Science. 1965. Retrieved April 15, 2014.)
  22. Commemoration of Prince I.V. Nemoy - Telepnev - Obolensky with a list of persons assigned to the guards at the time of the marriage. TsGADA, f. 135, sec. IV, rub. II, No. 5, l. 17. Retrieved July 13, 2013. Archived from the original on July 24, 2013.
  23. Nazarov V.D. Wedding affairs of the 16th century. // Questions of History, No. 10. 1976. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  24. Zimin A. A. The Thousand Book of 1550 and the Palace Notebook of the 50s of the 16th century. M.-L. Academy of Sciences of the USSR. 1950. Retrieved July 13, 2013. Archived from the original on July 24, 2013.
  25. Vorobyov Vas(v)yan (Vasily) Alexandrovich. Big Biographical Encyclopedia, 2009. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  26. Pleshanova I. I., Likhacheva L. D. Old Russian arts and crafts in the collection of the State Russian Museum. L., 1985
  27. List of guardsmen of Ivan the Terrible. Publishing house "Russian National Library". St. Petersburg, 2003. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  28. Tankov A. A. Historical chronicle of the Kursk nobility. M., 1913. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  29. Acts of the Moscow State edited by N. A. Popov: Publisher: Tip. Imperial Academy of Sciences St. Petersburg. 1890-1901 v.2, no. 10. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  30. Proceedings of the Moscow Department of the Imperial Russian Military Historical Society. Volume 1. Edited by the Full Member of the Society I. S. Belyaev. Moscow, Printing House of Moscow State University. 1911
  31. Vorobyov Ermolai (Antonovich). Big Biographical Encyclopedia, 2009. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  32. Collection of State Letters and Treaties kept in the Collegium of Foreign Affairs. part 1 p.192. Moscow, in the printing house of N. S. Vsevolozhsky, 1813
  33. Monuments of history and culture of the peoples of the Russian Federation. Objects of cultural heritage. Manor of the Sparrows. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  34. Jump to: 1 2 3 Chernyavsky M.P. Genealogy of gentlemen of the nobles, included in the genealogical book of the Tver province from 1787 to 1869, 1871
  35. According to the letters of tsars Ivan and Peter Alekseevich on November 25 and December 9, 1686, Kalina Semyonovich, for his many services to tsars Alexei Mikhailovich and Fedor Alekseevich in the war with the Turkish Sultan, the Crimean Khan and the Poles, was granted a local salary in the Kashinsky district, and at the dacha of 1776 Kalina's estate was written for his children: Timothy, Larion, Maxim and Gabriel. - See Chernyavsky M.P. Genealogy of gentlemen of the nobles, included in the genealogical book of the Tver province from 1787 to 1869, 1871
  36. Vorobyovs / V.E. Rudakov // New Encyclopedic Dictionary: In 48 volumes (29 volumes have been published). - St. Petersburg. , Pg. : 1911-1916.
  37. Savelov L. M. Bibliographic index on the history, heraldry and genealogy of the Russian nobility. Publisher: Azarova printing house, Ostrogozhsk, 1898. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  38. Jump to: 1 2 Zakharov A. V. Boyar lists of the 18th century. 2013. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  39. Belorukov D. F. Kostroma - the history of the Kostroma region. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  40. Russian State Historical Archive, file 1343 inventory 18
  41. DS, Volume III, p.64. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
  42. DS, Volume III, p.63. Retrieved July 31, 2013.
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  45. Tver estate / Ed. Berezkina E. I. Scientific Library of Tver State University, 2013. Retrieved July 31, 2013. Archived from the original on August 31, 2013

§ 84. General remarks about them. since the coat of arms, the family distinction of nobility, belongs to the descendants of Rurik and Vladimir Monomakh due to independent ownership of their patrimony, hereditary inheritances, then all the external attributes of the ordinary coats of arms of the nobility that exist in order to show the history of the feat, namely: a helmet, a name, a motto and etc. - are alien to the coats of arms of this kind. The princely closed hat, crowned with a ball, above which a cross rises, and trimmed with ermine, together with the princely velvet mantle, also lined with ermine, with fringe and cords, testify to the noble origin of these families. Placed on the shield in the coats of arms of some princely families of the Monomakh family, helmets crowned with princely hats, along with crests and shield holders, testify that the princely family of this category merged with another noble family and that their coats of arms are also inseparable. And in this case, of course, the entire coat of arms is covered with a princely mantle and crown.

Identical differences also belong to such clans, which, although descended from sovereign princes, do not, however, bear the princely title that belonged to their ancestors, because when the clan inheritance was split up, the last generations did not have an independent princely possession. Nevertheless, the origin of these surnames is also marked by princely attributes in their coats of arms.

As for the emblems in the coats of arms of this kind, they are nothing more than the banners that we have already seen on the seals of the destinies that were in the possession of the descendants of Rurik and Monomakh. Therefore, initially the coats of arms of the princely families consisted almost exclusively of the tribal emblem alone. She is important to us; and since its original place was on city seals, where there could be no question of the color of the field, no attention was paid to this sign in the coats of arms. Therefore, in the coats of arms of different princely families, which have adopted the same city emblems, they, in essence, without changing, appear in different fields. We consider it not out of place to pay special attention to this remark, because the difference in color, which marks the figures in the coat of arms and the field of the shield, may seem so important to someone that, despite the identity of the image, we will consider them different figures only because the color the fields are not the same in different coats of arms with the same emblems. Such a conclusion would be contrary to the basic rule of our princely heraldry, on the basis of which the unity of the origin of princely surnames and possession of one family patrimony is marked by the same emblems in the emblems.

Just as princely generations, coming from one ancestor and owning one lot, retain one common nickname, for example. princes of Rostov, Belozersky, etc., and special nicknames are added to this common name, so in the coats of arms of these families, regional and city banners are compared with other signs of valor, with other emblems, which either mean the possession of some special city, a separate volost, or more often, that the ancestor of the surname sat on the throne of Kiev, Novgorod, or, finally, some kind of feat. With such a combination of emblems, the place given to the family banner deserves special attention; namely: in older generations, it occupies either the entire field of the shield or the middle shield in the coat of arms; then, in subsequent generations, it is placed in the first, second quarter and is often repeated crosswise, so that with the help of the genealogical table of the Rurik house and the clans descended from it, it becomes clear why this or that place in the coat of arms was given to the main emblem. To this, however, it must be added that exceptions were sometimes made to this rule.

Speaking about the history of city emblems, we have already shown how the figures depicted in them are ancient and historically correct. What has been said above should serve as an answer to the question that can be proposed by someone: do the princely coats of arms owe their emblems to the banners of the city seals, or, on the contrary, were they adopted by the princes of the cities? It is difficult to give a general answer to this question, since the history of not all city coats of arms is known. We consider it sufficient to give only a few examples to resolve this issue.

The coat of arms of Moscow was originally a faithful and graphic image of the Grand Duke, striking external and internal enemies, a portrait of the Tsar and later his heir. Later, when the Grand Duke of Moscow became the Sovereign of All Russia, his private, personal coat of arms, his seal and banner acquired the meaning of the coat of arms of the city. Further, the coat of arms of Novgorod, so often found in the coats of arms of our princely families, was originally the seal of the vech, then the governor of Novgorod, and finally, the city itself. The seal of Kyiv - Archangel Michael - was first used on the seals of the Grand Dukes of Kyiv and later became the banner of the city.

From these examples, we can, in our opinion, conclude that the banners for seals were originally given to the cities by their princes; then, when the emblems, along with possessions, passed to subsequent generations, the tribal figures were given the meaning of a personal coat of arms, and now they remain indisputable evidence that the ancestors of a well-known family belonged to one or another principality, and at the same time that families using the same banner are descended from a common ancestor. This basic idea determines the system in which the coats of arms of Russian princely and noble families of Rurik's offspring should be presented.

Following the beginning of seniority, we will set out: 1) coats of arms of surnames, from Svyatoslav Yaroslavich, Grand Duke of Chernigov, and his son, Oleg, who happened - the princes of Chernigov; 2) childbirth coming from Rostislav Mstislavich Smolensky, i.e. princes of Smolensk and Yaroslavl; 3) descended from the Grand Duke Vsevolod Yuryevich the Big Nest: a) the princes of Rostov, b) the princes of Belozersky, c) the princes of Galicia, and d) the princes of Starodub, and 4) the princes of Lithuania, coming from Gediminas and who were on the inheritance of Izyaslav Vladimirovich Polotsky and son his Bryacheslav.

§ 85.I. Princely and noble families of the offspring of the Grand Duke Svyatoslav Yaroslavich of Chernigov. Svyatoslav Yaroslavich, from the vast possessions of his father Yaroslav Vladimirovich, inherited Chernigov, and for all the numerous offspring of this prince, the emblem prevailing in the coat of arms is the coat of arms of Chernigov: in a golden field, a black eagle, with a gold crown on its head, with outstretched wings, holding a gilded cross in its paw . Svyatoslav had five sons, of whom Oleg received the Principality of Chernigov; after his name, the Chernigov princes, who had been at enmity with the Kyiv grand dukes for so long, are called Olgovichi. The successor of Oleg of Chernigov was Vsevolod II, followed by his son Svyatoslav, and the latter's son Vsevolod Chermny (i.e. Red) reigned first in Chernigov, later in 1206 and 1209. in Kyiv and died in 1214, leaving behind three sons: 1) Prince Vladimir, 2) Prince. Oleg and 3) Prince. Michael. The last of them received from his parent in 1207 Pereyaslavl on the Dnieper, then reigned in Chernigov, in 1225 and 1228. - in Veliky Novgorod, where, leaving the prince of his eldest son Rostislav, he returned to Chernigov. Like other Russian princes, Prince Mikhail had to go to the Horde, and for refusing to bow to idols he was martyred in the Horde, at the behest of Batu in 1246; from the offspring of Michael, we will focus on his three sons, the ancestors of the following princely and noble families, namely:

1) His third son Simeon Mikhailovich, Prince Glukhovsky and Novosilsky, is the ancestor of the princes Odoevsky, Belevsky and Vorotynsky. Of these, the last two generations faded away, only the princes Odoevsky remained, who got their name from the fact that the son of Prince Simeon Glukhovsky - Roman moved, due to the violence of the Tatars, to live from Novosil to Odoev, where his descendants also remained: the son of Roman, Prince Yuri and the son of this latter Prince Semyon Odoevsky, the immediate ancestor of one of the most glorious Russian families ( Genealogical book ... T. 1. S. 182-184).

2) The fourth son of Prince Mikhail of Chernigov, Prince. Mstislav Karachevsky is also the ancestor of many princely families, but of them are still continuing: 1) Prince. Koltsov-Masalsky and 2) the princes Gorchakovs. - Princes Masalsky are descended from Mstislav Karachevsky, through his son Titus and grandson of Prince Svyatoslav; the son of the latter Yuri, already called Masalsky, had a son Vasily, the great-grandfather of Prince Vasily, who took the nickname Koltso-Masalsky, in contrast to other, now non-existent generations of the Masalsky princes, such as Litvinov-Masalsky and Klubkov-Masalsky ( Ancient Russian vivliofika. T. 9. S. 246); from another son of Prince Tit Mstislavovich, Prince. Ivan Kozelsky, the princes Gorchakovs led their family, by the nickname of their ancestor Ivan Gorchak ( Genealogical book ... T. 1. S. 193).

Finally, follows the third branch of the house of Prince. Mikhail Vsevolodovich Chernigovsky:

3) The offspring of Yuri Mikhailovich, Prince of Toru and Obolensky. His son, Prince Vsevolod Yuryevich, had a son, Prince Andrey Shutikha-Mezetsky, and from this latter was born Prince Alexander Baryatinsky, the ancestor of the Baryatinsky princes ( There. S. 202). Another son of Yuri, Prince Konstantin Obolensky, the closest ancestor of the princes Obolensky, had two great-grandchildren, princes Ivan and Andrei, from the first, through the grandsons of his princes Ivan, nicknamed Repnya, and Vasily Telepnya, as well as through the great-grandson of Vasily, nicknamed Tyufyak, they lead their own family (not counting the extinct generations) the princes Repnin, Tyufyakin and the nobles Telepnev ( Genealogical book... T. 1. S. 218-222; Ancient Russian vivliofika. T. 9. S. 190). And from Prince Andrei Konstantinovich, through his two sons: the first prince Ivan Dolgoruky and the second prince Vasily Shcherbatov, the princes Dolgorukov and Shcherbatov led their family ( Ancient Russian vivliofika. T. 9. P. 6. See: Dolgorukov P.V. The legend of the family of princes Dolgorukov. Ed. correct and additional SPb., 1842. S. XIV-XIX; Vremnik Mosk. islands of Russian history and antiquities. T. 10. S. 46-50, 70, 72 (Department of materials)). From the same root, i.e. princes of Chernigov, there were princes Volkonsky, who got their name from the fact that the son of Prince Yuri Mikhailovich Tarussky, Ivan, nicknamed Thick Head, received the estate of Saprygin, in Aleksinsky district (in the current Tula province) on the Volkonka river.

From the previous presentation of the history of princely and noble families descended from the Chernigov princes, it turns out that (except for private family emblems) the families descended from this root have the right: the older ones - to the Chernigov coat of arms without any addition, and the younger ones in combination with the Kyiv coat of arms in a sign that their ancestors sat in the Kievan great reign. That's why:

1) The princes Odoevsky, Koltsov-Masalsky and Gorchakov have one image of the Chernigov seal in the gold field ( In the coat of arms of the nobles Gorchakovs (Grb. IV, 85), the Chernihiv banner was also preserved, but in a field, with a red band to the left, divided into two halves of colors of blue and gold) so only for the book. Koltsovo-Masalsky with the distinction that the eagle holds in its right paw a small red shield covered with a princely cap; on this shield is the letter M with a cross, and under it are three stripes marked in gold ( Armorial, I, 4; II, 2; V, 1. (In the text, abbreviated Grb.)). This is still the coat of arms of the city of Masalsk, despite the fact that it now belongs to the Kaluga (and not Chernigov) province. As proof of the significance of our coats of arms, we allow ourselves to quote the following lines from the decree on granting Masalsk the described coat of arms: "This city was part of the possessions of Chernigov and belonged to one of the tribe of the princes of Chernigov, who during their time under the Lithuanian state, from where under They returned to Russia in the reign of Grand Duke Ivan Vasilyevich, they had this coat of arms "( Decree 1777 March 10 (No. 14596). Since ancient times, the coat of arms of the Masalsky family was a white capital letter M, with a golden cross hoisted in the middle of it, in an azure-colored shield (Okolski S. Op. cit. Vol. 2. P. 218). Under this banner is placed the coat of arms of Korczak). And about the coat of arms of the city of Odoev it is said that only the coat of arms of Chernigov was assigned to it, "as the lot of the eldest tribe of the princes of Chernigov" ( Decree 1777 March 10 (No. 14596)). These testimonies, in our opinion, are of extreme importance, firstly, because they show how the banner of the city was constantly and invariably preserved through whole centuries and, despite any accidents, remained the same, and on the other hand, as to the eldest in the family the generation passed without any addition the coat of arms of the main city in the lot of his city.

2) At the book. Baryatinsky and Volkonsky in the coat of arms is a shield, cut into two halves, of which the coat of arms of Kyiv is depicted on the right: Archangel Michael in the blue field, and Chernigov in the left ( Armorial. I.5; III, 1).

3) At the book. Obolensky and Repnin The clan of the princes Repnin in the male tribe died out in 1801 and continues along the female tribe in the family of the princes Repnin-Volkonsky, due to the marriage of the daughter of Field Marshal Prince Nikolai Vasilievich Repnin with Prince Grigory Semenovich Volkonsky. (See: Biographies of Russian Generalissimos and Field Marshals. St. Petersburg, 1840. Vol. 2. S. 230.)) the same coat of arms, namely: the shield is divided into two unequal parts, the upper one is spacious and the lower one is smaller. In the upper part, cut into two halves, in the right red field - the Kyiv coat of arms, and in the left gold - Chernigov; in the lower small part of the shield, two birds are visible, holding an arrow in their mouths, and golden balls in their paws (the coat of arms of the city of Obolensk) ( Armorial. I, 6; II, 3).

4) Princes Dolgoruky, in addition to the emblem of Chernigov in the 1st quarter and Kyiv in the red field in the 2nd part, have in the 3rd quarter of their four-part divided coat of arms in a black field a hand emerging from the clouds, dressed in armor and holding an arrow, and in the last quarter - a silver fortress in a blue field ( There. I, 7).

5) In the coat of arms of the princes Shcherbatov, the Chernihiv seal is placed on the middle small shield; the first and fourth parts of the large shield are occupied by the Kyiv coat of arms in a blue field, and the second and third parts are occupied by the image of a silver fortress in a black field ( There. I, 8). The fortress can mean here nothing more than the possession of mountains or, according to the explanation of the historian Prince. Shcherbatov, who wrote the genealogy of his ancestors, their resettlement in Tarusa ( Ancient Russian vivliofika. T. 9. S. 73).

6) The coat of arms of the princes Tyufyakins has a Chernihiv banner in the second quarter of its four-part coat of arms; its other emblems are as follows: in the first quarter in a red field is a warrior, in silver armor, with a sword raised up, in the third part - in a silver field a gray bird with an arrow pierced through the neck, and in the fourth part - in a blue field a tent, marked silver ( Armorial. II, 4),

and 7) in the coat of arms of the Telepnevs, the Chernigov banner occupies the first place, the second quarter - in a blue field, a golden star, the third - in a red field, a hand with a sword emerging from the clouds, and the last - in a silver field, a deer ( There. V, 11).

§ 86. II Coats of arms of princely and noble families of the offspring of Grand Duke Rostislav Mstislavich. This branch of Monomakh's offspring is divided into two generations by two sons of the Grand Duke Rostislav Mstislavich of Smolensk: Rurik, who inherited the city of Vyazma, the ancestor of the Vyazemsky princes, and his brother, Davyd Rostislavich, whose descendants, owning Yaroslavl and Smolensk, gave rise to the princes of Yaroslavl and Smolensk. This division happened as follows: Davyd Rostislavich had a son, Mstislav, and a grandson, Rostislav; this latter had two sons: Prince. Fyodor the Wonderworker, Yaroslavsky, and Gleb Rostislavich, Smolensky. The offspring of both were numerous, but to this day there remain few genera descended from this root; namely: from Yaroslavl - Prince. Shakhovsky, Shchetinin ( Although the kind of book. Shchetinins still continues, their coat of arms is not placed in the Armorial. This and similar omissions are explained by the fact that when the nobles were required to submit their coats of arms for inclusion in the Armorial, not all noble families managed to fulfill such a requirement of the government. This also explains why the coats of arms of the ancient princely families, which should have found a place in the first part of the Armorial, are placed in its other volumes. See: Armorial. X.27), Zasekins, Solntsev-Zasekins, Lvovs and Prozorovskys, and from the princes of Smolensk they went: Prince. Dashkovs and Kropotkins, as well as noble families, without a princely title: Vsevolozhsky, Tatishchev, Eropkin and Rzhevsky.

From what has been said, it follows that the designated families are entitled to the following emblems: 1) the banner of c. principality of Smolensk; 2) the banner of Yaroslavl and 3) the coat of arms of Kyiv, since their ancestor was in the great reign of Kiev. These banners are located in the coats of arms of individual families in the following order:

1) The senior line of the princes of Smolensk - Prince. The Vyazemskys kept in their coat of arms one Smolensk banner, which is also the Vyazma banner ( Decree 1780 Oct. 10 (#15072)): in a silver field, a black cannon on a golden carriage and a bird of paradise on the cannon ( Armorial. I, 9). The book has exactly the same coat of arms. Kropotkins ( There. V, 2) and the Rzhevskys ( There. I, 37).

2) Book. The Shakhovskys, Lvovs and Zasekins have a Yaroslavl banner in a small shield that occupies the heart of the coat of arms: in a golden field, a black bear to the left with a golden ax on his shoulder. Then, in the first and fourth parts of their four-part shield, the Kyiv coat of arms is placed in a blue field, and in the second and third - the Smolensk coat of arms ( Armorial. II, 5-6; V, 2).

3) Book. The Sontsovs and Sontsov-Zasekins have one with the book. Shakhov's coat of arms with the only difference that the bear depicted on the middle shield is black in a golden field with gold on the right shoulder with an ax turned to the right ( There. II, 6; VIII, 1; IX, 1. Compare: Armorial. V, 14).

4) Book. The Prozorovskys, having retained the Yaroslavl banner on a small shield in the heart of the emblem, have the Kyiv coat of arms in the first quarter, the Smolensk coat of arms in the fourth, and in the second part: in the silver field of a black dragon with a crown on its head and red wings, and, finally, in the third part: silver bear walking to the left ( There. I.11).

5) The princes Dashkovs in the middle shield depict a golden cross and a hexagonal star in a silver field, and between them a crescent, with horns facing down ( In Polish Heraldry, this emblem is called Koribut (Koributh); it was placed in the coats of arms of many Lithuanian princes, and in the coat of arms of Prince. Dashkovs can be explained by the fact that the Principality of Smolensk was under the rule of Poland for a long time. Compare: Okolski S. Op. cit. Vol. 2. P. 524-5 25 and below under the arms of Koributh); then other emblems common with the coats of arms of other surnames of the same root, namely: in the first and fourth fields of the four-part coat of arms, the Kyiv coat of arms in a blue field, and in the second and third - Smolensk in a red field ( Armorial. I, 10).

6) In the coat of arms of the Vsevolozhsks, the shield is divided into two parts: in the upper, blue, coat of arms of Kyiv is depicted, and in the lower, in a silver field, the coat of arms of Smolensk ( There. II, 19).

7) In the coat of arms of the Tatishchevs, the field of the shield is divided into two parts, and from them in the upper in the red field: a white banner with a golden staff (maybe the former Smolensk coat of arms, cf. p. 180), and in the lower Smolensk banner, i.e. e. bird of paradise on a gun carriage. Counts Tatishchevs, who were granted this dignity in 1801, have the field of the shield divided into three parts: of them, the indicated emblems are placed in the two lower ones, in the heart and legs, and at the top is added a double-headed black eagle extending to half, crowned with three crowns ( Armorial. II, 17; VII, 5).

8) The coat of arms of the Eropkins consists of the Smolensk banner only, with the fact that at the top, above the cannon, a sword is depicted, pointed to the right side ( There. II, 18).

To the same category of noble families, i.e. descending from Rostislav Smolensky ( The genera of the Dmitriev-Mamonovs and Aladins are missed by the Velvet Book among those originating from the book. Rostislav Mstislavich Smolensky. Placing here a description of the emblems of the indicated families, we consider it our duty to explain that, on the basis of the evidence presented by them, and some editions of the genealogical books, the ancestors of the indicated families descend from Prince Rostislav Mstislavich through his great-grandson Alexander Netshu. Lacking, however, sufficient data to show exactly which generation they come from and how they are connected with a common ancestor, we did not place them in the genealogy of Rurik's house. (Armorial. II, 21; V, 13); Vremnik Mosk. islands of Russian history and antiquities. T. 10. S. 123. (The Monastyrev family.)), belong to: 1) Dmitriev-Mamonov, descended from a descendant of Prince. Rostislav Mstislavich Alexander Netsha. Therefore, they have in their coat of arms, divided into two parts, of which the upper one is dissected, in the first part - the coat of arms of Kyiv, and in the second - Smolensk; in the lower part, surrounded on three sides by silver clouds, a silver arrow is indicated in a red field perpendicularly, flying upwards through a silver crescent, turned with horns upwards; above each of them you can see an octagonal star of silver color and between them a golden crown with four peacock feathers (is this the coat of arms of Sas with a crest?). The same feathers rise above the helmet ( Armorial. II, 21. Compare: Armorial. IV, 17); and 2) Aladins, which in the upper half of the broken shield have the coat of arms of Smolensk, and in the lower half - two crosswise floating silver fish ( There. V, 13).

Section 87 III. Coats of arms of princely and noble families of the offspring of Grand Duke Vsevolod Yuryevich Big Nest. The very name of the ancestor of this generation of Russian noble families, Vsevolod the Big Nest, shows that his offspring were numerous; now there are few families left from this root. They fall into the following four categories: 1) The eldest son of Vsevolod Yurievich (grandson of Vladimir Monomakh) Konstantin, through his grandson Vasilko of Rostov and two sons of this last Boris and Gleb, was the ancestor of the princes of Rostov and Belozersky. Of the former, the princes of Kasatkin and Lobanov-Rostovsky still exist, and of the latter, the princes of Beloselsky, Vadbolsky, Sheleshpansky and Ukhtomsky. 2) The second son of Vsevolod Yurievich Yaroslav was in Galich and is the ancestor of the princes of Galicia: Lyapunovs, Berezins, Osinnins and Ivins; and finally 3) from the last son of the Grand Duke Vsevolod Ivan Starodubsky went the princes of Starodubsky: Gagarins, Romodanovskys, Khilkovs and Gundurovs.

What emblems in the coats of arms are the indicated surnames entitled to?

1) The princes of Rostov, by origin from Vladimir Monomakh, who sat on the Kievan great reign, and by the possession of their inheritance of Rostov, have Kiev banners in their coats of arms, i.e. Archangel Michael, and Rostov - in a red field a silver deer running to the right ( Decree 1778 June 2 (No. 14765)). In the broken shield of the coats of arms of the book. Kasatkins and Lobanov-Rostovskys, the upper part is occupied by the coat of arms of Kyiv, and the lower part is occupied by Rostov ( Armorial. I, 12; II, 7).

Of the princes of Belozersky, the banner of the principality, which was in the original possession of their ancestors, i.e. in a blue field there is an image of a cross and a moon (see the coat of arms of Leliv), and under them are two fish, like the St. Andrew's cross floating ( Decree 1781 Aug. 16 (No. 15209)), remained without the addition in the coats of arms of the princes of Beloselsky, Vadbolsky and Ukhtomsky. The coat of arms of the Sheleshpansky princes, in essence, retaining the same emblem, differs from those indicated only by the fact that the fish are placed at the feet of the shield (i.e. occupy a third of it below); the heart and the top of the shield are divided into four fields, differing: the first quarter is red, the second is blue, the third is gold and the fourth is green. In the middle is a golden cross, and under it is placed a silver moon, with its horns facing upwards ( Armorial. I, 13; IV, 1-3).

2) There are no princely surnames left from the family of the princes of Galicia ( From the Galician princes of the offspring, Vladimir Monomakh, through his great-great-grandson Roman Mstislavich and the latter’s son Daniil Romanovich, was granted the princely title of Babichev and Drutsky-Sokolinsky, whose ancestors were in the Ostrog principality. (Russian genealogical collection, published by Prince Peter Dolgorukov, St. Petersburg, 1841. Book 4. S. 7-9, 16; Encyclopedic Lexicon. T. 4. S. 28.) Coats of arms of these surnames, with an explanation of their genealogy, placed in 5 vols of the Armorial under Nos. 4 and 5. The emblems in them are Polish, and will be explained below), and the noble generations that continue to this day, as a sign of their noble origin from Vladimir Monomakh, distinguish their coats of arms with princely robes and a crown. As for the emblems, the coat of arms of the Lyapunovs depicts a black single-headed eagle holding a sword in its right paw, and a golden bar in its left paw, a crown is visible above the sword ( Armorial. IV, 16. Compare: below, in the section on the coats of arms of the nobles leaving Poland, the emblem of Soltyk), while the Berezins' shield with a red field depicts a silver wall ( Armorial. II, 20).

3) The Starodub banner is, as mentioned above, an old oak. This emblem is repeated in the coats of arms of all genera, originating from this root; namely:

a) Coats of arms The Gagarins and Khilkovs, who are completely similar to each other, have a golden shield in the heart of the shield with an image of an oak on it, on the surface of which a princely crown is visible with an outstretched hand in armor and with a sword raised up, and a bear at the root of the oak. Then, in a four-part shield, the first and fourth parts are blue and have: the first image of a hand clad in armor with a sword raised up, and the last - a tree and a black bear walking from it to the right; and the second and third parts in a silver field: the right one is an old oak, and the second one is a fortress of red color ( Armorial. I, 4, 14).

b) In the coat of arms of the princes Gundorov, the shield is cut into three and divided into two parts. On the middle, silver shield, an irritated black bear is seen destroying an ant's nest at the root of an oak tree; then in the first and sixth parts an old oak is depicted in a blue field, in the second and fifth in a golden field: in the first - an eagle, and in the second - the Kyiv coat of arms, and, finally, in the third and fourth in a red field dressed in armor and from clouds outgoing hand with a sword; the shield is surmounted by three helmets, each with a princely cap; the crests consist: on the left helmet of a coming out black bear, on the middle one - from a hand armed with a sword, and on the right - from an old oak. Shield holders two bears ( There. VII, 1).

c) The family of the Romodanovsky princes died out at the end of the last century and, by decree of April 8, 1798, their surname and coat of arms were adopted by Ladyzhensky. Therefore, the coat of arms of the prince is placed in the Heraldry. Romodanovsky-Ladyzhensky; but, separating the coat of arms of the Ladyzhenskys ( There. II, 49), the Romodanovskys will have a coat of arms similar, with some changes, to the coat of arms of the princes Gundarevs. And their shield is cut into three and broken into two parts; on the middle, silver, shield, a bear is visible at the root of an oak. Then, in the first and sixth parts, an oak is depicted in a silver field, in the second and fifth in gold fields: in the first, a black bear walking to the left, in the last, the Starodub prince holding a staff in his left hand, and, finally, the third and fourth parts are occupied by the image sword-wielding hand. Helmets, crests and shield holders are the same as in the book. Gundorovs ( Armorial. IV, 5).

Section 88 IV. Princely families of the offspring of Gediminas. After what has already been said above about why we consider it necessary to place the princes of Lithuania in the series of princely families descended from Vladimir Monomakh, we consider it superfluous to recall that even if the offspring of Izyaslav Vladimirovich, who received Polotsk as an inheritance, and stopped, nevertheless, the land, which Gediminas and his descendants possessed was originally Russian. And since the emblem of the estate and grandfather of the prince is important in princely coats of arms, the coats of arms of the descendants of Gediminas, of which many families marked themselves with feats for the benefit of Russia, should close the category of coats of arms of Russian noble families, whose ancestors were the owners of the estates of St. Vladimir and Yaroslav. However, we would consider our review incomplete if we did not mention here the evidence of some of our chronicles, as well as genealogies, that Gediminas not only owned a Russian estate, but also descended from the offspring of Prince Izyaslav Vladimirovich of Polotsk and, therefore, , is in consanguinity with Equal-to-the-Apostles Prince Vladimir. It is hardly possible to positively reject this legend until all the branches and generations of the Rurik house are analyzed and restored with the help of criticism, until the inscriptions on the tombs of the specific princes are brought into the system and checked with chronicles and other sources. In any case, the evidence of Polish and Lithuanian chronicles and stories (Stryikovsky and others), telling that some famous Roman Palemon-Publius-Libo, at the time of either Augustus Caesar, or Nero, or Attila, sailed to Lithuania, formed its wild inhabitants and that the Palemonov grandchildren dominated Lithuania as early as the 11th (?) century ( Karamzin. T. 2. Note. 35), are not at all trustworthy and reveal only a desire to intermarry with the Romans at all costs. The glory of Rome and the tradition of her strength and power easily explain such a desire.

Our chronicles and genealogies say that in 1128 the princes of Polotsk Rogvoldovich were ousted from their possessions by the Grand Duke Mstislav Vladimirovich, who took possession of Polotsk, and the princes of Polotsk fled to Constantinople. At that time, the Lithuanians were tributaries of the princes, partly of Kyiv and Chernigov, partly of Smolensk and Krivsky, and were under the control of their own hetmans. Vilna, fearing Mstislav the Great, succumbed to the King of Hungary and called for reigning from Greece two sons of the former Polotsk prince Rostislav Rogvoldovich. One of these princes was called David, the other Movkold. The first became the prince of Vilna and was the father of Vita (Vitenes), nicknamed the Wolf, and Erden; from Movkold was born Mindovg, who had sons Vyshleg and Damont (Dovmont). The latter was at one time the Grand Duke of Pskov and, according to St. His baptismal name was Timothy. After Vitus on the Lithuanian throne was his son, Prince Proyden, followed by Vityan and, finally, Gediminas ( There. T. 4. Note. 103; Vremnik Mosk. islands of Russian history and antiquities. T. 10. (Department of materials.) S. 74). Since his time, together with the increase in the strength of Lithuania, its very history has become clearer and more reliable. From the sons of Gediminas descended the Lithuanian princely families, the genealogy of which was compiled by us according to the testimony of the Velvet Book and some other Russian sources; but respect for the subject makes us express the conviction that this information requires a strict and conscientious verification with the acts that have come down to us from ancient Poland and Lithuania. Many of the documents stored in the Lithuanian Metrica could facilitate the execution of such work for a person familiar with the history of Poland and its heraldry. This review will be supplemented by information reported on the basis of Polish sources when presenting the coats of arms of the families of people leaving Lithuania and Poland (see § 90).

In any case, there is no doubt that the possession of Prince Izyaslav Vladimirovich - Polotsk merged with Lithuania in the proper sense, which was within the current Vilna province. Gradually, this principality grew, and the power of Gediminas was already so great that in the west of Russia he was a counterbalance to the Grand Duke of Moscow in the East, and since the regions of this latter were subject to the Tatars, the Russians looked at Gediminas as a purely Russian Grand Duke. It is clear why the son of Gediminas Narimunt was called to reign in Novgorod, where, however, he was not for long.

Even during his lifetime, Gedimin divided the hereditary fiefdom between his children, of which Karachev and Slonim gave Mondovit, Pinsk to Narimunt, Vilna to Evnuty, Olgerd to Kreva and Ktom, Keystutiy to Troki, Koryada to Novgorodok, and Lubart was accepted into his land by the Volyn prince , whose daughter he married, because Lubart was bypassed during the division of his father's heritage ( Johannis Dlugossi seu Longini canonici quondam Cracoviensis historiae Polonicae libri XII. Lipsiae. 1711. Lib. X. P. 60; paprocki. Herbi Rycerstwa Polskiego. W Krakowie. 1584. P. 589; Vremnik Mosk. islands of Russian history and antiquities. S. 76). Soon after, the son of Olgerd and the grandson of Gediminas Jagiello married the Polish queen Jadwiga and, together with her hand, received the Piast crown, united the Lithuanian principality with Poland ( Ustryalov N.G. Study of the question, what place in Russian history should the Grand Duchy of Lithuania occupy? SPb., 1839; Borichevsky I.P. Orthodoxy and Russian nationality in Lithuania. SPb., 1851; Serchevsky E.N. Notes on the family of the princes Golitsyn ... St. Petersburg, 1853. S. 1-12).

The princely Lithuanian families originate from the three sons of Gediminas: Narimunt, Olgerd and Lubart. The former had a son, Alexander, and the latter, Patricius Zvenigorodsky. From the eldest son of Patricius, the great-grandson of Narimuntov, Fedor, the princes of Khovansky descended. The second son, Yuri, was the daughter of Grand Duke Vasily Dmitrievich, Princess Anna, in monasticism Anastasia. Yuri Patrikeevich had a son, Prince Vasily, from whom Prince Ivan Bulgak descended, and from him, through his two sons, Prince Mikhail Golitsa and Prince Andrei Kuraku, the princes Bulgakov-Golitsyn, who later retained one nickname Golitsyn, and Kurakins, lead their family. From another son of Vasily Yuryevich, Danil Shchenya, the Shchenyatevs descended, whose lineage was cut short. Finally, the princes Koretsky descended from the third son of Patrikeyev Alexander, who, as the genealogy says, “were exhausted in Moscow,” but remained in Poland.

From Olgerd, another son of Gediminov, they lead their family (without mentioning the generations of extinct ones), through the second son of Olgerdov Dmitry - the princes Trubetskoy, and through the third son, Konstantin, the princes Czartoryski.

Finally, from Lubart, through his son Theodore, went, by the way, the princes Sangushko.

The coat of arms of Lithuania has long been a chase (pogonia). Our history ( Addition to the Ipatiev Chronicle // PSRL. T. 2. S. 246. Okolsky has a detailed explanation of the meaning and history of the chase. (See: Okolski S.Op.cit. Vol. 2, p. 442-446)) retained the following news about its introduction: "Prince Viten began to reign over Lithuania (in 1278), invent a coat of arms for himself and a seal for the entire Principality of Lithuania: a slaughter knight on a horse with a sword, now they call the chase." It was this emblem - chases - that was preserved in the coats of arms of most of the Lithuanian princes; but for distinction in different surnames, it was not the same either in the position of the rider, or in the figure that was depicted on the shield that protected his shoulder, or, finally, because only one armed hand was represented in the coat of arms. Thus, there are five types of chases in Polish heraldry; namely: 1) in a red field, a knight covered with armor and a cone on a white horse. With his right hand he holds a naked sword, and on his left is a shield with a double, six-pointed cross, on a horse a saddle with three ends; 2) the same rider, but with a spear that he holds, as if intending to throw it at the enemy; 3) a naked rider on a horse without a saddle and a bridle holds a naked sword in the air, above his head; 4) in a golden field, a hand in armor with a drawn sword emerging from the clouds, this figure is repeated in a crest; Okolski S. Op. cit. Vol. 1. P. 542-543; Vol. 2. P. 442-451). Below will be the coats of arms of the families of Russians and those leaving Poland and Lithuania, who use different types of chase.

Initially, in the coats of arms of many Gedimin's descendants, the pursuits were used alone, and later other emblems were added to distinguish one noble family from others of the same root, and for many of them the basis should be sought in Polish heraldry. That the banner of pursuit passed to these princes by inheritance along with possession is proved by the fact that in the most ancient acts, which had the goal of approving this emblem for a certain generation, it is mentioned that a sign that already belonged to it is left behind. As evidence, we cite the following excerpt from the charter given to the princes of Czartorysky in 1442 by King Vladislav of Poland: by their kinship with the royal house, forever grants to their entire family in general and to each of its members individually the right to use the princely seal, which was used by their grandfather and father, i.e. a horse on which an armed man sits, holding a naked sword in his hand. This privilege was confirmed more than once, among other things, by King August I at the Lubel Sejm in 1569 ( Here are the original words of the charter: "Significamus tenore praesentium, quomodo cupientes fratrum nostrorum illustrium Ivonis, Alexandri et Michaelis ducum de Czartorejska honori intendere qui singulari affectione et fidelitate erga nostram Majestatem et inclitam coronam regni nostri Poloniae se exhibent et exercent, pro eorum duce promotion status , praefatos duces et consanguineos nostros, communiter et divisim sigillo eorum ducali frui, quo ex avo et patre ipsorum uti consueverunt, sculicet equo, cui subsidet vir armatus, gladium evaginatum manu tenens, volumus et decernimus, approbamus et concedimus perpetue ac in aevum." herb. Polish. Nieseck. (ed. Bobrowicz) Vol. 3. P. 224. Paprocki. Gniazdo Gnoty. P. 644)

Except Czartoryski ( Bobrovicz. herb. Pols. Vol. 3. P. 222) one chase without any other attributes remained with the Koretsky princes ( Ibid. Vol. 5. P. 228) and Sangushkov ( Okolski S. Op. cit. Vol. 3. P. 78). The princes Golitsyn had the same coat of arms, as evidenced by the sign on the family dishes of Prince Vasily Vasilyevich Golitsyn, stored in the Armory, and the coat of arms on the portrait of the same prince ( Tr. Moscow islands of Russian history and antiquities. T. 7. S. 83; Application). But later (it is difficult to determine exactly when), due to the need to distinguish the coats of arms of surnames originating from the same root, attributes were added that were also not devoid of heraldic significance, and the Pursuit was given a place in one or another part of the coat of arms according to the seniority of the origin of the surname from the common ancestor .

Since Narimunt reigned in Novgorod, and the descendants of Gediminas sat on the Polish royal throne, only princes descended from Narimunt have the right to the Novgorod coat of arms (hence, Prince Trubetskoy cannot have it); the Polish coat of arms could enter the coats of arms of all Lithuanian princes ( The following presentation will prove that the emblems in the coats of arms were adopted by different generations of the Gediminas' house according to the guidance of the genealogy of the Lithuanian clans, which was preserved in the Velvet Book. Therefore, we, when explaining these coats of arms, must adhere to the same source.).

Accordingly: 1) in the book. The Khovansky coat of arms is depicted as follows: in the heart of a four-part shield, a red shield covered with a princely cap is occupied by the Lithuanian coat of arms; in the first and fourth parts of the large shield there is a Polish coat of arms - in a red field a white single-headed eagle, and in the second and third parts of the coat of arms of Novgorod: in a crimson silver field a throne, on which a cruciform sovereign rod and a long cross are depicted; above the chair there is a triple candlestick with burning candles, on the sides of the throne are two black bears standing with their hind legs on a golden lattice, under which fish swimming in the river are visible ( Armorial. I, 1).

2) The coat of arms of the princes Kurakins is the same ( Armorial. I, 2), but in the arrangement of the figures, the only difference is that the Novgorod coat of arms (without the image of the river) is placed in the second quarter only, and in the third part, in a blue field, a silver cross, a hexagonal star and between them a golden crescent turned horns down (coat of arms Koribut). This emblem could be the banner of one of the cities that were in the possession of the ancestors of this family, and, indeed, it resembles the emblems of the cities of Borozna and Zenkov; but, being afraid of any conjectures not based on positive data, and thinking that the explanation of the coats of arms should be the concern of their owners themselves, we confine ourselves to one description, especially since, we repeat, the coat of arms of the hereditary patrimony remains, the coat of arms of the relative from whom it comes generation. Other attributes are less significant, although they are not accidental or arbitrary.

3) The coat of arms of the princes Golitsyn changed, as far as is known, three times, until it reached the modern form. Initially, it contained only the image of the Lithuanian chase. Then in the coat of arms of the book. The Golitsyns included the following attributes: the Lithuanian chase was placed in a special shield in the heart of the large shield, the Polish coat of arms was depicted in the first quarter, the Novgorod coat of arms was depicted in the second, then the last two quarters were left for emblems, so to speak, special, private: in the lower right part they were visible in a blue field, a silver cross and a hexagonal star, and between them a golden crescent, turned horns down (like the princes Kurakins); and finally, in the last quarter, in a blue field, a silver cross with a black double-headed eagle in the middle ( Serchevsky, in Notes on the Family of the Princes Golitsyns (St. Petersburg, 1853, p. VI), believes that the silver cross means the victory of the Lithuanians over the Teutonic Order. The same coat of arms was previously in the Volyn province. Korona Polska. Vol. 1. P. 154). At present, the shield in the coat of arms of the princes Golitsyns is divided into two parts and its lower half is cut. The upper part is occupied by the image of the Lithuanian chase, in the lower right part the coat of arms of Novgorod is visible, and finally in the left - the same white cross with a double-headed eagle in the middle, which is described above ( Armorial. I, 2).

And 4) at the princes Trubetskoy ( There. II, 1) The chase occupies (as it should by seniority) the third quarter of the four-part shield, then in the first part two vultures are depicted in a golden field, holding the princely crown with their front paws, in the second part - the Polish coat of arms (in a blue field) and, finally, in the fourth - a bull's head in a silver field.

In the same section, we must place the coat of arms of the most serene princes Menshikov. Their family, as stated in the letter to Alexander Danilovich Menshikov for princely dignity, granted in 1707, comes from a noble Lithuanian family. In addition to other attributes testifying to the award of princely dignity (a two-headed eagle crowned with three crowns) and the military prowess rendered by Menshikov on land and at sea (a cannon surrounded by cannonballs and banners, as well as a equipped ship), the Lithuanian chase is visible in his coat of arms (but instead of red in blue field). We meet this coat of arms on the papers of Prince Menshikov soon after he was awarded the princely dignity ( Among the manuscripts of the Imperial Public Library, Prince Menshikov's announcement of April 20, 1712 to the Russian and auxiliary troops about the passage of the ships of the Grand Chancellor Prince Radziwill, which will go along the Vistula to Danzig, has been preserved. We write out the title of Prince Menshikov: "We are Alexander Menshikov of the Roman and Russian state, Prince and Duke of Izhersky, hereditary lord of Oraniburh and others of His Royal Majesty of All Russia, the first real privy councilor, commander of the field marshal of the troops and governor general of the provinces of St. Petersburg and many provinces, gentleman St. Andrew and the Elephant and the Black and White Eagle, etc.") in the exact same form in which it is depicted in the Armorial ( Armorial. I, 15).

The region, which today is called the Kaliningrad region, had extensive ties with the Russian lands in ancient times. This fact is confirmed not only in archeology, for example, in the discovery of a number of Russian princely helmets of the 10th-12th centuries during excavations, but also in the genealogies of many boyar families of Ancient Russia. According to ancient genealogical legends, more than 70 noble Russian families trace their origins to people from Ancient Prussia. You can understand the reasons for this phenomenon by considering the events of the distant 13th century.

The exodus of the Prussians to the East Slavic lands occurred primarily under the influence of the Teutonic invasion of Prussia. The German penetration took place in three stages. First, German merchants and merchants appeared in the eastern part of the Baltic States, who by 1158 organized the first trading posts here. Then Catholic missionaries, under the pretext of Christianizing the pagans, founded bishoprics in these places from 1186 and, in addition to economic penetration, planted their own ideology. 1200 was a turning point in the fate of the Eastern Baltic, serving as the starting point for the start of direct armed aggression by the West. The new "Bishop of Livonia" appointed by Pope Innocent III, the former canon of Bremen Albert Buksgevden von Apeldern, went to the island of Gotland, and, having created a strong base there, with a detachment of 500 soldiers set off to conquer Livonia (part of modern Latvia).

This detachment became the core of the "Order of God's Knights" (otherwise - the "Order of the Swordsmen"), which took an active part in the aggressive campaigns on the lands of historical tributaries of Russia - Estonians ("Chuds"), Livs (annalistic "Lib"), Letts (Latvians) , Curonians (“Kors”), Latgalians (“Lotygol”), as well as Russians proper (Novgorodians, Pskovians and Polochans).

After 1226, the Teutonic knights also joined the fighting of the Sword, invited to the Baltic states by the Mazovian prince Konrad (in Russian chronicles referred to as "Prince Kondrat Kazimirovich") (1187 -1247), whose wife was the Vladimir-Volyn princess Agafya Svyatoslavovna - the granddaughter of the famous Prince Igor Novgorod-Seversky. If the sword-bearers, together with the Danes from the Dannebrog Order (founded by the Danish king Voldemar II in 1219), moved from the mouth of the Western Dvina and the coastal regions of Estonia, then the Teutons and the Poles advanced from behind the Vistula and its tributaries - to the north and east - through the territory of the Prussians tribes. At the disposal of the Grand Master of the Teutonic Order Hermann von Saltz at the first stage of the conquest of Prussia, there were only ten full-fledged Teutonic knights, but soon hundreds of militant adventurers from different European countries (primarily from some German principalities) rushed to his aid - the so-called. "pilgrims" - wandering mercenaries, ready for payment and the right to plunder to provide any services in the conquest of new territories. This powerful military pressure of the new conquerors on the resisting Prussians led to the migration of many of them from their native possessions, covered by the war, to the East Slavic lands.

Although Ancient Prussia was not part of Kievan Rus, however, close ties between the inhabitants of both countries have been noted since ancient times. According to some Russian chronicles, back in the middle of the 9th century. Novgorodians (i.e. Ilmen Slovenes) "called from the Prussian land, from the Varangians, the prince and autocrat, that is, Rurik, but he owns them as he pleases" . The areas of the Prussians at that time directly bordered on Russia, and some areas inhabited by closely related Yatvingian ships, from 983, after the successful campaign of Prince Vladimir Krasno Solnyshko, were among the Russian possessions.

In the thirteenth century immigrants from Prussia (the so-called "Prussians") are actively moving to the Novgorod lands. This was explained by the close and well-established political and commercial contacts of the Prussians with Novgorod. Their first mass migration began shortly before the invasion of the “Kryzhaks”-Teutons into the West Prussian lands and, possibly, was caused by an acute conflict between professional Prussian warriors and the pagan priestly elite.

According to the ancient Russian chronicle, already in 1215, the Prussian combat detachment was acting on the side of the freedom-loving Novgorod boyars in their struggle with the prince as a shock military force. Gradually, the number of Prussian settlers increased so much that they formed a separate colony in the city, mentioned since 1215. as "Prussian street" (now - Zhelyabova street). Recognizing the fact of the service of Prussian warriors in Russian squads, the famous historian S.V. Veselovsky pointed out that some of them took root in their new homeland, were subjected to Russification and became the founders of service dynasties.

One of these migrants was Misha Prushanin, who arrived in Russia with a large retinue and laid the foundation for the families of the Morozovs, Saltykovs, Burtsevs, Sheins, Rusalkins, Kozlovs, Tuchkovs and Cheglokovs. "Their ancestor - Misha Prushanin - is narrated in the genealogy of the Saltykovs - left Prussia for Novgorod at the beginning of the 13th century." Having converted to Orthodoxy with the name of Mikhail Prokshinich and settled on Prusskaya Street, he, as a wealthy man, built and rebuilt the Church of St. Michael in 1231, in which he was subsequently buried. In battles with the Swedes and Livonians (as the sword-bearers began to call themselves after 1237), Misha Prushanin, who became the founder of the noble boyar family of the Mishinichi-Ontsiferovichi, showed himself to be an outstanding military leader.

So, in the battle on the Neva in 1240, commanding a squad, he destroyed three Swedish ships. Unlike Alexander Nevsky and his court, who fought on horseback, Misha Prushanin's squad was on foot and included not princely servants, but free Novgorodians, the backbone of which, apparently, was the very detachment of professional Prussian soldiers who arrived in Novgorod in 1215, although its composition was significantly updated. There is evidence that another hero of the Nevsky battle, Sbyslav Yakunovich, who became a Novgorod posadnik in 1243, also belonged to the boyars of the Prussian street of Novgorod the Great.

The descendants of Misha Prushanin also played a prominent role in the social and political life of Novgorod, his grandson Mikhail Terentyevich Krivets was at one time a Novgorod posadnik. The family coat of arms of the princes Saltykovs descended from this surname retained the ancient Prussian symbols: a black eagle in a golden field with a crown on its head and a hand in armor with a sword extending to the right. The great Russian writer M.E. Saltykov-Shchedrin, who left interesting descriptions of Prussia in the 19th century in the story Abroad, also belonged to this illustrious family. It is believed that the boyar family Morozov also originates from Misha Prushanin.

The departure of the "Prussians" and "Sudovins" to Russia is not limited only to Misha Prushanin. Other settlers from the South-Eastern Baltic also gained considerable fame here. Ancient chronicles tell that in the middle of the XIII century. to the Grand Duke Alexander Yaroslavich "an honest and kind man left the Prussian land", who, having received holy baptism in Novgorod, was named Gabriel and was a brave governor of the Neva winner. Gabriel's great-grandson was Fyodor Alexandrovich Kutuz, and the son of his other great-great-grandson Anany Alexandrovich was Vasily Ananievich Golenishche, a posadnik in Novgorod in 1471. From them came the famous family of Golenishchev-Kutuzov, who gave us a wonderful commander who smashed to smithereens the "invincible" army of the French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. The coat of arms of the Golenishchev-Kutuzovs also bears the seal of Prussian origin: it consists of an image in a blue field of a black single-headed eagle with a crown on its head, holding a silver sword in its right paw. In addition to the Kutuzovs, the noble families of the Korovins, Kudrevatykh, Shestakovs, Kleopins, Shchukins, Zverevs and Lapenkovs originated from Fyodor Kutuz.

After the conquest of Prussia by the Teutonic Order, the emigration of the Prussians to the Russian lands intensified even more.

One of its directions was the Galicia-Volyn principality and the so-called "Black Russia" (the western part of modern Belarus), which was then under the rule of the Russian-Lithuanian prince Troiden. In the Volyn Chronicle under 1276 we read: “Prousi came to Troydenov and from his land in captivity before the Germans. He took them to himself and plant some of them in Gorodnya (Grodno), and plant some of them in Slonim. In turn, the Ipatiev Chronicle announced under 1281 that an entourage from Prince Vladimir Volynsky died on a campaign, “Byashet Prusin by birth”.

In the middle of the XIII century. Another direction of Prussian emigration, Novogorodsk-Pskov, also developed, which was extremely important for the future fate of the Russian state.

According to one of the ancient testimonies, the Prussian noble, i.e. the prince, “Glanda Kambila Divonovich, tired of fighting with the Order (i.e., with the crusaders), and having been defeated by them, left with his young son and many subjects” to Russia - to Novgorod the Great and was soon baptized, receiving the name John.

The exodus of a significant part of the Prussians to the East is confirmed by many documents. In 1283, the last independent Prussian noble, the Yatvyazh (Sudavian) leader Skurdo from Krasima, left for the Neman - to the "Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Russia and Samogitian", and from there part of the Prussians went to Russian lands. Among them was Glanda-Kambila, the son of Divonis, the prince of one of the Prussian lands. The prototype of the legendary Divonis, perhaps, was a real historical character - Diwane Klekine, one of the leaders of the Great Prussian Uprising in 1260-1275, known for defeating the crusaders in the Battle of Sirgun in 1271, but later died during the storming of Sheneze Castle. The sons of Divonis - Russigen and Kambila continued stubborn resistance to the invaders. But, having been defeated in this war, Glanda Kambila Divonovich left the Prussian lands for Novgorod Russia, where he was baptized and found a new homeland. The son of Glanda - Andrey Ivanovich Kobyla, at the beginning of the fourteenth century. having moved to Moscow, he became a boyar with the Grand Duke of Moscow Ivan Kalita and his successor Simeon the Proud. According to the pedigree, he had five sons, from whom 17 ancient families descended, including the Romanovs, Sheremetyevs, Kolychevs, Vereshchagins, Boborykins, Zherebtsovs, Koshkins, Ladygins, Konovnitsyns, Khludenovs, Kokorevs, Obraztsovs, Neplyuevs, Sukhovo-Kobylinskys, and also extinct genus Bezzubtsev. .

Note that their family coats of arms have the corresponding symbols: a crown - as a sign of origin from the legendary Prussian kings, two crosses, meaning the conversion of Glanda-Kambila and his descendants to Orthodoxy, and a pagan oak. In some coats of arms there is a generic symbol of the most ancient Prussian rulers - a black single-headed eagle with outstretched wings, clawed paws, sometimes with a crown around its neck ...

From Feodor Andreevich Koshkin - one of the five sons of A.I. Mares - the pedigree line leads to the Russian tsars. His grandson was nicknamed Koshkin-Zakharyin, his great-grandchildren were called Zakharyins-Yurievs, and from Roman Yurevich Zakharyin came Zakharyins-Romanovs and simply Romanovs. The daughter of Roman Yurievich - Anastasia - in 1547 became the wife of Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible, and from that time the rise of the Zakharyin-Romanov family began. The nephew of Empress Anastasia, Fyodor Nikitich Romanov (1554-1633), after the death of his cousin Fyodor Ioannovich, was considered the closest legitimate contender to the throne. However, Boris Godunov came to power, who hastened to deal with his rivals. In 1601, using a false denunciation, Godunov ordered the arrest of all the Romanovs, and Fyodor Nikitich to be tonsured a monk. Under the name Filaret, he was exiled to the North - to the Holy Trinity Anthony-Siya Monastery, but after Godunov's death he was elevated to the rank of Metropolitan of Rostov. In September 1610, Metropolitan Philaret was again arrested - by the Polish King Sigismund III, and only in July 1619 he returned from captivity, after which he was appointed Patriarch of All Russia. During Filaret's stay in Polish captivity, the Zemsky Sobor was convened in Moscow, which on February 21, 1613 elected his 16-year-old son Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov to reign, who gave rise to a new royal dynasty that ruled Russia for the next 300 years.

The article was prepared on the basis of the author's speech at the round table "Kaliningrad region in the historical destinies of Russia" on March 14, 2015, within the framework of the 1st Kaliningrad Forum of the World Russian People's Council "Frontiers of Russian statehood: global challenges, regional responses".

List of sources and literature

  1. Belyakov V. Kutuzov's sword // True. 1991. November 11.
  2. Bochkarev V.N. The struggle of the Russian people against the German-Swedish aggression. Alexander Nevskiy. M. 1946.
  3. Burov V.A. On the genealogy of the Novgorod boyars Mishinichi - Ontsiferovich // Antiquities of the Slavs and Russia. M., 1988.
  4. Zimin A.A. Formation of the boyar aristocracy in Russia in the second half of the 15th - the first third of the 16th century. M., 1988.
  5. Kosmolinsky P.F. Coat of arms from the carriage door // Heraldry. 1992. No. 2.
  6. Kulakov V.I. Social stratification of the Irzekapinis burial ground // Social differentiation of society. M., 1993.
  7. Lakier A.B. Russian heraldry. M., 1990.
  8. Novgorod the first chronicle of the older and younger editions. M.-L., 1950.
  9. monuments Literature of Ancient Russia. M, 1985.
  10. Pashuto V.T. anointing. "Pomesan truth". M., 1955
  11. Petrov P.N. History of the genera of the Russian nobility. In two books. M., 1991, Prince. 2.
  12. Shaskolsky I.P. Russia's struggle against crusader aggression on the shores of the Baltic in the XII-XIII centuries. L., 1978.
  13. Ipatiev Chronicle // Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles. Volume 2. St. Petersburg, 1908. Sheet 294. Yakov Krotov Internet Library http://krotov.info/acts/12/pvl/ipat39.htm

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We have all the pillar noble families from the Varangians and other aliens. M. Pogodin.
“Our nobility, not of feudal origin, but gathered in later times from different sides, as if in order to replenish the insufficient number of the first Varangian newcomers, from the Horde, from the Crimea, from Prussia, from Italy, from Lithuania ...” Historical and critical passages M. Pogodina. Moscow, 1846, p. nine

Before getting into the lists of nobility, the gentlemen of Russia belonged to the estate of the boyars. It is believed that at least a third of the boyar families came from immigrants from Poland and Lithuania. However, indications of the origin of this or that noble family sometimes border on falsification.

In the middle of the 17th century, there were approximately 40 thousand service people, including 2-3 thousand listed in Moscow genealogical books. There were 30 boyar families who had exclusive rights to the highest posts, including membership in the royal council, the highest administrative positions in the main orders, and important diplomatic appointments.

Discord between the boyar clans, interfered with the management of the state. Therefore, it was necessary to create, next to the ancient caste, another, more submissive and less obstinate service class.
Boyars and nobles. The main difference is that the boyars had their own estates, while the nobles did not.

The nobleman had to live on his estate, manage the household and wait for the tsar to call for war or court. Boyars and boyar children could come to the service at their discretion. But the nobles were required to serve the king.

Legally, the estate was royal property. The estate could be inherited, divided among the heirs, sold, but the estate could not.In the 16th century, the equalization of the rights of the nobles and the children of the boyars took place.During the XVI-XVII centuries. the position of the nobles approached the position of the boyars, in the 18th century both of these groups merged, and the nobility became the aristocracy of Russia.

However, in the Russian Empire there were two different categories of nobles.
Pillar nobles - this is how hereditary nobles of noble families, listed in columns, were called in Russia - genealogical books before the reign of the Romanovs in the 16-17 centuries, in contrast to the nobles of a later origin.

In 1723, the Finnish "chivalry" became part of the Russian nobility.
The accession of the Baltic provinces was accompanied (since 1710) by the registration of the Baltic nobility.

By a decree of 1783, the rights of Russian nobles were extended to the gentry of three Ukrainian provinces, and in 1784 to princes and murzas of Tatar origin. In the last quarter of the 18th century the formation of the Don nobility began in the early 19th century. the rights of the Bessarabian nobility were formalized, and from the 40s. 19th century - Georgian.
By the middle of the 19th century. with the Russian nobility, the nobility of the Kingdom of Poland is equalized in personal rights.

However, there are only 877 real ancient Polish noble families, and the current gentry families are at least 80 thousand. These surnames, with tens of thousands of other similar noble Polish surnames, got their start in the 18th century, on the eve of the first partition of Poland, when the magnates of their lackeys, grooms, psars, etc. share of the current nobility of the Russian Empire.

How many nobles were there in Russia?
“In 1858, there were 609.973 hereditary nobles, personal and employees - 276.809; in 1870 there were 544.188 hereditary nobles, 316.994 personal and employees; noble landowners, according to official data for 1877-1878, it was considered 114.716 in European Russia. Brockhaus and Efron. Article nobility.

According to the Great Soviet Encyclopedia (3rd ed.), in total in the Russian Empire (excluding) Finland) there were: in 1897 - 3.0 million people, in 1913 4 .1 million people. The proportion of the social group in 1897 - 2.4%, in 1913 - 2.5%. The increase in 1913 to 1897 is 36.7%. USSR article. capitalist system.

The number of nobility (male): in 1651 - 39 thousand people, 108 thousand in 1782, 4.464 thousand people in 1858, that is, in two hundred years it increased 110 times, while the country's population is only five times: from 12.6 to 68 million people. Korelin A.P. Russian nobility and its class organization (1861-1904). - History of the USSR, 1971, No. 4.

In the 19th century, there were about 250 princely families in Russia, more than half of them were Georgian princes, and 40 families traced their ancestry from Rurik (according to legend, in the 9th century he was called to “rule in Russia”) and Gediminas, the Grand Duke of Lithuania, who ruled in XIV century by present-day Western Belarus (“Cornet Obolensky” belonged to the Rurikoviches, and “Lieutenant Golitsyn” belonged to the Gediminoviches).

With the Georgians, situations arose even more amusing than with the Poles.

Since in St. Petersburg they were afraid that the princes would again not turn to oligarchic liberty, they began to consider the princes carefully, namely, they ordered everyone to prove their right to the principality. And they began to prove it - it turned out that almost none of the princes had documents. A large princely document factory was set up in Tiflis, and the seals of Heraclius, King Teimuraz and King Bakar, very similar, were attached to the documents. It was bad that they did not share: there were many hunters on the same possessions. Tynyanov Yu. Death of Vazir-Mukhtar, M., Soviet Russia, 1981, p. 213.

In Russia, the title of count was introduced by Peter the Great. The first Russian count is Boris Petrovich Sheremetiev, who was elevated to this dignity in 1706 for pacifying the Astrakhan rebellion.

The barony was the smallest noble title in Russia. Most of the baronial families - there were more than 200 of them - came from Livonia.

Many ancient noble families originate from Mongolian roots. For example, Herzen's friend Ogarev was a descendant of Ogar-Murza, who went to the service of Alexander Nevsky from Batu.
The noble family of Yushkovs is descended from the Khan of the Horde Zeush, who transferred to the service of Dmitry Ivanovich Donskoy, Zagoskina - from Shevkal Zagor, who left the Golden Horde in 1472 for Moscow and received estates in the Novgorod region from John III.

Khitrovo is an ancient noble family, descending from the one who left in the second half of the 14th century. from the Golden Horde to the Grand Duke of Ryazan Oleg Ioannovich Ed-Khan, nicknamed Strongly-Cunning, baptized Andrei. Simultaneously with him, his brother Salohmir-Murza, who had left, was baptized in 1371 under the name of John and married the sister of Prince Anastasia. He became the ancestor of the Apraksins, Verderevskys, Kryukovs, Khanykovs and others. The Garshin family is an old noble family, descending, according to legend, from Murza Gorsha or Garsha, a native of the Golden Horde under Ivan III.

V. Arseniev points out that the Dostoevskys descended from Aslan Murza Chelebey, who left the Golden Horde in 1389: he was the ancestor of the Arsenievs, Zhdanovs, Pavlovs, Somovs, Rtishchevs and many other Russian noble families.

The Begichevs originated, of course, from the Horde Begich, the Horde ancestors were in the noble families of the Tukhachevskys and Ushakovs. The Turgenevs, Mosolovs, Godunovs, Kudashevs, Arakcheevs, Kareevs (from Edigey-Karey, who moved from the Horde to Ryazan in the 13th century, was baptized and took the name Andrei) - all of them are of Horde origin.

In the era of Grozny, the Tatar elite strengthened even more.
For example, during the Kazan campaign (1552), which in history will be presented as the conquest and annexation of the Kazan Khanate to the Muscovite state, the army of Ivan the Terrible included more Tatars than the army of Yediger, the ruler of Kazan.

The Yusupovs came from Nogai Tatars. Naryshkins - from the Crimean Tatar Naryshka. Apraksins, Akhmatovs, Tenishevs, Kildishevs, Kugushevs, Ogarkovs, Rachmaninovs - noble families from the Volga Tatars.

The Moldavian boyars Matvey Kantakuzin and Scarlat Sturdza, who emigrated to Russia in the 18th century, met with the most cordial attitude towards themselves. The latter's daughter was a lady-in-waiting to the Empress Elizabeth and later became the Countess of Edling.The Panini counts traced their lineage back to the Italian Panini family, who arrived from Lucca as early as the 14th century. The Karazins came from the Greek family of Karadzhi. The Chicherins are descended from the Italian Chicheri, who arrived in Moscow in 1472 in the retinue of Sophia Paleolog.

The Korsakov family from Lithuania (Kors - the name of the Baltic tribe that lived in Kurzeme).

On the example of one of the central provinces of the empire, one can see that the clans of foreign origin accounted for almost half of the pillar provincial nobility. An analysis of the genealogies of 87 aristocratic families of the Oryol province shows that 41 clans (47%) have foreign origin - traveling nobles baptized under Russian names, and 53% (46) of hereditary clans have local roots.

12 outgoing Oryol families conduct genealogy from the Golden Horde (Ermolovs, Mansurovs, Bulgakovs, Uvarovs, Naryshkins, Khanykovs, Elchins, Kartashovs, Khitrovo, Khripunovs, Davydovs, Yushkovs); 10 clans left Poland (Pokhvisnevs, Telepnevs, Lunins, Pashkovs, Karyakins, Martynovs, Karpovs, Lavrovs, Voronovs, Yurasovskys); 6 families of nobles from the "German" (Tolstoy, Orlov, Shepelev, Grigorov, Danilov, Chelishchev); 6 - with roots from Lithuania (Zinovievs, Sokovnins, Volkovs, Pavlovs, Maslovs, Shatilovs) and 7 - from other countries, incl. France, Prussia, Italy, Moldova (Abaza, Voeikovs, Elagins, Ofrosimovs, Khvostovs, Bezobrazovs, Apukhtins)

A historian who has studied the origin of 915 ancient service families gives the following data on their national composition: 229 were of Western European (including German) origin, 223 were of Polish and Lithuanian, 156 were Tatar and other eastern, 168 belonged to the house of Rurik.
In other words, 18.3% were descendants of the Ruriks, that is, they had Varangian blood; 24.3% were of Polish or Lithuanian origin, 25% came from other Western European countries; 17% from Tatars and other Eastern peoples; the nationality of 10.5% was not established, only 4.6% were Great Russians. (N. Zagoskin. Essays on the organization and origin of the service class in pre-Petrine Russia).

Even if we count the descendants of the Ruriks and persons of unknown origin as pure Great Russians, it still follows from these calculations that more than two-thirds of the royal servants in the last decades of the Muscovite era were of foreign origin. In the eighteenth century, the proportion of foreigners in the service class increased even more. - R. Pipes. Russia under the old regime, p.240.

Our nobility was Russian only in name, but if someone decides that the situation was different in other countries, he will be greatly mistaken. Poland, the Baltic states, numerous Germanic peoples, France, England and Turkey were all ruled by aliens.

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