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Khrapovitsky

Khrapovitsky - an old noble family of the coat of arms " Gozdava ", descending from Daniil Khrapovitsky , who lived in the Commonwealth in the second quarter of the XVI century.

  • Ivan Anthony Khrapovitsky (died 1686), Smolensky subcommittee , governor of Vitebsk, was the commissioner for negotiations on eternal peace with Russia (1683); left "Notes on his life."
  • Dadibog Feofilovich Khrapovitsky converted to Orthodoxy, with the name of Theophilus , and was sovereign steward (1681–1692).
  • Ivan Dominicovich Khrapovitsky (died in 1808) was the auditor of the Lithuanian metrics and city judge of the Polotsk Voivodeship, and after the accession of Polotsk to Russia, he was the chairman of the joint court of the Polotsk governorship.
  • Joseph Khrapovitsky (died 1801) - Major General of the Lithuanian forces, Zemsky judge of the Smolensk Voivodeship and Marshal of the Permanent State Council (1784).
  • Kazimir Mikhailovich Khrapovitsky (1818-1881), lieutenant general, participated in the Hungarian campaign of 1849 and in the Crimean campaign.
Khrapovitsky
Hrapovitsky 2-127.jpg
Gozdava ext.
Coat of arms description:
see text
Volume and sheet of the Common StampII, 127
Part of the genealogy bookVI
Nationality
Lithuanian coat of arms Vytis. 16th century.png Grand Duchy of Lithuania
Herb Rzeczypospolitej Obojga Narodow.svg Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Royal Coat of arms of Russia (17th century) .svg Kingdom of Russia
Russia Russian empire
EstatesKoshchino , Muromtsevo

The Khrapovitsky family was recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Vilna province. Two branches were separated from this kind of Khrapovitsky, who owned Koshchin and other estates in the Smolensk Voivodeship , after the conquest of Smolensk they remained in Russian citizenship and converted to Orthodoxy.

The first branch includes: Platon Yuryevich Khrapovitsky (1738-1794), Smolensk governor and senator; Matvey Evgrafovich , military general of 1812; Stepan Semenovich , major general, partisan of 1812; Ivan Semenovich , Privy Councilor, Nizhny Novgorod, then St. Petersburg Governor. The genus is recorded in the VI part of the genealogy books of the provinces of Smolensk, Kaluga, Vladimir and Tver. The coat of arms of the Khrapovitsky family is included in Part 2 of the General Tombstone of the noble families of the All-Russian Empire, p. 126.

The Koshchino family estate, owned by the Khrapovitsky even before the accession of Smolensk to Russia

The second branch of the Khrapovitsky family originates from Leonty Khrapovitsky, the Smolensk landowner (second half of the 17th century). Vasily Ivanovich , a “life-campanian,” a participant in the 1737 campaign, the 1742 war with the Swedes and the Seven Years War, was the first to be elevated by the Empress Elizabeth as a “noble merit” (1747). Handwritten notes of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna, containing economic orders and addressed to Vasily Khrapovitsky, were printed in Russian Antiquities (1873, vol. VIII).

His sons Alexander (1749-1801) - senator, state secretary of Empress Catherine II and Michael (1758-1819) - translator, poet. Anthony (Khrapovitsky) (1863-1936) - Metropolitan of the Russian Orthodox Church, First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad. This genus is recorded in the VI part of the genealogy books of Smolensk and Kaluga provinces. The coat of arms of this branch of the Khrapovitsky family is included in Part 2 of the General Tombstone of the noble families of the All-Russian Empire, p. 127

There are two more genera of the Khrapovitsky, of later origin.

Emblem Description

Coat of arms of the Khrapovitsky 1785

In the Coat of Arms of Anisim Titovich Knyazev in 1785 there is a seal with the coat of arms of the state adviser, Smolensk provincial leader of the nobility in 1780-1781, major general and Smolensk governor in 1782, ruler of Smolensk governorate in 1786, secret adviser and senator Platon Yuryevich Khrapovitsky: a round-shaped shield, in a red field, shows a golden lily connected by stems so that their flowers look up at one and down at the other. The shield is crowned with a crowned nobleman's helmet with a neck kleinod and a crest of three ostrich feathers, on the average a golden lily. Shield holder: on the left side, a warrior in armor with a spear, point up in his left hand. Around the shield are military fittings in the form of banners, sabers, guns and drums [1] .

Emblem. Part II No. 126.

Coat of arms of the Khrapovitsky family: in a shield, divided crosswise, diagonally, fourfold, red in a silver field, two lilies are shown, connected by stems so that their flowers look up at one and the other down, variable with flower fields. The shield is crowned with an ordinary noble helmet with a noble crown on it and five peacock feathers, in the middle of which a silver lily is visible. The mark on the shield is red, lined with silver [2] .

Emblem. Part II No. 127.

Coat of arms of the offspring of Vasily Khrapovitsky: the shield is divided perpendicularly into two parts, of which on the right side, in a black field, between three silver pentagonal stars, is a golden rafter with three burning grenades of a natural color indicated on it. In the left part, divided crosswise four times red in a silver field, there are two lilies, connected by stems so that their flowers look at one up and the other down, variable with flower fields. The shield is crowned with an ordinary noble helmet, turned to the right, with a noble crown on it, on the surface of which four ostrich feathers of red and white color are visible, marked between two black eagle open wings, with three silver stars repeated on each of them. The mark on the shield is red and black, lined on the right side with silver, and with the left gold [2] .

Note: Vasily Khrapovitsky came from the noblemen of Smolensk district, served in the guard since 1731, was granted to the company of sergeants from the grenadier company of the Prerazhensky regiment, vice sergeant of the life campaign, was granted sergeants on November 25, 1746, and later became prime minister [ 1] .

Heraldry

An explanation of the coat of arms of V.I. Khrapovitsky, signed on December 02, 1745 by V.E. Adodurov, noted that "in this coat of arms, the laid lilies are inclined to express goodwill, good deeds and the useful service of the aforementioned vice sergeant, and those are especially fitting for him that even from his ancestors they were used in print, and in the above position they were used to distinguish them from the emblems of other surnames [1] .

Famous Representatives

Polish subjects

  • Khrapovitsky Fedor - a Vitebsk corral , was granted the estate in 1566 and 1580 for his heroic defense of the Vitebsk castle and for courage, and ambassador to Russia in 1589.
  • Khrapovitsky Joseph - Vitebsk sub-governor, captured by the Russians in 1654 and exiled to Yaroslavl, exchanged from captivity in 1683.
  • Khrapovitsky: Dominic and Yuri - captured by the Russians in 1654 and exiled to Astrakhan.
  • Khrapovitsky Stefan-Anthony - ambassador to the Sejm in 1697 and at the Olkinik congress in 1700.
  • Khrapovitsky Mikhail Osipovich - a Vitebsk corral in the years 1700-1723, died from a gun rupture, during the battle with Russian troops.
  • Khrapovitsky Joseph - Marshal of the Permanent State Council in 1784, Knight of the Order of the White Eagle .
  • Khrapovitsky Anton - Ambassador of the Smolensk Voivodeship at the Sejm of 1775 [3] .

Russian subjects

  • Khrapovitsky Vasily Ivanovich - on February 7, 1747, an increase in the patrimonial emblem was granted to him for participation in the enthronement of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna . He is married to the late daughter of Emperor Peter I , Elena Mikhailovna Serdyukova [3] .

Sources

  • Rummel V.V. , Golubtsov V.V. Genealogy collection of Russian noble families . - T. 2. - S. 594-612.
  • Rod: Khrapovitsky on the Rodovod
  • Khrapovitsky // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
  • Gajl T. Polish Armorial Middle Ages to 20th Century . - Gdańsk: L&L, 2007 .-- ISBN 978-83-60597-10-1 . (polish)

Notes

  1. ↑ 1 2 3 Comp. A.T. Knyazev . Tombstone of Anisim Titovich Knyazev of 1785. Edition S. N. Troitsky 1912. Ed., Prep. text afterword O. N. Naumova. - M. Publ. "Old Basmannaya." 2008 Khrapovitsky. p. 194. ISBN 978-5-904043-02-5.
  2. ↑ 1 2 Compost: P.A. Druzhinin . General Herb of the Noble Clans. Parts I — X. M., ed. Drone. 2009, pp. 631-632. ISBN 978-5-904007-02-7.
  3. ↑ 1 2 Comp. Count Alexander Bobrinsky . Noble clans included in the General Armorial of the All-Russian Empire: in 2 volumes - St. Petersburg, type. M. M. Stasyulevich, 1890. Author: Bobrinsky, Alexander Alekseevich (1823-1903). Part I. p. 625-627.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Khrapovitsky&oldid=99126517


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Clever Geek | 2019