Baratynsky and Boratynsky - an old noble family of gentry origin, the coat of arms of Korchak . According to the stories of Polish gereldists, the ancestor of all families with the coat of arms of Korczak was Zoard, one of the leaders of the detachments who flooded Europe in the V century.
| Baratynskie | |
|---|---|
![]() Korchak | |
| Description of the coat of arms: see text | |
| Volume and sheet of the General Armorial | IV, 116 |
| Provinces in which RK is introduced | Smolensk, Tambov |
| Part of the genealogy book | VI |
| Ancestor | Dmitry Dmitrievich Boratynsky |
| Allegiance | |
| Manors | Mara , Muranovo |
The nickname Boratynsky was first received by the Chancellor of the Russian Land, Dmitri Dmitrievich (died 1374), from the Boratyn Castle (God's Defense), built in Galicia by his father, the Podkarby (Treasurer) of the Polish Kingdom, Dmitry Bozhedar. Semyon Dmitrievich (Senko), inherited the estate of Dombkowicz and is the ancestor of the Domkovski, and Dementy Dmitrievich (Demko), inherited the estate of the Mikhalevitsa and is the ancestor of the Mikhalevskys. Their great-grandchildren, Stepan and Andrei Stepanovich, adopted Catholicism at the end of the 15th century . The names of Jan and Peter Baratynsky are found in Polish history: Jan, the elder Rogatinsky and Khorunzhi Przemysl, saved Hetman Lyantskoronsky in a battle with Volokh (1512). In the first half of the 16th century, he repeatedly participated in the battles and campaigns of Sigismund I and, at the head of his own squad of 400 men, went to the aid of the Hungarian king. I tried to reject from the battle against King Ferdinand, but did not have time. He was left dead on the battlefield and picked up by his haidus, after which he returned to the King of Hungary [1] ; Peter, a lawyer scholar, was elected chairman (marshal) of one of the Sejms (died in 1558 and buried in the royal cathedral in Krakow , which testifies to his merits to the state).
The great-grandson of Stepan Stepanovich, Belsky nobleman Ivan Petrovich , left for Russia in about 1660, adopted Orthodoxy and received estates in the Smolensk province, in the territory of Belsky , and his son Pavel Ivanovich (born in 1645) served as a lieutenant in the Smolensk gentry [2 ] .
Content
Famous representatives of the genus
- The grandson of Pavel Ivanovich, Andrey Vasilyevich (1738-1810 / 1813), had seven children
- Abram (Abraham) Andreevich (1767-1810) - Lieutenant-General and Senator.
- Evgeny Abramovich (1800–1844) - the famous Russian poet
- Nikolai Evgenevich (1835-1898)
- Alexander Nikolaevich (1867-1918) - a public and political figure, a member of the State Duma from Kazan province .
- Ilyina, Olga Alexandrovna (1894–1991) - Russian poetess, writer,
- Alexander Nikolaevich (1867-1918) - a public and political figure, a member of the State Duma from Kazan province .
- Nikolai Evgenevich (1835-1898)
- Irakli Abramovich (1802-1859) - Russian military and statesman; a participant in the Russian-Turkish war of 1828–29 and the suppression of the Polish uprising of 1830–1831, lieutenant general; Yaroslavl (1842–1846) and Kazan (1846–1857) governor, senator
OO Abamelek, Anna Davydovna - Sergey Abramovich (1807–1866) - the owner of the estate of Mar. OO Sofya Mikhailovna (1805–1888, nee Saltykova, in the 1st marriage - for A. A. Delvig )
- Varvara Abramovna (1810-1891) OO Rachinsky, Alexander Antonovich
- Rachinsky, Sergey Aleksandrovich , an outstanding teacher
- Evgeny Abramovich (1800–1844) - the famous Russian poet
- Peter Andreevich (1768–1845) - Lieutenant General, Actual Privy Counselor, Senator (1821)
- Bogdan Andreevich (1769-1820) - Vice-Admiral.
- Ilya Andreevich (1776-1837) - Rear Admiral.
- Andrey Ilyich (1813–1890)
- Lev Andreevich (1848-1907) - Moscow Vice-Governor (1890-1902)
- Andrey Ilyich (1813–1890)
- Alexander (Yakov) Andreevich (1777–1807?)
- Maria (Marfa) Andreevna (1781-1845) OO I.D. Panchulidzev (1759-1815).
- Ekaterina Andreevna (ca. 1783—1842)
- Abram (Abraham) Andreevich (1767-1810) - Lieutenant-General and Senator.
The genus Baratynsky recorded in Part VI of the genealogical books of the Smolensk and Tambov provinces.
The Boratynsky clan confirmed its gentry origin in the Habsburg Empire, the clan was inscribed in the coat of arms of the kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria [3] .
Another branch of this genus, originating from Alexander Boratynsky, in all likelihood, from the eldest son Peter (in the lineage number 16 d. 1620), existed in the Western Territory and until 1788 preserved the family estate Boratynets-Lyadzky. His son, cornet Jan Alexandrovich, in 1697 signed the act of electing King Augustus II , these Boratyn nobles of the Grodno province [2] .
Emblem Description
Three horizontal silver (white) rivers (beams or a bar) on a red shield field are arranged in the following order: the longest of them is shown above; the average is shorter than the first, but longer than the next, lower.
In the collar there is a golden bowl, from which a dog with left-facing forepaws comes out in a red field looking to the left. The mark is red with silver. The coat of arms of the Baratynskys is included in Part 4 of the General Armorial of the noble families of the All-Russian Empire, p. 116
Notes
- ↑ Extract from the Rummel Compilation pedigree. I. 156.
- ↑ 1 2 V.V. Rummel. V.V. Golubtsov. Pedigree collection of Russian noble families. In the 2nd volume. SPb., 1886 Edition A.S. Suvorin. Tom. I. Boratynskie. pp. 156-163.
- ↑ “Poczet szlachty galicyjskiéj i bukowińskiéj” on Books.Google
Literature
- Baratynsky // Encyclopedic Lexicon : In 17 vols. - SPb. : Type of. A. Plushara , 1835–1841.
- Boratynskie or Baratynskie / / Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : 86 tons (82 tons and 4 extra). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
- Rummel V. V. , Golubtsov V. V. Pedigree collection of Russian noble families . - T. 1. - p. 156-163.
- Baratynskie or Boratynskie // Russian biographical dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. , 1900. - V. 2: Aleksinsky - Bestuzhev-Ryumin. - p. 489.
- Lyamina E. E., Pasternak E. E., Peskova A. M. Baratynskie
- Gajl T. Polish Armorial Middle Ages to 20th Century . - Gdańsk: L & L, 2007. - ISBN 978-83-60597-10-1 . (polish)
