Ilya Danilovich Miloslavsky ( July 3 (13), 1595 - May 19 (29), 1668 ) - a steward , a boyar and a diplomat . Father of Tsarina Maria Miloslavskaya , the first owner of the Fun Palace .
| Ilya Danilovich Miloslavsky | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | July 3 (13), 1595 |
| Date of death | May 19 (29) 1668 (72 years old) |
| Citizenship | Russian kingdom |
| Occupation | stolnik , boyar |
| Father | Daniil Ivanovich Miloslavsky |
| Mother | |
| Spouse | Ekaterina Fedorovna (nee Narbekova) |
| Children | Anna, Catherine, Irina and Maria |
Content
Biography
Came from a noble noble family of Miloslavsky . Born in the family of the Kursk governor Daniil Ivanovich Miloslavsky .
In 1643 he was sent to Istanbul to Sultan Ibrahim I on the return of Azov , assuring him from Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich “to be in strong brotherly friendship and love .” In 1646, with the rank of steward, he was sent together with the clerk Ivan Baibakov [1] to Holland to prepare trade agreements. He was put forward by the clerk of the Ambassadorial order , Ivan Gramotin , in whom he was a servant.
On January 16, 1648, young Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich married his daughter Maria , and 10 days later his other daughter, Anna , married the tsar’s teacher, boyar B. I. Morozov . The exalted Miloslavskys were distinguished by money-grubbing and bribery and enjoyed a bad reputation among the people. The king did not show respect for his father-in-law, called him " Ilya, not father-in-law ." Miloslavsky used the position of the tsar’s father-in-law and the newly-made boyar for his quick and immediate kin ( Leonty Stepanovich Plescheev - head of the Zemsky order and Pyotr Trahaniotov - head of the Pushkarsky order ) enrichment. In May 1648, the Salt Riot ( Moscow Uprising of 1648 ) broke out in Moscow against the Miloslavsky and other boyars. In 1651, an amusing palace was built on the territory of the Moscow Kremlin as residential chambers for Ilya Miloslavsky.
Since 1654 he took part in the war with Poland . In the 1660s, he was the head of the Foreign Order , in this field the royal father-in-law did not achieve any significant success - the treasury was scanty, taxes were rising, the unprecedented high cost due to the unsuccessful replacement of silver money with copper coin led in 1662 to the next performance of Muscovites - Medny riot . “Thieves' sheets” appeared on the streets of the city, in which the boyars I. D. Miloslavsky and I. A. Miloslavsky , the okolnichnik F. M. Rtishchev and others were declared traitors.
In 1668, 72-year-old Ilya Danilovich Miloslavsky died.
Family and Children
He was married to Ekaterina Ivanovna Narbekova, from whom she had four daughters:
- Anna Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (? - 1667), wife from 1648 of the boyar Boris Ivanovich Morozov (1590-1662)
- Catherine Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya, wife of the governor and deceit, Prince Fyodor Lvovich Volkonsky (? - 1697/1698)
- Irina Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (? - 1645), wife from 1638 of Prince Dmitry Alekseevich Dolgorukov (c. 1612-1673)
- Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (1624–1669), wife from 1648 Alexei Mikhailovich (1629–1676), the second king from the Romanov dynasty (1645–1676)
Notes
- ↑ Baibakov, Ivan // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
Links
- Miloslavsky Ilya Danilovich
- Miloslavsky, Ilya Danilovich at the Rodovod . Tree of ancestors and descendants