Count Alexander Vasilyevich Gudovich (1869, Old Ivityonki , Chernihiv Province - January 1919 , Moscow ) - Kutaisi Governor (1916-1917), the last private owner of the estate Vvedenskoye , which was completely rebuilt.
| Alexander Vasilievich Gudovich | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||
| Predecessor | Lev Vladimirovich Potulov | ||||||
| Successor | position abolished | ||||||
| Birth | |||||||
| Death | |||||||
| Rod | Gudovichi | ||||||
Content
Biography
From a noble family . Great-grandson of Lieutenant-General Count Vasily Vasilyevich Gudovich ; the son of the guard, Colonel Count Vasily Vasilyevich Gudovich (1819–1886) and Princess Varvara Nikolaevna Shcherbatova (1834–1882), daughter of the Moscow civil governor N. A. Shcherbatov . Had an older brother Basil .
- 1892-1902 - Gadyatsky district leader of the nobility
- 1895 - camera Junker
- 1901 - State Councilor
- 1902–1905 - Yaroslavl Vice-Governor
- Ministry of the Interior official
- Chamberlain of the highest court
- 1916–1917 - Kutaisi Governor
Count Gudovich was arrested in November 1918. O. G. Sheremeteva recalled: “ Sergey ’s situation is so serious that he was not arrested. But they took Pavel, Boris, Gudovich, Saburov ... Anna is very worried about her husband and son, and although she speaks of the will of God, of fate, it seems that anxiety breaks through. Marya is calm ... " [1] . He was sentenced to "stay in the camp until the end of the Civil War ." In September 1919, he was taken to Moscow , where he was shot along with other hostages in response to an explosion by anarchists of the building of the Moscow Committee of the RCP (b) [2] . For a long time, the relatives did not know anything about his fate. Sergey Golitsyn, in his memoirs of “The Survivor’s Notes” wrote:
... Anna Sergeyevna Saburova and Countess Maria Sergeyevna Gudovich, otherwise - aunt Anna and aunt Marya. But the last two did not consider themselves widows. Their husbands - the former Petersburg governor Alexander Petrovich Saburov and the former Kutaisi governor count Alexander Vasilyevich Gudovich - were arrested. Since then, their wives and sons have been trying to find out about their fate. but nowhere and never received a response. Both Aunt Anna and Aunt Marya were convinced that their husbands were alive, that they were being held in some mysterious prison ... [3]
Family
His wife (from January 1900) was countess Maria Sergeevna Sheremeteva (05/19/1880–17.03.1945), maid of honor of the court (11/14/1898), the youngest daughter of Count Sergei Dmitrievich Sheremetev (1844-1918) from his marriage to Princess Ekaterina Pavlovna Vyazemskaya (1849) —1929); heiress of the estate Vvedenskoe. The wedding was in the home church of the Life-Giving Trinity of the Sheremetev Strange House in Moscow. Seriously engaged in painting under the guidance of N. P. Bogdanov-Belsky . In the early 1920s, she was arrested and imprisoned in Butyrka prison. After being liberated in 1924 from Moscow, she moved to Tsaritsyno. From the mid-1930s she lived in Rybinsk in the family of her youngest son, where she died. Married born:
- Varvara (1900–1938, shot), wife of Prince Vladimir Vasilyevich Obolensky (1890–1937, shot);
- Dmitry (1903–1937), “simple-hearted, sociable, handsome, he immediately disposed in his favor” [4] . In 1920, he was arrested for the first time, and after his release he returned to his family. In 1924, he was again arrested and exiled to Cherdyn; in 1927, released under an amnesty. In 1929, he was arrested with his brother Andrew and sent to the Belbaltlag camp. From 1932 he worked on the construction of the Moscow-Volga canal. In 1936 he was arrested in Dmitrov and in July 1937 he was shot at Donskoy Cemetery.
- Maria (1905–1940), since 1928, the wife of Prince Sergey Sergeevich Lvov (1902–1938, executed), the son of S. E. Lvov ; tragically died (drowned).
- Andrew (1907-1994), in 1929, was arrested with his brother, sentenced to three years in exile in Siberia. After his release he lived in Dmitrov and worked on the construction of the Moscow-Volga canal. Later he worked on the construction of the Rybinsk hydroelectric complex.
Notes
- ↑ Sheremeteva, O. G. Search on Vozdvizhenka // Sheremetevs in the fate of Russia: Memoirs. Diaries. Letters / Auto-comp. A.I. Alekseeva, M.D. Kovaleva. - M .: Publishing house "Zvonnitsa", 2001. - p. 275-276. - 5000 copies - ISBN 5-88093-089-0 .
- ↑ Gudovichi // Great Russian Encyclopedia / S. L. Kravets. - M .: The Great Russian Encyclopedia, 2007. - T. 8. - p. 137. - 767 p. - 60 000 copies - ISBN 978-5-85270-338-5 .
- ↑ Golitsyn S. Notes of the survivor: Roman. - M .: Orbita, 1990. - 736 p. - S. 143. ISBN 5-85210-018-8
- ↑ Aksakova T. A. Recent years in Kaluga // Family chronicle: in 2 books: [ rus ] . - Paris: Atheneum, 1988. - T. 2. - p. 69. - 351 p.
Literature
- Great Russian Encyclopedia : 30 T. / Preds. scientific - ed. Council Yu. S. Osipov; rep. ed. S.L. Kravets. - M .: Great Russian Encyclopedia, 2007. - T. 8: Grigoriev — Dynamics. - 767 s. - p. 137. ( ISBN 978-5-85270-338-5 T.8)
- Rukhlyadko I.N., Rozhkov R.S. The village of Ivaytenki - the estate of the Gudovich graphs . Unechsky local history museum (May 3, 2017). The date of circulation is July 2, 2017.