Ivan Ivanovich Chicherin - the Duma clerk of 1609-1613, one of the minor figures of the Time of Troubles ; in 1613-1633, a diplomat and governor . [one]
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An adherent of False Dmitry II , in 1609 he signed his letter to Sapieha about the speedy departure of Lithuanian and Polish military people and Don Cossacks with Alexander Lisovsky to protect Uglich and Yaroslavl . [one]
He participated in the solemn embassy on January 31, 1610 to King Sigismund , when "people of various ranks took over the representation of the Russian state " and was awarded a house in Moscow and a local salary for being among those who, as stated in the letter from King Sigismund dated September 21, 1610, "we came to our royal majesty and thought we served before everyone else ... and while they came to us ... near Smolensk , Prince Vasily Shuisky ... ruined their yards in Moscow to the base ...". During the reign of Alexander Gonsevsky in Moscow, Chicherin almost alone signed all letters and petitions, because "all the old clerks were driven away." He brought to Smolensk the news of the death of False Dmitry II. In 1611, appointed by the Duma clerk on the Local Order , Ivan Ivanovich, among other boyars , parish , duma nobles and duma clerks, signed a letter from the Moscow Boyar Duma to the Smolensk governors Mikhail Shein and Gorchakov on the immediate surrender of Smolensk to King Sigismund. [one]
He also signed the well-known letters of exhortation on August 25 and 26, 1612, and the letter of election of Mikhail Romanov to the kingdom in May 1613. In the same year he was sent to Persia with a notice of accession to the throne of Mikhail Fedorovich. In 1616, Chicherin, with the rank of solicitor, was the governor of the guard regiment in Novosili , and the following year the bailiff of the English ambassador. In 1618, together with Prince M. Baryatinsky and clerk M. Tyukhin - as part of the embassy in Persia at the court of Shah Abbas I the Great [2] . In 1625 he was granted the Moscow nobleman and traveled to Persia for the second time, upon returning from where he was appointed governor to Ufa , where he remained until 1628. In the years 1630-1631 he spent the governor in Kazan , the next year he was governor at the Bersenevsky Gate in Moscow, and then again “year” the governor in Kazan. Over the past 7-8 years of his career, he often earned the high honor of being invited to the sovereign's table. He cut his hair in 1633. His fiefdom is the village of Rozhdestvensky , 10-15 km from Uglich. [one]
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Chicherin, Ivan Ivanovich // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
- ↑ Poletaev A.V. The last point in the biography of M.A. Tyukhin . Electronic scientific archive of Ural Federal University . Ural Federal University named after the first President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin.
Literature
- Chicherin, Ivan Ivanovich // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.