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Barbashina

Barbashins - the Russian princely family, a branch of the Glazaty-Shuysky princes ( Suzdal and Nizhny Novgorod ). Representatives of her inheritance did not have and served the great princes of Moscow. The genus is listed in the Velvet Book. [one]

Content

  • 1 History of the genus
  • 2 Genealogy
  • 3 See also
  • 4 notes
  • 5 Literature
  • 6 References

Family History

Founder Ivan Aleksandrovich Barbash , Prince Glazaty-Shuisky , great-grandson of the Grand Duke of Nizhny Novgorod Suzdal Prince Semyon Dmitrievich , son of Alexander Vasilievich Glazaty, Prince Shuisky [2] .

Prince Ivan Aleksandrovich Barbash is known for serving Ivan III in the Novgorod campaign of 1495, and led the army of the ships on a campaign in Kazan in 1499. His eldest son, Prince Mikhail Ivanovich Barbashin , in the campaign of 1495 was a sovereign in bed. The second son, Vladimir , is mentioned in the same campaign and in the rank of the wedding of Prince V.D. Kholmsky in 1500. Two more sons, Fedor and Boris, are known only by genealogy.

The most famous is the youngest son, Prince Ivan Ivanovich Barbashin . In 1521, he was the head when collecting troops in Serpukhov , then he was a regimental governor , and in 1529 he was granted the boyar . In 1530, Ivan Ivanovich took part in the Kazan campaign . Since that time, he took the place of the first governor in large regiments. In the infancy of Ivan the Terrible, he was among the twenty boyars who made up the Supreme Duma. In the first year of the reign of Elena Glinsky, Ivan Ivanovich was appointed governor of Novgorod-Seversky ; then he built a fortress in Velizh in the Toropetsk district on the old settlement and burned out the outskirts of Vitebsk , from where he returned with many prisoners. He died in 1541.

Ivan Ivanovich knows five sons. The eldest, Ivan Ivanovich the Younger, was the first governor of the Yartaul regiments on campaigns in 1544 and 1549. Peter was tonsured a monk named Porfiry. Nikita Ivanovich was the head in the campaign of 1544. Vasily Ivanovich , starting his service in 1540, for thirty years participated in all campaigns on the Lithuanian border and in Livonia . In 1554, he participated in the capture of Astrakhan , then - in a campaign against Livonia , in which in 1560 he destroyed a thousandth detachment of enemies five versts from Ermes and captured 11 commanders, 120 knights and the main leader, Land Marshal Philip Bel. Subsequently, Prince Vasily Ivanovich served in the guardsmen . The last time is mentioned as the voivode in Tarus in 1571, the oprichnik of Ivan the Terrible in 1573 [3] .

The last representative of the clan was Princess Martha (Maria) Vasilyevna Barbashina (d. 1633), daughter of Vasily Ivanovich. She married Prince Vladimir Timofeevich Dolgorukov and was the mother of Mary , the first wife of Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov .

Genealogy

  • Ivan Aleksandrovich Glazy Barabash (mentioned 1499)
    • Mikhail Ivanovich Barbashin (mentioned in 1495)
    • Vladimir Ivanovich Barbashin (d. 1507)
    • Fedor Ivanovich Barbashin
      • Andrey Fedorovich Barbashin
    • Boris Ivanovich Barbashin
    • Ivan Ivanovich Barbashin - since 1529 boyar [4] (d. 1541)
      • Ivan Ivanovich Barbashin
      • Peter Ivanovich Barbashin (as a monk Porfiry)
      • Andrey Ivanovich Barbashin
      • Nikita Ivanovich Barbashin
      • Vasily Ivanovich Barbashin (died after 1571) - the last in the family
        • Marfa (Maria) Vasilievna (d. 1633) is the third wife of Vladimir Timofeevich Dolgorukov , the mother of Maria , the first wife of Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich .

See also

  • Shui
  • Eyed-Shuysky

Notes

  1. ↑ N. Novikov. The genealogy book of princes and nobles of Russia and those who traveled (Velvet book). In 2 parts. Part I. Type: University type. 1787 Family of princes Barbashins. pg. 71-72.
  2. ↑ Barbashins, princes // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
  3. ↑ List of guardsmen of Ivan the Terrible. St. Petersburg, 2003, Ed. Russian National Library. // List of guardsmen of Ivan the Terrible, indicating their services and “Salary Appeal” in 1573
  4. ↑ W. Berch. Systematic lists of the boyars, deceased and duma nobles. SPb. 1833 Printing house H. Ginze. pg. 31.

Literature

  • Barbashins // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.
  • V.V. Boguslavsky, E.I. Kuksina Slavic Encyclopedia. Kievan Rus - Muscovy: in 2 vols. Olma-press, 2005. Vol. 1 p. 58 ISBN 5-224-02249-5 ISBN 5-224-02250-9
  • The history of the clans of the Russian nobility: In 2 book. / autostat P.N. Petrov . - M .: Contemporary; Vocabulary, 1991. - T. 1. - S. 237. - 50,000 copies. - ISBN 5-270-01513-7 .
  • Barbashina // Encyclopedic lexicon , 1835, ed. Plyushara, vol. IV, p. 320

Links

  • Genealogy
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title= Barbash&oldid = 98579894


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