Oubril is a Belgian noble family from which several generations of major diplomats of the Russian Empire came from:
- Catholic Yakov Ubri (1734-1779), having arrived in Russia, served as an adviser to the head of the board of foreign affairs, N. I. Panin , who generously endowed him with serfs.
- His son Pyotr Yakovlevich (1774-1847) was a real Privy Councilor and Ambassador to Madrid and Frankfurt
- Pavel Petrovich Ubri (1818-96), the son of the previous one, served as the envoy of Russia in the German and Austrian empires [1] .
- His son Pyotr Yakovlevich (1774-1847) was a real Privy Councilor and Ambassador to Madrid and Frankfurt
| Clean up | |
|---|---|
| Coat of arms description: see text | |
| Volume and sheet of the Common Stamp | V, 146 |
| Provinces in the Republic of Kazakhstan of which the genus is introduced | St. Petersburg |
| Part of the genealogy book | III |
| Ancestor | Yakov Yakovlevich Ubri |
| Place of origin | Flanders |
| Nationality | |
| Estates | Blasters |
In 1795, the Ubri clan was introduced by the Provincial Noble Assembly in the third part of the noble genealogy of the St. Petersburg province of the Russian Empire [1] .
According to the data for 1884, the family estates of Ubri were located in several counties of the Vitebsk province and included the village of Klyastitsy . In addition, P.P. Ubri belonged to 1/3 of the Noi-Otengof manor of the Riga county of Livonia province. Later, he acquired part of the Yakubovo estate of the Drissen district of Vitebsk province.
Emblem Description
In a shield with a gold field, a blue stripe is depicted perpendicularly, in the middle of which is a silver lily and two pentagonal gold stars.
The shield is crowned with a noble helmet and crown. Crest: two black eagle wings spread out and a pentagonal star-shaped star is visible between them. The mark on the shield is blue, lined with gold. The coat of arms of the noble clan Ubri is included in Part V of the General Tombstone of the noble clans of the All-Russian Empire , page 146 [2] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 Ubri, a noble family // Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary : in 86 volumes (82 volumes and 4 additional). - SPb. , 1890-1907.
- ↑ Coat of Arms of Ubri