Prince Alexei Grigoryevich Chertenok Dolgorukov (d. July 1, 1646 ) - the son of the boyar and the head, then the governor , the youngest (second) son of the governor of Prince Grigory Ivanovich Chert Dolgorukov .
| Alexey G. Dolgorukov | |
|---|---|
| Date of death | |
| A country | |
| Occupation | |
| Children | and |
Biography
In 1601, Prince Aleksey Chertenok Dolgorukov was sent to replace the ill Prince N. A. Lvov by head in Moscow : "from Neglinna along Pokrovskaya Street." In 1604 he was appointed governor to Mikhailov instead of Prince Boris Priimkov-Rostovsky , and in 1605 he swore allegiance to False Demetrius I , who appointed him to the post of the second governor of the advanced regiment in Serpukhov . Alexei Dolgorukov was the brother-in-law of Tsar Vasily Ivanovich Shuisky , both were married to their sisters - Princess Pelageya and Maria Petrovna Buinosov-Rostovsky .
He participated in the struggle against Polish-Lithuanian invaders and supporters of False Dmitry II , in 1607 he recaptured the city of Dedilov from the rebels. In 1606 he was appointed to the Voivodeship in Serpukhov , and in 1608 he became governor in Kolomna . In 1614, Alexei Grigorievich Dolgorukov was appointed Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich governor in Kaluga . In 1621 - 1623 he was in the province of Bryansk . In 1624 - 1625 he was governor in Sviyazhsk .
On July 1, 1646, the governor, Prince Alexei Grigoryevich Chertenok Dolgorukov, died and was buried in the Epiphany monastery.
Family
Prince Alexei Grigoryevich Chertenok Dolgorukov was married to Princess Pelageya Petrovna Buinosova-Rostovskaya (c. 1580 - 1659 ), daughter of Prince Peter Ivanovich Buinosov-Rostovsky .
Children:
- Yuri Alekseevich Dolgorukov (c. 1606-1682), a major Russian military leader, boyar and voivode ,
- Dmitry Alekseevich Dolgorukov (c. 1612–1673), steward , okolnichy and governor,
- Pyotr Alekseevich Dolgorukov (c. 1616–1669), a stolnik and a deceased.
Links
- Dolgorukov, Alexey Grigoryevich (voivode) // Russian Biographical Dictionary : in 25 volumes. - SPb. - M. , 1896-1918.