Andrei Mikhailovich Ryabinin (born 1772/1773 - d. In 1854 or 1855 (until April 29)) - State Councilor , first director of the Moscow Assignation Bank in 1804-1809. One of the last in the history of carriers of the rank of chamberlain [1] .
| Andrey Mikhailovich Ryabinin | |
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| Date of Birth | |
| Date of death | |
| Occupation | Director of Moscow Assignment Bank |
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The son of Admiral M.I. Ryabinin . In 1780 he was assigned to the Preobrazhensky Regiment, in 1782 he was promoted to junior non-commissioned officer. On January 25, 1790, with the rank of captain, he was appointed the adjutant wing under Vice President of the Admiralty Board Column I. G. Chernyshev .
He took part in the following campaigns: in 1790 - on the ship “Three Hierarchs” he was cruising in the Baltic Sea and in battles with the Swedish fleet at Krasnaya Gorka; June 22 - with the defeat of the enemy fleet during its breakthrough from the Vyborg Bay; in 1791, on the ship "12 Apostles" stood on the Kronstadt raid. In 1793, on the ship "Three Hierarchs" went from Revel to Copenhagen.
In 1797, Ryabinin was appointed to the Provincial State as Chief Provincial Master. On January 1, 1799 he was appointed to the emperor’s retinue according to the quartermaster unit, on the 17th he was promoted to colonel, and on January 22 he was appointed an adjutant outhouse to Paul I, but already on November 3 he was appointed a brigade major for infantry.
Appointed on April 8, 1800 as a valid chamberlain, and on May 1 he was appointed adviser to the State Assignation Bank, renaming from a military rank to full state advisers. On January 13, 1804 he took the place of the first director in the Moscow branch of this bank, and on June 8 he was appointed manager of this branch and the Moscow accounting office. September 22, 1807 received the Order of St. Vladimir 3rd degree.
Ryabinin occupied the position of director until 1809, when he was removed from office for a discovered shortage of copper money worth 100,245 rubles. At that time, only 30 peasant souls were behind him in the St. Petersburg province.
Ryabinin was in many years of friendly relations with Karamzin and with Prince A. I. Vyazemsky (the father of the writer). Karamzin took a living part in the fate of Ryabinin and in January 1817 sent a letter to Alexander I , attaching a note to him in the Ryabinin case and asking the sovereign to show mercy to “one of his kind and honest subjects,” that is, “to be ranked as a Herald ” as Ryabinin wanted. Karamzin’s request was successful.
A. M. Ryabinin since the 1820s He lived in Moscow and on the estate of his wife Bryn, Zhizdrinsky district, Kaluga province .
He was married to Princess Ekaterina Alekseevna, daughter of Prince Alexei Leontyevich Shakhovsky. Children: Alexander (guard staff captain, born August 23, 1808, d. December 31, 1857), Mikhail (call ass., Born January 2, 1814, died December 6, 1867), Alexey (born August 1 1800, died in Moscow on April 3, 1882, d.s.s.), the daughters of Varvara, Natalia (d. 1891) and Catherine.
A. M. Ryabinin was a founding member of the Imperial Moscow Society of Agriculture and in 1846, on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of society, received a silver medal from him.
Uncle I.I. Pushchina .
Notes
- ↑ A real chamberlain // Court staff // Mesyatseslov and the general staff of the Russian Empire in 1839. Part one. - SPb. : Printing house at the Imperial Academy of Sciences , 1839. - S. 6.
Sources
- Russian Biographical Dictionary vol. 17. 1918