Prince Ivan Andreevich Tatev (d. After 1606 ) - steward and governor .
| Ivan Andreevich Tatev | |
|---|---|
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | steward and governor |
| Father | Ivan Andreevich Tatev |
| Spouse | Anastasia Ivanovna Tateva |
| Children | childless |
Biography
Representative of the princely family of Tatevs . The eldest son of the governor of Prince Andrei Ivanovich Tatev . The younger brothers are the princes Fedor, Yuri and Semyon Tatev .
In 1587, Prince I.A. Tatev, together with Shuisky and other representatives of the noble nobility, plotted to get a divorce from Tsar Fyodor Ivanovich and Irina , sister of the ruler Boris Godunov , who suffered from infertility. The conspiracy was directed against Boris Godunov, who was considered too " thin " to rule the state. The conspirators, however, were exposed and repressed, with Prince Ivan Andreevich Tatev being exiled to Astrakhan .
However, already since 1598, Prince I. A. Tatev was returned from exile to the " sovereign service ." In 1598 - 1599 he was the first governor of a Ukrainian guard guard regiment stationed in Orel . In 1600 - 1601 he was the first governor in Livny and the first governor of a guard regiment in Orel . His deputy and second governor was Bogdan Ivanovich Polev . In 1603, Prince Ivan Tatev with a military detachment was sent from Moscow to Vyazma to capture the robbers.
In 1604 - the governor in Chernigov . He changed the oath of allegiance to Boris Godunov and went over to the side of False Dmitry I , although he had circulated letters shortly before that, proving that the newly arrived “ Tsarevich Dmitry ” was none other than the monk Grigory Otrepyev . After the city was surrendered to the impostor, Prince Ivan Tatev went over to his side and accompanied the impostor on his campaigns. After the defeat at Starodub, False Dmitry fled to Putivl , where Ivan Tatev followed him. On behalf of False Dmitry, Prince Ivan Andreevich Tatev traveled from Putivl to the Polish King and Grand Duke of Lithuania, Sigismund III Vase , asking him for military assistance.
In 1606, Prince Ivan Andreevich Tatev attended the wedding of False Dmitry and Marina Yurievna Mnishek , meeting in the hallway the Polish-Lithuanian Embassy sent by Sigismund III to this celebration. After the deposition of the impostor and his assassination, Tatev no longer played a significant role in political life.
Sources
- Russian biographical dictionary : 25 tons. / Under the supervision of A. A. Polovtsov. 1896-1918.