Georgy Nikolaevich Mikhailovsky (Garin-Mikhailovsky) ( 1890 - 1946 ) - Russian lawyer.
| Georgy Nikolaevich Mikhailovsky | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | |
| Date of death | |
| A country | |
Content
Biography
The son of an engineer, the famous Russian writer N. G. Garin-Mikhailovsky was born in the city of Ust-Katav, Ural province (according to Yu. Tsingovatov, he was born in Ust-Kamenogorsk [1] ). He studied at the Tenishevsky College [2] . He graduated from the Law Faculty of St. Petersburg University in 1911 (as well as the historical and philological [1] ) and was left at the university at the department of international law. To collect material for a dissertation on the law of the sea was sent abroad; studied in Paris - at the consular and diplomatic department of the Higher School of Political Sciences . The First World War interrupted his scientific studies. In 1914-1917 he served in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs : in a short time he went from secretary of the legal department to the head of the International Legal Department of the Ministry.
In 1918-1919 he worked in the foreign affairs agencies of the White Movement : first with General A. I. Denikin , then with General P. N. Wrangel . In February 1920, he was evacuated to Constantinople, - was the legal adviser of the Russian mission . Not wanting to participate anymore, he said, in the “afterlife of the diplomatic department”, he arrived in Czechoslovakia in October 1921; July 25, 1922 passed the test of international law, after which until 1928 he was a professor at the Department of International Law at the Russian Law Faculty of the University of Prague , headed by P. I. Novgorodtsev . Here he wrote The History of International Relations of Russia (was not published). In Prague, Mikhailovsky met N. N. Raevsky , whom he told about a meeting with his daughter Dantes, who had killed Pushkin [Comm 1] [1] .
In 1928, the Russian Law Faculty closed and Mikhailovsky began to earn literary work - several of his works of art were published in Czech and Russian.
Since 1932, the family moved to Bratislava. The source of existence here was the translation of the works of his father and articles on international law; he published a series of articles in the Slovak language under the general title "Nonsense of the Russian Revolution." He spoke 17 languages and in 1939, when national clerics came to power in Slovakia, Mikhailovsky was accepted as a translator in the Slovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs . In April 1945, on April 17, he was arrested by the SMERSH military counterintelligence, taken to the USSR, where he was sentenced to 10 years in prison camps; according to some information, he soon died in Vorkuta camps , according to others - in the Donbass [1] .
In 1993, his book was published (in two volumes), extracted from the Archive of Russian Foreign Policy : "From the History of the Russian Foreign Ministry: 1914-1920."
Family
He was married to Anna Nikolaevna Glebova (1897-1981) [3] , who came from the old Yaroslavl family of the Glebovs . Daughter of N. N. Glebov , niece of A. N. Glebov , sister of the artist T. N. Glebova . She studied at St. Petersburg University, at the Faculty of Philology. Then she taught Russian and French. Anna Mikhailovskaya wrote posthumous memoirs: “The Sisters of Gorbova” (St. Petersburg: publishing house of the Polytechnic University, 2012) [4] .
In his first marriage, since 1917, married to Pavel Dmitrievich Kozyrev; the son of an engineer D.P. Kozyrev , brother of P.D. Kozyrev . She was widowed in November 1920. She had no children in this marriage. In the second marriage, since 1921 - for George Nikolaevich Mikhailovsky.
Their son, Nikolai Georgievich Mikhailovsky (1922-2012), candidate of chemical sciences, worked at the Institute of Experimental Endocrinology of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Bratislava.
Comments
- ↑ Raevsky recorded his story: “The professor of international law, Georgy Nikolayevich Garin-Mikhailovsky (the son of the writer), handed me over and allowed me to publicize the following. In July-August 1913, he became intimately acquainted with an elderly lady (50–55 years old), Countess d'Anthes and her daughter Francoise (20 years old). The countess told Garin-Mikhailovsky that she was the daughter of Dantes, who had killed Pushkin, from her second marriage. To the question of Mikhailovsky, was Dantes in connection with Nat. Nick., The countess replied that there could be no doubt about this and that her father himself did not hide it. It goes without saying that the countess’s story in this part has to be taken with extreme caution. However, according to Garin-Mikhailovsky, it is absolutely unbelievable that this venerable elderly Frenchwoman would invent her origin from Dantes. ”
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Conscientious Russian intellectual away from the “lost homeland”
- ↑ He was a classmate of V. M. Zhirmunsky , who wrote in his diary in 1906: “Mikhailovsky, a tearful socialist, as the class called him after this bomber burst into tears in response to N. I.’s somewhat sarcastic remark”
- ↑ Mikhailovsky, Georgy Nikolaevich at the Rodovod. Tree of ancestors and descendants
- ↑ See about her Mikhailovsky N. G. My memories of the Russian gymnasium in the city of Moravsk Trebova // “Together”. - Bratislava . - 2000. - No. 3, 4; see also: Russian Bratislava. Anna Nikolaevna Glebova-Mikhailovskaya. Poems (publication) // Problems of the History of the Russian Abroad. Vol. 1. - M .: IVI RAS, 2005. - S. 381-387; see also: Glebova-Mikhailovskaya, Anna (Russian Bratislava) ; see also: Sixteen Fridays: Second Wave of the Leningrad Vanguard / Edition prepared by Elena Spitsyna. // Experiment / Experiment: Journal of Russian culture. - LA, USA. - 2010. - No. 16. In 2 hours