Pavel Semenovich Malyutin (July 23 ( August 3 ) 1792 , Moscow - August 23 ( September 4 ) 1860 , Nizhny Novgorod ) - Russian businessman, merchant of the 1st guild, Hereditary honorary citizen (since 1837), owner of the trading house “P . Malyutin & Co. ”, philanthropist and philanthropist.
| Pavel Semenovich Malyutin | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | July 23 ( August 3 ) 1792 |
| Place of Birth | Moscow |
| Date of death | August 23 ( September 4 ) 1860 (68 years old) |
| A place of death | Nizhny Novgorod |
| Nationality | |
| Occupation | businessman |
| Father | Semyon Semyonovich Malyutin |
| Mother | Avdotya Grigoryevna Malyutina (nee Plotnikova) |
| Spouse | Ekaterina Fedorovna Malyutina |
| Children | Semyon, Mikhail, Nikolay, Pavel, Evdokia [1] , Alexandra |
Content
- 1 Biography
- 2 notes
- 3 Literature
- 4 References
Biography
Pavel Semenovich Malyutin was born in Moscow on July 23 (August 3), 1792 in a merchant family.
His father, Semyon Semyonovich Malyutin (1749-1831) came from the Kaluga province , was listed as a merchant of the 3rd guild in Kaluga. Since 1786, he enrolled in the Moscow merchants of the 3rd guild and married the daughter of the famous Moscow merchant G.I. Plotnikov, Avdotya Grigoryevna. In 1821 he was ranked among the merchants of the 2nd guild, and in 1830 - the 1st guild. He traded in liquid products (paints, glues, technical oils and other chemicals) in Moscow and since 1824 in St. Petersburg. By the end of his life, his fortune exceeded 2 million rubles.
The case of S. S. Malyutin was inherited by sons, forming the Malyutin Brothers society: Mikhail Semenovich Malyutin (1790-1857) conducted business in St. Petersburg, Pavel Semenovich in Moscow; Nikolai Semyonovich Malyutin (1800-1852) helped them. The main business of the Company was the sale of textile products: scarves, chintz and canvas, then brocade, paper yarn, raw cotton, and woolen goods; they were also engaged in the wholesale supply of tea and goat fluff; they established sales of goods in the village. Ivanovo and Voznesensky Posad (since 1871 - Ivanovo-Voznesensk), Kazan and Astrakhan, constantly participated in the Nizhny Novgorod and Rostov fairs. By 1835, the turnover of the St. Petersburg branch of the Company alone exceeded 3.5 million rubles. In 1837, a chemical plant was opened in the village. Kupavna of the Bogorodsky district of Moscow province , in 1843 they bought a paper spinning factory of Prince. Golitsyn-Prozorovsky in the village of Ramenskoye, Bronnitsky district, Moscow province, and converted it; set up a paper-and-paper factory in Moscow, subsequently acquired gold mines in the Tomsk province , the Kokshan chemical plant (together with the Ushkovs) in the Yelabuga district of the Vyatka province, forest dachas (10.5 thousand hectares) and a glass factory in the Kadnikovsky district of the Vologda province and other enterprises , in 1860 opened a beet sugar factory in with. Doktorovo of the Bogorodsky district of the Moscow province.
After the death of childless brothers, M. S. and N. S. Malyutin, all property of the Malyutin Brothers society passed into the possession of Pavel Semyonovich Malyutin, who renamed it Pavel Malyutin and Ko Trading House. His sons Semyon Pavlovich (c. 1842 - no later than 1869), Mikhail Pavlovich (1850-1902), Nikolai Pavlovich (16.5.1852 - 2.7.1907), Pavel Pavlovich (1856-1892), inherited 6.3 million from his father. rub. silver, and after graduating from the Moscow Commercial School, became directors of a family trading house, renamed in 1869 as “Pavel Malyutin Sons”.
Notes
- ↑ In marriage, Voronin
Literature
- Malyutins / Ulyanova G.N. // Great Russian Encyclopedia : [in 35 vols.] / Ch. ed. Yu.S. Osipov . - M .: Great Russian Encyclopedia, 2004—2017.