Nikita Trubetskoy

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Prince Nikita Yurievich Trubetskoy (Никита Юрьевич Трубецкой in Russian) (May 26, 1699 - October 16, 1767) was a Russian statesman and Field Marshal (1756), minister of defense of Russia 1760.

His parents were general-poruchik and senator Yuri Troubetzkoy (20 April 16688 September 1739), who was governor of Belgorod, and Elena Grigorevna Tcherkassky (b. before 1696).

In 1715-1717, Nikita Trubetskoy was educated abroad. He started his military career as the batman of Peter I. In 1722 he joined the Preobrazhensky Regiment in the rank of sergeant and promoted to ensign in 1727. In 1730, Trubetskoy was one of staunch opponents of the Supreme Privy Council and supported the empress Anna Ivanovna. He had taken part in all of the Russian wars up until 1740, when he was appointed General-Prosecutor of the Senate. Trubetskoy remained on this post until 1760. He headed the investigation and trial of Andrei Osterman (1741), Aleksei Bestuzhev-Ryumin (1758) and others. In 1760, Trubetskoy became a senator and president of the Military Board. He retired in 1763.

Nikita Trubetskoy is known to have been a very enlightened man and connoisseur of art. He was a friend of prince Antioch Kantemir and writer Mikhail Kheraskov, and a patron of Yakov Shakhovsky.

[edit] Family and children

Nikita Trubetskoy was married two times. On 11 April 1722 he married Countess Anastasia Gavrilovna Golovkin (? – 27 April). Secondly, on 10 November 1735 he married Princess Anna Drucka-Sokolinska (ca. 1712 – before 1780). In this marriages he had numerous children, including:

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Preceded by
Pavel Yaguzhinsky
General-Prosecutor of Russia
1740 – 1760
Succeeded by
Yakov Shakhovsky

[edit] External links