Meshchersky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The coat of arms of the Meshchersky family.

Meshchersky (also transliterated as Mestchérsky) is a princely family whose title was recognized by the Russian Empire.

Origin

The family descends from the medieval independent rulers of the Meshchera tribe.[1] Their title of prince was confirmed by the Emperor Paul I of Russia on 30 June 1798.[1]

The family was somewhat arbitrarily grouped in documentation together with Tatar princely families of the Russian Empire. The neighboring Tatar kingdom subjugated lords of the Meshchera tribe under its suzerainty, and some of them converted to Islam and bore Muslim-like first names; but soon, under Russian subjugation, subsequent generations converted to the Eastern Orthodox faith and used Slavic Christian names. The family was listed in the first part of the Registers of the Nobility of Russia, which became formalized in the 19th century or earlier.

The book Notice sur les principales familles de la Russie does not mention the Meshchersky family at all, which may be attributable to the well-established animosity towards the Meshcherskys of its author, Prince Pyotr Dolgorukov.

Estates

The Meshcherskys had estates particularly in Ukraine, examples of their lands being at: Pokrovskoe, Petrovskoe, Lotoshino, and the Vesholi-Podol Palace in Poltava. The estate of Petrovskoye-Alabino, near Moscow, is currently claimed by Yevgeniy Meshchersky.

Members

A Meshchersky family chapel and crypt in Warsaw cemetery.

Prince Ivan Sergeyevich Meshchersky (b. 11 December 1775 - d. 17 March 1851) m. to Sophia Sergeyevna Vsevolojskaya (b. 19 January 1775 - d. 4 October 1848)

  • Prince Vassili Ivanovich Meshchersky (b. 1791 - d. 14 February 1871)
    • Princess Elena Vassilievna Meshcherskaya (b. St.Petersburg 14 January 1820 - d. Wartenberg 7 October 1905) m. Calixt Gustav Hermann Biron von Curland (b. Schleise 3 January 1817 - d. Wartenberg 8 March 1882)[2]
  • Prince Peter Ivanovich Meshchersky (b. 28 May 1802 - d. 14 April 1876) m. Princess Ekaterina Mikhailovna Karamzine (b. 1809 - d. 1867)
    • Prince Nicolas Petrovich Meshchersky (b. 1828 - d. Dushno 11 January 1901), m. countess Maria Alexandrovna Panina (d. Dushno 30 September 1903)
      • Princess Ekaterina Nicolaievna (b. 1855)
      • Prince Alexander Nicolaevich Meshchersky (b. 9 April 1862)
      • Princess Alexandra Nikolaievna Meshcherskaya. B. in Moscow 28 September 1864, d. in Budapest 7 July 1941. M. in Dugino 29 June 1887 to Prince Pavel Pavlovich Galitzine (b. 1856 - d. 1916).[3]
      • Princess Maria Nicolaievna Meshcherskaya, b. 10 April 1866 at St. Petersburg, m. count Nicolas Mikhailovitch Tolstoj and died in Asnieres, France 30 October 1948.
      • Princess Sonja Nicolaievna Meshcherskaya m. Boris Wassiltchilkoff.
      • Prince Peter Nicolaevich Meshchersky (b. Moscow 24 May 1869 - d. Paris 17 November 1944), m. Vera von Struve (b. Tokyo 4 February 1876 - d. Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois 17 December 1949), daughter of Karl von Struve[4]
        • Prince Nicolas Petrovich Meshchersky (bSt. Petersburg 21 November 1905 - d. Versailles 18 July 1966), m. Berlin 12 January 1948 to Yvonne Claire Marie Amélie Leroux (b. Les Mureaux 7 June 1911 - d. Louveciennes 9 August 2004)
          • Prince Piotr Nicolaevich Meshchersky (b. Paris 4 June 1948) m. Saint-Michel-en-Brenne 8 June 1973 to Caroline Marie Paule Sophie Lebaudy (b. Neuilly-sur-Seine 9 June 1950)[5]
            • Prince Nikolai Alexander Maria Petrovich Meshchersky (b. Neuilly-sur-Seine 8 February 1976)
            • Prince Kirill Petrovich Meshchersky (b. Paris 31 March 1977)
            • Princess Sophie Petrovna Meshscherskaya (b. Paris 10 January 1980)
        • Prince Kyrill Petrovich Meshchersky (b. St. Petersburg 1907 - d. Rio de Janeiro 1947), m. in Paris 1944 to Maria Janara Baffa Trasci Amalfitani (b. Buenos Aires 1926 - d. Rio de Janeiro 22 May 1947).[6] Kyrill Petrovich Meshchersky lost his life on 22 May 1947 in a crash near Rio de Janeiro, Brazil with his wife and his younger son.
          • Prince Rostislav Kirillovich Meshchersky (b. Paris 1944 - d. suicide 4 November 1976)
          • Princess Alexandra Kirillovna Meshcherskaya (b. Paris 1945)
          • Prince Nikita Kirillovich Meshhersky (b. 1947 - d. Rio de Janeiro 22 May 1947)
        • Prince Nikita Petrovich Meshchersky (b. St. Petersburg 1909 - d. 1940)
        • Princess Marina Petrovna Meshcherskaya (b. St. Petersburg 1913) m. 1) count Michael Vorontsov-Dashkoff (b. 9 July 1904 - d. 14 March 1983) 2) count Ivan Schuvaloff[7]
      • Princess Natasha Nicolaievna Meshcherskaya (b. 1877 - d. 1944) m. in Nice 16 April 1903 to count Pavel Ignatieff[8] (b. 1870 - d. 1945)[9]
    • Prince Vladimir Petrovich (b. 11 January 1839 - d. 23 July 1914)[1]

Prince Petr Sergeyevich Meshchersky (b. 1778 - d. 1857) m. to Ekaterina Ivanova Chernysheva

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.