Andrey Gagarin
Andrey Gagarin | |
---|---|
Prince Andrey Petrovich Gagarin | |
Andrey Gagarin in Saint Petersburg in 2002 | |
Spouse |
Tatiana Andreevna Shmit Tatiana Valentinovna Jakovleva Tatiana Ivanovna Nukhina |
Issue |
Prince Dmitri Andreevich Princess Maria Andreevna Princess Julia Andreevna |
House | House of Gagarin, House of Rurik |
Father | Prince Peter Andreevich Gagarin |
Mother | Varvara Vasilievna Sheshina |
Born |
Leningrad, Russia | 9 July 1934
Died |
30 January 2011 76) Maryland, USA | (aged
Burial | Saint Petersburg, Russia |
Prince Andrey Petrovich Gagarin (Russian: Князь Андрей Петрович Гагарин, 9 July 1934 in Leningrad, today St. Petersburg, Russia - 30 January 2011 Maryland, USA) was a Russian prince of the Rurik dynasty and a professor of physics at Saint Petersburg Polytechnical University.[1][2][3]
Background
As the son of Prince Peter Andreevich Gagarin (Russian: Князь Петр Андреевич Гагарин, 1904–1938, victim of Stalin's purges [4]) and grandson of Prince Andrey Grigorievich Gagarin (Russian: Князь Андрей Григорьевич Гагарин, 1855–1920), Andrey Petrovich Gagarin walked in the footsteps of his closest ancestors. His father was a graduate of the same Polytechnical University for which his grandfather was the first rector,[5] and at which Andrey Petrovich Gagarin held a professorship. Great-grandfather was the well known diplomat, artist, officer and the vice-chancellor of the Imperial Academy of Arts Prince Grigory Grigorievich Gagarin (Russian: Князь Григорий Григорьевич Гагарин, 1810–1893), himself a son of Prince Grigory Ivanovich Gagarin (Russian: Князь Григорий Иванович Гагарин, 1782–1837), poet, diplomat and patron of the arts, later ambassador to Rome.[3]
After the Bolshevik seizure of power, most members of Andrey Grigorievich Gagarin's family left the country. Still some decided to stay, a decision that proved dear. In 1938 the last adult Prince Gagarin on Russian soil, Peter Andreevich was executed. His older brother Andrey Andreevich who also stayed in Russia had been executed already in 1937, leaving young Andrey Petrovich Gagarin, at the age of 4, one of the very few surviving rurikid princes in Russia. He was to be brought up by his mother Princess Varvara Vasilievna Gagarina (née Sheshina, later remarried to Vadim Mikhailovich Burlakov).[6] By using the family name of his stepfather (during 1947-1972),[7] Andrey Petrovich Gagarin was able to obtain higher education that otherwise would not have been accessible for a member of Russia's highest aristocracy.[8]
Prince Andrey P. Gagarin served as the chairman of the Nobility assembly of St. Petersburg[9] and a long-time CILANE delegate. He was one of the participants in the Rurik Dynasty DNA Project.[1]
Marriages and Issue
Andrey Petrovich Gagarin was married three times. Firstly he married Tatiana Andreevna Shmit, no issue. Secondly he married Tatiana Valentinovna Jakovleva and had issue:
- Princess Maria Andreevna Gagarina, born 1961. Married to Alexander Stanislavovich Korotkov and has issue: Varvara Alexandrovna Korotkova and Sofia Alexandrovna Korotkova
Thirdly he married Tatiana Ivanovna Nukhina and had issue:
- Prince Dmitri Andreevich Gagarin, born 1973. Legitimated by parents marriage.[10] Dmitri Gagarin is married to Viktoria Viktorovna (née Kotelkova) and has issue: Prince Ivan Dmitrievich Gagarin
- Princess Julia Andreevna Gagarina, born 1973. Legitimitated by parents marriage.[10] Julia Gagarina is married to Jan Alexander von Heiroth and has issue: Anastasia von Heiroth
Title and dynastic branch
The title Knyaz (князь) is a Slavic title found in most Slavic languages, denoting a royal nobility rank. It is usually translated into English as either Prince or less commonly as Duke. The German translation is Fürst. The etymology of the title is a cognate of the English king, the German König, and the Scandinavian konung. In Russia the title was originally a hereditary title for the patrilineal descendants of Rurik.[11][12]
The princes Gagarin are a cadet line of the House of Rurik. They are descendants of Yaroslav I the Wise, himself a son of Vladimir the Great also known as St Vladimir, the Christianiser of Russia, and his wife Ingegerd Olofsdotter, daughter of the Swedish king Olof Skötkonung. The fourth and favorite son of Yaroslav I and Ingegerd, Vsevolod I of Kiev, married Anastasia, daughter of the Byzantine emperor Constantine IX Monomachos giving birth to the Monomakh branch of the Rurikids, the branch to which the Gagarins belong.
Yaroslav I had several of his daughters married to foreign princes: Anne of Kiev married Henry I of France, and was to be the first queen of France to act as regent, Elizabeth of Kiev who married Harald III of Norway, and Anastasia of Kiev who married Andrew I of Hungary. Finally, one of the theories regarding the origin of Agatha, the wife of Edward the Exile, himself the last undisputed heir to the last native English royal dynasty, the House of Wessex, is that she was a daughter of Yaroslav I as well.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Rurikid Dynasty DNA Project". Family Tree DNA. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
- ↑ http://www.runewsweek.ru/science/8622/
- ↑ 3.0 3.1
- ↑ "Список граждан, расстрелянных в Ленинграде, вне Ленинграда и впоследствии реабилитированных (том 8 "ЛМ")". Visz.nlr.ru. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
- ↑ "Origins". Spbstu-eng.ru. 1902-10-02. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Лучшая половина жизни". Sta-net.ru. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
- ↑ "Санкт-Петербургское губернское Дворянское собрание". Spbgds.ru. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 "Ахакхнрейю Пеопхмрмшу Хгдюмхи \ Йнмяскэрюмрокчя: Йкюяяхйю Пняяхияйнцн Опюбю". Civil.consultant.ru. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
- ↑ "князь". "Vasmer's Etymological Dictionary" online
- ↑ "knez". Oxford English Dictionary, 1989, online [1] (subscription required)
External links
- http://www.zeit.de/2003/21/Adel_verzichtet
- http://www.zeit.de/2003/21/Petersburg_2fAdel
- http://en.turgenev.de/