Draft:Rakhmanovs

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House of Rakhmanovs

The Rakhmánovs (also Rokhmánovs) are a Russian Empire’s noble family.[1][failed verification]

Rakhmanovs
The nobles
Herb Prawdzic
CountryRussia
FoundedMay 02,1500
FounderVasily III
Current headArtyom Alekseyevich
Historic seatRussian Empire
TitlesPrince, princess
MembersAleksey Vladimirovich, Artyom Alekseyevich
Connected familiesSologub , Perekrestov-Osipov,
Estate(s)The Rakhmanov Estate (in Moscow),

The Rakhmanov Estate (in Kharkov province), The Rakhmanov Estate (in Kaluga province), The Rakhmanov Estate (in Tula province), The Rakhmanov House (in Moscow province), The House of free apartments (in Tula province), The Rakhmanov-Osipov Estate (in Moscow province),

Small-Rakhmanov Palace (in Kaluga province)

When submitting documents (May 07, 1688), the Rakhmanov family tree painting was provided for the entry of the genus into the Velvet Book.

The genus is included in the VI part of the genealogical books of the Kaluga, Moscow, Tula, Tavrida (Crimea) and Kharkov provinces.[2]

Origin and history of the family

It dates back to the beginning of the 17th century and originated, according to the legends of ancient genealogists, from immigrants from Poland who went into the service of the Grand Duke of Moscow Vasily III Ivanovich.[3]

Boris Semyonovich (Shiryaev's son) Rakhmanov was granted estates in Kaluga district (1627). In the 17th century, the Rakhmanovs served as stewards, solicitors and Moscow nobles.

Dmitry Alexandrovich (1768-1832) and Grigory Nikolaevich Rakhmanov were senators. Vasily Aleksandrovich Rakhmanov (1851 - ?) - at the beginning of the 20th century, he was the director of a department in the Ministry of Public Education.

Description of emblem

Coat of arms of the Rakhmanovs in 1785

In the Coat of arms of Anisim Titovich Knyazev in 1785, there is an image of a seal with the coat of arms of Mikhail Mikhailovich Rakhmanov: in the silver field of the shield there is a straight silver wall with masonry (without battlements and towers), on the surface of which a golden lion is visible by half, muzzle to the right, holding a golden ring in its front paws. The shield is crowned with a noble crown (noble helmet, helmet and namet are missing). Around the shield there are military fittings in the form of banners, sabers, cannons with cannons, drums, pipes.

Emblem. Part V. No. 63.

In the blue field there is a silver wall with three towers, on the surface of which a lion is visible halfway out, holding a golden ring in its paws.

On the shield is a noble crowned helmet. Helmet: a lion with a ring indicated on the shield. The namet on the shield is blue, lined with silver. (Herbovnik, V.63).[4]

Famous representatives of the nobility:

Rakhmanov (Nikita Ivanovich, born in 1729) - published translations in the Proceedings of the Free Economic Society.

Rakhmanov (Sergey Efimovich) was a famous actor (1759-1810), from the Orphanage; at first he was an actor of the "free Russian theater on Tsaritsyn Meadow", later he was employed in the directorate of Imperial Theaters. He was an inspector of the St. Petersburg Theater School. He performed the roles of Foreman and Skotinin perfectly. His wife, Christina Fyodorovna, nee Loginova (died in 1827), was a good actress in the roles of old ladies and quarrelsome women.[5]

Dmitry Alexandrovich (1768-1832) and Grigory Nikolaevich Rakhmanov[6] were senators. Vasily Alexandrovich Rakhmanov (1851 — ?) — at the beginning of the XX century was the director of the department in the Ministry of Public Education.

The Romanovs and the Rakhmanovs

The destinies of the royal family and the Rakhmanovs were closely intertwined in Tashkent, where the Rakhmanovs, after being expelled by the bolsheviks, accidentally witnessed and participated in the event, as a result of which the daughter of Nikolai Konstantinovich Romanov, whose name was Daria Chasovitina, gave birth to Margarita. Margarita became the daughter of Daria and her lover Fillip.[7][failed verification]

Nikolai Konstantinovich Romanov[8]is the first child of Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolaevich, the younger brother of Russian Emperor Alexander II. Grandson of Nicholas I, cousin of Alexander III.[9]

Daria Chasovitina was born from an extramarital affair of Grand Duke Nikolai Konstantinovich, who was exiled in Tashkent, with Daria Evseevna Chasovitina (1880-1953, or 1956), the daughter of a local Cossack, and is thus brought to be the half-sister of Artyemy and Alexander Iskander and aunt to Kirill and Natalia Androsov.

Her Grace - Rakhmanova-Romanova Margarita Fillipovna - born in the USSR, lived in the city of Navoi in the Uzbek USSR, gave birth, also had a stepsister on her father's side, whose name is still hidden.[10]

Representatives of the noble family in the XX-XXI century[edit]

Aleksey Vladimirovich (1979) (Does not recognize his rights to the title) was born in the family of a woman who is a descendant of the noble Sollogub family, and his father, a direct descendant of the Rakhmanovs. His mother, Larisa, belongs to one of the breeds of the Sollogub family.

His Grace Highness - Artyom Alekseyevich (2005) is the son of Aleksey Vladimirovich and grandson of Larisa (current location unknown), is the eldest heir.

Information[edit]

  1. ^ "Russian Empire | History, Facts, Flag, Expansion, & Map | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2024-03-11. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  2. ^ "Рахмановы". www.booksite.ru. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  3. ^ Гаврилович, Мельник Александр (2013). "Московский великий князь Василий III и культы русских святых". Ярославский педагогический вестник. 1 (4): 7–12. ISSN 1813-145X.
  4. ^ "Рахмановы". Форум Союза Возрождения Родословных Традиций (in Russian). 2022-01-17. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  5. ^ "Рахманов, Сергей Ефимович – Русский биографический словарь А.А. Половцова. Том 15". azbyka.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  6. ^ "Рахманов Григорий Николаевич / Персоны / Война 1812 года. Биографический справочник". www.brdn.ru. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  7. ^ "Russian Revolution | Definition, Causes, Summary, History, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2024-03-05. Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  8. ^ Третьякова, Людмила. "Изгнанник из рода Романовых: как сложилась жизнь великого князя, уличенного в преступлении | Вокруг Света". www.vokrugsveta.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2024-04-06.
  9. ^ "Великий князь Николай Константинович Романов".
  10. ^ "Дворец Николая Романова в Ташкенте: шедевр архитектуры и свидетель времени". plov.press (in Russian). 2022-12-19. Retrieved 2024-04-06.