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Former Russian court official position
Okolnichy (Russian: око́льничий, IPA: [ɐˈkolʲnʲɪtɕɪj]) was an old Russian court official position. According to the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary
Okolnichy
Russian boyar (died 1543)
(Russian: Роман Захарьин-Кошкин); c. 1500 – 16 February 1543) was a Russian okolnichy and voivode who is best known as the progenitor of the Romanov dynasty
Roman_Zakharyin-Koshkin
Russian boyar (c. 1522–1586)
1613–1645) founded the Romanov dynasty of Russian tsars. He was a son of the okolnichy Roman Yurievich Zakharyin (who died on 16 February 1543, and who gave
Nikita Romanovich Zakharyin-Yuriev
Nikita_Romanovich_Zakharyin-Yuriev
Russian assembly with advisory or legislative functions
boyars[citation needed] and five or six okolnichies. By 1613 the duma had increased to twenty boyars and eight okolnichies. Lesser nobles, "duma gentlemen" (dumnye
Duma
on birth and position. The system was divided into Duma ranks: boyars, okolnichys, duma nobility and duma clerks; Moscow ranks: stolniks, stryapchiys, Moscow
Russian rank titles during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
Russian_rank_titles_during_the_sixteenth_and_seventeenth_centuries
1598–1613 chaotic period of Russian history
nephew Mikhail Skopin-Shuisky, Vasily and Ivan Golitsyn, okolnichy Ivan Kriuk-Kolychev, okolnichy Mikhail Tatishchev, monks, priests, clerics, merchants
Time_of_Troubles
Tsaritsa of Russia from 1547 to 1560
daughter of the boyar Roman Yurievich Zakharyin-Koshkin, who served as Okolnichy during the reign of Grand Prince Vasily III. The House of Zakharyin-Yuriev
Anastasia_Romanovna
(Russian: Адашев, Алексей Фёдорович, died 1561) was a Russian statesman, okolnichy, postelnichy [ru], voivode of Livonia. He was a confidant of Tsar Ivan
Aleksey_Adashev
Feudal aristocratic rank
piece be played during his play The Dance of Death, Part One. Magnate Okolnichy Russian nobility Freiherr - similar Allodial title in Germanic Europe
Boyar
Russian military leader
statesman and military leader, he held the positions of Stolnik (1639) and Okolnichy. He was the first governor of Yakutia, and Viceroy of Kashira. He was
Pyotr_Golovin
1452–1681 Tatar vassal state of Russia
subordinate administration. A permanent representative with the rank of okolnichy was established in November 1542. In 1552, its rulers began to be offered
Qasim_Khanate
Russian noble family
Country Russia Founded 14th century (1300s) Founder Andrey Kharitonovich Tolstoy Titles Counts of the Russian Empire (Counts Tolstoy) Okolnichy (former)
Tolstoy_family
Tsar of Russia from 1584 to 1598
supporter of the Godunovs who would be promoted from dumny dvoryanin to okolnichy in 1586. Around the same time, Ivan IV was looking for his eighth wife
Feodor_I_of_Russia
(Царево-Алексеев). He took part in assaults on Poland. In 1658 he was promoted to the rank of okolnichy. s:ru:РБС/ВТ/Лобанов-Ростовский,_Никита_Иванович
Nikita Ivanovich Lobanov-Rostovsky
Nikita_Ivanovich_Lobanov-Rostovsky
Russian noble family
Trouble; he actively sided with the pro-Polish party, received the rank of okolnichy from King Sigismund III, and was one of the signers for his son, Wladislaw
Rzhevsky_family
Russian Old Believer martyr (1632–1675)
by the Old Believers. She was born on 21 May 1632 into a family of the okolnichy Prokopy Feodorovich Sokovnin. At the age of 17, she was married to the
Feodosia_Morozova
Russian statesman and diplomat (1645–1729)
family, though historians differ on whether his lineage was that of an okolnichy or of boyar rank. He died in exile in 1729, aged about 84. Tolstoy married
Pyotr_Andreyevich_Tolstoy
Russian politician and statesman (1500s–1568)
Chelyadnin family. Ivan Petrovich was born in the 1500s, the only son of the okolnichy Pyotr Fyodorovich Davydov-Khromoy [ru] and the daughter of Prince Semyon
Ivan Petrovich Fyodorov-Chelyadnin
Ivan_Petrovich_Fyodorov-Chelyadnin
Russian nobleman and politician (1617–1700)
III to France and England in 1681. He died in 1700 in the rank of an okolnichy. According to legend, Pyotr Potemkin, as a diplomat, had an eccentric
Pyotr_Potemkin
Prefix or suffix added to someone's name
Futuna, Nauru) Russian: Boyarin Dyak Knyaz (and Veliky Knyaz) Namestnik Okolnichy Posadnik Voyevoda German: Burggraf Graf Freigraf Landgraf Markgraf Pfalzgraf
Title
Tsarina of Russia from 1581 to 1584
deposition of False Dmitry I. Maria Feodorovna was the daughter of the okolnichy Feodor Feodorovich Nagoy [ru]. It has been suggested by historian-genealogists
Maria_Nagaya
Upper class in Russian society before 1917
by the recipient's wife. Boyar scions Marshal of Nobility Odnodvortsy Okolnichy Stolnik Princess Maria Staritskaya (c. 1560–1612) Prince Mikhail Skopin-Shuisky
Russian_nobility
Dormition Cathedral in the Moscow Kremlin. Volkonsky was granted the rank of okolnichy by Tsar Michael Romanov as well as large estates. Wolkov V. A. Smolensk
Siege_of_Belaya
Russian nobleman
Peter I of Russia, and his wife Anna Nikitchna Akinfova, daughter of an okolnichy (noble rank below that of boyar). He was the great-great-grandfather of
Boris_Grigoryevich_Yusupov
Fictional character
thirteenth-century Tatar chief. His ancestors included boyars in Tver and okolnichy in Moscow, and generál-anshéfs in Saint Petersburg. Rakhmetov is the second
Rakhmetov
Russian noble (c. 1610 – 1685)
until the end of the war. In 1663, Baryatinsky received the title of okolnichy. In 1668, he repelled an assault by the Tatars from the Crimean Khanate
Yury_Baryatinsky
31.07.1854—22.01.1858 Fyodor Andreevich Panov Lieutenant General 09.03.1858—29.11.1866 Nikolai Andreevich Okolnichy Major General 27.03.1866—2.01.1869
Oblast_of_Siberian_Kirghiz
2016 Russian TV series or program
1489), more on the last's) Boris Nevzorov as Grigoriy Mamonov, boyar and okolnichy in the court of Grand Duchy of Moscow Giuliano Di Capua as Ivan Fryazin
Sophia_(TV_series)
Russian diplomat
promoted him from a regular scrivener to a member of the Boyar Duma and okolnichy. Fyodor Shaklovity was then appointed head of the Streltsy Department
Fyodor_Shaklovity
Russian politician (died 1611)
in favor of Simeon Bekbulatovich. Tsar Boris Godunov appointed Belsky okolnichy and hastily sent him away from Moscow, ordering him to build the town
Bogdan_Belsky
Topics referred to by the same term
general, writer, and historian Aleksandr Ivanovich Lobanov-Rostovsky (okolnichy) [ru] (died 1677) Aleksandr Ivanovich Lobanov-Rostovsky (general) [ru]
Aleksandr_Lobanov-Rostovsky
Legal code promulgated in 17th-century Russia
code. Members of the committee included Prince Semyon Prozorovsky, an okolnichy prince (one of highest ranks of boyars in old Russia), Fyodor Volkonsky
Sobornoye_Ulozheniye
City in Luhansk Oblast, Ukraine
settlement of Bielska Sloboda which originally might have been named after Okolnichy Bogdan Belsky of Litvin Bielsky family who at that time was a subject
Starobilsk
dumniy dvoryanin (3rd rank in Boyar Duma after boyars and okolnichys), only to become an okolnichy a year later (together with Artamon Matveev) on the day
Kirill_Naryshkin
Russian noble
1606–1607, revolt of Ivan Bolotnikov. For that, in 1605 he was promoted to okolnichy, and around late 1606 / early 1607 – to a boyar. In 1607 he also became
Mikhail_Shein
families of Muscovy, whose members were promoted straight to the rank of okolnichy, skipping lower ranks like the stolnik. Prince Alexander Kurakin (1752–1818)
Kurakin_family
Russian statesman and diplomat (1625–1682)
regiments. At the end of the year Matveyev was raised to the rank of okolnichy, and on 1 September 1674 attained the still higher dignity of boyar. The
Artamon_Matveyev
Russian noble family
Russian state in various high-ranking positions, stolniks, voivodes, and okolnichy, and were repeatedly granted estates for their service. These genealogical
Karpov_(Russian_family)
Russian diplomat (1676–1727)
Muscovy. Members of this family were promoted straight to the rank of okolnichy, skipping lower ranks like the stolnik. Due to the upheavals during the
Boris_Kurakin
Former palace within the Moscow Kremlin
latter’s death in 1563, the residence was purchased by the voivode and okolnichy boyar Ivan Sheremetev, who paid the exceptionally large sum of 7,800 rubles
Small_Nicholas_Palace
In August 1603, a detachment of 100 servicemen under the command of okolnichy Ivan Basmanov was sent from Moscow in a westerly direction to destroy
Khlopko_Rebellion
Civil disturbance in Russia
rioters split into two groups to target the most hated boyars, diaks, okolnichys, and merchants, killing Nazar Chistoy as he begged for mercy. When rumors
Moscow_uprising_of_1648
Russian diplomat (1580s–1653/1654)
appointed to serve as a majordomo of the tsar's court. In 1627, was made an okolnichy and official head of the Prikaz Bolshogo dvortsa [ru], a government office
Prince_Alexey_Lvov
Topics referred to by the same term
family: Grigory Konstantinovich Volkonsky [ru] (cca. 1560 — 1634), prince, okolnichy and voivode, who repelled the Polish attack on Moscow in 1618. Grigory
Grigory_Volkonsky
Moscow riot on 25 July (O.S.)/4 August 1662
They included the names of the "traitors", such as boyar Miloslavsky, okolnichys Fyodor Rtishchev and Bogdan Khitrovo, diak D.M. Bashmakov, merchants V
Copper_Riot
Former support service of the Russian Armed Forces
an order On Management of the Grain Supplies of All Military People to okolnichy Yazykov with Elevating Him to Commissary General After That, thus forming
Rear of the Russian Armed Forces
Rear_of_the_Russian_Armed_Forces
Type of Eastern European court office
were ranked fifth in the hierarchy of Russian bureaucracy, after boyars, okolnichys, duma nobles, and duma dyaks.[citation needed] Stolniks were also attached
Stolnik
Russian noble (died 1675)
Ivan Khovansky was granted the title of a boyar, by-passing the rank of okolnichy. In 1650, there was an uprising in Novgorod and Pskov. Ivan Nikitich Khovansky
Ivan_Nikitich_Khovansky
1980 Soviet film
marriage with Nikita Moiseyevich. She wants him to marry a girl from okolnichy under the name of Eudoxia Lopukhina, a girl from a noble family, that
The_Youth_of_Peter_the_Great
OKOLNICHY
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Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
A Famous City
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Night
Boy/Male
Australian, Biblical, Christian, Danish, French, Hebrew
Son of My Sorrow or Pain; Son of My Sorrows
Boy/Male
Hindu
Heart
Male
Dutch
, spear sport.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Thoughtful, Devoted
Girl/Female
Indian
Ruler of the World
Girl/Female
Greek Latin
From Persia.
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Spiritual Teacher
Boy/Male
Indian
Celestial music
OKOLNICHY
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