He once described himself to the critic and writer Piero Rattalino as 'a vieux style pianist'. Prince K's two squadrons were the first to attack, but were attacked themselves in the centre of the French line of battle by three squadrons of French cuirassiers. The House of Milyukov stems from a "foreigner" Semyon Melik, who was a voivode, that fought alongside Prince Dmitry Donskoy and died in the Battle of Kulikovo. Toumanishvili or Tumanian is an ancient Georgian princely family of Armeno-Georgian origin. Chavchavadze is a Georgian noble family, formerly a princely one. As the Austrian influence increased, Panin found a fresh enemy in Joseph II, and the efforts of the old statesman to prevent a matrimonial alliance between the Russian and Austrian courts determined Catherine to get rid of a counsellor of whom, for some mysterious reason, she was secretly afraid. He was canonized as Saint Ilia the Righteous by the Georgian Orthodox Church. Later, during the Revolution of 1918, many members participated as members of White Army, this branch altered the spelling to Melyukovs, to escape the prosecution by the Cheka. Felix Yusupov II married Princess Irina, niece of last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. Both sons also had children that survived in the Soviet Union up to the collapse in 1991 and second Russian Civil War. It would be through Nikolay that the family continued to survive to the present day. After the war he entered the Chevalier Guards regiment. Camillo (Lvovich) Razumovsky (1853-1917), philanthropist in Czech Silesia, built numerous churches, schools and hospitals around Opava (today Czech Republic) and in Western Ukraine, caused a commotion by flaunting the social conventions of the XIX century Vienna when he married a woman of the Jewish faith. Soldiers and citizens of Petrograd demanded Milyukov's resignation, which followed on 2 May. They formed two lines in exile, both accepted among the ranks of Russian princely nobility, knyaz. The family branched out in eastern Georgia when Erekle II, King of Kartli and Kakheti, granted, in 1774, to his father-in-law Prince Zaal Abashidze and his male descendants estates in Kakheti. Upon crossing into Mongol territory on August 17–18, his thus-far undefeated army imploded and collapsed, he himself being betrayed by his two Russian officers (Bolsheviks later shot them also, for betraying their commander) who took him prisoner and handed him over to the Red Army on August 21, 1921. After the Russian annexation of Georgia (1801) the family was received among the princes (knyaz) of the Empire under the name of Amilakhvarov (1825) and Amilakhvari (1850). After the Russian Revolution of 1917 the Stroganov family emigrated with the White movement and all family property in Russia was nationalized. In 1857, during the absence of the emperor, he presided over the commission formed to consider the question of the emancipation of the serfs, to which he was altogether hostile. The White Guard is a political party that greatly supports the monarchy in Russia. He first distinguished himself in the battle of Charnova (1807) where his regiment held out for 15 hours against the whole army commanded by Napoleon. He bought a large collection of jewellery, including a 36 carat (7.2 g) diamond known as Morocco Sultan. A noble was called dvoryanin (pl. Use of the Soviet anthem, with Mikhalkov's lyrics, continued until 1991, when it was retired after the USSR disintegrated. They were hereditary marshals of Georgia from 1433, from which the family takes its name. Following the Russian Renaissance, Tsar Paul Romanov II offer the restoration of the Gagarin noble rank and title to Vladimir who graciously accepted the offer. The family lived comfortable in France throughout the entire Cold War. Under the Imperial Military Service of the Neo-Roman Empire Josef served with the Northern Fleet placed in charge of Neo-Rome Naval Aviation's only Fleet Defense Interceptor squadron in the 1990s. Under his leadership the company quickly began to prosper as a private energy company meeting the needs of the Neo-Roman Empire. He had a distinguished military career, with his portrait in the hall of heroes in the Hermitage museum. Alexander was a Russian Rurikid prince and an international rugby union footballer who played for England. Prince Obolensky only won a further three caps for England later that year (against Wales on 18 January, Ireland on 8 February and Scotland on 21 March), and scored no further tries. The circumstances of his disgrace are complicated and obscure. "Ruhestörung", ein Routineeinsatz im Kiez – aber offensichtlich stechen die Streifenkollegen dabei in ein Drogennest. During the period of Polish intervention in the early 17th century, the Stroganovs offered humanitarian and military support to the Russian government (some 842,000 rubles just in terms of money), for which they received the title of distinguished people in 1610. He graduated from the Naval Cadets College in 1815. Current living Belosselsky-Belozersky Princes are, by order of age, Paul Pavlovich (10.11.1948-), Patrick Georgevich (26.05.1955-), Stephane Georgevich (23.09.1957-) Michel Georgevich (23.09.1957-), Christian "Constantin" Pavlovich (19.06.1977-), Vincent Patrickevich (23.02.1989-) and Antoine Stephanovich (18.05.1989-). The descendants of this family have survived in Abkhazia and Tbilisi. Prince Dmitry Khilkov was an aristocratic disciple of Tolstoy who was exiled by the government and had his children taken away from him for following Tolstoy's teachings. The Apakidze had been vassals to the Dadiani princes of Mingrelia, and then were confirmed as princes of the Russian Empire in 1867 and 1903. Razumovsky or Rozumovsky is a Ukrainian-Russian noble family of which the only surviving remained in Austria. His son Nikolay Nikolayevich, a geographer, who wrote a novel on the life of the first Bobrinsky, and continued to lived in Moscow through the period of the Soviet Union. After Russia’s annexation of Georgia in 1801, Mukhrani ceased to exist as an autonomous princedom and its former rulers were confirmed as Russian princes in 1825 and 1850. He was educated in the corps of cadets at St Petersburg, began his military career in the Seven Years' War, and was wounded at Zorndorf. He was born in London to Prince Paul Chavchavadze (1899–1971) and Princess Nina Georgievna of Russia (1901–1974), thus being a descendant of the prominent Georgian noble family and the Imperial Russian dynasty. There then was Prince Stepan Aleksandrovich Khilkoff (1786-1854). This new royal house defeated all subsequent attempts by the exiled Mukhranian pretenders to reclaim the crown and, by 1762, united both Kartli and Kakheti into a single monarchy. On 22 August 1826, the day of Emperor Nikolay Pavlovich's coronation, he was promoted to Lieutenant-General; on 5 July 1827 he was awarded the order of St Vladimir 2nd Class, and on 6 December 1830 the order of St Anna 1st Class with an Imperial crown, having received over the previous ten years, 22 signs of the monarch's favour. The Belosselsky-Belozersky family is an aristocratic Russian family. Several representatives of the family served also as bishops of Bodbe, Ninotsminda, Alaverdi and Nekresi. Wrangel led the Kolymskaya expedition in search of northern lands. In 1804, Nicholas went to Paris and frequently met Napoleon I, who presented him with a gift of three large tapestries. However, the friendship between Tsar Paul II and Prince Felix III soon soured following Russia's humiliating defeat in the Georgian War. However, with the Russian Empire's acquisition of the Northern Region of Georgia, the family has returned and become an active part in the Georgian Court. In 1919, Javakhishvili succeeded the noted chemist Petre Melikishvili as the second rector of the university: he served until June 1926, when, in the aftermath of anti-Soviet August Uprising of 1924, tolerance of non-Marxist intellectuals began to contract. However, Demetre's reign over Northern Georgia was relatively short and he was forced out of government by one of his own Generals. It was okolnichi Peter Andreevich Tolstoy who decided the family fortune by casting his lot with the party of Peter the Great. When her pupil Nicholas became the Emperor of Russia in 1826, the 84-year-old governess was made a Princess with the title of Her Serene Highness. There was also Prince Mikhail Ivanovich Khilkoff (1837-1909) Minister of Communications - "The Railway Prince." He was previously married without any issue to Princess Praskovia Pavlovna Shcherbatova (July 6, 1795-October 17, 1820). When the Neo-Roman Empire emerged as the new government, Nikolay decided to petition the new government for his family's old business that had been nationalized by the Soviets. At Guttstadt he was wounded so seriously that they feared for his life. He had a son, Paul Pavlovich who in turn has a son, Christian (Constantin) Pavlovich. He was awarded three Stalin Prizes (1941, 1942, 1950) and numerous other awards. The family moved back to St. Petersburg and were among the other Georgian nobility set to return to Tbilisi before the Georgian War. The most notorious Milyukov in the 20th century was Pavel Milyukov. After the Russian SFSR occupied Georgia early in 1921, the family fled to Istanbul, Turkey, where Dimitri attended a local British School, and later, in 1922, emigrated to France. A very powerful family, the Klikoff have has several notable figures that include: Prince Andrey Yakovlevich Khilkoff (?-1718) Russian ambassador to Sweden. His eldest son, Yuri was presented the Ungern-Sternberg noble rank and title as well as what remained of their property in Russia. His great grandson Prince Vasily Golitsyn (+1619) was active during the Time of Troubles and went as an ambassador to Poland to offer the Russian crown to Prince Wladislaw. He was popularly known as just "The Prince" by many sports fans. It was here that Dimitri completed his great African odyssey, living through the liberation of North Africa. He urged also the formation of armed fighting squads to lead the revolutionary struggle. Peter agreed and left his professorship at Moscow University to take a seat in the Imperial Court. The same year he was raised to the dignity of prince, and was appointed president of the imperial council of state and of the council of ministers. The October Revolution forced him to emigrate to France, where he actively campaigned for the monarchist cause. Nikolay's second son, Anatole Nikolayevich Demidov (1813-1870), was a well-known traveller and patron of art. He gradually gained in Peter's confidence serving first as the Russian ambassador to Constantinople, then as the head of the secret police. To circumscribe the influence of the ruling favorites he next suggested the formation of a cabinet council of six or eight ministers, through whom all the business of the state was to be transacted; but Catherine, suspecting in the skillfully presented novelty a subtle attempt to limit her power, rejected it after some hesitation. Though Constantin would die before the re-establishment of the Russian Empire, his sons would would be requested by Tsar Paul Romanov II to return to Russia and resume their noble hereditary rights. Semyon Anikeyevich Stroganov (? The youngest daughter Princess Maria Konstantinovna ended up living in Brussels married to Major General Boris E.Hartman, commander of the Russian Imperial Chevalier Gardes/Horse Guards Regiment. They remained married for 53 years until her death. He founded the Gatchina Palace museum and the Art History Institute in St. Petersburg before emigrating to Paris in 1925. As the President of the Free Economic Society, he was also their most prominent advocate in the great commission of 1767, though he aimed primarily at pleasing the empress, who affected great liberality in her earlier years. Demetre Mukhrani returned to Georgia shortly after it became a territory of the Russian Empire. He was succeeded after death by three sons and two daughters of which, two of his sons continued in their father's naval footsteps while the other became a nautical engineer. However, even in this small provincial town he tried to ascertain and inform Peter of the Swedish political news. He was a great friend of foreigners, who generally alluded to him as the great Galitzine. For the White leaders, who believed in "Russia strong and indivisible", this was high treason. In the 14th century Edigu, a Tatar from the Manghit tribe and one of Tamerlane's greatest strategists, settled on the north shores of the Black Sea, establishing the Nogai Horde and laying the foundations for the Crimean Khanate. For two centuries, the Demidov plants produced a large portion of Russia's iron and steel. Much like their historical counterparts, many of today's Bobrinsky are given government jobs in transportation and agriculture given their rich family history in Russia economics.
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