Vorontsovs (ancient Russian noble family). Historical and geographical persons of the Vorontsovs Coat of arms of the Vorontsov family

02.03.2023

When submitting documents on June 14, 1686, for entering the family into the Velvet Book, the Vorontsov family tree was provided.

Genus history

From the middle of the 15th to the end of the 17th century. The Vorontsovs served as governors, solicitors, stewards, roundabouts and boyars.

  • Mikhail Illarionovich, lieutenant general, eldest son of Larion (Illarion) Vorontsov), chancellor. In 1744, he was granted the dignity of count of the Roman Empire by Emperor Charles VI, and at the same time he was allowed to use this title in Russia. His brothers Roman and Ivan Illarionovich were granted the dignity of a count in 1760 by Emperor Franz I; this dignity was recognized for them in Russia only in 1797.

Counts Vorontsov were recorded in the fifth part of the genealogical books of Vladimir, Kursk, Moscow, Kaluga, St. Petersburg and Yaroslavl provinces. The grandson of Roman Illarionovich, Count Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov, being a Caucasian governor, was elevated to the princely dignity of the Russian Empire in 1845; in 1852 he was granted the title of lordship.

Vorontsov-Dashkovs

The daughter of Roman Illarionovich and Marfa Ivanovna Surmina, Ekaterina, was married to Prince Mikhail-Kondraty Ivanovich Dashkov. At the request of Ekaterina Romanovna, her cousin-nephew Ivan Illarionovich, in 1807, was allowed to add the surname Dashkovs to his surname and be called Count Vorontsov-Dashkov. About his son Illarion Ivanovich, see above. The Vorontsov-Dashkovs are recorded in the fifth part of the genealogical books of the Moscow and St. Petersburg provinces.

Shuvalovs

With the death of his descendant son, Adjutant General, His Serene Highness Prince Semyon Mikhailovich Vorontsov (1823-1882), by the personal Imperial Decree of June 7, 1882, Count Pavel Andreevich Shuvalov was allowed to take the coat of arms, title and surname of his maternal grandfather, Field Marshal , His Serene Highness Prince Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov and henceforth be called the Most Serene Prince Vorontsov count Shuvalov.

By the personal decree of February 12, 1886, Count Mikhail Andreyevich Shuvalov, as the heir to the majorate estate established in the Vorontsov family, was allowed to add to his title, coat of arms and surname the title, coat of arms and surname of the founder of this majorate and henceforth be called the Most Serene Prince Vorontsov count Shuvalov.

Other Vorontsovs

There are other ancient noble families of the Vorontsovs.

The first of them, descended from Anofry Petrovich Vorontsov, who was placed in 1629, is recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Oryol province.

The second clan of the Vorontsovs, leading from Besson Timofeevich Vorontsov, placed in 1630, is recorded in the VI part of the genealogical books of the Kursk and Kaluga provinces.

According to the sentinel book of Odoev and Odoevsky district of 1616, the boyar children Onoshko Petrov son Vorontsov and Bezson Timofeev son Vorontsov owned estates in Odoevsky district. The first in the village of Krivoy and in the village of Nikolsky Stoyanovo had sixty-seven quarters with osmina in the field, and in two for the same, the second - in the villages of Bortnaya, Sotnikovo, too, and Goryainovo - sixty-two quarters in the field, and in two for that and. Probably later, Onofrey Petrov, son of Vorontsov, was placed in the Oryol district, and Bezson Timofeev, son of Vorontsov, in the Kursk district.

There were also many children of the boyar Vorontsovs, who were placed in different cities. Some of them served in Arzamas. Some of their descendants moved from Arzamas uyezd to Simbirsk uyezd. Then one branch moved from the Simbirsk district to the Buzuluk district of the Orenburg province. Their descendants - noblemen Vorontsovs - lived in Buzuluk, Buguruslan districts and in Samara. These Vorontsovs are included in the I part of the noble family tree of the book of the Simbirsk province and in the II part of the Samara province. One of the Arzamas Vorontsovs, the stolnik Dmitry Lukyanovich Vorontsov, in 1686 submitted a genealogical list to the Discharge, in which he indicated his origin from the noble Varangian Shimon Afrikanovich and indicated that the son of the executed boyar Fyodor-Demid Vorontsov, Kirei Vorontsov, was exiled in disgrace to Arzamas, he had sons Fedor and Ivan, Ivan had a son Gregory, Gregory had a son Lukyan, known in the list of ten in 1649 among the boyar children of the courtyard, as one of the builders of the Simbirsk serif line, who was the father of the steward Dmitry Lukyanovich.

There are quite a few noble Vorontsov families of later origin.

Under the name of the Vorontsovs, a Russian noble family of Polish origin is known, the Lubich coat of arms, divided into two branches.

The ancestor of the first of them was Pavel Voronets, who was granted estates in the Smolensk Voivodeship by King Vladislav IV. His son Peter, after the conquest of Smolensk in 1656, entered into Russian citizenship, was a cornet in the regiment of the Smolensk gentry and a steward. This branch is included in the VI part of the genealogical book of Smolensk and in the II part of the Kursk province.

The second branch comes from Dmitry Vorontsov, who received in the first half of the 17th century. from the kings of the Polish estates in Smolensk land. His son, captain Casimir, entered into Russian citizenship after the conquest of Smolensk. His descendants are included in the second part of the genealogical book of Smolensk and in the third part - of the Kaluga province (Armorial, IV, 114).

According to the hypothesis of the Pinsk local historian Roman Goroshkevich, the Pinsk noble family of Verenich-Stakhovsky, descended from two brothers, Semyon and Dmitry Vorontsov (Voronichi), may be an offshoot of the Russian noble family of the Vorontsovs.

Description of coats of arms

Coat of arms of the Count Vorontsov family

The shield is divided by a diagonal strip on the right side into two parts, of which the upper is silver and the lower is red, and on the line are two roses with one lily of variables between them with fields of flowers. A black top is attached to the shield, on which a golden rafter with three garnets is depicted, and on the black top there are three silver stars. On the shield is placed a crown peculiar to the counts, above which are depicted three tournament crowned helmets with gold hoops and worthy of them kleinods and a chain decorated, of which a double-headed eagle with a crown, nose and golden claws is placed on the middle silver erect, and on the right, which is placed obliquely, on the sides there are six banners, of which the first is red, the last is white, and the middle one is with golden Russian eagles. The mantling is lowered on both sides, black and gold on the right side, red and silver on the left. The shield holders stand on the sides and two white horses with red city crowns on their necks hold the shield with their front legs. Motto: Semper Immota Fides.

The coat of arms is included in the General Armorial of the noble families of the All-Russian Empire, part 1, 1st section, p. 28.

The most famous representatives

  • Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov - boyar and governor, in 1505 and 1506 he went against the Kazan Tsar Makhmet-Amin; in 1514 he commanded reserve regiments stationed on the Ugra River. He died in 1518.
  • Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov - son of Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov, boyar and governor; was at the siege and capture of Smolensk (1513 and 1514); went, in 1522, against the Crimean Tatars; in 1524 he commanded a separate detachment of "numerous rati" (150,000 people) sent near Kazan; on the way he distinguished himself in the battle of the Sviyaga River with Cheremis and Kazan Tatars; was the governor in Novgorod, was at the commission of the spiritual letter of Vasily Ioannovich, who punished him and other boyars about his son, about the dispensation of the zemstvo, etc. During the reign of Elena, at first, all the affairs of the state were led by her uncle Mikhail Glinsky, with his "like-minded" Vorontsov; together with Glinsky Vorontsov was imprisoned (1534). A year later, the disgrace from Vorontsov was removed, and he commanded the troops of Novgorod and Pskov against the Lithuanians, and in 1537 he took part in peace negotiations with Lithuania and Sweden in 1539.
  • Fedor-Demid Semyonovich Vorontsov - brother of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov and son of Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov, boyar and councilor, an active participant in the struggle for power under the young Ivan the Terrible, was executed in 1546.
  • Vasily Fedorovich Vorontsov - the son of Fedor-Demid Semyonovich Vorontsov, okolnichiy and governor. Killed near Wenden in 1578.
  • Ivan Fedorovich Vorontsov, brother of Vasily Fedorovich Vorontsov, was executed by Ivan IV in 1570 along with many others accused of having relations with Novgorodians.
  • Ivan Mikhailovich Vorontsov - son of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov, voivode, councilor and diplomat. Participated in all the wars of Ivan IV and traveled twice on diplomatic missions: he took a letter to Sigismund-August in Lithuania (in 1557), and the second time to Sweden (1567-69). During the stay of the Russian embassy there, King Eric XIV was dethroned; At the same time, the Moscow ambassadors were robbed, beaten and even threatened with death, from which their younger brother Erich, Karl, saved them; then they were transported to Abo, kept there for about 8 months, as captives, and only in 1569 they were released to Moscow.
  • Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (1714-1767) - Count, State Chancellor; was born in 1714. At the age of fourteen, he was appointed chamber junker at the court of Grand Duchess Elisaveta Petrovna and served the latter both with his pen, which he was good at, and with the money of his rich sister-in-law, the wife of his brother Roman. Together with Shuvalov, he stood behind the sleigh, on which the princess went to the barracks of the Preobrazhensky Regiment on the night of her proclamation as empress; he, together with Lestok, arrested Anna Leopoldovna and her family. For this, Elizabeth granted him a real chamberlain, lieutenant of the newly founded life company and made him the owner of rich estates. On January 3, 1742, Mikhail Illarionovich became the husband of Anna Karlovna Skavronskaya, the Empress's cousin. In 1744 he was elevated to the dignity of a count of the Russian Empire and after that he was appointed vice-chancellor. In 1748, he almost fell into disgrace. He was accused of complicity in the Lestocq conspiracy, but he managed to easily justify himself from this accusation and regain the favor of the empress. When Chancellor A.P. Bestuzhev-Ryumin fell into disgrace in 1758, Vorontsov was appointed in his place. Having inherited from Bestuzhev-Ryumin the so-called Peter's system - an alliance with Austria (against Turkey), under Elisaveta Petrovna he actively continued the war with Prussia, but under Peter III he almost entered into an alliance with Prussia. Mikhail was attached to Peter and even tried to defend his rights after the coup on June 29, 1762; he refused to swear allegiance to Catherine II, for which he was subjected to house arrest, and swore only when he heard about the death of Peter Fedorovich. Nevertheless, Catherine II, who saw him as an experienced and hardworking diplomat, left him as chancellor. The need to share their work (in diplomatic relations) with N. I. Panin, who kept a completely different system, the resulting misunderstandings with him and other close associates of the empress, for example, with Grigory Orlov, and the coldness of the empress herself soon forced Vorontsov to retire (1763). He died in Moscow in 1767. Neither contemporaries nor historians agree in assessing the activities of M. I. Vorontsov. Most historians, following the harsh sentence of Manstein, call him incapable, poorly educated and amenable to foreign influence. But almost everyone considers Mikhail Illarionovich an honest, gentle and humane person. A friend and patron of M. V. Lomonosov, he was interested in the successes of his native literature and native science, and, as far as one can judge from his letters, especially of the last decade, he had a good education, if not in a political, then in a general literary sense.
  • Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov (1707-1783) - the elder brother of Mikhail Illarionovich; genus. in 1707; lieutenant general and senator under Elizabeth, general-in-chief under Peter Fedorovich, under Catherine II, first in disgrace, and then governor of the provinces of Vladimir, Penza and Tambov. With his extortions and extortion, he brought the provinces entrusted to him to extreme ruin. The rumor about this reached the Empress, and on the day of his name day she sent him a wallet as a gift. Having received such a "double-meaning" sign of royal favor with guests, Roman Illarionovich was so amazed by him that he soon died (1783). He was married to a wealthy merchant's daughter, Marfa Ivanovna Surmina. Of his daughters, Elizabeth was the favorite of Peter III, and Catherine became famous under the name of Princess Dashkova.
  • Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov (1719-1786) - the second brother of Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov - was president of the Votchina Board in Moscow, lieutenant general, senator, chamberlain. He is married to Maria Artemyevna, the daughter of the Cabinet Minister Artemy Petrovich Volynsky, who was executed under Biron.
  • Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov-Dashkov (1790-1854) - grandson of Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov, master of ceremonies at the court of Emperor Nicholas I (1789); after the death of the last of the family of princes Dashkov, with the permission of Emperor Alexander I, in 1807 he became known as Count Vorontsov-Dashkov.
  • Alexander Romanovich Vorontsov (1741-1805) - Count and State Chancellor; genus. in 1741; began his service at the age of 15 in the Izmailovsky regiment. In 1759, Mikhail Illarionovich, who took a great part in the fate of his nephews, sent him to the Strasbourg military school; after that he traveled to Paris and Madrid and compiled for his uncle a description of the Spanish administration. Returning to Russia (1761), he was soon appointed chargé d'affaires in Vienna, and with the accession of Pyotr Fedorovich was sent to England as a minister plenipotentiary, where he did not stay long. Under Catherine II, he was a senator, president of the College of Commerce, but he stood at a distance from the court. Shortly after the conclusion of the Iasi Peace (1791), Alexander Romanovich had to resign and remained away from business until the accession of Alexander I, who in 1802 appointed him State Chancellor. This was a time of celebration for the Vorontsovs; Napoleon's rule caused a break with the system of Panin, who sought an alliance with France and Prussia, and demanded rapprochement with England and Austria. His brother was in London

The history of the origin of the genus

The official genealogy of the Vorontsovs, an old Russian noble family, begins with the Varangians. The ancestor is African or Afrek, brother of Yakun the Blind, Varangian jarl.

Jarl (other - Scandinavian) - a noble person, the governor of the king in the Scandinavian countries. In the Anglo-Saxon chronicles, the leaders of the Viking troops were called jarls.

He had two sons - Friyand and Shimon. Yakun the Blind expelled his nephew, Shimon, from the fatherland, who in 1027 brought about 3 thousand Varangians and several Latin priests to Kyiv to the Grand Duke Yaroslav the Wise. All of them subsequently adopted the Orthodox faith. Shimon, already under the name of Simon, began to serve in Kyiv and soon became the first nobleman of the son of Yaroslav Vsevolod. Simon's son Yuri is mentioned around 1157 by a thousand in Rostov. There is no complete record of the descendants of Simon who was baptized as Simon. But such a record is kept from the boyar Protasy Fedorovich. On behalf of his son Veniamian (Velyamin) Protasyevich, the surname of the Velyaminovs was formed. The immediate ancestor of the Vorontsovs, the grandson of Velyamin Protasyevich - Fedor Vasilyevich Voronets Velyaminov(about 1400).

Ty?syatsky - an official of the princely "administration" in the cities of medieval Rus'. Initially, the military leader of the city militia ("thousands"), to whom ten sots were subordinate. The first mention in the annals of the thousands refers to 1089.

To the boyar Protasy Fedorovich, genealogists cannot trace the generational list of the Vorontsovs - no reliable historical information has been preserved - and only from him, with Protasius, does an uninterrupted genealogy of the family begin, which gave Russia boyars, governors, diplomats and politicians of the highest rank.

As already mentioned, the Vorontsovs, as an independent noble, count and princely family, descended from the boyar family of Protasyevich (leading from the legendary thousand prince Ivan Kalita). The ancestor of the entire subsequent "surname" is Fedor, nicknamed Voronets. His great-grandson was Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov, who died in 1518, from which, in fact, the rise of the family began. In September 1505, he led the regiment of the left hand during the defense of Nizhny Novgorod from the Tatars, in 1505–06, having become a boyar and governor, he already participated in a campaign against the Kazan kingdom, and in 1514 he commanded a reserve regiment on the Ugra River.

Title regiments - regiments into which the Russian army was divided during campaigns in the 16th and, partially, in the 17th centuries. The title regiments included three or five regiments - large, advanced and sentry, as well as regiments of the right and left hands. To them, in the case of the sovereign's campaign, was added the sovereign's regiment (consisting of servicemen of the Moscow rank), ertaul (reconnaissance detachment), as well as a large detachment (artillery).

History knows his sons: Fyodor Semenovich Vorontsov (sk. 1546). In some surviving chronicles, he is also listed under the name Demid, a boyar (1544) and a duma councilor. In August 1528 he stood in Vyazma. In August 1530 he was on the banks of the Oka, against Lublin. In 1531 - the second governor of the regiment of the right hand at Odoev, for protection from the Crimea. Participated in 1531 and 1532 in two embassy commissions: on the affairs of Kazan and sent to Lithuania for the exchange of letters.

During the reign of Elena Glinskaya and Shuisky, he did not play a prominent role, but he managed to win the love of the growing Ivan IV. A brave warrior and "talented leader", in modern terms, after the overthrow of the Shuiskys in the principality in 1543, he took a leading position in the government of the minor Ivan IV the Terrible. This fact, of course, could not go unnoticed by the large Shuisky family, who also claimed leading roles at the court of Ivan the Terrible. Fyodor Semenovich Vorontsov was subjected to "humiliation" by the Shuiskys and was even exiled to Kostroma in 1543. But fortune is changeable, and royal caress and disgrace go hand in hand, and after the overthrow of the Shuiskys, Vorontsov was returned to court. At the end of the same year, the head of the Shuiskys, Andrei, was disgraced and executed, and Ivan IV immediately returned his favorite from exile and appointed him chief adviser. But a weak man, having gained power, Vorontsov began to abuse it - wanting to rule indefinitely under the young 14-year-old tsar. The annals preserved records that every time Ivan IV "intervened" in state affairs or favored one of the boyars, Vorontsov was terribly angry and his anger was "long and terrible." The tsar's patience ran out, and in October 1545 Vorontsov was again removed from the court. This time he was saved by the intercession of Metropolitan Macarius, and after a while the wayward nobleman was returned.

Metropolitan Macarius (in the world - Michael; c. 1482, Moscow - 1563) - Metropolitan of Moscow and All Rus' (since 1542), in 1526-1542 - Archbishop of Novgorod. A supporter of Josephism, a follower of Joseph Volotsky. Canonized by the Russian Church.

And six months later, a new disgrace comprehends him. Ruined Vorontsov case. When, in 1546, Ivan IV himself was at the head of a detachment of Moscow troops sent towards the Crimeans, he was once stopped by Novgorod pishchalniks and began to beat with their foreheads about something, Ivan ordered his servants to send them away, while a struggle ensued between them, and several people was killed. Ivan IV ordered his clerk, Vasily Zakharov, to investigate the case. The diligent clerk reported that the Novgorod pishchalniks acted at the instigation of the Vorontsovs - Fedor and his cousin Vasily Mikhailovich, as well as Prince Ivan Ivanovich Kubensky. The chroniclers say that the clerk slandered the boyars, and that Fyodor Semenovich was only guilty of wanting to rule the state without any intervention from the tsar. Nevertheless, allegations of bribery were also attached to the slander, and by order of Ivan IV, the accused were executed, and their loved ones were sent into exile.

But Vorontsov's son Vasily served as governor during the Livonian War and in a difficult time remained faithful to his duty to the end and fell with a weapon in his hands, fighting the enemy.

Pishchalniki - the infantry of the troops of the Russian state, armed with long-barreled firearms - squeakers.

Other Vorontsovs of that era also did not go unnoticed by chroniclers and historians. Dmitry Semenovich Vorontsov (sk. 1537) - served as governor of the Moscow princes Vasily III and Ivan IV, was governor in Pskov (1534). Dmitry Semenovich Vorontsov is a descendant in the ninth generation from the boyar Protasy Fedorovich, the common ancestor of the Vorontsovs and the Velyaminovs, the second son of Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov. In 1519, during a campaign against Smolensk, he was a regimental governor in Dorogobuzh. In 1520 he was among the other governor in Serpukhov, and in 1521 he was in Meshchera. In 1530 he was the commander of a guard regiment of cavalry during a campaign against Kazan. In May 1531 he was already in the Seversk land on Kleven. The usual glorious path of a good soldier-warrior, although a boyar. And under the young Tsar Ivan IV in November 1535, he led a regiment of his right hand to Lithuania. In April 1536 he participated in the founding of the Velizh fortress. In July 1537, he stood near Nizhny Novgorod, due to the threat from the Kazan Khanate. His brothers, the boyars Mikhail, Ivan-Foka and Fedor served with him. He had a son, Ivan Chukha, but history has preserved little information about him.

Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov, brother of Dmitry Semenovich, (c. 1539), boyar (from 1531) and also a governor. In 1513, during a campaign against Smolensk, he participated in the destruction of Lithuanian lands from Orsha and Drutsk to Braslav. And in 1514, during the campaign of Vasily III to Smolensk, he stood in Tula to protect himself from attacks from the Crimean Khanate, as the second governor of the right-hand regiment. Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov in 1517 stood on Meshchera, on Tolstik with an advanced regiment, from where he was sent to the Vashan River. In 1519, Mikhail Vorontsov was already the second governor under the command of Prince I. M. Vorotynsky on the banks of the Oka and in Meshchera. He was also present as a close boyar when compiling the spiritual letter of Vasily III. It was he who persistently opposed the dying tonsure of the Grand Duke.

In June 1521, Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov was in Meshchera. And in 1524 he went as the second governor with a large regiment near Kazan. In July 1531, he stood on the banks of the Oka on Devic as the third governor. Participated in the Kazan campaign (1524), where he already commanded a separate detachment.

During the reign of Elena Glinskaya (1533–38), he was one of the closest assistants to M. L. Glinsky in government, and in 1534 he was imprisoned with him, in 1535 he was forgiven.

Glinsky - Lithuanian princely family, presumably of Tatar origin, from which came the Moscow ruler Elena Glinskaya - the mother of Ivan the Terrible. According to Moscow ideas, this family was among the poor; in the Sovereign genealogy for a story about him, only an empty space was left.

Mikhail Lvovich Glinsky (1470–1534) - prince from the Glinsky family, military leader and statesman of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Grand Duchy of Moscow. Lithuanian court marshal (official in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania) from 1500, head of the Vilna Mint from 1501. The leader of the performance known as the Glinsky rebellion.

Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov was the head of the Novgorod and Pskov troops during the hostilities in Lithuania, and in 1537 he participated in peace negotiations with Lithuania and Sweden. His sons: Ivan Mikhailovich Vorontsov, carried out a number of important diplomatic missions in Lithuania (1557) and Sweden (1567–69); Vasily Mikhailovich Vorontsov, boyar, executed in 1546, it was from him that the most famous branch of the family came.

His great-great-grandson was Illarion Gavrilovich Vorontsov (1674–1750), a senator (since 1742), whose middle son M.I. the dignity of the Roman Empire of his brothers - Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov (1719–86), lieutenant general (1761), senator (since 1761), married to the daughter of A.P. Volynsky Marya (1725–93), and Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov (by decree of 1797 the clan of the counts Vorontsov was included in the number of count families of the Russian Empire). R. I. Vorontsov had five children, of which the most famous are: Ekaterina Romanovna Vorontsova-Dashkova; Elizaveta Romanovna Vorontsova (married Polyanskaya) (1739–1792), favorite of Emperor Peter III; Alexander Romanovich Vorontsov; Semyon Romanovich Vorontsov. The son of the latter, M. S. Vorontsov, was elevated to the princely dignity of the Russian Empire in 1845, and in 1852 he was granted the title of "Most Serene One". After the death of his childless son Semyon Mikhailovich Vorontsov (1823–1882), by decree of 1882, the son of M. S. Vorontsov’s daughter, Count Pavel Andreevich Shuvalov, was allowed to be called His Grace Prince Vorontsov-Shuvalov. By decree of 1886, Count Mikhail Andreevich Shuvalov (sc. 1903), as the heir to the Vorontsov majorate, was allowed to be called His Serene Highness Prince Vorontsov, Count Shuvalov.

Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov had two sons: Artemy (1748–1813), real privy councilor, senator (1792–1800), and Illarion (1730–1790). The son of the latter, Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov (1790–1854), active Privy Councilor (1838), envoy in Munich (Bavaria) in 1822–27, Turin (Sardinia) in 1827–31. From 1831 he was the chief master of ceremonies, from 1846 - a member of the State Council, vice-chancellor of the Russian Empire and royal orders. After the death of E. R. Dashkova, he inherited her estates and in 1807 received the right to be called Count Vorontsov-Dashkov; from this branch of the family, his son I. I. Vorontsov-Dashkov is most famous.

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Genus history

From the middle of the 15th to the end of the 17th century. The Vorontsovs served as governors, solicitors, stewards, roundabouts and boyars.

  • Mikhail Illarionovich, lieutenant general, eldest son of Larion (Illarion) Vorontsov), chancellor. In 1744, he was granted the dignity of count of the Roman Empire by Emperor Charles VI, and at the same time he was allowed to use this title in Russia. His brothers Roman and Ivan Illarionovich were granted the dignity of a count in 1760 by Emperor Franz I; this dignity was recognized for them in Russia only in 1797.

Counts Vorontsov were recorded in the fifth part of the genealogical books of Vladimir, Kursk, Moscow, Kaluga, St. Petersburg and Yaroslavl provinces. The grandson of Roman Illarionovich, Count Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov, being a Caucasian governor, was elevated to the princely dignity of the Russian Empire in 1845; in 1852 he was granted the title of lordship.

Vorontsov-Dashkovs

The daughter of Roman Illarionovich and Marfa Ivanovna Surmina, Ekaterina, was married to Prince Mikhail-Kondraty Ivanovich Dashkov. At the request of Ekaterina Romanovna, her cousin-nephew Ivan Illarionovich, in 1807, was allowed to add the surname Dashkovs to his surname and be called Count Vorontsov-Dashkov. About his son Illarion Ivanovich, see above. The Vorontsov-Dashkovs are recorded in the fifth part of the genealogical books of the Moscow and St. Petersburg provinces.

Shuvalovs

With the death of his descendant son, Adjutant General, His Serene Highness Prince Semyon Mikhailovich Vorontsov (1823-1882), by the personal Imperial Decree of June 7, 1882, Count Pavel Andreevich Shuvalov was allowed to take the coat of arms, title and surname of his maternal grandfather, Field Marshal , His Serene Highness Prince Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov and henceforth be called the Most Serene Prince Vorontsov count Shuvalov.

By the personal decree of February 12, 1886, Count Mikhail Andreyevich Shuvalov, as the heir to the majorate estate established in the Vorontsov family, was allowed to add to his title, coat of arms and surname the title, coat of arms and surname of the founder of this majorate and henceforth be called the Most Serene Prince Vorontsov count Shuvalov.

Other Vorontsovs

There are other ancient noble families of the Vorontsovs.

The first of them, descended from Anofry Petrovich Vorontsov, who was placed in 1629, is recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Oryol province.

The second clan of the Vorontsovs, leading from Besson Timofeevich Vorontsov, placed in 1630, is recorded in the VI part of the genealogical books of the Kursk and Kaluga provinces.

According to the sentinel book of Odoev and Odoevsky district of 1616, the boyar children Onoshko Petrov son Vorontsov and Bezson Timofeev son Vorontsov owned estates in Odoevsky district. The first in the village of Krivoy and in the village of Nikolsky Stoyanovo had sixty-seven quarters with osmina in the field, and in two for the same, the second - in the villages of Bortnaya, Sotnikovo, too, and Goryainovo - sixty-two quarters in the field, and in two for that and. Probably, later Onofrey Petrov, son of Vorontsov, was placed in Orlovsky district, and Bezson Timofeev, son of Vorontsov, in Kursk district.

There were also many children of the boyar Vorontsovs, who were placed in different cities. Some of them served in Arzamas. Some of their descendants moved from the Arzamas uyezd to the Simbirsk uyezd. Then one branch moved from the Simbirsk district to the Buzuluksky district of the Orenburg province. Their descendants - noblemen Vorontsovs - lived in Buzuluk, Buguruslan districts and in Samara. These Vorontsovs are included in the I part of the noble family tree of the book of the Simbirsk province and in the II part of the Samara province. One of the Arzamas Vorontsovs, the stolnik Dmitry Lukyanovich Vorontsov, in 1686 submitted a genealogical list to the Discharge, in which he indicated his origin from the noble Varangian Shimon Afrikanovich and indicated that the son of the executed boyar Fyodor-Demid Vorontsov, Kirei Vorontsov, was exiled in disgrace to Arzamas, he had sons Fedor and Ivan, Ivan had a son Gregory, Gregory had a son Lukyan, known in the list of ten in 1649 among the boyar children of the courtyard, as one of the builders of the Simbirsk serif line, who was the father of the steward Dmitry Lukyanovich.

There are quite a few noble Vorontsov families of later origin.

Under the name of the Vorontsovs, a Russian noble family of Polish origin is known, the Lubich coat of arms, divided into two branches.

The ancestor of the first of them was Pavel Voronets, to whom King Vladislav IV granted estates in the Smolensk Voivodeship. His son Peter, after the conquest of Smolensk in 1656, entered into Russian citizenship, was a cornet in the regiment of the Smolensk gentry and a steward. This branch is included in the VI part of the genealogical book of Smolensk and in the II part of the Kursk province.

The second branch comes from Dmitry Vorontsov, who received in the first half of the 17th century. from the kings of the Polish estates in Smolensk land. His son, captain Casimir, entered into Russian citizenship after the conquest of Smolensk. His descendants are included in the second part of the genealogical book of Smolensk and in the third part - of the Kaluga province (Armorial, IV, 114).

According to the hypothesis of the Pinsk local historian Roman Goroshkevich, the Pinsk noble family of Verenich-Stakhovsky, descended from two brothers, Semyon and Dmitry Vorontsov (Voronichi), may be an offshoot of the Russian noble family of the Vorontsovs.

Description of coats of arms

Coat of arms of the Count Vorontsov family

The shield is divided by a diagonal strip on the right side into two parts, of which the upper is silver and the lower is red, and on the line are two roses with one lily of variables between them with fields of flowers. A black top is attached to the shield, on which a golden rafter with three garnets is depicted, and on the black top there are three silver stars. On the shield is placed a crown peculiar to the counts, above which are depicted three tournament crowned helmets with gold hoops and worthy of them kleinods and a chain decorated, of which a double-headed eagle with a crown, nose and golden claws is placed on the middle silver erect, and on the right, which is placed obliquely, on the sides there are six banners, of which the first is red, the last is white, and the middle one is with golden Russian eagles. The mantling is lowered on both sides, black and gold on the right side, red and silver on the left. The shield holders stand on the sides and two white horses with red city crowns on their necks hold the shield with their front legs. Motto: Semper Immota Fides.

The coat of arms is included in the General Armorial of the noble families of the All-Russian Empire, part 1, 1st section, p. 28.

The most famous representatives

  • Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov - boyar and governor, in 1505 and 1506 he went against the Kazan king Makhmet-Amin; in 1514 he commanded reserve regiments stationed on the river Ugra. He died in 1518.
  • Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov - son of Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov, boyar and governor; was at the siege and capture of Smolensk (1513 and 1514); went, in 1522, against the Crimean Tatars; in 1524 he commanded a separate detachment of "numerous rati" (150,000 people) sent near Kazan; on the way he distinguished himself in the battle of the Sviyaga River with Cheremis and Kazan Tatars; was the governor in Novgorod, was at the commission of the spiritual letter of Vasily Ioannovich, who punished him and other boyars about his son, about the dispensation of the zemstvo, etc. During the reign of Elena, at first, all the affairs of the state were led by her uncle Mikhail Glinsky, with his "like-minded" Vorontsov; together with Glinsky Vorontsov was imprisoned (1534). A year later, the disgrace from Vorontsov was removed, and he commanded the troops of Novgorod and Pskov against the Lithuanians, and in 1537 he took part in peace negotiations with Lithuania and Sweden in 1539.
  • Fedor-Demid Semenovich Vorontsov - brother of Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov and son of Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov, boyar and councillor, an active participant in the struggle for power under the young Ivan the Terrible, was executed in 1546.
  • Vasily   Fedorovich   Vorontsov - the son of Fedor-Demid   Semenovich   Vorontsov, roundabout and voivode. Killed near Wenden in 1578.
  • Ivan Fedorovich Vorontsov, brother of Vasily Fedorovich Vorontsov, was executed by Ivan IV in 1570 along with many others accused of having relations with Novgorodians.
  • Ivan Mikhailovich Vorontsov - son of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov, governor, councilor and diplomat. Participated in all the wars of Ivan IV and traveled twice on diplomatic missions: he took a letter to Sigismund-August in Lithuania (in 1557), and the second time to Sweden (1567-69). During the stay of the Russian embassy there, King Eric XIV was dethroned; At the same time, the Moscow ambassadors were robbed, beaten and even threatened with death, from which their younger brother Erich, Karl, saved them; then they were transported to Abo, kept there for about 8 months, as captives, and only in 1569 they were released to Moscow.
  • Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (1714-1767) - Count, State Chancellor; was born in 1714. At the age of fourteen, he was appointed chamber junker at the court of Grand Duchess Elisaveta Petrovna and served the latter both with his pen, which he was good at, and with the money of his rich sister-in-law, the wife of his brother Roman. Together with Shuvalov, he stood behind the sleigh, on which the princess went to the barracks of the Preobrazhensky Regiment on the night of her proclamation as empress; he, together with Lestok, arrested Anna Leopoldovna and her family. For this, Elizabeth granted him a real chamberlain, lieutenant of the newly founded life company and made him the owner of rich estates. On January 3, 1742, Mikhail Illarionovich became the husband of Anna Karlovna Skavronskaya, the Empress's cousin. In 1744 he was elevated to the dignity of a count of the Russian Empire and after that he was appointed vice-chancellor. In 1748, he almost fell into disgrace. He was accused of complicity in the Lestocq conspiracy, but he managed to easily justify himself from this accusation and regain the favor of the empress. When Chancellor A.P. Bestuzhev-Ryumin fell into disgrace in 1758, Vorontsov was appointed in his place. Having inherited from Bestuzhev-Ryumin the so-called Peter's system - an alliance with Austria (against Turkey), under Elisaveta Petrovna he actively continued the war with Prussia, but under Peter III he almost entered into an alliance with Prussia. Mikhail was attached to Peter and even tried to defend his rights after the coup on June 29, 1762; he refused to swear allegiance to Catherine II, for which he was subjected to house arrest, and swore only when he heard about the death of Peter Fedorovich. Nevertheless, Catherine II, who saw him as an experienced and hardworking diplomat, left him as chancellor. The need to share his work (on diplomatic relations) with N. I. Panin, who kept a completely different system, the resulting misunderstandings with him and other close associates of the empress, for example, with Grigory Orlov, and the coldness of the empress herself soon forced Vorontsov to resign (1763). He died in Moscow in 1767. Neither contemporaries nor historians agree in assessing the activities of M. I. Vorontsov. Most historians, following the harsh sentence of Manstein, call him incapable, poorly educated and amenable to foreign influence. But almost everyone considers Mikhail Illarionovich an honest, gentle and humane person. A friend and patron of M. V. Lomonosov, he was interested in the successes of his native literature and native science, and, as far as one can judge from his letters, especially of the last decade, he had a good education, if not in a political, then in a general literary sense.
  • Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov (1707-1783) - the elder brother of Mikhail Illarionovich; genus. in 1707; lieutenant general and senator under Elizabeth, general-in-chief under Peter Fedorovich, under Catherine II, first in disgrace, and then governor of the provinces of Vladimir, Penza and Tambov. With his extortions and extortion, he brought the provinces entrusted to him to extreme ruin. The rumor about this reached the Empress, and on the day of his name day she sent him a wallet as a gift. Having received such a "double-meaning" sign of royal favor with guests, Roman Illarionovich was so amazed by him that he soon died (1783). He was married to a wealthy merchant's daughter, Marfa Ivanovna Surmina. Of his daughters, Elizabeth was the favorite of Peter III, and Catherine became famous under the name of Princess Dashkova.
  • Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov (1719-1786) - the second brother of Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov - was the president of the Votchinnaya Collegium in Moscow, lieutenant general, senator, chamberlain. He is married to Maria Artemyevna, the daughter of Artemy Petrovich Volynsky, who was executed under Biron.
  • Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov-Dashkov (1790-1854) - grandson of Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov, master of ceremonies at the court of Emperor Nicholas I (1789); after the death of the last of the family of princes Dashkov, with the permission of Emperor Alexander I, in 1807 he became known as Count Vorontsov-Dashkov.
  • Alexander Romanovich Vorontsov (1741-1805) - Count and State Chancellor; genus. in 1741; began his service at the age of 15 in the Izmailovsky regiment. In 1759, Mikhail Illarionovich, who took a great part in the fate of his nephews, sent him to the Strasbourg military school; after that he traveled to Paris and Madrid and compiled for his uncle a description of the Spanish administration. Returning to Russia (1761), he was soon appointed chargé d'affaires in Vienna, and with the accession of Pyotr Fedorovich was sent to England as a minister plenipotentiary, where he did not stay long. Under Catherine II, he was a senator, president of the College of Commerce, but he stood at a distance from the court. Shortly after the conclusion of the Peace of Jassy (1791), Alexander Romanovich had to resign and remained away from business until the accession of Alexander I, who in 1802 appointed him state chancellor. This was a time of celebration for the Vorontsovs; Napoleon's rule caused a break with the system of Panin, who sought an alliance with France and Prussia, and demanded rapprochement with England and Austria. In London was his brother Semyon Romanovich, an Angloman, respected by local statesmen; and the alliance with Austria returned him to the system of Peter, as if inherited from his uncle, Mikhail Illarionovich. Exhibiting in all his reports to the emperor, during 1802-04, the importance and significance of the alliance with Austria and especially with England, and pointing out the significant harm from Napoleonic "distortions", the need for joint armed actions against him, Alexander Romanovich greatly contributed to the break with Napoleon in 1803.

A prominent place is occupied by the activities of Alexander Romanovich in matters of internal administration, where he took a special part in the transformation of the Senate, the organization of the ministry, etc. His authoritative opinion was addressed in important matters even after his retirement (1804). He died in 1805. He possessed an extraordinary memory and extensive historical knowledge; left "Notes on his time" or an autobiography published in the 7th volume of the "Archive of Prince Vorontsov", and several notes of a historical and legal nature: "On the Rights and Advantages of the Senate" (published in "Readings of the Moscow Society of Russian History and Antiquities" for 1 8 64 g, book 1) and “Notes on some articles relating to Russia” (also in the “Readings of M. O. I. D. R.” for 1859, book 1; see Sushkov’s article in Russian Bulletin" for 1859).

Vorontsovs- an ancient noble family. From the middle of the 15th to the end of the 17th century. The Vorontsovs served as governors, solicitors, stewards, roundabouts and boyars.


Coat of arms of the Count Vorontsov family

Officially, the Vorontsov family tree is derived from the legendary Shimon Afrikanovich, who left the Varangian land for Kyiv in 1027. There is no complete record of the descendants of Shimon, who was baptized as Simon. But such a record is kept from the boyar Protasy Fedorovich. On behalf of his son Veniamian Protasyevich surname Velyaminovs. The immediate ancestor of the Vorontsovs, the grandson of Velyamin Protasyevich— Fedor Vasilyevich Voronets Velyaminov(about 1400). However, there is another point of view, according to which the ancient boyar family of the Vorontsovs died out in the 16th century, and the later counts of the Vorontsovs were only assigned to it. This version was defended in his genealogical research by Prince Pyotr Vladimirovich Dolgorukov. Considering this an insult, Count (later the Most Serene Prince) Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov sent the prince a challenge to a duel, but the duel did not take place.

His great-grandson was Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov(sk. 1518), only son Ivan Nikitich Vorontsov from which the rise of the family began. In 1490 he served as governor in Mozhaisk. In 1494 and 1496 he was the second governor in Tula. In 1501 he was governor in Starodub. In 1502, as the fourth commander of a large regiment, he participated in a campaign against the Lithuanians to Mstislavl. In 1504 he received the nobility. In 1505, with the beginning of the Russian-Kazan war, he was sent to Murom with a regiment of the left hand.

In 1506 he participated in an unsuccessful campaign against Kazan. In 1513 he was a regimental governor in Tula. In 1514, during the campaign of Vasily III to Smolensk, he was left on the Ugra River to protect himself from attacks from the Crimean Khanate. In 1518 he commanded troops in Serpukhov. He died shortly thereafter.

Had four sons Michael, Dmitry, Ivan Foku And Fedora and daughter Evdokia issued for A. M. Kutuzova-Kleopina.

Fedor-Demid Semyonovich Vorontsov(sk. 07/21/1546), boyar (1544) and councilor of the Duma.

In August 1528 he stood in Vyazma. In August 1530 he was on the banks of the Oka, against Lublin. In 1531 - the second governor of the regiment of the right hand at Odoev, for protection from the Crimea. Participated in 1531 and 1532 in two embassy commissions: on the affairs of Kazan and sent to Lithuania for the exchange of letters.

During the reign of Elena Glinskaya and Shuisky, he did not play a prominent role; but he managed to win the love of the growing Ivan IV. In 1539, as an Uglich butler, he was sent to the Ugra. The Shuiskys unsuccessfully tried several times to remove him from the court; finally, in 1543, he was exiled to Kostroma. But at the end of the same year, the head of the Shuiskys, Andrei, was disgraced and executed. Ivan IV immediately returned his favorite from exile and appointed him chief adviser.

Vorontsov wanted to rule unlimitedly under the 14-year-old tsar, getting angry, according to the chronicler, every time Ivan IV interfered in business or favored one of the boyars. For this, in October 1545, Vorontsov was removed from the court, but, at the request of Metropolitan Macarius, he was soon returned.

Six months later, he suffers a new disgrace. When, in 1546, Ivan IV himself was at the head of a detachment of Moscow troops sent to meet the Crimeans, he was once stopped by Novgorod pishchalniks and began to beat with their foreheads about something, Ivan ordered his servants to send them away; at the same time, a struggle ensued between them, and several people were killed. Ivan IV ordered his clerk, Vasily Zakharov, to investigate the case; the latter reported that the Novgorod pishchalniks acted at the instigation of the Vorontsovs - Fedor and his nephew Vasily Mikhailovich, as well as Prince Ivan Ivanovich Kubensky. By order of Ivan IV, the accused were executed, and their loved ones were sent into exile.

The chroniclers say that the clerk slandered the boyars, and that Fyodor Semyonovich was only guilty of wanting to rule the state without any intervention from the tsar.

His son Vasily Fyodorovich Vorontsov(d. 1578, Wenden) - roundabout and governor. During the Livonian War in 1578 he was in the guard regiment, during the siege of Wenden he commanded the "firearms". During the attack of the Lithuanians Sapieha and the Swedish General Boye on October 21, 1578, the actions of the Russian firearms stopped the enemy advance. When the battle resumed the next day, and most of the Russian troops fled, he remained true to his duty and fell with weapons in his hands.

Ivan Fyodorovich Vorontsov, brother of Vasily Fedorovich Vorontsov - was executed by Ivan IV in 1570, along with many others accused of relations with the Novgorodians.

Dmitry Semenovich Vorontsov(sk. 1537), governor in Pskov (1534); had a son Ivan Chuhu. In 1519, during a campaign against Smolensk, he was a regimental governor in Dorogobuzh. In 1520 he was among the other governor in Serpukhov. In 1521 he was in Meshchera. In 1530 he was the commander of a guard regiment of cavalry during a campaign against Kazan. In May 1531 he was in the Seversk land on Kleven. In November 1535 he led a regiment of his right hand to Lithuania. In April 1536 he participated in the founding of the Velizh fortress. In July 1537, he stood near Nizhny Novgorod, due to the threat from the Kazan Khanate.

Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov(sk. 1539), boyar (since 1531), In 1513, during a campaign against Smolensk, he participated in the devastation of Lithuanian lands from Orsha and Drutsk to Braslav. In 1514, during the campaign of Vasily III to Smolensk, he stood in Tula to protect himself from attacks from the Crimean Khanate, as the second governor of the regiment of the right hand. In 1517 he stood on Meshchera, on Tolstik with an advanced regiment, from where he was sent to the Vashan River. In 1519 he was the second governor under the command of Prince I. M. Vorotynsky on the banks of the Oka and in Meshchera. In June 1521 he was in Meshchera. In 1524 he went as the second governor with a large regiment near Kazan; on the way he distinguished himself in the battle of the Sviyaga River with Cheremis and Kazan Tatars; he was the governor in Novgorod, was at the time of the completion of the spiritual letter of Vasily Ioannovich, who punished him and other boyars about his son, about the dispensation of the zemstvo, etc. . In July 1531, he stood on the banks of the Oka on Devic as the third governor.

During the reign of Elena Glinskaya (1533-38), he was one of the closest assistants to her uncle M. L. Glinsky in government, in 1534 he was imprisoned with him, and in 1535 he was forgiven. He was the head of the Novgorod and Pskov troops during the hostilities in Lithuania, in 1537 he participated in peace negotiations with Lithuania and Sweden in 1539.

In April 1536 he was transferred from Novgorod, where he was governor, governor in Melvyatitsy. Died in 1539.

He had three sons Vasily, Yuri and Ivan, who were all boyars.

Ivan Mikhailovich Vorontsov- son of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov, voivode, councilor and diplomat. Participated in all the wars of Ivan IV and traveled twice with diplomatic missions: he took a letter to Sigismund-August in Lithuania (in 1557), and the second time to Sweden (1567-69). During the stay of the Russian embassy there, King Eric XIV was dethroned; At the same time, the Moscow ambassadors were robbed, beaten and even threatened with death, from which their younger brother Erich, Karl, saved them; then they were transported to Abo, kept there for about 8 months as captives, and only in 1569 were they released to Moscow.

Ivan Mikhailovich Vorontsov is the compiler of an article list about the embassy to Sweden in 1567-1569, which took place in an atmosphere of mutual distrust on both sides - both Swedish official circles and Moscow ambassadors - on the eve of the overthrow of the Swedish king Eric XIV. There are almost no descriptions of the country in the article list, it contains brief records of business meetings, conversations and trials that fell to the lot of the embassy participants in Sweden: V. and his companions survived the 1568 coup in Stockholm, which deposed Eric; they were imprisoned for eight months and barely saved their lives. In Moscow, together with his comrades, I. M. Vorontsov returned only in 1569

Vasily Mikhailovich Vorontsov, boyar, executed in 1546, the most famous branch of the family descended from him.

Vasily Mikhailovich had descendants:

1. Fedor Vasilievich. Fedor Vasilyevich had a brother 2. Petr Vasilievich, whose son, 2.1. Boris Petrovich, in 1628 he was a lawyer of the aft palace, and his son (grandson of Peter Vasilyevich) was 2.1.1. Mikhail Borisovich(1673), since 1666 married to Ekaterina Paramonovna Zinovieva(October 9, 1692), after which the inheritance went to Elizar Nikitich and Illarion Gavrilovich Vorontsov.

1.1.1. Elizar Nikitich was the grandson of Fyodor Vasilyevich from his eldest son 1.1. Nikita Fedorovich and left five sons: 1.1.1.1. Petra, 1.1.1.2. Dmitry, 1.1.1.3. Fedora, 1.1.1.4. Ivana and 1.1.1.5. Maxim Elizarovich, of which the youngest (Maxim) left one son 1.1.1.5.1. Andrey Maksimovich already childless.

The successor of the family was the second brother of Elizar Nikitich - Gavrila Nikitich (1678), because the family was from the youngest son of Fyodor Vasilyevich -1.2. Lukyana continued in the person of his son Streltsy Colonel 1.2.1. Dmitry Lukyanovich. His son 1.2.1.1. Petr Dmitrievich(b. 1687, 1763), former commissioner of the fleet, from marriage to Aksinya Yakovlevna Levashova(b. 1698, 1752) had 1.2.1.1.1. daughter (May 5, 1745), who married Ivan Vasilyevich Yanov, and two sons: the governor in Vladimir - 1.2.1.1.2. Alexey Petrovich and a member of the patrimonial board - 1.2.1.1.3. Ivan Petrovich. Alexey Petrovich is married to Evdokia Stepanovna Protasova had 1.2.1.1.2.1.childless son Luca and 1.2.1.1.2.2. daughter Elizabeth, while Ivan Petrovich from marriage with Marfa Alekseevna Korobeynikova had two daughters: 1.2.1.1.3.1. Tatyana and 1.2.1.1.3.2. Catherine and two sons: childless 1.2.1.1.3.3. Petra and 1.2.1.1.3.4. Dmitry Ivanovich.

1.1.2. Gavrila Nikitich Vorontsov, centurion of the streltsy army, died during the siege of Chigirin in 1678. Gavriil Nikitich has four sons: 1.1.2.1. Procopius. Prokopy Gavrilovich had a son 1.1.2.1.1. Alexei and 1.1.2.1.1.1. grandson Ivan Alekseevich.

1.1.2.2. Ilya,

1.1.2.3.Ivan(1695) Ivan Gavrilovich had a 1.1.2.3.1.son Gabriel and grandchildren: 1.1.2.3.1.1. Alexey Gavrilovich, governor in Alatyr (1765), and 1.1.2.3.1.2. Ilya Gavrilovich, both childless, like their uncle Ilya Gavrilovich

1.1.2.4. Illarion Gavrilovich Vorontsov(1674 - May 25, 1750), steward and governor in Rostov the Great. senator (since 1742), for the merits of his son, Empress Elizaveta Petrovna was elevated to Privy Councilor during the coronation. Married to Anna Grigorievna Maslova(1740) had three sons and three daughters, but in general Vorontsov was not rich, owning two hundred souls of peasants. His rise and enrichment was helped by the merits of his second son, Mikhail Illarionovich, who contributed to the accession to the throne of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna.

M. I. Vorontsov was erected an imp. Charles VII in 1744 to the dignity of count of the Roman Empire, and in 1760 imp. Franz I elevated his brothers to the count of the Roman Empire - 1.1.2.4.5. Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov(1719-86), lieutenant general (1761), senator (since 1761), married to the daughter of A.P. Volynsky marie(1725-93), and 1.1.2.4.4. Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov(1717-1783) (by a decree of 1797, the Vorontsov family was included among the count families of the Russian Empire).

Daughters: 1.1.2.4.1. Praskovya- behind Sergei Danilovich Tatishchev,

1.1.2.4.3. Daria(born 1713, 1765) - for Pyotr Mikhailovich Khrushchev,

and 1.1.2.4.6. Pelagia(born 1721, 1757) - for Alexander Ivanovich Narbekov.

1.1.2.4.2. Count (1744) Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (born July 12, 1714, February 15, 1767) - statesman and diplomat, to whom the Vorontsov family owes its exaltation.

Born July 12, 1714. At the age of fourteen he was appointed chamber junker at the court of the Grand Duchess Elizabeth Petrovna and served the latter both with his pen, which he was good at, and with the money of his rich sister-in-law, the wife of his brother Roman, and was very loved by her for her diligence in managing the estates of her highness


Unknown foreign artist of the 3rd quarter of the 18th century. Portrait of Mikhail Vorontsov. Type P. Rotary. Kuskovo Museum

Together with Shuvalov stood behind the sleigh on which the princess rode to the barracks of the Preobrazhensky regiment on the night of her proclamation as empress; he, together with Lestok, arrested Anna Leopoldovna and her family. For this, Elizabeth granted him a real chamberlain, lieutenant of the newly founded life company and made him the owner of rich estates. He was granted a coat of arms with the motto "Sumper Jmotta Fides" (Loyalty is never unshakable).

Appreciating the loyalty and honesty of Vorontsov, Empress Elizaveta Petrovna gave him her cousin (January 3, 1742) - Countess Anna Karlovna Skavronskaya, daughter Karl Samuilovich Skavronsky, brother of the Empress Catherine I, giving Vorontsov the rank of lieutenant general, 28 years old.


Unknown foreign artist of the 3rd quarter of the 18th century. Portrait of Anna Karlovna Vorontsova. Type P. Rotary. Kuskovo Museum
Countess Anna Karlovna Vorontsova (nee Countess Skavronskaya; December 7 (18), 1722 - December 31, 1775 (January 11, 1776)) - wife of Chancellor Count Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov, cousin of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna, lady of state.
Anna Karlovna, daughter of the elder brother of Catherine I, Karl Samoilovich Skavronsky, who was elevated to the dignity of a count in 1727. Who was her mother - it is not known, her name was Marya Ivanovna. As a girl, she was taken to the court of Tsesarevna Elizaveta Petrovna and appointed maid of honor.

Countess A.K. Vorontsova, nee Skavronskaia. Pavlovsk

Elizaveta Petrovna loved her cousin very much and after ascending the throne, married her to Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov. The wedding was celebrated at the court with great pomp on January 31, 1742, the empress personally escorted the newlyweds to their house and stayed for dinner and a ball. April 25, 1742 Anna Karlovna was granted the status of ladies. Two years later, in 1744, M.I. Vorontsov, together with his brothers, received the title of count.
Empress Elizabeth constantly noted Anna Karlovna and emphasized her relationship with her; during the Vorontsovs' trip abroad in 1746, there was even an order that neither the wife of the Russian envoy in Berlin nor Countess Vorontsova should kiss the hands of the Princess of Zerbst, the mother of Grand Duchess Ekaterina Alekseevna.
Anna Karlovna was constantly in the company of the Empress, and Elizabeth was often easily at her house, where she met with all foreign residents at the Russian court, who looked after the wife of the great chancellor and reckoned with her influence in foreign policy. On June 29, 1760, Anna Karlovna was elevated to the rank of Chief Chamberlain.

Louis Tocqué (1696-1772) Anna Karlovna Vorontsova (1750s)

In the short reign of Peter III, the Vorontsovs belonged entirely to the party of the emperor and were among those who accompanied him on June 28, 1762, in a galley flight from Oranienbaum to Kronstadt.
On February 9, 1760, Anna Karlovna received the Order of St. Catherine of the Grand Cross from Peter III. It was said that upon the accession of Catherine II, Countess Anna Karlovna returned her cavalry order to the Empress, but received it back. At the coronation of Catherine II, Vorontsova, according to the ceremonial, set purple and St. Andrew's ribbon on the empress.
Widowed in 1767, Countess Anna Karlovna did not play a prominent role at court, although Tsarevich Pavel Petrovich called her aunt.
Anna Karlovna was different from her ordinary, colorless sisters and aunts and was one of the most interesting and pretty women of the 18th century. Ekaterina Alekseevna, the future empress, wrote about her in 1756:
... The Countess is charming: the more you see her, the more you love her.

A.K. Vorontsov. Unknown artist from the original by L. Toke. GIM

Anna Karlovna was famous as a remarkably beautiful woman; even in the time of Peter III, when she was already under forty, she was still considered among the first beauties of St. Petersburg. In addition to her attractive appearance, Vorontsova had a mind and a kind heart. Anna Karlovna's own letters to her daughter depict her as a cheerful, impressionable woman with a lively temperament, a lover of chatting. Unlike other secular ladies, Vorontsova had a good command of Russian literacy.
According to Gelbig, Countess Vorontsova was a lovely woman, but she liked to drink. A big winder, fashionista and dandy, who, thanks to her husband's position, constantly made acquaintance with foreign ministers in St. Petersburg and, as she put it, "with a whole store of envoys," she knew many diplomatic secrets and was no stranger to politics. Catherine II in her "Notes" says:
... The Saxon resident Prass, surprisingly, had information about many subjects that, apparently, he had no way to find out about. The source of this information was revealed many years later: Prass was a secret and very modest lover of the wife of the great chancellor, Countess A.K. Skavronskaya, who saw him with her friend, Samarina, the wife of the ceremony master.
Having only one daughter, Anna Mikhailovna, Countess Vorontsova was strongly attached to her; her daughter's unhappy marriage to Count A.S. Stroganov, which ended in divorce, and her early death left her "inconsolable". As her own, Anna Karlovna loved the children of her husband's brother, Count R.I. Vorontsov, who were left without a mother early; of them, the youngest daughter, Ekaterina, was brought up in her house from the age of four. Later known as Princess Dashkova, whom Anna Karlovna at the end "for her dissolute behavior renounced her home." Dashkova described her aunt as follows:
... Her character was a strange combination of pride with extraordinary sensitivity and softness of heart.
Anna Karlovna loved the fine arts and knew a lot about them, having seen a lot during her travels in Europe. Her magnificent house was constantly visited by artists, writers, scientists, statesmen. D.I. Fonvizin named Countess Vorontsova among the first persons to whom he read his "Undergrowth" immediately after it was written.

Aleksey Antropov (1716-1795) Portrait of Anna Karlovna Vorontsova (nee Skavronskaya), widow of former Chancellor Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (1763)

Anna Karlovna died on December 31, 1775, she was buried at the Lazarevsky cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra

In 1744, Mikhail Illarionovich was granted the rank of real privy councilor and made vice-chancellor.
And on March 27, 1744, the German Emperor Charles VII elevated Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov, who held the post of vice-chancellor, to the dignity of a count of the Roman Empire. Since he had no male offspring, Emperor Franz I allowed the title of count to be extended to his brothers, Roman and Ivan Illarionovich. In 1748, he almost fell into disgrace. He was accused of complicity in the Lestocq conspiracy, but he managed to easily justify himself from this accusation and regain the favor of the empress.


Antropov Alexey Petrovich: Portrait of Prince M.I. Vorontsov

When Chancellor A.P. Bestuzhev-Ryumin fell into disgrace in 1758, Vorontsov was appointed in his place. Having inherited from Bestuzhev-Ryumin the so-called Peter's system - an alliance with Austria (against Turkey), under Elizabeth Petrovna he actively continued the war with Prussia, but under Peter III he almost entered into an alliance with her. Mikhail was attached to Peter and even tried to defend his rights after the coup on June 29, 1762; he refused to swear allegiance to Catherine II, for which he was subjected to house arrest, and swore only when he heard about the death of Peter Fedorovich. Nevertheless, Catherine II, who saw in him an experienced and hardworking diplomat, left him as chancellor. The need to share his work (in diplomatic relations) with N.I. Panin, who kept a completely different system, the ensuing misunderstandings with him and other close associates of the empress, for example, with Grigory Orlov, and the coldness of the empress herself forced Vorontsov to resign in 1763. In 1765, he was dismissed from service and settled in Moscow, where he died on February 15, 1767, was buried in the former Holy Cross Monastery, on Vozdvizhenka.

Neither contemporaries nor historians agree in assessing the activities of M. I. Vorontsov. Most historians, following the harsh sentence of Manstein, call him incapable, poorly educated and amenable to foreign influence. But almost everyone considers Mikhail Illarionovich an honest, gentle and humane person. Empress Catherine II wrote about him:

... Hypocritus, which did not happen, that's who was sold to the first buyer; there was no court that did not support him on a salary.

Vorontsov was very indecisive and timid, which prevented him from giving his voice the necessary weight. In relations with representatives of foreign powers, he avoided decisive answers and, hiding the true intentions of his government, tried to give everyone hope that their desires would be fulfilled. In private life, Vorontsov was a sober man, temperate, friendly with everyone, without distinction of social status. Despite the generosity of the Empress, who granted him villages and factories, he constantly needed money, always asked for subsidies, and embarked on commercial enterprises.

A friend and patron of M. V. Lomonosov, he was interested in the successes of his native literature and native science, and, as far as one can judge from his letters, especially of the last decade, he had a good education, if not in the political, then in the general literary sense.


Matvei Vasiliev. Count en:Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov. (1755)

Mikhail Illarionovich, married to Anna Karlovna, had four children, three of whom died in infancy.

Genus history

The origin of the clan was from the legendary Simon Afrikanovich, who left the Varangian land for Kyiv in 1027. His immediate ancestor was Fyodor Vasilievich Vorontsov (about 1400).

From the middle of the 15th to the end of the 17th century. The Vorontsovs served as governors, solicitors, stewards, roundabouts and boyars.

Mikhail Illarionovich, a lieutenant general, was granted the dignity of count of the Roman Empire by Emperor Charles VI in 1744, and at the same time he was allowed to use this title in Russia. His brothers Roman and Ivan Illarionovich were granted the dignity of a count in 1760 by Emperor Franz I; this dignity was recognized for them in Russia only in 1797.

Counts Vorontsov were recorded in the fifth part of the genealogical books of Vladimir, Kursk, Moscow, Kaluga, St. Petersburg and Yaroslavl provinces. The grandson of Roman Illarionovich, Count Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov, being a Caucasian governor, was elevated to the princely dignity of the Russian Empire in 1845; in 1852 he was granted the title of lordship.

Vorontsov-Dashkovs

The daughter of Roman Illarionovich, Ekaterina, was married to Prince Mikhail-Kondraty Ivanovich Dashkov. Her nephew, Ivan Illarionovich, in 1867 was allowed to add the surname Dashkovs to his surname and be called Count Voronotsov-Dashkov. About his son Illarion Ivanovich, see above. The Vorontsov-Dashkovs are recorded in the fifth part of the genealogical books of the Moscow and St. Petersburg provinces.

Shuvalovs

With the death of his descendant son, Adjutant General, His Serene Highness Prince Semyon Mikhailovich Vorontsov (1823-1882), in the same 1882, Count Pavel Andreevich Shuvalov was granted the highest permission to take the coat of arms, title and surname of his maternal grandfather, Mikhail Semenovich Vorontsov, and be called His Grace Prince Vorontsov Count Shuvalov. In 1886, Count Mikhail Andreyevich Shuvalov, as the heir to the majorate estate established in the Vorontsov family, was allowed to be called His Serene Highness Prince Vorontsov, Count Shuvalov.

Other Vorontsovs

There are other ancient noble families of the Vorontsovs.

The first of them, descended from Anofry Petrovich Vorontsov, who was placed in 1629, is recorded in the VI part of the genealogical book of the Oryol province.

The second clan of the Vorontsovs, leading from Besson Timofeevich Vorontsov, placed in 1630, is recorded in the VI part of the genealogical books of the Kursk and Kaluga provinces.

There are quite a few noble Vorontsov families of later origin.

Under the name of the Vorontsovs, a Russian noble family of Polish origin is known, the Lubich coat of arms, divided into two branches.

The ancestor of the first of them was Pavel Voronets, to whom King Vladislav IV granted estates in the Smolensk Voivodeship. His son Peter, after the conquest of Smolensk in 1656, entered into Russian citizenship, was a cornet in the regiment of the Smolensk gentry and a steward. This branch is included in the VI part of the genealogical book of Smolensk and in the II part of the Kursk province.

The second branch comes from Dmitry Vorontsov, who received in the first half of the 17th century. from the kings of the Polish estates in Smolensk land. His son, captain Casimir, entered into Russian citizenship after the conquest of Smolensk. His descendants are included in the second part of the genealogical book of Smolensk and in the third part - of the Kaluga province (Armorial, IV, 114).

According to the hypothesis of the Pinsk local historian Roman Goroshkevich, the Pinsk noble family of Verenich-Stakhovsky, descended from two brothers, Semyon and Dmitry Vorontsov (Voronichi), may be an offshoot of the Russian noble family of the Vorontsovs.

Description of coats of arms

Coat of arms of the Count Vorontsov family

Coat of arms of the Count Vorontsov family

The shield is divided by a diagonal strip on the right side into two parts, of which the upper is silver and the lower is red, and on the line are two roses with one variable lily between them with fields of flowers. A black top is added to the shield, on which a golden rafter with three garnets is depicted, and on the black top there are three silver stars. On the shield is placed a crown peculiar to the counts, above which are depicted three tournament crowned helmets with golden hoops and worthy of them kleinods and a chain decorated, of which a double-headed eagle with a crown, nose and golden claws is placed on the middle silver erect one, and on the right, which is placed obliquely, on the sides there are six banners, of which the first is red, the last is white, and the middle one is with golden Russian eagles. The mantle is lowered on both sides, black and gold on the right side, red and silver on the left. The shield-bearers stand on the sides and with their front legs the shield is held by two white horses with red city crowns on their necks. Motto: Semper Immota Fides.

The coat of arms is included in the General Armorial of the noble families of the All-Russian Empire, part 1, 1st section, p. 28.

The most famous representatives

  • Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov - boyar and governor, in 1505 and 1506 he went against the Kazan Tsar Makhmet-Amin; in 1514 he commanded reserve regiments stationed on the Ugra River. Died 1518
  • Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov - son of Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov, boyar and governor; was at the siege and capture of Smolensk (1513 and 1514); went, in 1522, against the Crimean Tatars; in 1524 he commanded a separate detachment of "numerous rati" (150,000 people) sent near Kazan; on the way he distinguished himself in the battle of the Sviyaga River with Cheremis and Kazan Tatars; was the governor in Novgorod, was at the commission of the spiritual letter of Vasily Ioannovich, who punished him and other boyars about his son, about the dispensation of the zemstvo, etc. During the reign of Elena, at first, all the affairs of the state were led by her uncle Mikhail Glinsky, with his "like-minded" Vorontsov; together with Glinsky Vorontsov was imprisoned (1534). A year later, the disgrace from Vorontsov was removed, and he commanded the troops of Novgorod and Pskov against the Lithuanians, and in 1537 he took part in peace negotiations with Lithuania and Sweden in 1539.
  • Fedor-Demid Semyonovich Vorontsov - brother of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov and son of Semyon Ivanovich Vorontsov, boyar and councilor, participated in 1531 and 1532 in two embassy commissions: on Kazan affairs and sent to Lithuania for the exchange of letters.
  • Vasily Fedorovich Vorontsov - the son of Fedor-Demid Semyonovich Vorontsov, okolnichiy and governor. Killed near Wenden in 1577.
  • Ivan Fedorovich Vorontsov, brother of Vasily Fedorovich Vorontsov, was executed by Ivan IV in 1570 along with many others accused of dealings with Novgorodians.
  • Ivan Mikhailovich Vorontsov - son of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov, governor, councilor and diplomat. Participated in all the wars of Ivan IV and traveled twice with diplomatic missions: he took a letter to Sigismund-August in Lithuania (in 1557), and the second time to Sweden (1567-69). During the stay of the Russian embassy there, King Erich XIV was dethroned; At the same time, the Moscow ambassadors were robbed, beaten and even threatened with death, from which their younger brother Erich, Karl, saved them; then they were transported to Abo, kept there for about 8 months, as captives, and only in 1569 were they released to Moscow.
  • Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov (1714-1767) - Count, State Chancellor; was born in 1714. At the age of fourteen, he was appointed chamber junker at the court of Grand Duchess Elisaveta Petrovna and served the latter both with his pen, which he was good at, and with the money of his rich sister-in-law, the wife of his brother Roman. Together with Shuvalov, he stood behind the sleigh, on which the princess went to the barracks of the Preobrazhensky Regiment on the night of her proclamation as empress; he, together with Lestok, arrested Anna Leopoldovna and her family. For this, Elizabeth granted him a real chamberlain, lieutenant of the newly founded life company and made him the owner of rich estates. On January 3, 1742, Mikhail Illarionovich became the husband of Anna Karlovna Skavronskaya, the Empress's cousin. In 1744 he was elevated to the dignity of a count of the Russian Empire and after that he was appointed vice-chancellor. In 1748, he almost fell into disgrace. He was accused of complicity in the Lestocq conspiracy, but he managed to easily justify himself from this accusation and regain the favor of the empress. When Chancellor A.P. Bestuzhev-Ryumin fell into disgrace in 1758, Vorontsov was appointed in his place. Having inherited from Bestuzhev-Ryumin the so-called Peter's system - an alliance with Austria (against Turkey), under Elisaveta Petrovna he actively continued the war with Prussia, but under Peter III he almost entered into an alliance with Prussia. Mikhail was attached to Peter and even tried to defend his rights after the coup on June 29, 1762; he refused to swear allegiance to Catherine II, for which he was subjected to house arrest, and swore only when he heard about the death of Peter Fedorovich. Nevertheless, Catherine II, who saw him as an experienced and hardworking diplomat, left him as chancellor. The need to share their work (in diplomatic relations) with N. I. Panin, who kept a completely different system, the resulting misunderstandings with him and other close associates of the empress, for example, with Grigory Orlov, and the coldness of the empress herself soon forced Vorontsov to retire (1763). He died in Moscow in 1767. Neither contemporaries nor historians agree in assessing the activities of M. I. Vorontsov. Most historians, following the harsh sentence of Manstein, call him incapable, poorly educated and amenable to foreign influence. But almost everyone considers Mikhail Illarionovich an honest, gentle and humane person. A friend and patron of M. V. Lomonosov, he was interested in the successes of his native literature and native science, and, as far as one can judge from his letters, especially of the last decade, he had a good education, if not in a political, then in a general literary sense.
  • Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov (1707-1783) - the elder brother of Mikhail Illarionovich; genus. in 1707; lieutenant general and senator under Elizabeth, general-in-chief under Peter Fedorovich, under Catherine II, first in disgrace, and then governor of the provinces of Vladimir, Penza and Tambov. With his extortions and extortion, he brought the provinces entrusted to him to extreme ruin. The rumor about this reached the Empress, and on the day of his name day she sent him a wallet as a gift. Having received such a "two-meaning" sign of royal favor at a party, Roman Ilarionovich was so struck by it that he soon died (1783). He was married to a wealthy merchant's daughter, Marfa Ivanovna Surmina. Of his daughters, Elizabeth was the favorite of Peter III, and Catherine became famous under the name of Princess Dashkova.
  • Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov - the second brother of Roman Illarionovich Vorontsov - was the president of the estate board in Moscow.
  • Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov-Dashkov (1790-1854) - grandson of Ivan Illarionovich Vorontsov, master of ceremonies at the court of Emperor Nicholas I (1789); after the death of the last of the family of princes Dashkov, with the permission of Emperor Alexander I, in 1807 he became known as Count Vorontsov-Dashkov.
  • Alexander Romanovich Vorontsov (1741-1805) - Count and State Chancellor; genus. in 1741; began his service at the age of 15 in the Izmailovsky regiment. In 1759, Mikhail Illarionovich, who took a great part in the fate of his nephews, sent him to the Strasbourg military school; after that he traveled to Paris and Madrid and compiled for his uncle a description of the Spanish administration. Returning to Russia (1761), he was soon appointed chargé d'affaires in Vienna, and with the accession of Pyotr Fedorovich was sent to England as a minister plenipotentiary, where he did not stay long. Under Catherine II, he was a senator, president of the College of Commerce, but he stood at a distance from the court. Shortly after the conclusion of the Iasi Peace (1791), Alexander Romanovich had to resign and remained away from business until the accession of Alexander I, who in 1802 appointed him State Chancellor. This was a time of celebration for the Vorontsovs; Napoleon's rule caused a break with the system of Panin, who sought an alliance with France and Prussia, and demanded rapprochement with England and Austria. In London was his brother Semyon Romanovich, an Angloman, respected by local statesmen; and the alliance with Austria returned him to the system of Peter, as if inherited from his uncle, Mikhail Illarionovich. Exhibiting in all his reports to the emperor, during 1802-04, the importance and significance of the alliance with Austria and especially with England, and pointing out the significant harm from Napoleonic "distortions", the need for joint armed actions against him, Alexander Romanovich greatly contributed to the break with Napoleon in 1803.

A prominent place is occupied by the activities of Alexander Romanovich in matters of internal administration, where he took a special part in the transformation of the Senate, the organization of the ministry, etc. His authoritative opinion was addressed in important matters even after his retirement (1804). He died in 1805. He possessed an extraordinary memory and extensive historical knowledge; left "Notes on his time" or an autobiography published in the 7th volume of the "Archive of Prince Vorontsov", and several notes of a historical and legal nature: "On the Rights and Advantages of the Senate" (published in "Readings of the Moscow Society of Russian History and Antiquities" for 1 8 64 g, book 1) and “Notes on some articles relating to Russia” (also in “Readings of M. O. I. D. R.” for 1859, book 1; see Sushkov’s article in “ Russian Bulletin" for 1859).

  • Semyon Romanovich Vorontsov (-) - Count, Russian politician and diplomat. He was an ambassador to Italy, an infantry general, a holder of all Russian orders. The Russian ambassador in London, married to Ekaterina Alekseevna Senyavina (who died in Venice).
  • Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov ( - ) - Count, and with the Most Serene Prince, Field Marshal General; honorary member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences (); Novorossiysk and Bessarabian Governor-General (- gg.). He contributed to the economic development of the region, the construction of Odessa and other cities. V - Viceroy in the Caucasus. Son of Semyon Romanovich Vorontsov.

Notes

Literature

  • Alekseev V. Counts Vorontsov and Vorontsov-Dashkov in the history of Russia

The most important sources and manuals for the history of the Vorontsov family:

  • "Archive of Prince Vorontsov" - an extensive publication (37 volumes were published from 1870 to 1891), edited by P. I. Bartenev, representing excellent material for Russian history of the 18th century;
  • Longinov, “Several news about the direct accomplices of Catherine II” (“The Eighteenth Century”, book 3);
  • P. Dolgoruky, "Mémoires" (Geneva, 1867 and 1871; the complete genealogy of the Vorontsovs is placed);
  • "Russian Archive" for 1879, vol. I and II (biography of Semyon Romanovich Vorontsov);
  • Shcherbinin, "Biography of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov" (St. Petersburg, 1859);
  • Shcherbinin, “Notes on the activities of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov in the Caucasus” (“Russian Archive”, 1872, Nos. 3 and 4);
  • Shcherbinin, “Memoirs of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov” (in the “Russian Archive”, 1876, vol. III);
  • Tolstoy, "Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov" (in the "Russian Archive", 1877, vol. III);
  • "Russian Antiquity", 1873, No. 12 (biography of Mikhail Semyonovich Vorontsov);
  • biographies of Prince M. S. Vorontsov in the "Portrait Gallery"


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