Kropotkin family

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Princes Kropotkin
Князья Кропоткины
princely family, boyar scions
Rurik dynasty
Current regionRussia
Place of originPrincipality of Smolensk
Founded15th century
FounderPrince Dmitry Vasilyevich Kropotka
Connected familiesKropotka-Jełowicki

The House of Kropotkin (Russian: Князья Кропоткины) is an ancient

Rurik stock descending from Prince Dmitry Vasilyevich nicknamed Kropotka, a nephew of the last Grand Duke of Smolensk, Yuri Svyatoslavich.[1] Princes Kropotkin are listed in the 5th part (titled nobility) of the Kazan, Kaluga, Mogilyov, Moscow, Ryazan, Saint-Petersburg and Tula genealogical books and 2nd part (military nobility) of the Moscow genealogical book.[1]

History

In the 15th-early 16th centuries, Princes Kropotkin were vassals of the

Muscovite side and died in the Russo-Lithuanian war of 1500 — 1503.[1] His brother, Prince Alexander Dmitrievich Kropotkin (d. 1520), was the founder of the senior lineage. The son of Prince Ivan Dmitrievich Kropotkin, Vasily Kropotka-Jełowicki (d. circa 1542), was the founder of the Lithuanian branch.[1]
When his son, Prince Jakob Kropotka-Jełowicki died in 1564, this branch became extinct.

The family had owned lands in the regions of

stolnik in the 17th century, none of them had ever been in the rank of boyar. Many family members were voivodes, commanders, courtiers and later generals. However, in the early 18th century, some of the Ryazanian branch had degraded to poor gentry and even odnodvortsy. For example, Prince Dmitry Timofeevich Kropotkin, an early 18th-century landlord of the Demidovo village, Ponitski stan, and a dragoon of the Senate company (Senatskaya rota), was statused as an odnodvorets, but his relations of the very same village, were counted as full nobility.[2]
Despite many other impoverished Rurikid families, the Kropotkins managed to maintain the princely title.

To the general public the family is mainly known for the famed Russian revolutionary Pyotr Kropotkin.

Notable members

Descendants of Prince Alexander Dmitrievich Kropotkin (d. 1520)

Prince Alexey Ivanovich Kropotkin (1806-1903)

Descendants of Prince Ivan Dmitrievich Kropotkin (d. 1520)

  • Prince Vasily Ivanovich Kropotka-Jełowicki (d. circa 1542) was the founder of the Lithuanian princes Kropotka-Jełowicki.[1]
  • Prince Andrey Ivanovich Kropotkin (d. after 1558) was the founder of the junior Russian branch of Princes Kropotkin.[1]
  • Prince Dmitry Vasilyevich Kropotkin (d. 1574), grandson of Prince Andrey Ivanovich, was a participant in the Russo-Livonian war of 1558–1583, the second head (golova) of the Guard Corps (Storozhevoy polk) in Livonia (1558), the head of the Guard Corps in the Fellin campaign (now Viljandi, Estonia) in 1560, and the 1st voivode at Gaujiena (1567). He died in a battle with the Swedes.
  • Prince Mikhail Ivanovich Kropotkin (d. after 1598) was participant of the Russo-Swedish war of 1590–1593, a voivode at Gdov (1590–1591) and Yama (1593–1594). His son, Prince Kuzma (Voin) Mikhailovich Kropotkin (d. after 1643) was a participant of campaigns against Ivan Bolotnikov and False Dmitry II. In 1625 he organized census (Pistovye knigi) of the landlords of Tula and Krapivna districts, in 1635–1643 he recorded landed estates of the Vladimir district.
  • Prince Boris Mikhailovich Kropotkin was a Ryazanian landlord and is believed to be the founder of the Ryazanian branch of the family. However, Princes Kropotkin were recoded as owner of estate in Perevitsky stan earlier in the 16th century.
  • Prince Semyon Nikitich Kropotkin (d. after 1609) was a participant of the Russo-Livonian war of 1558–1583 as the 1st voivode of the Great Corps in 1565, the Russo-Swedish war of 1590–1593, and a voivode at Ladoga (1590–1594). In 1602 he received the fiancé of Princess Xenia Godunova, Prince Johan of Schleswig-Holstein.[1] He was a voivode in the campaign that cleared Krapivna and Odoyev off of Bolotnikov's troops. He owned the village of Semyonovskoe (Chepryuhino or Chudinovo) on the Glinushka river, in Perevitsky stan, in the second half of the 16th century, which he received from the Bishop of Ryazan.[3]
  • Prince Jakov Ivanovich Kropotkin was an
    oberster kriegskommissar
    , the head of investigation service (sysknoy prikaz; since 1740).
  • Prince Alexey Petrovich Kropotkin (1805–1871) was a
    Russo-Turkish war of 1828–1829
    , and the suppression of the Polish revolt of 1830–1831.
  • Pyotr Alexeyvich Kropotkin (1842–1921) was a famed anarchist revolutionary and philosopher, who disclaimed the title of Prince at the age of twelve.
  • Prince Pyotr Nikolaevich Kropotkin (1831–1903) was a lieutenant general (1901), participant of the suppression of the Polish revolt of 1863–1864, head of the 1st Hussar Sumsky corps (1867–1874); since 1874 he was a member of the Chief Committee for establishment organization of troops; in 1876–1881 he was the commander of the 5th Caucasus division.
  • Prince Dmitry Nikolaevich Kropotkin (1836–1879) was a
    Imperial retinue. In 1868–1870 he was the governor of Grodno governorate and in 1870–1879 of the Kharkov governorate, actively fighting any anti-tsar movement. He was shot by G.D. Goldenberg from Narodnaya Volya.[1]
  • Prince Nikolay Dmitrievich Kropotkin (1872–1937) was an active state councillor (1913), master of ceremonies (1910), vice-governor of Courland (1907–1912) and (1912–15) and Livonia. Since 1898 he owned Segewold mansion (now in Sigulda, Latvia). In 1917 he emigrated to Germany.[1]
  • Alexey Petrovich Kropotkin (b. 13-11-1937) is a Russian scientist, a professor in physics.[1]
  • Prince Alexey Ivanovich Kropotkin (1816–1903), lieutenant general (1873), a participant of the Hungary campaign of 1849, Crimean war of 1853-56, flügeladjutant (1853), major general of the Imperial retinue(1858), Moscow oberpolicmeister (1858–1860), marshal of Luzhsk nobility (1897–1900).[1]
  • Vladimir Vsevolodovich Kropotkin (1922–1993) was a Soviet archeologist, and the head of the Scytho-Sarmatian department of the Institute of Archeology at the Soviet Academy of Sciences.[1]
  • Princess Alexandra Kropotkin (1887–1966), writer and émigré to the United States
Kropotkins' mansion Segewold, Latvia

Estates

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Shumkov A.A. Kropotkiny//Bolshaya Rossiyskaya Entsyklopediya
  2. ^ a b Милюков П.Н. Алфабет на именные книги пехотного Азовского полка... Рязань, 1897. С. 30.
  3. ^ a b Анпилогов Г.Н. Рязанская писцовая приправочная книга конца XVI века. Москва, 1982. С. 59.
  4. ^ a b Анпилогов Г.Н. Рязанская писцовая приправочная книга конца XVI века. Москва, 1982. С. 24.
  5. ^ Анпилогов Г.Н. Рязанская писцовая приправочная книга конца XVI века. Москва, 1982. С. 41.
  6. ^ Анпилогов Г.Н. Рязанская писцовая приправочная книга конца XVI века. Москва, 1982. С. 42.
  7. ^ a b Милюков П.Н. Алфабет на именные книги пехотного Азовского полка... Рязань, 1897. С. 31.

See also