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Created article using a translation of the Russian Wikipedia article ru:Бакунины. See its history for attribution. Added English language sources for verifiability. |
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Revision as of 19:01, 26 December 2022
House of Bakunin Баку́нины | |
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Noble family | |
Parent family | Báthory family |
Country | Russia |
Current region | Tver |
Place of origin | Transylvania |
Historic seat | Pryamukhino |
The Bakunins (Russian: Баку́нины) are a Russian noble family.
Origin
The Bakunin family claims descent from Stephen Báthory, the Prince of Transylvania that campaigned against Ivan the Terrible for control over Livonia.[1]
Family tree
- Mikhail Ivanovich Bakunin — commandant in Tsaritsyn under Peter the Great;[1]
- Vasily Mikhailovich Bakunin (1700—1766) — Active State Councillor and official of the Collegium of Foreign Affairs under Elizabeth of Russia;[1]
- Pyotr Vasilyevich-Bolshoy Bakunin (1724—1800) — official of the Collegium of Foreign Affairs,[1] rose to the rank of Active State Councillor. From 1783 to 1785 he was the leader of the nobility in Luga district, married to Ekaterina Andreevna Barteneva, had three daughters: Anna, Alexandra and Maria.
- Pyotr Vasilyevich-Menshoy Bakunin (1731—1786) — official of the Collegium of Foreign Affairs,[1] under Nikita Panin, and Privy Councillor.
- Modest Petrovich Bakunin (1765—1802) — a well-known agronomist, headed the Tsarskoye Selo agricultural school. He held the rank of Privy Councillor.
- Nikolai Modestovich Bakunin (1799—1838) — College Secretary (from April 1833). He was married to Baroness Sophia Karlovna von Tipolt.
- Modest Nikolaevich Bakunin — diplomat
- Modest Modestovich Bakunin (1848—1913) — consul general in Sarajevo and Copenhagen.
- Stepanida Nikolaevich Bakunin
- Modest Nikolaevich Bakunin — diplomat
- Ilya Modestovich Bakunin (1801—1841) — major general in the Russo-Turkish War and the Caucasian War.
- Nikolai Modestovich Bakunin (1799—1838) — College Secretary (from April 1833). He was married to Baroness Sophia Karlovna von Tipolt.
- Pavel Petrovich Bakunin (1776—1805) — director of the Russian Academy of Sciences and manager of the Russian Academy, later chamberlain and Active State Councillor.
- Aleksandr Pavlovich Bakunin (1797—1862) — governor of Tver and Privy Councillor.
- Nikolai Aleksandrovich Bakunin (1828—1893) — active state councilor, chamberlain, founder of a glass factory.
- Semyon Pavlovich Bakunin (1802—1864)
- Ekaterina Pavlovna Bakunin (1795—1869).
- Aleksandr Pavlovich Bakunin (1797—1862) — governor of Tver and Privy Councillor.
- Modest Petrovich Bakunin (1765—1802) — a well-known agronomist, headed the Tsarskoye Selo agricultural school. He held the rank of Privy Councillor.
- Mikhail Vasilyevich Bakunin (1730—1803) — Collegiate Councillor under Catherine the Great.[2] Founder of the Bakunin family estate in Pryamukhino.[3]
- Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakunin (1764—1837) — Major General, Governor of Mogilev and St. Petersburg:
- Vasily Mikhailovich Bakunin (1795—1863) — major general and member of the Union of Prosperity.
- Ivan Mikhailovich Bakunin (1802—1874) — colonel.
- Lyubov Mikhailovna Bakunina (1801).
- Evdokiya Mikhailovna Bakunina (1793—1882) — an artist who received a gold medal from the Academy of Fine Arts.
- Ekaterina Mikhailovna Bakunina (1811—1894) — sister of mercy.
- Praksovya Mikhailovna Bakunina (1812—1882) — writer and poet.
- Ivan Mikhailovich Bakunin (1766—1796) — lieutenant colonel in the Persian expedition of 1796
- Aleksandr Mikhailovich Bakunin (1768—1854) — Tver landowner, poet and publicist.
- Lyubov Aleksandrovna Bakunina (1811—1838) — the bride of Nikolai Stankevich;
- Varvara Alexandrovna Bakunina (1812—1866)
- Mikhail Aleksandrovich Bakunin (1814—1876) — Russian thinker, revolutionary, anarchist, pan-Slavist, one of the ideologists of populism.
- Tatyana Aleksandrovna Bakunina (1815—1871)
- Aleksandra Aleksandrovna Bakunina (1816—1882)
- Ilya Aleksandrovich Bakunin (1819—1900) — landowner
- Aleksei Ilyich Bakunin (1874—1945) — doctor, deputy of the State Duma of the II convocation from the Tver province.
- Tatyana Alekseevna Bakunina (1904—1995) — professor at the University of Paris, historian of Freemasonry, wife of Mikhail Osorgin
- Aleksei Ilyich Bakunin (1874—1945) — doctor, deputy of the State Duma of the II convocation from the Tver province.
- Pavel Aleksandrovich Bakunin (1820—1900) — philosopher-publicist, public figure.
- Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Bakunin (1821—1908) — defender of Sevastopol, participant in the battles for the freedom of Italy, public figure.
- Aleksei Aleksandrovich Bakunin (1823—1882)— activist for agrarian reform, botanist.
- Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakunin (1764—1837) — Major General, Governor of Mogilev and St. Petersburg:
- Vasily Mikhailovich Bakunin (1700—1766) — Active State Councillor and official of the Collegium of Foreign Affairs under Elizabeth of Russia;[1]
References
- ^ a b c d e Leier 2009, p. 10.
- ^ Carr 1975, pp. 3–4; Leier 2009, p. 10.
- ^ Carr 1975, pp. 3–4; Leier 2009, pp. 10–11.
Bibliography
- Carr, E. H. (1975) [1937]. Michael Bakunin. London: Macmillan Press. doi:10.1007/978-1-349-02632-6. ISBN 978-1349026326. OCLC 1004387682. SBN 333 18425 4.
- Leier, Mark (2009) [2006]. Bakunin: The Creative Passion. New York: Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1583228944. OCLC 1090891844.