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Razumovsky

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Coat of arms of the Razumovsky family (1914)

Razumovsky (Template:Lang-ru, Ukrainian: Розумовський, German: Razumofsky) is a Russian Empire and then an Austrian noble family[clarification needed] of Ukrainian-born Register-Cossacks origin.

History

The root of the family begin with the Register-Cossack Yakov Romanovich Rozum, who died about 1700. According to legend, Ivan Yakovlevich Rozum have been raised to the rank of Count of the Holy Roman Empire by Emperor Charles VII, but died without children. His brother Grigoriy Yakovlevich Rozum had two children — Kirill and Alexey. After Alexey became a favorite of Russian Empress Elizabeth of Russia, the family name was changed to Razumovsky for all Rozums. Notable representatives of the family include:

  • Grigory Kirillovich Razumovsky (1759–1837) - the fifth son of Kirill, known from his writings in the West as Gregor or Grégoire, a geologist, botanist and zoologist, as well as prominent political dissenter with Czarist Russia, who lost his Russian allegiance in 1811 and was subsequently incorporated into the Bohemian nobility and accorded the rank of Count in the Austrian Empire. Gregor was the first to describe and classify the Lissotrion helveticus. His branch of the family survives to this day.
  • Leon (Lev) Grigorievich Razumovsky (1816–1868), grandson of Kirill, envoy of Saxe-Coburg to the court of Napoleon III. Father of Camillo Lvovich Razumovsky.
  • Camillo Lvovich Razumovsky (1853–1917), philanthropist in Czech Silesia, built numerous churches, schools and hospitals around Opava (today Czech Republic) and in Western Ukraine, caused a commotion by flouting the social conventions of the 19th century Vienna when he married a woman of the Jewish faith.
  • Andreas Andreievich Razumovsky (1929–2002), grandson of the latter, well-known political analyst and media figure in Germany and Austria, was expelled from Czechoslovakia where he was posted as correspondent of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in 1967 for warning of an imminent invasion by Warsaw Pact troops, analysed and published a book in 1981 on the centrifugal forces leading to the dismembering of Yugoslavia.
  • Dorothea Razumovsky (*1935-2014), née Prinzessin zu Solms-Hohensolms-Lich, well-known media-figure and political analyst, widely criticised for adopting a stance during conflicts arising from the dismemberment of Yugoslavia that was interpreted as being too pro-Serb.
  • Katharina (Katerina) Razumovsky (*1961), daughter of the aforementioned, artist living in Vienna, Austria and Moscow, Russia.
  • Gregor (Grigoriy) Razumovsky (*1965), son of the aforementioned, President of the Razumovsky Society for Art and Culture which supports artistic exchange and co-operation between East and West, also honorary President of the European Institute for the Furtherance of Democracy, an Austrian-based think-tank.

References

Literature

  • Maria Razumovsky. Die Rasumovskys: eine Familie am Zarenhof. Köln 1998. — 300 S.
  • Разумовская М. А. Разумовские при царском дворе: Главы из российской истории, 1740-1815 гг. СПб., 2004. — 272 с.
  • Розанов С. С. Родственные связи семейства Разумовских: Книга 1: Род и потомство К.Г. Разумовского. Родословная роспись: Справочное генеалогическое издание. — М.: Ирисъ, 2007. — 120 с.

Notes