- The
Russian nobility or
dvoryanstvo (Russian: дворянство)
arose in the
Middle Ages. In 1914, it
consisted of
approximately 1,900,000 members, out of a...
-
There were
several dvoryan (Russian nobility)
families named Lvov (Russian: Львов) in the
Russian Empire. One of them is
traced from a Mark Demidovich...
- Fanen-yunker/yunker (ru: фанен-юнкер/юнкер) was a
military rank for
junior officers of
dvoryan descent since 1902. Kamer-yunker (ru: камер-юнкер; cf.
German Kammerjunker)...
- ****embly of the
Nobility (Russian: дворянское собрание, благородное собрание) was a self-governing body of the
sosloviye (estate) of the
Russian nobility...
-
Aleksandr Nikolayevich (2002).
Potomstvo Ryurika:
polnyi perechen'
knyazey i
dvoryan,
potomkov Ryurika -
pervogo russkogo knyazya,
osnovatelya dinastii Ryurikovichey...
-
January 2021 – via Runivers. 79.
Aleksandr Yuryevich Monastyr,
rodonachalnik dvoryan Monastyrovykh, Sudakovykh, Aladyinykh,
Tsyplyaevykh i
Musorgskikh v t e...
- had a
status equal to Boyars, were
switched to
Serving Tatars,
equal to
Dvoryans. This
policy provoked a
Tatar revolt in 1656.
After the
death of khanbika...
-
Lidia Lwow-Eberle (1920–2021),
Polish WWII
partisan of
Armia Krajowa Lvov
dvoryan families Aaron Moses Lwow (fl. 18th century),
Polish grammarian, scribe...
- "Laws
about Estates" (Законы о состояниях)
defined four
major estates:
dvoryans (nobility), clergy,
urban dwellers and
rural dwellers (peasants). The two...
- the
Ottoman Empire. Born on 26
September (8 October) 1810 in the
noble dvoryan Ganetsky family of
Polish origin. His
mother descends from the Eysymontt...