- (dvorovye deti boyarskie,
vybornye deti boyarskie). A
nobleman is
called a
dvoryanin (plural: dvoryane). Pre-Soviet
Russia shared with
other countries the...
- 1611;
Tsardom of Russia) was a
prominent 17th
century Russian nobleman (
dvoryanin),
voivode (military chieftain) of, allegedly, a
Rurikid origin who practically...
- respect,
meaning "my master" in Maltese,
Darija and
Egyptian Arabic.
Dvoryanin, the word (Russian: Дворянин, romanized: Member of the court); a member...
- met with
hostility from the
other prisoners due to his
noble status of
dvoryanin, his
views on life changed.
After his time in the
camps and a further...
- was
another supporter of the
Godunovs who
would be
promoted from
dumny dvoryanin to
okolnichy in 1586.
Around the same time, Ivan IV was
looking for his...
-
routinely signing his name Musoryanin,
roughly "garbage-dweller" (compare
dvoryanin: "nobleman"). The
first syllable of the name
originally received the stress...
- of
Count of
Austria (21
April 1819)
Alexander Soszyński – the
title of
dvoryanin of
Russia (1860) and
various other members of the
latter family received...
-
applied to the
lowest ranks of the nobility: Barons, the
generic titles of
Dvoryanin,
Pomeshchik and
landless nobles) Ваше благовестие Your
Evangelism K-9...
- game with him upon his death. Ivan
Vasilyevich Birkin (d. 1643) was a
dvoryanin at the
Moscow Duma (since 1641); as a
voivode he
supervised the construction...
-
Sapieha family, of Lis coat of arms, of
Ruthenian origin. He was Hospodar's
dvoryanin (Polish:
dworzanin hospodarski) and
rewizor hospodarski (inspector of...