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Nikolai Sergeevich Polushkin Manuscript and Document, 1910-1923

2 items
Abstract Or Scope

Polushkin's typescript"Rossiĭskiĭ Rodoslovynĭ Sbornik" (205 p. with 10 page supplement) is a survey of the Russian nobility throughout the Russian Empire. It primarily deals with noble families from the 17th-19th centuries, but also traces some families back to Ri︠u︡rk. The manuscript is indexed. The document is a table listing the Imperial Foreign Ministry staff in Europe from 1878 to 1917.

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A.I. Ievreinov Memoirs, 1950

27 pages
Abstract Or Scope

Typescript memoir ""Poezdka v Tobolsk" that discusses Ievreĭnov's travel to Tobolśk in 1918 as part of a conspiracy to free the Imperial family.

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Nicholas Poggenpohl Diary, 1897

2 items
Abstract Or Scope

Poggenpohl's diary is in French, and concerns the visits of the German Kaiser Wilhelm II and the French President Felix Faure to Russia in July and August, 1897. There is also a typed transcription of the diary.

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Marina D. Geiden Memoirs, 1960

60 pages
Abstract Or Scope

The memoirs primarily concern aristocratic life and the Imperial court in St. Petersburg in the early 20th century. A version of Geiden's memoirs has been published as Heyden, Marina de "Les rubis portent malheur", Monte-Carlo, Regain [1967], 315 pp.

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Nikolai Dmitrievich Semenov-Tian'-Shanskii Memoirs, 1938-1961

7 items
Abstract Or Scope

These typescript memoirs mainly concern the Imperial family and Petr A. Stolypin. Titles of the longer pieces are: "Moi vospominanii︠a︡ o E.I.V. Gosudare Imperatore Nikolae II;" "Svetloĭ pami︠a︡ti Imperatrit︠s︡y Aleksandry Fedorovny;" and "Pami︠a︡ti Petra Arkadévicha Stolypina." Also included is a letter by a French general, dated 1941, and a typescript by an unidentified woman, entitled"Nikolaĭ II kak i︠a︡ ego znala.".

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Mariia Kirillovna Shevich Memoirs, 1956

113 pages
Abstract Or Scope

These typescript memoirs discuss her childhood at diplomatic posts (Japan, Washington, Netherlands), and in France and Russia; and her adult life up to 1920. A great deal of attention is devoted to life in the Imperial court and aristocratic social circles.

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Vladimir Knorring Manuscript, 1914

16 pages
Abstract Or Scope

Typescript essay "Imperatorakaia Rossiia i ee otnoshenie k Lifliandskomu dvorianstvu i nemetsko-baltiiskomu natsionalizmu" discusses Russo-Baltic German relations during tsarist times until the reign of Nicholas II and World War I.

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Mariia Aleksandrovna Vasil'chikova Memoirs, 1920

4 items
Abstract Or Scope

Memoirs of Vasilćhikova. The memoirs include a nineteen-page essay about the Tsarina and a twelve-page essay about Tsar Nicholas II. Both essays are handwritten and in French. Included with the essays are two postcards: one with a photograph of Marii︠a︡ Vasilćhikova and one with a portrait of her.

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Panin Family Papers, 1714-1913

600 items
Abstract Or Scope

The great majority of the collection consists of correspondence between family members in the period 1820-1874. There are many letters by the following: Nikita Petrovich Panin, diplomat; his wife Sofii︠a︡ Vladimirovna; their sons, Aleksandr Nikitich and Viktor Nikitich, Minister of Justice in 1841-61; and Viktor's daughters Leonilla Komarovskai︠a︡ and Olǵa Levashova. There are also several brief essays by Nikita Panin. Items by non-family members include a photocopy of a letter by Mikhail Golit︠s︡uyn (1714), a letter by Sergeĭ Uvarov, and two letters by Moscow Metropolitan Filaret.

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Evgeniia Stepanovna Shaikevich Memoirs, 1929

4 items
Abstract Or Scope

Shaĭkevich's (neʹe Ostrovskai︠a︡) handwritten memoirs (fifteen small notebooks) discuss her family and guests at her home, including Prince Sergeĭ Volkonskiĭ, Nikolaĭ Berdi︠a︡ev, and Maksimili︠a︡n Voloshin. She also discusses prominent Russian and Jewish families at the turn of the century. The memoirs conclude with her emigration to Latvia, Germany, and France. The essay "Poslednii︠a︡ stranichki" and her minor manuscripts are also autobiographical in nature.

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