Countess Ekaterina Andreyevna Chernysheva (née UshakovaRussian: Екатерина Андреевна Чернышёва; 22 October 1715 – 25 September 1779[1]) was a Russian lady-in-waiting.
Biography
Ekaterina was the only child of Andrei Ushakov [ru] from his second marriage to Elena Leontyeva Apraksina, née Kokoshkina. Count Ushakov was a friend of Peter the Great who arranged the marriage.[2] During the reign of Empress Anna, Ushakov was the head of the Secret Chancellery [ru] and had great influence at court.
Count Ushakov was a passionate father and adored his daughter. Ekaterina grew up in luxury and received a good education at home. On 18 April 1730, Empress Anna granted her the rank of maid of honour, which she would fufill until her marriage in 1738.
In her youth, Ekaterina Andreyevna was a close friend of Anna Leopoldovna.[3]Ernst Johann von Biron wanted to use Ekaterina's relationship with the Grand Duchess to disrupt her proposed marriage to Duke Anthony Ulrich of Brunswick and insted marry her to his son Peter. However, Anna Leopoldovna hated the Birons, and her friend's praise urged her to give her consent to Brunswick.
Chernyshev was an intelligent man. In early 1741, during the regency of Anna Leopoldovna, Chernyshev was appointed ambassador to Denmark–Norway, and was later transferred to Prussia. When Ekaterina travelled to Berlin to join her husband, Empress Elizaveta ordered that she should not kiss the hands of the Princess of Anhalt- Zerbst, the mother of the future Grand Duchess, Ekaterina Alekseevna. Chernyshev would later have appointments in London, and in Paris at the court of Louis XV.
The family returned to Russia in 1762 as Chernyshev had been appointed as a senator. They settled in Saint Petersburg in 16 Dvortsovaya Embankment, which Ekaterina Andreevna inherited after her father's death in 1747.[5] In her later life, Ekaterina was rarely seen in society and almost never showed up at court.[6]
Ekaterina Andreevna died on 25 September 1779 from a stroke and was buried in the Lazarevskoye Cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra.
Children
The Chernyshevs had 11 children, 3 sons and 8 daughters. Almost all the children died in infancy:
Anna Petrovna (1738 – October 1756), died of typhus