Elizaveta Petrovna Yankova (née Rimskaya–Korsakova; April 4, 1768 – March 15, 1861) was a Moskva old–timer who left detailed memoirs about the life of noble Moskva "for five generations", recorded and published by her grandson Dmitriy Blagovo.
Biography
The third daughter[2] of the Captain of the Semyonovskoe Regiment Pyotr Rimskiy–Korsakov (December 8, 1731 – 1807) from his marriage to Princess Pelageya Shcherbatova (1743 – June 24, 1783).[3] On her father's side, she was the great–granddaughter of the historian Vasiliy Tatishchev.[4] She spent her childhood and youth on her father's Estate Bobrovo ("Kaluga was seventeen miles away") and in her parents' Moskva Home near Ostozhenka, and after her mother's death in 1783, on the Estate Pokrovskoe in Tula Guberniya.
Elizaveta Petrovna married a distant relative, Dmitriy Yankov (1761–1816),[5] on June 5, 1793, in Moskva.[6] He had proposed to her three times and had been rejected three times by her strict father. The wedding took place in the One–Day Church of Iliya. After the wedding, the newlyweds went to Yankov's Estate Gorki near Moskva; then they settled in Yankov's House, which was located on Neopalimovskiy Lane on the site of today's Estate No. 5.[7]
In 1806, the couple bought a house from the Bibikovs on the corner of Prechistenka and Myortvy Lane – old and dilapidated. Five years later they built a new house, which they moved into in November 1811. On September 1, 1812, as Napoleon's Army approached Moskva, Elizaveta Yankova and her children left for her Tambov Estate, Elizavetino, to return to the house that had burned down in 1815.
The new house was built by 1818, when Yankova was already a widow. In 1828 she sold the house: "I was very tired of the busy place on Prechistenka from the constant driving". From 1828 to 1838, she lived in a house on Shtatny Lane, on the site of which Aleksandra Derozhinskaya's Mansion was later built. For a long time she lived with her unmarried daughter Kleopatra, after whose death she moved into the House of the Blagovo Family.
Elizaveta Yankova "vividly remembered all the family traditions dating back to the time of Pyotr I, and told them with amazing detail, sometimes remembering years and dates: who was married to whom, who had how many children, in a word, she was a living chronicle of the entire 18th century and half of the 19th". Her grandson, Dmitriy Blagovo (Pimen in monasticism), immortalized his grandmother by publishing her memoirs in the magazine "Russian Herald" (1878–1880). The book was published as a separate edition under the title "Grandmother's Stories" in 1885, published by Aleksey Suvorin.
Children
She had seven children in her marriage, most of whom died in childhood.
Agrafena Dmitrievna (May 31, 1794 – 1865), an amateur artist, married to Dmitriy Blagovo (1783–1827) from 1825; they had a son, Dmitriy;
Pyotr Dmitrievich (1795 – February 23, 1797);
Anna Dmitrievna (November 22, 1796 – ?), married to Colonel Nikolay Posnikov since 1823;
Sofya Dmitrievna (April 29, 1798[8] – December 7, 1805);[9]
Kleopatra Dmitrievna (1800–1847);
Elizaveta Dmitrievna (April 18, 1802 – February 5, 1803);
Aleksandr Dmitrievich (1803 – January 1, 1805);[10]
^The elder sister, Ekaterina (November 4, 1764 – December 1795), became, at the age of five, by the will of her father, the godmother of Elizaveta Yankova; the second daughter was named Elizaveta, as was the next one. The eldest brother, Mikhail, was born in 1770.
^Pelageya Shcherbatova's parents were Nikolay Shcherbatov and Anna Ivanovna, née Princess Meshcherskaya (died in 1792).
^His daughter Evpraksiya Tatishcheva (1715–1769) was first married to Mikhail Rimskiy–Korsakov (1708–1778) and they had a son, Pyotr, and a daughter, Mariya (January 20, 1736 – August 17, 1768; married to Prince Pyotr Volkonskiy).
^The son of Colonel Aleksandr Yankov (1720–1766) and his wife Anna Tatishcheva (1731–1772); he was educated in the Gentry Corps, together with Count Aleksey Bobrinskiy.