Mikhail Ivanovich Bulgakov-Golitsa

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mikhail Ivanovich Bulgakow-Goliza ( Russian Михаил Иванович Булгаков-Голица ; * after 1466 ; † 1554 or 1556 ) was a prince from the noble family of the Galitzins , a male sideline of the Gediminas family . The rank of boyars , he was a member of the Russian aristocracy , he also held as voivod and commander of the Grand Duchy of Moscow the office of officials in the civil service .

Life

Mikhail Ivanovich was the eldest son of Prince Ivan Vasilyevich Bulgakov († 1498) and Princess Ksenja Ivanovna Vsjewoloschskaja . The grandfather of his father Ivan, Juri , left his Lithuanian homeland at the beginning of the 15th century and emigrated to Moscow , where he married Maria, a daughter of Grand Duke Vasily I , in 1418 . Yuri is considered to be the ancestor of the Russian Galitzins and Kurakins , both male sidelines of the Lithuanian ruling house of the Gediminids.

In the service of the Moscow Grand Dukes, Michail commanded the Russian troops against the Crimean Khanate and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania . In the Russo-Lithuanian War 1512–1522 he was defeated in the Battle of Orscha in 1514 by Hetman Konstantin Ivanovich Ostroschski and was captured with his brother Dimitri Ivanovich Bulgakov . Only after 38 years of imprisonment, in which his brother Dimitri died, did the Polish King Sigismund II. August release him from prison due to respect for the Knjas' loyalty (to the Russian crown) and stoic firmness, whereupon he gave the Tsar Ivan IV. Stood by as a favorite, but went to the Trinity Monastery near Moscow as early as 1552. Bulgakow-Goliza, known as the "Iron Glove", died there in 1554 or 1556.

marital status

From the marriage with a woman of unknown name a son emerged:

  • Juri Michailowitsch Bulgakow-Galitzin († 1560), Russian prince, boyar, diplomat and governor of Novgorod

Web links

Comments and individual evidence

  1. ^ According to Genealogia dynastyczna: after 1466
  2. According to Genealogy.euweb.cz: 1554
  3. ^ According to Arthur Kleinschmidt : Russia's history and politics presented in the history of the Russian high nobility , p. 82
  4. ^ According to Arthur Kleinschmidt, Russia's History and Politics Represented in the History of the Russian High Nobility, p. 82: Bojar since 1510
  5. Arthur Kleinschmidt: Russia's history and politics presented in the history of the Russian high nobility , p. 82
  6. According to Arthur Kleinschmidt, Russia's history and politics presented in the history of the Russian high nobility, p. 81: Iwan Buljak
  7. ^ According to Genealogia dynastyczna: Iwan Bułgak
  8. Arthur Kleinschmidt: Russia's history and politics presented in the history of the Russian high nobility , p. 82