Chukavino
Chukavino is a village in the Tver region, on the right high bank of the Volga,
5 kilometers from the Tver-Rzhev highway.
The first mention of Chukavino dates back to the second half of the 17th
century, when it belonged to the Sytin boyars. At the end of the 30s of the 18th
century, the daughter of Dmitry Stepanovich Sytin, Nadezhda, married
warrant officer
Petr Romanovich Choglokov
, and the village of Chukavino
was given to her as a dowry. Petr Romanovich was related to the cousin of
Empress Elizabeth Petrovna, Maria Simonovna Choglokova (she was the wife
of his cousin). This partly explains the scale with which the Chukavino estate
was built far from the capital at the end of the 18th century.
After the death of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna, Petr Romanovich fell into
disgrace, and then the rapid construction ended. Petr Romanovich resigned
and settled on the estate.
Soon the estate again passed through the female line as a dowry to the
daughter of Petr Romanovich
Favsta Petrovna
to Prince
Sergey Borisovich
Bolkhovskoy
, whose estates were located near Kazan. Sergey Borisovich
almost did not live in Chukavino, occasionally visiting here and staying
mainly at the
Konoplino
estate, located a mile from Chukavino. In 1791, the
estate was once again given as a dowry to the daughter of Prince
S.B. Bolkhovskoy,
Nadezhda Sergeevna
, who married Major General Ermolay
Ivanovich Velikopolsky. But they lived in Kazan, where Ermolay Ivanovich
served.
Four years after the death of Ivan Ermolaevich, Nadezhda Sergeevna married
a second time to
Alexey Fedorovich Moiseev
. After her death in 1823,
Chukavino passed to her son from her first marriage,
Ivan Ermolaevich
Velikopolsky
. Neighboring Konoplino went to his half-sister (from his second
marriage)
Varvara Alekseevna
, the wife of mathematician and professor at
Kazan University N.I. Lobachevsky.
In 1829 Alexander Pushkin came to the estate.
Having settled in Chukavino, I. E. Velikopolsky began to reconstruct and
improve the estate. A new landscape park was created. He invited an
experienced gardener from Switzerland. He planted firs, cedars, beeches,
poplars, Berlin oaks - about 270 species of trees and shrubs in total. He built
a greenhouse where he grew fruit trees. He opened an agricultural school and
a hospital on his estate, and sent capable peasant children to study at Kazan
University.
To produce fine linen, he built a weaving workshop, equipping it with
machines of his own design. His method was found useful, but was never
implemented. In the hope of improving his affairs, he supplied timber to Tver
for a bridge across the Volga, and tried to set up a cigar factory in Chukavino.
He tried to play a lottery for a wonderful portrait of Shakespeare that he had,
and many other things that inevitably ended in failure and completely ruined
him.
Subsequently, Chukavino was given as a dowry to Ivan Ermolaevich’s
daughter Nadezhda Ivanovna, who married Rzhevsky, Zubtsovsky, Staritsky
and Korchevsky landowner Colonel Nikolai Andreevich Chaplin.
Today the main house, an outbuilding, a church, a landscape park with ponds,
and the remains of outbuildings have been preserved in the estate. In the
church fence there are the graves of Ivan Ermolaevich and his wife, as well as
the Chaplin family. Between the two buildings of the estate, on the side of the
park leading to the Volga, there is an underground passage all the way to the
Volga.
In 1996, the Chukavino estate was transferred to a charity organization for
former Gulag prisoners, but was then taken away at the request of the
prosecutor's office. In 2007, the estate was occupied by the regional sled dog
breeding center.
The Ilyins are connected with the Velikopolskys through Ermolay
Ivanovich’s wife Nadezhda Sergeevna, née Princess
Bolkhovskaya. Nadezhda Sergeevna was married for the second
time to Alexey Fedorovich Moiseev. Her son from this marriage,
Nikolay Alekseevich, is the father of Nadezhda Nikolaevna, the
wife of Petr Alexandrovich Ilyin. Thus, Nadezhda Sergeevna is
the grandmother of Nadezhda Nikolaevna Ilyina.
On the map of 1848-1853, there may be an error - where Chukavino is located,
“Lukavino” is indicated
Ivan Ermolaevich
Velikopolsky
prince Sergey Borisovich
Bolkhovskoy
2
1
2
prince SERGEY
BORISOVICH
BOLKHOVSKOY
1744 - ?
princess
NADEZDA
SERGEEVNA
MOISEEV
1770 - 1823
ALEXEY
FEDOROVICH
MOISEEV
1755 - 1833
NIKOLAY
ALEXEEVICH
MOISEEV
USTINYA
(ELISAVETA)
NIKITICHNA
RADILOVA
?‑1779(?)
SOFIA MATVEEVNA
MUDROVA
ERMOLAY IVANOVICH
VELIKOPOLSKY
1742 - 1802 (?)
IVAN ERMOLAEVICH
VELIKOPOLSKY
1797 - 1868 (?)
NIKOLAY
IVANOVICH
LOBACHEVSKY
1792-1856
VARVARA
ALEKSEEVNA
1812 - 1885
enquiries@ilyinsfamily.com
ALL ESTATES
KAZAN
PROVINCE
PETROVO
ARKATOVO
PANOVA GORA
TAGASHEVO
ELAN
KLIYANCHINO
CHEREMYSHEVO
NADEZDINO
SREDNYAYA IYA
CAIMARY
SHYSHARY
KOZLOVKA
TVER
PROVINCE
CHUKAVINO
KONOPLINO
KAZAN CITY
ILYINS
BORATYNSKY
VESHNJAKOVS
BOLKHOVSKOY
VELIKOPOLSKY
OSSOKINS
RUS
ILYIN FAMILY HISTORY
PORTRAITS
GEN. TREE
TIMELINE
ESTATES
MEMOIRS