Ilyins in Kazan
Maria Petrovna Ilyina
(Veshnjakova)
Tatyana Petrovna
Zheltukhina
(Veshnjakova)
The first evidence of the Ilyins’ purchase of a house in Kazan dates back to
1839.
Maria Petrovna Ilyina
then bought a house from
Vladimir Fedorovich
Zheltukhin
, the husband of her sister Tatyana (see deed of sale).
1
From the book: S.A.
Khovansky "Princes
Khovansky", MCMNO,
Moscow, 2007 ISBN
978-5-94057-286-2
We know nothing about the fate of this house. Perhaps it had to be sold after
1873, when Maria Petrovna’s son
Petr Alexandrovich
served as a member of
the Economic Council of the Rodionov Institute.
Petr Alexandrovich Ilyin
At that time, this position was always held by election at the Assembly of
Nobility by one of the landowner nobles. Ivan Mikhailovich Yambikov served
as a housekeeper at the Institute. Yambikov was a great rogue, and when my
father retired he severely punished him. Yambikov stole, and my father was
forced to pay his seven thousand rubles, for which our Kazan house was sold...
.....
In 1873, my parents moved to live in Kazan and went to Petrovo only for
the summer. They lived in the Stepanovs' house on Malaya Krasnaya Street.
I don’t remember this apartment at all.
.....
After 1873, we lived closer to the Institute in Smirnova’s house, on the
corner of Krasnaya and Komissariatskaya. I remember this apartment.
Downstairs there was a hall, a living room, a dining room, my father’s office
and a bedroom, and we all somehow huddled in the mezzanine with
a wooden staircase. I think it was a bit cramped.
.....
In the same year <
about 1874
> my parents bought their house on
Krasnaya Street. If you walk along Krasnaya from the Institute, on your left
hand there was a huge three-story corner house
P.G. Ossokin
, in which he
lived with my grandmother
V.I. Moiseeva
, who raised his only daughter, the
orphan Lyudmila, and next to it was a wooden house with five windows and
a mezzanine, bought by my parents from A.N. Arunbatova, this house fifty
years later, when I write these lines, stands in front of me (I live in the house
opposite) in almost the same form, even the coloring is the same, but almost
none of its former inhabitants are alive... .
This house had eight rooms. Down the street there was a hall with two
windows, papered with white wallpaper, with Viennese chairs, then just
coming into fashion, and large mahogany mirrors with a bronze clock; next to
it there was a living room with three windows with three walnut sofas and
armchairs upholstered in chintz. Two trellises with ivy greatly decorated the
room. On the table in front of the sofa there was a lovely porcelain lamp with
dancing Chinese people. The following rooms were: the dining room, the
parents' bedroom, the boys' room and the father's office. Manya and I lived
with the nanny upstairs in a large room facing the street, and my sister Varya
was nearby, in a room facing the courtyard.
The kitchen was in the courtyard. The house had a small garden with a fence
leading onto the street. There were two fragrant poplars in the garden, quite
thick. We climbed on the branches, and from them we could see the
Artsibashevs’ huge garden, separated from ours by a stone fence.
2
3
4
Petr Gavrilovich
Ossokin
Portraits of the prince Sergey Borisovich Bolkhovskoy and Alexandra Ivanovna Anikeeva
On the left on the wall are portraits of Fedor Fedorovich and Anna Nikolaevna Zheltukhin
Bottom right — photograph of Varvara Ivanovna Anikeeva
At the top in the center is a portrait of Vasily Alekseevich Moiseev. In the
second row from the top from the left is a portrait of Nikolay Alekseevich
Moiseev
By title
Mrs. Lieutenant Colonel Marya Petrovna Ilyina asks, and what is my request for, the following
points
I bought from the chamber cadet of the court of His Imperial Majesty, collegiate assessor and
cavalier Vladimir Fedorovich Zheltukhin, by power of attorney given to him by the widow,
collegiate couciloress Princess Ekaterina Matveevna Khovanskaya, a courtyard place with a
ruined structure, consisting of 4 parts of the city of Kazan in Malaya Krasnaya Street between
the houses of the courtyard councilor Telaniev's and Kazan tradesman Fadey Vasiliev, having a
measure of land from the face of the cross of seven, and a length of eighteen fathoms at a
price of 1,500 rubles in banknotes. And for the possession of this place with a ruined building,
I received from Zheltukhin a deed of sale, completed in the Kazan Chamber of Civil Court on
the 21st day of February 1839 under No. 20, letter B, which is why I present the deed of
purchase for presentation here. I most sincerely ask. And so that Your Imperial Majesty’s
Highest decree ordered that the Kazan city magistrate accept this request with a genuine deed
of sale, and on the basis of the laws, create a certificate on this deed and return it back to me
with a signature and in all this act as the laws command. Most Gracious Sovereign, I ask Your
Imperial Majesty to make a decision regarding this petition of mine. December... day 1839.
This petition must be submitted to the Kazan city magistrate in draft and fair copy, from the
words of the petitioner, Mr. Zheltukhin, the courtyard man Gerasim Ivanov, son Kolychov, and
granted to file it to my son-in-law the guard staff captain Vasily Mironovich Krudener
(Signature).
Lieutenant Colonel Maria Petrova’s daughter of Ilya put her hand to this petition, starting from
the first page, ending between the words “Kolychov” and “granted to file”
From
Boris Petrovich Ilyin
memoirs
1
2
3
4
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