My research concerns many state intelligence networks created in the first half of the 18th century by
Russia [and in 1937 by Soviet Union].
Let the example be an ominous figure of Jakob Johann von Sievers who has been active in the Russian
intelligence since 1748.
This structure had a military - intelligence - political nature. This structure created for
decades the leading politicians, and drove to the spectacular political internationally events.
The mystery of the complicated machines - several octopuses - caused the birth of conspiracy theories,
such theories and journalism as Archibald Henry Maule Ramsay b. 1894.
For a 100 years such theories indicate specified states, as well as some nations or particular
politicians, as drivers of the intelligence structure - this situation lasts from 1916 to today, 2014.
The answer to the above question at the moment is gone.
In the history of Tsarist Russia, it is difficult to find a detail, because there is difficult
to get to archives of a special services and political institutions.
I quote the text of the book 'The Anglo-American Establishment' by Carroll Quigley ed. in 1981
(copyright by The Anglo-American Establishment: From Rhodes to Cliveden. 1981, New York: Books in Focus,
354 pages, ISBN 0-916728-50-1; reprinted by Rancho Palos Verdes: GSG & Associates, date unknown,
ISBN 0-945001-01-0).
The author of this book reveals details of secret intelligence and political structures of
the United Kingdom and the USA in the second half of the 19th century and in the first half of the
twentieth century.
These data obviously yet not suggest who or what was the driving force of the intelligence network and the
military-political structures, which in details is discussed on this web site, and broadening data on
the other sites designated as parts of my search.
My research concerns many state intelligence networks created in the first half of the 18th century.
These Scottish degrees, or so-called Templar system, made rapid progress, and as it had
headquarters in the Jesuit College of CLERMONT at PARIS, was termed the System of Clermont.
"The specific "Knights Templar" fraternal order connected to Freemasonry originated from Thomas Dunckerley
toward the end of the 18th century ...
In 1751 Baron Karl Gotthelf von Hund und Altengrotkau began the Order of Strict Observance,
which ritual he claimed to have received from the reconstituted Templar Order in 1743 in Paris.
He was initiated, by Scottish knights, into the Order of the Knights Templar, and ... to have
met two of the "unknown superiors" who directed all of masonry, one of whom was Prince Charles Edward Stuart.
... In 1779 the High Knights Templar of Ireland Lodge, Kilwinning, obtained a charter from
Lodge Mother Kilwinning in Scotland..."
- all above by Wikipedia and others webnet sources.
The System of Clermont was introduced in Germany in 1751, by the Baron HUNDT, as the Strict
Observance rite.
System of Clermont contemplated the restoration of the Stuarts to the throne.
Charles Edward Louis John Casimir Sylvester Severino Maria Stuart (1720 - 1788), was the second
Jacobite pretender to the thrones of England, Scotland, France and Ireland (as Charles III).
In 1742, Lord Kilmarnock and other exiled Stuart participants received Karl Gotthelf, Baron Von Hund into
the Order of the Temple in Paris showing the Jacobite Templar link still existed;
and in 1745,
Prince Charles Edward Stuart given a gala meeting for the Chivalry of the Order in Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh.
Jacobitism was a political movement in Great Britain and Ireland that aimed to restore
the Roman Catholic Stuart King James II of England and his heirs to the thrones of England, Scotland and
Ireland.
Compare:
Karolina Rozalia Tekla Sobanska nee Rzewuska (1793/1795 - 1885) - Countess, an agent of the Russian tsarist
police, wife of Jerome Sobanski. Carolina Rzewuska was born as a daughter of Adam Lawrence Rzewuski
and her siblings were
Ewelina Hanska, and
Adam RZEWUSKI, Russian general.
After completing education in Vienna, she married Jerome Sobanski, landowner close to Odessa;
in 1818 he met Karolina by General Ivan Osipovich de Witte / Jan de Witte. She participated in the social
life of the city, and 1823 met Alexander Pushkin. Pushkin fall in love with Sobanska.
The next exile, who found himself, surrounded by Witt and Sobanski, was Adam Mickiewicz.
Sobanska was known as a traitor;
August to October 1825, Mickiewicz and Sobanski participated in the expedition to Crimea, but
Woroncew / Vorontsev arranged Mickiewicz's transfer to Moscow
[Ekaterina was the sister of
Prince Mikhail Vorontsov, Viceroy of New Russia and Caucasus (b. 1782 - d. 1856 in ODESSA)].
In 1829 Adam Mickiewicz probably thanks to her left Russia and went to Germany on board an English ship.
In 1767 or 1768
- J. A. von Stark / STARCK has established a new sect, which grew out of Clirici Ordinis
Templariorum / Clerics of the Knights Templar.
Von Starck was in 1761 initiated into a French freemasonry lodge at Gottingen / Getynga
[south to HANOVER] but left for St. Petersburg in 1761, while teaching in St. Petersburg
[1761-1765 and in 1768], Starck had met a Greek by the name of
Count Peter Melesino / Melissino, 1726-1797, a lieutenant-general in the Russian Imperial Army,
and whose order of freemasonry claimed the clerics of the Templar Knights.
Then Starck traveled to Paris in 1765 and obtained a position at the royal library;
back to Germany, in Wismar (1766-8).
Starck promoted the clerical brand of Templarism
[see: in France in 1749; in 1750 in French Brittany; see
Count Belford who had flown from Scotland to Russia;
in Ireland 1750/1760 or since ca 1758-1760; on 24th June 1758 in Tipperary at Lodge No 296 (see below)
with Sir Chas. A. CAMERON;
Berlin in 1760;
in Ireland in 1765 - Sir Edward Gilmore]
and in 1768 joined it to movement of Karl Gotthelf von Hund (1722-76), a union formalized in 1772.
Starck helped found a Strict Observance lodge at Wismar (1767),
returned to St. Petersburg in 1768, presumably on freemasonry business,
back in Konigsberg in 1769 where he lived next door to Immanuel Kant.
1769 - in Boston, New England, was established the Provincial Grand Lodge, under the auspices of
Scotland.
BELFORD:
Inf. by STARCK in 1809-1815:
"... in St Petersburg in 1763, Starck made the acquqintance of the Last Grand Master of the Templar Order,
named a SOLE aureo in the Magister Ordinis' list.
This was Count Belford who had flown to Russia after the Scottish rebellion, a man aged about sixty,
then affected with gout, who lived at the house of Grand Chancellor VORONCOV and was supported by him".
Compare -
General Belford died in Ireland aged 71, in Woolwich Warren in 1780. He was fighting in 1741 in Carthagena.
Then under Duke Cumberland. He had 2 sons.
The Freemasons in Russia in the 18th century - remember on
Roman Larionovich Vorontsov [inf. in 1762], and Count G. G. ORLOV / Count Orloff.
Above G. G. Orlov:
Grigori Ivanovich Orlov (b. 1685) m. Ljukeria Ivanovna Zinoviev (b. 1710)
and had issue:
1.
Ivan Orlov, in 1762 as Count Orlov (b. 1728); m. Jelisaveta Feodorovna Rtistschev;
2.
Grigori, younger, in 1762 - Count Orlov, 1763 Furst von Orlov in Holy Roman Empire (b. 1734);
m. 1776, Jekaterina Nikolaevna Zinoviev.
Named above
GRIGORI ORLOV, younger, had a son by Empress Catherine II of Russia, ie. Ct Alexis Bobrinsky, d. in Bogoroditsk
in 1813;
m. in 1796 to Anna Dorothea von Ungern-Sternberg.
"Alexei Grigorievitch Bobrinskoy, born in 1762 in Saint Petersburg; Count. Natural son of
Catherine the Great and Grigori Orlov, secretly born in the Winter Palace at St. Petersburg and
secretly raised at an estate in Bobriki until ... 1781 when Catherine wrote him a letter
acknowledging her maternity. He was made a Count of the Russian Empire by his half-brother Emperor Paul III ...
promoted to General-Major. He married Baroness Anna Dorothea von Ungern-Sternberg.
Died at his estate at Bogoroditsk near Tula".
Roman Larionovich Vorontsov was born in 1717 [1707 ?], d. 1783.
He was married to Marfa Ivanovna Surmina.
Count Semyon Romanovich Vorontsov [born in 1744 in Moscow, died in 1832 in LONDON !] was a Russian
diplomat - Vorontsov's parents were Roman Larionovich Vorontsov (1717 - 1783) and Marfa Ivanovna Surmina
(1718 - 1745);
married Catherine Siniavin, with the daughter
Catherine Countess Vorontsov, b. 1783/1784, d. 1856
[Countess Ekaterina Semyonovna Vorontsov / Woronzow, the daughter of Semyon Vorontsov,
the Russian ambassador in the Great Britain from 1785 [until 1806; he died in 1832 in London];
Ekaterina was the sister of Prince Mikhail Vorontsov, Viceroy of New Russia and Caucasus (1782-1856 in ODESSA).
She was a niece of Princess Dashkova, a friend of Catherine the Great and a conspirator in the coup d'etat
against Emperor Paul III / Peter III and put his wife on the throne].
By Wikipedia on Catherine Vorontsov:
"... In 1808, she married George Herbert, 11th Earl of Pembroke as his second wife and became Countess of
Pembroke, Lady Pembroke, the chatelaine of Wilton House, Wiltshire. The Wilton Estate, Salisbury ...".
Named
George Augustus Herbert, 11th Earl of Pembroke
- General George Augustus Herbert, 11th Earl of Pembroke and 8th Earl of Montgomery b. 1759, d. 1827.
He was a lieutenant-general in 1802 and appointed a Knight of the Garter in 1805.
After serving as
a plenipotentiary on a special mission to Austria in 1807,
he was also appointed Governor of Guernsey and finally promoted to a general in 1812.
Initially above network was a global political conspiratorial structure of the Russian
intelligence infiltrated by the British [1791], French [from the 40s of the 18th century] and
Germans [1769/1776], and by the Polish independence conspiracy [was established 1792/1799] starting
from a years 1870/1878.
Compare three dates:
1.
6 km to the south of the BRZEZIE was the palace in Wieniec founded in the early nineteenth century by the
family of Miaczynski; in 1868 the property bought a Warsaw banker of Jewish origin and a great Polish
patriot - Leopold Kronenberg.
2.
1870, Brown of London - takes over the Breguet company [below];
3.
and the letter of 1871 from Albert Pike to Mazzini.
Now look at WIELICHOWO [Owsiany - Boryslawski and Walesa - Gajewski as the line to the Chocen commune]
and to the area of the Great Poland between Koscian and Przemet and Grodzisk Wielkopolski together
with Zbaszyn - Chobienice:
Wielichowo - 4 km north-east to PROCHY -
for almost 200 years, formed a large Bishops key, which was under the lease.
Weronika's [Grabowska nee Scipio of Stara Hancza] daughter was Ludwika Broel-Plater, 1799 in
Cracow - 1873, m. in 1816; d. in 1873 in Prochy in the KOSCIAN / Kosten County in the 19th century.
Prochy is a village in the Wielichowo commune, within Grodzisk Wielkopolski County, at way from
Wielichowo and Wolsztyn, 4 km south of Rakoniewice, 3 kilometres west of Wielichowo, 14 / 16 km south of
Grodzisk Wielkopolski; 16 / 17 km south to Zdroj - compare Colonel Jozef NEYMAN;
9 km south-west to KOWALEWO.
Kowalewo - 3 km north-west to Kamieniec,
7 km north-west to Wilanowo, 10 km south-east to Grodzisk Wielkopolski, 11 km south-east to ZDROJ [NEYMAN].
WIELICHOWO - 12 km north-west to Wilkowo Polskie [Szoldrski - Poninski + Cagliostro; Kiedrzynska-Zamoyska in 1775].
Prochy belonged to Rozalia Kierski at the beginning of the 19th century; then to the Mielzynski family;
Prochy with Pruszkowo Olendry owned Piotr Radonski; and ca 1870, Prochy was owned by Count Plater.
Wielichowo - at the end of the 17th century, the Poznan chapter became the official owner.
We don't know the names of the farm tenants until the 1st half of the 19th century.
In 1730 it was Andrzej Krzywosadzki and the family of Andrzej and Regina Sawicki were court tutors
at that time.
Separate tenants were Antoni and Helena Smolenski / Smolinski.
In 1743, Karol Rokossowski was the landlord;
Michal Narwanski, and then Marianna Rychlewska, the treasurer.
In 1767, Katarzyna Majkowska was the tenant.
The manager Felicjan Klosowski, married to Rozalia Strzelecka, who was replaced by Szusciewicz in 1770.
In 1781, Wladyslaw Walknowski, the abbot, a suffragan from Poznan built on the site of an older temple
new church.
The last tenants in the eighteenth century were Maciej Markowski in love with Julianna Slowacka.
After the third partition of Poland in 1795, the Prussian government secularized the property and
the farm was sold to General Friedrich Wilhelm von Zastrov, adjutant of the King of Prussia.
After Fryderyk, WIELICHOWO inherited August Adolf von Zastrov, the Prussian major.
In 1839 he sold the Wielichowo village to Mikolaj Gorgoni Mielzynski (1780-1842) who was married
Brygida Sczaniecka with 3 children:
Teodozja,
Cezary
and Aleksander Mielzynski - the insurgent of 1831.
The named Teodozja Mielzynska took Wielichowo.
Stanislaw Mielzynski was born in 1840, in Baszkow close to KROTOSZYN [see Angela Merkel].
Stanislaw Mielzynski married to Aniela RONNE, born in 1832, in Gargsdai / Gargzdai manor / Gorzdy,
Lithuania now {ex-border to East Prussia}.
Aniela Mielzynska was the daughter of Felix II / Feliksas von Ronne, born ca 1797 - died in 1857,
the owner of Gargsdai / Gargzdai. Feliks II = Feliks Filip von Ronne, b. ca 1797 / 1800, known as Felix II
Baron Ronne, was the son of
Felix {1st} Baron Ronne and Antonia GIELGUD = Gelgaudaite; an owner of Gargsdai.
Feliks 2nd married Franciszka ZALUSKA / Franziska Countess Zaluskyte, 2nd m. to Princess
Ruboviska / Rubowicka.
When Felix von Ronne 2nd died, his daughter, above named Countess ANIELA MIELZYNSKA / Anele Mielzinskienei
{see Krotoszyn, Baszkow and Bilewicz - Angela Merkel} taken the estate land with Gargsdai / Gargzdai manor.
Then the GARGZDAI estate belonged to Baron Eugenijus Ronne / Eugeniusz von Ronne.
Retow / Rietavas of the Oginskis {the most important family in Belarus when it comes to Polish
independence conspiracies}, is situated 25 km south of Plunge of the Oginskis, and east of Gargzdai
{von Ronne}, ca 40 km.
Above mentioned Aniela / Aniele Amalia Baroness Ronne / Aniele (Anele Elena Amelija), b. 1832,
d. 1911, married in 1868 to Count Stanislaw Mielzynski / Count Melzinski, the last heir of Renavas
[he was born in 1840, in Baszkow close to KROTOSZYN].
Their son
Felix Count Melzinski / Feliks Marian Mielzynski, 1871 - 1910 was the heir of manor Renavas, too.
Renavas - 50 km east-north-north of PLUNGE.
Feliks Marian Mielzynski, ca 1871 - 1910, was the son of Stanislaw Kostka Mielzynski 2nd, b. 1840 in BASZKOW,
d. in MIELZYN in 1891,
the grandson of
Aleksander Dominik Mielzynski, b. 1813 in Baszkow, the Krotoszyn County, d. 1885 in Turin;
the great-grandson of
Count Mikolaj Gorgoni Mielzynski, b. 1780 in RABIN, d. 1842 in Karczew;
the great-great-grandson of
Maksymilian Antoni Jan Mielzynski, 1738 in LASZCZYN in the Rawicz County - 1799 close to Pawlowice,
the Pszczyna County;
who was the son of
Andrzej Mielzynski, 1698 - 1771 + Anna Petronela BNINSKA.
Brygida Sczaniecka [the daughter of Sylwester Sczaniecki], 1775-1859 married Mikolaj Gorgoni
Mielzynski, born in 1780 in RABIN - d. in KARCZEW in 1842,
the son of
Maksymilian Antoni Jan Mielzynski, 1738-1799 + Konstancja Hutten-Czapska, 1749-1813,
and grandson of
Andrzej Mielzynski official in Kcynia, 1698-1771;
Anna Petronela Bninska, 1720-1771;
Jakub Hutten-Czapski;
Rozalia Ewa Hutten-Czapska, 1715-1769;
and great-grandson of
Krzysztof Mielzynski, 1670 - 1721, an official in Kcynia 1693, and in Przemet in 1717 - 1719;
and great-great-grandson of
Maciej Mielzynski, 1636 - 1697, an official in Kcynia in 1659 - 1660, in Srem 1683.
Maciej Mielzynski (b. 1636 or born 1638 - d. 1697) married Katarzyna MYCIELSKA GORZYCKA MIELZYNSKA.
MACIEJ MIELZYNSKI m. 3rd in Pawlowice in 1684 to Katarzyna Mycielska, the daughter of
Krzysztof MYCIELSKI.
Named Maciej born in 1636, with 2nd wife Elzbieta Baranowska had son named KRZYSZTOF Mielzynski died in 1721
[Krzysztof Ignacy Mielzynski born before 1670 in Dabrowa (Kaisersfelde), close to Mogilno - west to RADZIEJOW.
He was the son of Maciej Mielzynski, born in 1636 in Niegolewo west to Poznan, close to Opalenica;
d. 1697 in Goscieszyn near Wolsztyn (Wollstein).
Krzysztof MIELZYNSKI married in 1682 to Anna Goszycka / Gorzycka - she died in 1733,
the daughter of Andrzej Goszycki / GORZYCKI and KATARZYNA MYCIELSKA, d. 1712].
Karol Ignacy Mielzynski, 1838 - 1904, was the son of Maciej Mielzynski CONSPIRATOR.
Named
CONSPIRATOR, Count Maciej Mielzynski, b. 1799 in Winnogora, the Szamotuly County, Greater Poland.
Died in Kazimierz, the Pabianice County.
Son of Jozef Mielzynski and Franciszka.
Father of Katarzyna Broel-Plater;
Karol Ignacy Mielzynski;
Gabriela Koncza and
Koczorowska.
The heirs of Wielichowo changed over the years, at the beginning they were the Poznan bishops:
Stanislaw Ciolek and Andrzej Opalinski.
After secularization of the estates of the clergy, the first heir on the recommendation
of the King of Prussia was Frederick William von Zastrow, followed by others:
Count Mikolaj Mielzynski,
Teodosia with her husband, Count Dzieduszycki,
merchant Juliusz Munk,
Lieutenant Colonel Hermann,
Boleslaw Potocki, count;
Eryk Schultz,
and finally the Wielichow estate in 1922 becomes the property of Teresa Lubomirska,
the last heiress of Wielichow.
In 1840, Wielichow was situated in the Koscian county, later it was in the area of Smigiel.
In 1851 Wielichow passed into German hands, first Juliusz Munke, and in 1854 - Hermann von Holleben.
Boleslaw Eulogiusz Potocki b. in 1829 in Bedlewo, died in 1898, BEDLEWO,
landowner, count, social and economic activist. POTOCKI Boleslaw Eulogiusz,
was the son of
Maksymilian Jozef Potocki, 1786-1837 + Jozefa Wyszynska;
the great-grandson of
Jozef Potocki, the Krzywin governor, lived in 1710-1781.
Jozef Potocki with the Szeliga coat of arms, died in 1781 in Wronczyn.
He was the governor in Krzywin. Jozef b. 1710, was the son of
Stefan Potocki b. ca 1675 / 1680, d. in 1724, and Franciszka Korzbog-Zawadzka.
Jozef Potocki married Anna Gajewska, the daughter of Franciszek Gajewski, the KUJAWY governor,
1675-1753.
Anna Potocka Gajewska had 5 children:
1.
Magdalena Potocka m. Felicjan Niegolewski, the Royal court official;
with the son Andrzej Marcin NIEGOLEWSKI (1787-1857);
2.
Roza Potocka b. ca 1740, m. Franciszek Kczewski, the SREM official, born 1735.
3.
Jozefa Potocka m. Ksawery Kwilecki;
4.
Aleksander Potocki;
5.
Stanislaw Potocki.
Above Stefan Potocki b. ca 1675/1680 (died 1724/1726), married Franciszka Korzbog-Zawadzka.
They had children:
A.
Krystyna Potocka m. in 1742 to Jozef Walknowski, the son of Antoni Walknowski, d. 1732.
B.
Jozef Potocki, d. 1781, m. in 1738, to Anna Kunegunda Gajewska, b. 1721.
Boleslaw Eulogiusz Potocki b. in 1829 in Bedlewo,
m. twice; the 1st in 1861 to Css Helena Kwilecka, 1840-1862;
the 2nd in 1871, Drezno, to Css Jozefa Mycielska, 1839-1917,
the daughter of
Count Teodor Kazimierz Maciej Mycielski, 1804-1874 + Css Aniela Mielzynska, 1811-1843.
Aniela was the granddaughter of
Maciej Mielzynski, the Walcz official, lived in 1733-1793;
Seweryna Lipska, 1750-1804;
Ignacy Niemojowski, the Wielun official, 1750 - 1786;
Katarzyna Walknowska, 1750 - 1787.
BEDLEWO:
In 1912 - 1933, Bedlewo was owned by the daughter of named Boleslaw Potocki,
ie. Helena Miaczynska.
The Bedlewo palace was built in 1866 for Boleslaw Potocki.
Bedlewo became the property of the Potocki family in 1694. In 1866 Boleslaw Potocki built the palace.
Boleslaw Potocki was the co-founder of Bank Kwilecki, Potocki and Co.
In 1865 Wielichowo was purchased by Boleslaw Potocki, who resold it in the same year 1865
to hands of
Count Cezar August Adam Broel-Plater.
Piotr Swiatopelk Mirski, 1857 - 1914
[Piotr was the son of
Duke Dimitry Swiatopelk-Mirski + princess Sophia ORBELIANI.
Dymitr b. in 1824 in Stara Hancza, in the Suwalki County, d. 1899 in Nice, in France, was the son of prince
[the title in 1821 in the Congress Poland] Thomas Theophilus Jan Sviatopolk-Mirsky and Marianne
Nostitz-Jackowska. Tomasz was the envoy of the Congress Poland in St Petersburg.
Tomasz Swiatopelk-Mirski b. 1788 in Kalisz, d. in 1868.
Tomasz was the son of Franciszek Ksawery Swiatopelk-Mirski / Francis Xaverius Mirsky and Katarzyna BADOWSKA.
Franciszek Ksawery Mirski / Franciszek Swiatopelk-Mirski, b. ca 1730 ?
Franciszek was the son of Jan Felicjan Mirski, b. 1664, d. aft. 1759;
and the grandson of Jozef Mirski b. maybe ca 1640, d. aft. 1697;
the great-grandson of Andrzey Michal Mirski, b. maybe ca 1620, d. in 1709;
the great-great-grandson of Jaroslav Swiatopelk-Mirski, b. maybe ca 1600, d. after 1662;
the great-great-great-grandson of Lukasz Swiatopelk-Mirski, ca 1570 - aft. 1595/1600;
and Lukasz was the son of Grzegorz Swiatopelk-Mirski, b. maybe ca 1550, d. ca 1620;
and Lukasz was the grandson of Andrzej Swiatopelk-Mirski b. ca 1500, d. aft. 1550],
and mentioned Piotr Swiatopelk Mirski, 1857 - 1914 married to Katarzyna Bobrzynski,
ie. Countess Bobrinska;
she was from a branch of Alexei Bobrinsky, younger, 1831 - 1888, who was the son of
Wassili Bobrinsky, older, b. 1804, d. Moscow in 1874,
the son of Alexei Bobrinsky, older, b. St.Petersburg in 1752, who married 1796 to Anna Dorotea / Anna Dorothea
von Ungern-Sternberg (1769 Tallinn - St. Petersburg in 1846), the daughter of the Tallinn commendant
Woldemar Conrad von Ungern-Sternberg b. 1739.
Wassili Bobrinsky b. 1804, the 1st m. 1824 to Pss Lydia Gortschakova b. 1807, 2 m. 1830 to Sofia Sokownina
b. 1812, 3 m. 1869 to Alexandra Utschakova.
Wassili Bobrinsky / Wasyl Bobrzynski had 2 children:
I.
Alexei Bobrinsky, younger, 1831 - 1888, 1st m. 1855 to Pss Catherine Lvova b. 1834, 2nd m. 1859
Sofia Cheremeteva b. 1842.
He had 4 children:
1. Wassili Bobrinsky, younger, 1860 - 1861,
2. Ct Alexei Bobrinsky, 1861 - Florence in 1937, he m. twice,
3. Ct Wladimir Bobrinsky, 1862 - 1938, married to a French woman,
4. Css Catherine Bobrinsky / Ekaterina Alexeiievna, 1864 - 1926, m. 1886 to Pr Peter Swiatopolk-Mirski /
Piotr Swiatopelk Mirski d. 1914;
II.
Css Sofia Bobrinsky, 1837 - 1891 m. Viktor von Keller, d. 1906.
Wassili's brothers:
A.
Alexei Bobrinsky, 1800 - 1868, m. 1821 to Css Sophia Samojlowa b. 1799,
B.
Pavel / Pawel Bobrzynski / Paul Bobrinsky b. 1801 - died in Florence 1830
(see Oginski and Chodzko - Venture, Breguet, Sulkowski),
m. 1822 to Julia Junosza - Bielinska / Junosza Bielinski / Julia Junosha-Belinskaya b. 1804 -
died in Paris in 1899.
Julia Stanislawowna Bobrynska nee Sonocka Bielinska / Bielinska, b. after 1790 / bef. 1804 -
d. 1892 / 1899 [1795-1892]; m. in 1822; after death of husband she moved to Paris; she was married to
Pavel Alekseevich Bobrinski / Pawel Aleksiejewicz Bobrynski ie. Pawel Bobrynski / Bobrinski born on October 27,
1801, in Saint Petersburg ie. Paul Bobrinsky, b. 1801 - died in Florence 1830.
Julia was the daughter of
Stanislaw Kostka Bielinski [b. ca 1740 ?] died 1812 in Vicebsk / Witebsk, served on the court of
the King Stanislaw August Poniatowski; the Marshal of the Parliament in 1793, m. Katarzyna nee Golicyn,
b. 1775, d. 1825 [1770-1827] in Saratow.
Julia was the granddaughter of
Michal Bielinski
[b. ca 1690 and he had the brother Franciszek BIELINSKI, junior, b. 1683,
who was the son of Kazimierz Ludwik Bielinski, 1650-1713]
died 1746/1747, the Chelmno province governor in 1738, the Sztum office,
1725 the King court, 1736-1742 in Kozlowka palace near by Lubartow;
m. 1st to Aurora Maria Rutowska, the daughter of Fryderyk August II and Fatima,
the grand-daughter of
Jan Jerzy II Saxon / Sas and his 1st wife - Anna Zofia of Danmark, 2-v. Claude Marie de Bellegarde;
Jan Jerzy the 2nd m. 2nd time to Tekla Peplowski,
the grand-daughter of Jadwiga Niemyski, of the Kozlowka estate.
Julia was the great-granddaughter of
Kazimierz Ludwik Bielinski, b. ca 1650, d. 1713, the Crown Marshal in 1702-1713,
in 1682 he married Ludwika Maria MORSZTYN, the daughter of Andrzej Morsztyn.
Kazimierz Bielinski was the son of Franciszek Bielinski, senior, b. ca 1620, and Anna Akerstoff.
Marcin Mikolaj Radziwill, b. 1705, was the alchemist.
The FRANKISTS leaders maintained a relationship with Prince Marcin Mikolaj Radziwill, b. 1705,
who "showed interest in religious issues and who visited Yaakov Frank in 1759".
Marcin Mikolaj Radziwill of Ostrow Wielkopolski was the supporter of the FRANKISTS.
In 1765, Jakob Frank, known Sabbatean, planned to establish links with the Russian Orthodox Church
and with the Russian government through a Russian ambassador in Warsaw, Prince REPNIN. At the end of the
year a Frankist delegation went to Smolensk and Moscow.
Marcin Mikolaj Radziwill, b. 1705 in Ciemkowicze, General Lieutenant, d. 1782 in Sluck
[see NIEPOKOJCZYCKI],
the son of
Jan Mikolaj Radziwill [the co-owner of OSTROW WIELKOPOLSKI with the Przebendowskis],
and
Dorota Henryka Przebendowska [b. ca 1680 ?] 2nd voto Franciszek Bielinski [1683 - 1766].
Marcin Mikolaj Radziwill, b. 1705, came from the same branch of the Radziwills as
Stefania Julia Radziwill, the lady-owner of Miezonka in the Berezyna parish
[in 1742, the land Miezonka belonged to the Konstantynowiczs. Berezyna and Lubuszany
were owned by the Potockis came from Artur Potocki, the Templar. Lubuszany is situated at half way
from BEREZYNA to MIEZONKA]
and as Stanislaw Radziwill, b. 1722, and his family:
Soltan - Piottuch-Kublicki - Szumski - Konstantynowicz [the 40' of the 19th century].
Above Franciszek BIELINSKI, junior, b. 1683, was the son of
Kazimierz Ludwik Bielinski, 1650-1713,
and the grandson of
Franciszek Bielinski, senior, b. ca 1620, and Anna Akerstoff.
Above Kazimierz Ludwik Bielinski, b. ca 1650, d. 1713, the Crown Marshal in 1702-1713,
in 1682 he married Ludwika Maria MORSZTYN, the daughter of Andrzej Morsztyn.
Kazimierz's sons:
1.
Franciszek Bielinski, junior, b. 1683 - 1766, the Crown Marshal in 1742-1766, the Chelmno governor
in 1725-1732, m. above Dorota Przebendowska;
2.
Michal Bielinski [b. ca 1690] died 1746/1747, the Chelmno province governor in 1738, the Sztum office,
in 1725 the King court, in 1736-1742 in Kozlowka palace near by Lubartow;
m. 1st to Aurora Maria Rutowska, the daughter of Fryderyk August II and Fatima,
the grand-daughter of
Jan Jerzy II Saxon / Sas and his 1st wife - Anna Zofia of Danmark, 2-v. Claude Marie de Bellegarde;
Jan Jerzy the 2nd m. 2nd time to Tekla Peplowski, the grand-daughter of Jadwiga Niemyski, of the Kozlowka estate.
Julia Stanislawowna Bobrynska nee Sonocka Bielinska / Bielinska, b. after 1790 / bef. 1804 -
d. 1892 [1795-1892]; m. in 1822 to Pavel Alekseevich Bobrinski / Pawel Aleksiejewicz Bobrynski ie.
Pawel Bobrynski / Bobrinski born in 1801, in Saint Petersburg ie. Paul Bobrinsky, b. 1801 - died in Florence
in 1830.
Julia Junosza - Bielinska / Junosza Bielinski / Julia Junosha-Belinskaya, b. 1804 - d. in Paris
in 1899,
had a daughter
Julia Pawlowna Bobrynska / Julia Broel - Plater, Golabek - Jezierska, nee Bobrinski / Bobrynska, 1823 - 1899,
married Waldemar Golabek-Jezierski Count, b. 1822, died 1855 in Warsaw.
Julia 1st married Waldemar Golabek - Jezierski in 1851; Waldemar was born in 1822. They had a son Aleksander
Golabek - Jezierski.
Pawel's daughter was mentioned Julia Pawlowna Bobrynska / Julia Broel - Plater, Golabek -
Jezierska, nee Bobrinski / Bobrynska, 1823 - 1899, married Waldemar Golabek-Jezierski,
Count, b. 1822, died 1855 in Warsaw.
He was son of Jan Nepomucen Pawel Golabek-Jezierski, Count, and Karolina.
Julia BOBRZYNSKA JEZIERSKA b. 1823, the 2nd time married Cezar August Broel - Plater in 1859;
Cezar / Cezary August Plater was born on September 8, 1810, in Wilno or in Dusetos or was born as
Cezary Augustus in 1808, died in 1877, a brother of
Wladyslaw PLATER, has already been mentioned in association with Emilia PLATER.