Mariya Volkonskaya

Mariya Volkonskaya
Mariya Volkonskaya
Born December 25, 1805(1805-12-25)
Died August 10, 1863(1863-08-10) (aged 57)
Nationality Russian
Other names Mariya Raevskaya

Countess Mariya Nikolayevna Volkonskaya (née Raevskaya, Russian: Мария Николаевна Волконская (Раевская)) was the youngest daughter of Russian General Nikolay Raevsky and Sophia Konstantinov, granddaughter of Mikhail Lomonosov. In 1825 Maria married the future Decembrist count Sergey Volkonsky.

When Volkonsky was arrested and exiled to Siberia, she followed him into exile on the condition that her children born after her departure to Siberia would be forever struck from the noble estate and become bonded laborers (Russian: заводские крестьяне); the threat, however, was not put into practice.

Life

Volkonskaya had a sister Sophia. At the age of eighteen Mariya married Sergey Volkonsky, who was elder. Popularly known in Irkutsk as the Princess of Siberia, she founded a local hospital and opened a concert hall, in addition to hosting musical and cultural soirees in her home. In Irkutsk Mariya had a blue and white timber mansion.

The Volkonskys had four children; two died at early age in Siberia while Mikhail (1832–1909) and Yelena (1835–1916) survived into the 20th century and retained the style of prince and princess inherited from their father.

A number of literary works, including Alexander Pushkin's Eugene Onegin and Nikolay Nekrasov's poem Russian Women were dedicated to Volkonskaya. A passage in Eugene Onegin reads:

I recall some storm-brewing ocean:
Jealous, I watched its waves that beat
A path straight toward her in devotion,
To swirl in sequence at her feet.
To join those waves my soul was burning,
To touch those limbs with lips so yearning.[1]

In 1922, it was proved that Volkonskaya was the subject of six poems by Pushkin (written in 1820, 1822, 1824, 1825, 1828 and 1829).[2] Pushkin also dedicated a few lines to the sudden passing of Volkonskaya's little son, Nikolai. However, Pushkinist Mikhail Gershenzon rebutted the view that Pushkin was in love with Mariya.[3] Volkonskaya herself died of heart problems in the Ukrainian village Voronki. Photos of Volkonskaya and her family were ceremonially handed over to the Russian State Historical Museum in 2001.

Notes

  1. ^ Eugene Onegin, translated by DOUGLAS HOFSTADTER New York Times
  2. ^ Б. М.Соколов. Мария Волконская и Пушкин, 1922
  3. ^ Brian Horowitz. The myth of A.S. Pushkin in Russia's Silver Age, Northwestern University Press, 1996, pp. 1-2

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