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Koreiz, one of the oldest settlements in Crimea, was a lively spot with several shops, eating-houses and mosques; during Princess Anna Sergeevna Golitsyna’s tenure, it was also a center of missionary activity.
Owner of the estate of Koreiz. Married Prince Ivan Aleksandrovich Golitsyn.
Golitsyna died in 1837 in Simferopol, and is buried at Koreiz in the Voznesenskii church.
Golitsyna died in 1837 in Simferopol, and is buried at Koreiz in the Voznesenskii church.
Married the highly influential Princess Anna Sergeevna Vsevolozhskaia, daughter of Lt. General S. V. Vsevolozhskii.
Gaspra had been an ancient Greek settlement and a Tatar village. Prince A. N. Golitsyn built the palace between 1831 and 1836 in the neo-Gothic style favored by Vorontsov.
One of Alexander I’s closest advisors, Golitsyn accumulated an impressive record, serving as over-procurator of the Holy Synod and Minister of Spiritual Affairs and Education. He was a member of the Academy of Sciences, and a cavalier of every orde...
Prince Kirill Aleksandrovich Naryshkin, another of Vorontsov’s cousins and a member of the State Council, built the now famous estate at Foros.