Browse Items (12 total)

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You are looking at a fragment of a topographical map of the Crimean peninsula published in 1842 by the Military-Topographical Depot of the Russian Army. The map was built from the triangulations of Lt. Colonel Oberg and topographical surveys…
Inscribed in part 3 of the rodoslovnaia kniga (reserved for those who attained civil rank of 8 or higher). The brothers were included in the noble register along with their father, Smail Bey Balatukov, in 1815. In 1820, the Commission on Muslim and G...
Despite providing evidence of descent from a princely clan, Balatukov was inscribed in part 3 of the rodoslovnaia kniga (reserved for those who attained civil rank of 8 or higher).
Inscribed in part 2 of the rodoslovnaia kniga (reserved for those whose noble status was defined by military service).
Inscribed in part 2 of the rodoslovnaia kniga (reserved for those whose noble status was defined by military service). Krymgireev was also to be presented with a patent testifying to his descent from an ancient foreign noble clan.
Inscribed in part 1 of the rodoslovnaia kniga (reserved for recipients of imperial seals, stamps, and coats-of-arms).
Inscribed in part 2 of the rodoslovnaia kniga (reserved for those whose noble status was defined by military service).
The grant consisted of a vineyard in the Kozy Valley.
A dacha composed of 3,066 desiatinas (8,278 acres), of which 65% was considered suitable for cultivation. The land was in/near Marsanda, Nikita, and Magarach - prime terrain for vineyards.
This dacha consisted of 2,585 desiatinas (almost 7,000 acres), including forest and a vineyard in Kozy valley.
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