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Varvara Arsenyeva

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Russian courtier (1676–1730)
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Varvara Mikhailovna Arsenyeva
BornВарва́ра Миха́йловна Арсе́ньева
1676
Died1730
Goritsky Monastery
Noble familyArsenyev
FatherMikhail Afanasyevich Arsenyev
OccupationLady-in-Waiting to Catherine I of Russia
Ober-Hofmeisterin to Maria Menshikova

Varvara Mikhailovna Arsenyeva (Russian: Варва́ра Миха́йловна Арсе́ньева; 1676–1730), was a Russian courtier and mistress of Peter the Great.

Biography

She was the daughter of the yakut Governor Mikhail Afanasyevich Arsenyev. Her sister Daria married Alexander Danilovich Menshikov in 1706. She was appointed lady in waiting to the Empress Catherine, and was for a time the lover of Peter the Great. In 1727, she was appointed Ober-Hofmeisterin to her niece Maria Menshikova, daughter of her sister Daria, who was bethrothed to Grand Duke Peter of Russia. The same year, however, she was exiled to the Alexandrov Kremlin after the fall of Menshikov.

Wishing to be released from captivity, Varvara sent gifts and wrote wrote to the Grand Duchesses Ekaterina and Praskovya, Princess Tatiana Kirillovna Golitsyna, M. M. Rzhevskaya, and other influential ladies of the time, but it was in vain. A year later, the position of the Menshikov's worsened, and it was decided to send the Menshikov and his family to Berezov and Varvara to the Goritsky Monastery where she would be forcibly tonsured under the name Varshanuphia. She would die in the following year.

Awards

On 29 June 1727, Varvara and her nieces Maria and Alexandra were awarded with the Order of Saint Catherine, 1st degree, as was typical of ladies in waiting. Howerver the order was withdrawn on 14 October 1727 by Captain Pyrsky who accompanied the family into exile.

References

  • Н. И. Павленко. Крушение. Ссылка // Александр Данилович Меншиков. — М: «Наука», 1981. — С. 160. — 140 000 экз.
  1. ^ www.alexnews.info https://www.alexnews.info/archives/2502. Retrieved 2024-01-02. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. "Кавалеры ордена Святой Екатерины" (PDF).
Mistresses and minions of Russian emperors and empresses
1700–1762
1762–1796
1796–1917
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