The House of Khilkoff or Khilkov (Russian: Хилков) is a Rurikid princely family descending from sovereign rulers of Starodub-on-the-Klyazma. A descendant of the Great Prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich, the Christianizer of Russia, Prince Ivan Vsevolodovich,(c. 958 – 15 July 1015) received from his brother, the Great Prince Yaroslav Vsevolodovich, the appanage of Starodub, and this originated the Princes of Starodub; those who later had the Ryapolovskaya volost took the name Prince Ryapolovsky in the sixteenth century, for an unknown reason, the Ryapolovskys changed their name: the older branch to Khilkoff, and the younger to Tatev.
The founder of the Khilkoffs was the great-grandson of Prince Ivan Andreyevich Ryapolovsky (Nagavitsa), Prince Ivan Fyodorovich Khilok. The Khilkoffs have played a notable part in Russian history. Under Tsar Alexey Mikhailovich there were 16 noble families whose members rose straight to the rank of boyar, missing out that of okolnichiy; the Princes Khilkoff were among that number. At the time of the 1917 revolution the Khilkoff family were the 14th wealthiest family in Russia, fleeing Russia to stay with the King of Denmark, then dispersing over Europe. Khilkoff descendants today live in France, Belgium, United Kingdom, The United States of America, Switzerland, Canada, Australia, and Moscow - the city they founded in 1147.[1]
^Khilkoff, Alexis Russia Revisited Archived 31 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
The House of Khilkoff or Khilkov (Russian: Хилков) is a Rurikid princely family descending from sovereign rulers of Starodub-on-the-Klyazma. A descendant...
Khilkoff (1676–1716) was the Russian ambassador to Sweden. In 1697 Prince Khilkov, in the capacity of a stolnik was sent with a number of others to Italy...
attacked by the enemy at the village of Burtsova on 15 September, Prince Khilkov turned the rear of the French infantry battalion, attacked and crushed...
Prince Mikhail Ivanovich Khilkov (also spelled Chilkoff, Chilkov, Khilkoff, Hilkof and other variants) (Russian: Михаил Иванович Хилков) (18 December...
Prince Dmitry Aleksandrovich Khilkoff (most often spelled Khilkov, sometimes also Hilkov or Hilkoff) (1858–1914) went from being an officer in the Czar's...
Central] was distributing the Message to Garcia, Prince Hilakoff (Mikhail Khilkov), Director of Russian Railways, was in this country...and made a tour of...
Baikal began, following the proposal of the Minister of Transport Mikhail Khilkov. On 30 December 1895 a contract with Sir W G Armstrong Whitworth & Co Ltd...
Minister, Vyacheslav von Plehve; Foreign Minister, Vladimir Lambsdorff; Prince Dmitry Khilkov; Finance Minister, Sergei Witte; Viceroy Yevgeni Alekseyev....
Lobanov-Rostovsky (Nikita Lobanov-Rostovsky) Gagarin of Starodub (Andrey Gagarin) Khilkov of Starodub The Yurievichi branch (named after Yuri Dolgorukiy) would reign...
Prince Stepan may refer to: Stepan Khilkov (1785–1854), Russian lieutenant-general, eldest son of Prince Alexander Jacobovich Khilkoff Prince Stepan Arkadyevitch...
Letter to a Corporal (1899) "The Commune and the World": A letter to D. A. Khilkov (1899) Correspondence with the Dukhobors in Canada (1899–1900) Letter to...
of Bavaria Alexander von Kaulbars Paisi Kaysarov Amanullah Khan Mikhail Khilkov Pyotr Kikin Jan Hendrik van Kinsbergen Hugo von Kirchbach Prince Kitashirakawa...
Gurieli House of Izmaylov House of Jaqeli House of Javakhishvili House of Khilkov House of Kurakin House of Lieven House of Lyapunov House of Menshikov House...
Minister, Vyacheslav von Plehve; Foreign Minister, Vladimir Lambsdorff; Prince Dmitry Khilkov; Finance Minister, Sergei Witte; Viceroy Yevgeni Alekseyev....
craftsmen, some of the Streltsy, and urban poor deposed voyevoda Fyodor Khilkov and ravaged the households of several merchants around Novgorod. The insurgents...
Alexander Ievreinov Nikolay Ilminsky Karl Jessen Alexander Kazakov Mikhail Khilkov Boris Khreschatitsky Alexander Khristiani Friedrich von Kielmansegg Hugo...
Prince Stepan Khilkov, and head of the Elizabethan Institute Lyubov Bezobrazova. Hendrikova was born to Prince Alexander Yakovlevich Khilkov (1755–1819)...
mother, Praskovya Yuryevna Khilkova, was the daughter of Yuri Yakovlevich Khilkov (1682 – 1730) and Yevdokia Petrovna Neledinskaya. Alexey's children were:...
Dolgorukov (1615–1617) Ivan Vorotynsky Jr. (1618–1619; third time) Boris Khilkov (1619–1620) Boris Lykov-Obolensky / Ivan Odoyevsky Jr. (1620–1624) Semyon...
Prince Semen Pozharskiy 1647 Prince Ivan Khilkov 1648 Prince Ivan Romodanovskiy Menshoy 1649 Prince Ivan Khilkov 1649 Stepan Pushkin 1649-1651 Timofei Buturlin...
- Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia (b. 1690) Date unknown Andrey Khilkov, ambassador to Sweden (b. 1767) Alexander Kikin, adviser to Tsarevich Alexei...
died of consumption in 1817), she was married to an officer, Prince Ivan Khilkov, who soon left, according to Gogol, he was "a big comedian and an old sinner"...
Bludov - government official and writer Nikolai Islenev - general Stepan Khilkov - general Dorothea Lieven - noblewoman, socialite Elena Aleksandrovna Naryshkina...
The governors of Novgorod Governorate were 1727–1729 Yury Yakovlevich Khilkov, governor; 1729 -? Vasily Ivanovich Gagarin, governor; ? – ? A. F. Bredikhin...
Chaikovskii, I. A. Rubanovich, Lazarev, Chaim Zhitlowsky, Shishko, D. A. Khilkov, D. A. Klements, S. M. Kliachko, Rappoport, Victor Chernov, M. R. Gots...