Who is the pillar noblewoman? Pillar noblewoman.

Material from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia

Pillar nobility- in pre-revolutionary Russia, representatives of noble families who belonged to the ancient hereditary noble families. The name comes from the so-called Columns - medieval lists granting representatives of the service class estates for the duration of their service.

Subsequently, the estates became hereditary. In the 17th - early 18th centuries, the main documents for the annual recording of service people according to the Moscow list were noble lists, which in - years were kept in the form of books, repeating the purpose and structure of the boyar lists-columns. Since for truly ancient Russian noble families the main evidence of their antiquity was a mention in these columns, such nobles were called pillars.

Because this concept was not formalized legally anywhere; in historiography there is no consensus on the question of what historical period can indicate the end of the formation of this layer of nobility, i.e. Until what conditional or real date must a noble family or its founder be known in order to be considered a pillar? Various options Such conditional chronological restrictions include: 1) it is assumed that only those families whose ancestors are known in the largest pre-Petrine all-Russian genealogical codes, such as the Sovereign Genealogy and (or) the Velvet Book; 2) in another version, the pillar nobility includes noble families known before 1613, i.e. before the election of the Romanov dynasty to the kingdom; 3) finally, all noble families of the pre-Petrine era can be classified as pillar nobles (however, in this case it often remains unclear exactly what moment of Peter’s reign can be considered a milestone date).

In the 18th-19th centuries, the pillar nobles did not have any privileges over representatives of the new noble families (appeared as a result of the award of personal or hereditary nobility for special merits, for length of service, by rank, by order). Therefore, the antiquity of the family served exclusively as a source of pride for its representatives. Official documentation usually used the simple formulation “from the nobles of such and such a province,” the same for both the old nobility and the new. The pillar nobility was quite numerous in the 18th and 19th centuries.

The titled nobility (aristocracy) largely consisted of new families (the award of the title for special merits, sometimes to former pillars, but untitled nobles), as well as Finnish, Belarusian, Polish, Georgian, Tatar, Ukrainian, Balkan, Armenian, Balkan, Western European. The number of clans that were previously boyars, and descended from Rurik, Gediminas, or from people from the Golden Horde, was limited and gradually decreased (the clan was suppressed in the absence of male heirs), as in relative numbers (the percentage of pillars relative to the growing total number of noble families in Russia), and in absolute terms (by total number such genera). They had no privileges over the new titled nobility.

Write a review about the article "Pillar nobility"

Links

An excerpt characterizing the Stolbovoe nobility

“Dear birthday girl with the children,” she said in her loud, thick voice, suppressing all other sounds. “What, you old sinner,” she turned to the count, who was kissing her hand, “tea, are you bored in Moscow?” Is there anywhere to run the dogs? What should we do, father, this is how these birds will grow up...” She pointed to the girls. - Whether you want it or not, you have to look for suitors.
- Well, what, my Cossack? (Marya Dmitrievna called Natasha a Cossack) - she said, caressing Natasha with her hand, who approached her hand without fear and cheerfully. – I know that the potion is a girl, but I love her.
She took out pear-shaped yakhon earrings from her huge reticule and, giving them to Natasha, who was beaming and blushing for her birthday, immediately turned away from her and turned to Pierre.
- Eh, eh! kind! “Come here,” she said in a feignedly quiet and thin voice. - Come on, my dear...
And she menacingly rolled up her sleeves even higher.
Pierre approached, naively looking at her through his glasses.
- Come, come, my dear! I was the only one who told your father the truth when he had a chance, but God commands it to you.
She paused. Everyone was silent, waiting for what would happen, and feeling that there was only a preface.
- Good, nothing to say! good boy!... The father is lying on his bed, and he is amusing himself, putting the policeman on a bear. It's a shame, father, it's a shame! It would be better to go to war.
She turned away and offered her hand to the count, who could hardly restrain himself from laughing.
- Well, come to the table, I have tea, is it time? - said Marya Dmitrievna.
The count walked ahead with Marya Dmitrievna; then the countess, who was led by a hussar colonel, the right person, with whom Nikolai was supposed to catch up with the regiment. Anna Mikhailovna - with Shinshin. Berg shook hands with Vera. A smiling Julie Karagina went with Nikolai to the table. Behind them came other couples, stretching across the entire hall, and behind them, one by one, were children, tutors and governesses. The waiters began to stir, the chairs rattled, music began to play in the choir, and the guests took their seats. The sounds of the count's home music were replaced by the sounds of knives and forks, the chatter of guests, and the quiet steps of waiters.
At one end of the table the Countess sat at the head. On the right is Marya Dmitrievna, on the left is Anna Mikhailovna and other guests. At the other end sat the count, on the left the hussar colonel, on the right Shinshin and other male guests. On one side of the long table are older young people: Vera next to Berg, Pierre next to Boris; on the other hand - children, tutors and governesses. From behind the crystal, bottles and vases of fruit, the Count looked at his wife and her tall cap with blue ribbons and diligently poured wine for his neighbors, not forgetting himself. The countess also, from behind the pineapples, not forgetting her duties as a housewife, cast significant glances at her husband, whose bald head and face, it seemed to her, were more sharply different from his gray hair in their redness. There was a steady babble on the ladies' end; in the men's room, voices were heard louder and louder, especially the hussar colonel, who ate and drank so much, blushing more and more, that the count was already setting him up as an example to the other guests. Berg, with a gentle smile, spoke to Vera that love is not an earthly, but a heavenly feeling. Boris named his new friend Pierre the guests at the table and exchanged glances with Natasha, who was sitting opposite him. Pierre spoke little, looked at new faces and ate a lot. Starting from two soups, from which he chose a la tortue, [turtle,] and kulebyaki and to hazel grouse, he did not miss a single dish and not a single wine, which the butler mysteriously stuck out in a bottle wrapped in a napkin from behind his neighbor’s shoulder, saying or “drey Madeira", or "Hungarian", or "Rhine wine". He placed the first of the four crystal glasses with the count's monogram that stood in front of each device, and drank with pleasure, looking at the guests with an increasingly pleasant expression. Natasha, sitting opposite him, looked at Boris the way thirteen-year-old girls look at a boy with whom they had just kissed for the first time and with whom they are in love. This same look of hers sometimes turned to Pierre, and under the gaze of this funny, lively girl he wanted to laugh himself, not knowing why.

Recently I discovered that some people do not know what “pillar nobility” is. Therefore, I want to conduct a small educational program, literally in a nutshell.

Let us remember who the old woman wanted to be in “The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish”? "A pillar noblewoman." Why? Indeed, in the time of Pushkin, rank was valued more than nobility of origin. Nevertheless, being a pillar nobleman was, as they would say now, “cool.” This meant that you ancient family that your ancestors were nobles even before Peter I. Why before Peter? Because in the XVI-XVII centuries. information about Russian nobles was entered into the columns of the Rank Order. Actually, that’s why they are “pillars”. And under the reformer tsar, the nobility began to be quite actively replenished with people from other classes. This was officially formalized: if a person received a certain rank, he was elevated to hereditary nobility, that is, not only he, but also his children would be nobles.

Coat of arms of the Pushkins.

It’s easy to remember how one could “get out among the people” in the first decades of the 19th century if you memorize a part of Pushkin’s poem “My Genealogy.” The poet (a leading nobleman, by the way) lists in it the most common ways of obtaining hereditary nobility in his time:

I'm not an officer, not an assessor,
I am not a nobleman by cross,
Not an academician, not a professor;
I'm just a Russian tradesman.

Accordingly, a person received hereditary nobility if he became:

officer (ensign or cornet, this is class 14 of the Table of Ranks. True, children born before their father received an officer rank belonged to the group of “chief officer children” and only one of them, at the request of the father, could receive nobility),
collegiate assessor (8th grade Table of Ranks),
professor,
academician
received an order (in Pushkin - “cross”. That is why they tried to reward representatives of the peasantry, philistinism and merchants either with medals or with some objects, for example, silver ladles. Award ladles were awarded until early XIX century).

Then the tightening of the screws began. In 1845, the military rank conferring hereditary nobility was promoted to major. In 1856 - to colonel in the army and full-time state councilor in civilian life.

I specifically wrote “the most common methods” because there were other possibilities. After ascending the throne, Empress Elizabeth Petrovna granted nobility to all the soldiers of the grenadier company of the Preobrazhensky Regiment who helped her carry out the coup. The smallpox received nobility and their surname after material was taken from the founder of their family, the boy Alexander Markov, for inoculation of Catherine II. The illegitimate daughter of Emperor Paul I from a laundress was elevated to the nobility and received the surname Musina-Yuryev.

By the way, in the same poem, Alexander Sergeevich writes about representatives of those families whose ancestors served under Peter the Great and his followers.

My grandfather did not sell pancakes (a hint to the Menshikovs),
Didn’t wax the royal boots (This is about Kutaisov, Paul I’s valet),
Didn’t sing with the court sextons (About Razumovsky, whose ancestor, Alyosha Rozum, became Elizabeth Petrovna’s favorite after she noticed a handsome fellow with a wonderful voice in the church choir),
I didn’t jump to princehood from crests (Bezborodko),
And he was not a runaway soldier
Austrian powder squads (a kick towards Kleinmichel and his
descendants);
So should I be an aristocrat?
I, thank God, am a tradesman.

And finally, I remind you that there was a personal nobility. It was received along with the first civilian rank, and after 1845 with the first officer rank. A personal nobleman could not own peasants, hold elected noble positions, or participate in noble meetings; his name was not entered in the genealogical book of the corresponding province. But there were also bonuses: they could not apply Physical punishment, he was free from poll tax and conscription. In addition, if a family had three personal noblemen in a row (grandfather, father and son), then the son could ask for hereditary nobility. A person could submit the same petition if his father and grandfather had personal nobility and served Russia “immaculately” for 20 years.

P.S. Just in case: I'm talking mainly about the first decades of the 19th century.
P.P.S. The table of ranks can be seen here.

Many words from old fairy tales cause modern children only bewilderment, and adults do not quite understand how to explain this or that concept. For example, what does “pillar noblewoman” mean from Pushkin’s fairy tales? Where did this word come from? Let's try to figure it out.

Nobility in Rus'

IN Kievan Rus the concept of “nobility” had not yet taken shape. Naturally, princely families already existed, but, in principle, any free person could join the ranks of the warriors or boyars. As a class, the nobility took shape already in the XIII-XV centuries in Moscow Rus'. The emergence of this class is inextricably linked with a reconsideration of the principles of land ownership.

Estate and fiefdom

In Muscovy there were two types of private land- patrimony and estate. It was called votchina private land which was passed down from generation to generation. An estate is land for temporary use, which was given for service in connection with the expansion of the territory of Muscovite Rus', due to the increase in land from the south and Eastern Siberia, there was more agricultural land, but it could only be obtained in the service of the tsar.

Columns

The lands that were provided to service people were formalized according to the laws of that time in special decrees - columns. In them, each employee could find out whether he had land and whether he had the right to cultivate it. The lists were compiled quite often, and were reviewed and certified by the king himself. So the sovereign of all Rus' had an idea about the number of people loyal to him who owned estates. To be included in such a list is the dream of every serviceman, because it meant not only ownership of earthly lands, but also the probable attention and mercy of the king himself.

In the lists, the names of the owners of the estates were written from top to bottom - “in a column”. Thus, a person whose last name was in the “columns” was called “pillar nobleman” and “pillar noblewoman.” This honorary title spoke both of the presence of land holdings and of a special status. Getting into the coveted “columns” was not easy.

Noblewomen

At first, only men were included in the “columns”. But over time, the coveted lists also included female names. This is how the concept of “pillar noblewoman” appeared. The meaning of the word "noblewoman" implies good birth or an advantageous marriage. The term “pillar” indicates the presence of significant lands and a privileged position.

Thus, a pillar noblewoman is a woman from a good family, a wife or widow who owns an estate. After the death of a civil servant, his widow had the right to retain the estate lands “for living”; after her death, the estate returned to the treasury and could be transferred to other pillar nobles. Cases where wives or daughters owned the estate personally were quite rare. As a rule, only high-ranking noblewomen had this right. This property was usually under the special guardianship of the royal authorities, and a woman could not sell, mortgage or inherit the land.

Land reforms

Confusion among the owners of patrimonial and estate lands was so typical that it created a lot of inconvenience and incorrect court decisions. It is worth clarifying that court decisions in those days were mainly based on and the chain of illegal transfers of estates by inheritance, lease or sale spread throughout the country. To legalize the existing state of affairs, land reform was undertaken.

Land reforms of the early 16th century equalized the position of owners of patrimonial and estate lands. Lands owned by families from generation to generation, and lands owned by one or another nobleman or noblewoman, are lands subject to the same laws. This decision was made in order to legalize huge estates that, relatively speaking, did not belong to their owners. Thus, the pillar nobles became hereditary nobles - only they themselves could dispose of their right to land. Naturally, in those years the autocracy grew and strengthened, and the tsarist government reserved the right to take away lands and demote the nobleman.

Results

This is how we figured out the term “pillar noblewoman.” The meaning of the word lies on the surface - this is a representative of the noble class, whose surname is on the “column lists” of the sovereign himself. Perhaps this is the daughter of the royal servant or his widow, for whom the local lands were left “for maintenance.” But after the adoption of land reform, this word begins to fall out of use and practically loses its meaning. A.S. Pushkin in his fairy tale used this word to denote not only the old woman’s greed, but also her desire to be known as special to the tsar himself. But everyone knows how it ended for the greedy woman.

The meaning of PILLAR NOBLEMS in Modern explanatory dictionary, TSB

PILLAR NOBLEMS

in Russia, hereditary nobles of noble families, listed in the 16-17 centuries. in the columns are genealogical books, in contrast to nobles of later origin.

TSB. Modern explanatory dictionary, TSB. 2003

See also interpretations, synonyms, meanings of the word and what PILLAR NOBLETS are in Russian in dictionaries, encyclopedias and reference books:

  • PILLAR NOBLEMS in the Big Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    in Russia, hereditary nobles of noble families, listed in the 16-17 centuries. in the columns are genealogical books, unlike the nobles more...
  • NOBLEMS
    see Nobility...
  • PILLAR in the Big Russian Encyclopedic Dictionary:
    PILLAR NOBLEMS, descendants in Russia. noblemen of noble families, listed in the 16th and 17th centuries. in columns - genealogical books, unlike ...
  • NOBLEMS in the Large Modern Explanatory Dictionary of the Russian Language:
    pl. Persons belonging to the nobility and having noble title, received by...
  • DAURS in the Orthodox Encyclopedia Tree:
    Open Orthodox encyclopedia"TREE". Daurs, Dahurs, Dagurs, people in China. They live on the right bank of the river. Nonny, to the east. ...
  • CHARLES IX in the Directory of Characters and Cult Objects of Greek Mythology:
  • CHARLES IX in biographies of Monarchs:
    King of France from the Valois family, who reigned from 1560 to 1574. Son of Henry II and Catherine de Medici. J.: November 26, 1570 ...
  • RUSSIA, SECTION MOSCOW STATE XVI - XVII CENTURIES in the Brief Biographical Encyclopedia:
    The successes of collective activity significantly modified the political role of the Moscow princes, turning them from appanage fiefdoms into representatives of the national interests of the Great Russian people. ...
  • YOKAI in the Literary Encyclopedia:
    The Moor is a Hungarian novelist. His father, who belonged to the official nobility, was a lawyer in Komorna, one of the centers of the then grain industry...
  • SLAVS in big Soviet encyclopedia, TSB:
    the largest group of peoples in Europe, united by the proximity of languages ​​(see Slavic languages) and common origin. Total number glory peoples on...
  • RUSSIAN SOVIET FEDERAL SOCIALIST REPUBLIC, RSFSR in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB.
  • Przeworsk culture in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    culture, archaeological culture, widespread in Poland and adjacent regions of the Ukrainian SSR since the end of the 2nd century. BC e. ...
  • POMORIC CULTURE in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    culture, archaeological culture 6-2 centuries. BC e. on the territory of Poland and adjacent regions of Belarus and Ukraine. ...
  • UNDERGROUND MINING in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    development of solid minerals, a set of works on opening, preparing a deposit and extracting minerals (ores, non-metallic minerals and coals). ...
  • DUTCH BOURGEOIS REVOLUTION OF THE 16TH CENTURY in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    bourgeois revolution of the 16th century, bourgeois revolution of 1566-1609 in the historical Netherlands, which combined a national liberation war against absolutist Spain with an anti-feudal struggle. IN …
  • LENDYEL CULTURE in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    culture, archaeological culture of the Chalcolithic era (2600-2100 BC). Named after a settlement and burial ground in the Lengyel community in ...
  • HALLSTAT CULTURE in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    culture, archaeological culture of the tribes of the southern part Central Europe during the Early Iron Age (approximately 900-400 BC). Named...
  • VINCA in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, TSB:
    Neolithic culture (late 5th - 4th millennium BC) of the Balkan Peninsula. Distributed mainly in the valleys of the river. Vardar and...
  • CLASS MONARCHY
    and class representative institutions. — In the theoretical, state-legal meaning, a monarchy can be called a governmental organization in which the power of the sovereign...
  • COLD SALT
  • RUSSIA. LAND OWNERSHIP IN RUSSIA V Encyclopedic Dictionary Brockhaus and Euphron:
    (addition to the article) Since the appearance of the article by Prof. Karysheva acc. article in the Enz. Dictionary, information about land ownership in Russia was subject to insignificant ...
  • PSKOV PROVINCE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    I belongs to the so-called lakeside region of European Russia and is located in the north-west of the latter. P. province occupies an area of ​​38846.5 ...
  • ORDERS, INSTITUTIONS in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron.
  • BALTIC REGION in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    (Baltic Sea region) - consists of 8 provinces: Courland, Livonia and Estland. Although this region has not been a special place since 1876...
  • ESTATE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    (in Russian history) - P. was the name given to real estate given by the state for use as a salary for service. The origin of P. is in ...
  • PATRIARAL DOMAINS IN RUSSIA in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
  • HORSE DRIVE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron.
  • NOBILITY in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    I, as the highest ruling class in Russia, arose on the basis of public service. Since in ancient times civil service is nothing...
  • YARD PEOPLE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    I persons who made up the ancient Rus' the court staff of Russian princes, great and appanage, greatly expanded under the Moscow Grand Duke and...
  • GOVERNMENT OFFICERS in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    By the name G. ranks we mean either generally independent political elements (rank = ordo, status), mainly of the old Western European class...
  • CITY, CONCEPT in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    I (Urbs, Burg, Wick or Weich, Stadt, City, Cit?) - this word from ancient times meant a settlement artificially fortified with a fence or rampart...
  • MILITARY SERVICE in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Euphron:
    The duty to personally defend one’s homeland has existed at all times and in all states, although its very fulfillment was subject to various fluctuations...
  • FINLAND*
  • COLD SALT* in the Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron.
  • SAINT PETERSBURG, CAPITAL OF RUSSIA* in the Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron.
  • BALTIC REGION*
    (Baltic Sea region) ? consists of 8 provinces: Courland, Livonia and Estland. Although this region has not been a special place since 1876...
  • PORTUGAL in the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedia:
    [Map P. ? see map of Spain.] ? kingdom in Europe. Occupies the western part of the Iberian Peninsula, between 36¦59" - 42¦8" north. lat. ...
  • PATRIARAL DOMAINS IN RUSSIA in the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedia:
    Since the Russian patriarch replaced the metropolitan, all means of supporting the latter were transferred to him, including...
  • MOBILIZATION OF LAND PROPERTY in the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedia:
    ? is the process of transfer of land ownership from one person to another on the basis of such a system of land relations in which alienation, ...

14.09.2009

Nobility: pillar, hereditary, personal.

Coat of arms of the Pushkins

Let us remember who the old woman wanted to be in “The Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish”? "A pillar noblewoman." Why? Indeed, in the time of Pushkin, rank was valued more than nobility of origin. Nevertheless, being a pillar nobleman was, as they would say now, “cool.” This meant that you were of an ancient family, that your ancestors were nobles even before Peter I. Why before Peter? Because in the XVI-XVII centuries. information about Russian nobles was entered into the columns of the Rank Order. Actually, that’s why they are “pillars”. And under the reformer tsar, the nobility began to be quite actively replenished with people from other classes. This was officially formalized by the Table of Ranks: if a person received a certain rank, he was elevated to hereditary nobility, that is, not only he, but also his children would be nobles.

It’s easy to remember how one could “get out among the people” in the first decades of the 19th century if you memorize a part of Pushkin’s poem “My Genealogy.” The poet (a leading nobleman, by the way) lists in it the most common ways of obtaining hereditary nobility in his time:

I'm not an officer, not an assessor,
I am not a nobleman by cross,
Not an academician, not a professor;
I'm just a Russian tradesman.

Accordingly, a person received hereditary nobility if he became:

An officer (ensign or cornet, this is class 14 of the Table of Ranks. True, children born before their father received an officer rank belonged to the group of “chief officer children” and only one of them, at the request of the father, could receive nobility),
collegiate assessor (8th grade Table of Ranks),
professor,
academician
received an order (Pushkin has a “cross”. That is why they tried to reward representatives of the peasantry, philistinism and merchants either with medals or with some objects, for example, silver ladles. Award ladles were awarded until the beginning of the 19th century).

Then the tightening of the screws began. In 1845, the military rank conferring hereditary nobility was promoted to major. In 1856 - to colonel in the army and full-time state councilor in civilian life.

I specifically wrote “the most common methods” because there were other possibilities. After ascending the throne, Empress Elizabeth Petrovna granted nobility to all the soldiers of the grenadier company of the Preobrazhensky Regiment who helped her carry out the coup. The smallpox received nobility and their surname after material was taken from the founder of their family, the boy Alexander Markov, for inoculation of Catherine II. The illegitimate daughter of Emperor Paul I from a laundress was elevated to the nobility and received the surname Musina-Yuryev.

By the way, in the same poem, Alexander Sergeevich writes about representatives of those families whose ancestors served under Peter the Great and his followers.

My grandfather did not sell pancakes (a hint to the Menshikovs),
Didn’t wax the royal boots (This is about Kutaisov, Paul I’s valet),
Didn’t sing with the court sextons (About Razumovsky, whose ancestor, Alyosha Rozum, became Elizabeth Petrovna’s favorite after she noticed a handsome fellow with a wonderful voice in the church choir),
I didn’t jump to princehood from crests (Bezborodko),
And he was not a runaway soldier
Austrian powder squads (a kick towards Kleinmichel and his
descendants);
So should I be an aristocrat?
I, thank God, am a tradesman.

And finally, there was a personal nobility. It was received along with the first civilian rank, and after 1845 with the first officer rank. A personal nobleman could not own peasants, hold elected noble positions, or participate in noble meetings; his name was not entered in the genealogical book of the corresponding province. But there were also bonuses: corporal punishment could not be applied to him, he was free from poll tax and conscription. In addition, if a family had three personal noblemen in a row (grandfather, father and son), then the son could ask for hereditary nobility. A person could submit the same petition if his father and grandfather had personal nobility and served Russia “immaculately” for 20 years.

P.S. Just in case: I'm talking mainly about the first decades of the 19th century.
P.P.S. The table of ranks can be seen here.