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PRINCE OLEG VOLKONSKY

Brief biography and backround.

The history of the Volkonsky family and of its various members in different centuries, can be traced in many sources, both in Russia and abroad. From a purely academical-historical point of view, Princess Elizaveta Volkonsky's 1000-page history of the family published at the very beginning of the twentieth century in Russia, is undoubtedly the most important.
The further we go back in time, the more does the history of the family become blurred. This is natural. The same can be said, however, about more recent times. This is unnatural. The further we go forward in time after the Bolshevik revolution of 1917, the less we know about the fate of this family and its members scattered across the world.
This brief biography is an attempt to fill at least one of the "gaps" in information about one of the lines of the family since the events of 1917. If any other member of the Volkonsky family, a relative, or friend, who reads this site, can add any information, their contribution would be very welcome.

I belong to the "third" line of the Volkonskys - those, who are directly descended from Prince Fedor Ivanovich Tarussky who fell at the battle of Kulikovo in 1380.
More recent history goes as follows:

My father: Valentin Mikhailovich Volkonsky. Born 1892 at Knyazhi Borki (now called Arki Borki) family estate near Zadonsk, Voronezhskaya Gubernia. Died in England in 1960. He graduated as midshipman from the last class of the Morskoi Korpus in 1917, already at the time of the Kerenski provisional government. During the Russian civil war he fought for the Whites as an artillery man on an armoured train. After the civil war he found himself in Poland where he met and married Lydia Alexandrovna Rybnikova, daughter of a landowner whose family estate was at Romeiki, near Sarny, Volynskaya gubernia. This became part of Poland after the Soviet-Polish war. Valentin Mikhailovich successfully managed the estate which his wife had inherited until the outbreak of war and the Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939. The family (with two children, Oleg and Elena) fled to western Poland, which was occupied by the Germans.
In August 1944, another dangerous and advenurous journey westwards began. Eventually, the family made their way to southern Italy where Valentin Mikhailovich joined the Free Polish Forces of General Wladyslaw Anders. When this army was moved to Great Britain in 1946, the Volkonskys went with them. Prince Valentin Mikhailovich Volkonsky ended his life working for the Royal Navy as a teacher at the Military Language School in Scotland. His widow, Lydia Alexandrovna, emigrated to America, where she died in 1977. Her memoirs were published in 1972 in the Russian language newspaper "Russkaya Zhizn'" of San Francisco under the title "My Life". The full title of the book is "Proshchai Rossia" - "Farewell to Russia."

Uncle: (younger brother of father) Alexandr Mikhailovich Volkonsky. Born 1900. Died 1961 in Paris. Buried at St. Genevieve des Bois. No children.
Also served in the White army and was evecuated together with Gen. Wrangel's forces from the Crimea to Gallipoli, and then to France.

Grandfather: Mikhail Apollonovich Volkonsky. Born (probably at Knyazhi Borki, near Zadonsk)in 1876. All traces of him disappear after 1917.  Great grandfather: Apollon Alexandrovich. Born 1826. Died - ?

Great-great grandfather Alexandr Lvovich Volkonsky, 1793-1865.

(In case you don't have such information, you can trace our line and all the  Volkonskys lines, all the way back to Prince Mikhail Chernigovsky under the
following website: www8.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/html/russ.html)
You might find this useful.

Myself: Oleg Valentinovich. Born May 21, 1939 at Romeiki, Poland, at parent's family estate. Grew up in England and graduated from Oxford University in 1962. Worked as broadcaster for the Russian language services of the B.B.C. in London, Radio Liberty in Munich, Germany, and the Voice of America in Washington D.C. USA. Author of many radio broadcasts on historical subjects, including a 104-part cycle under the title "Stranitsy Istorii" ("Pages of History") for the Voice of America. Have lived in several countries: in England, France, The United States, Germany, (and including a few years in Moscow, Russia). Currrently resident of Dresden, Germany.
Married to Ekaterina Mikhailovna Oreshenkova of Moscow. I have dual citizenship - British and American.

Son: Alexandr Olegovich, born 1984 In Washington, D.C. from first wife Pamela Judd, and American citizen. Alexandr Olegovich has spent his summer vacations in Russia for several years in a row and speaks Russian quite fluently.

Sister: Elena Valentinovna: born at Romeiki, Poland, in 1922 and died at Mount Clemens, Michigan, USA, in 2001. Married to Jan Sienkiewich, an American of Polish descent. I have two daughters Gloria and Camilla.
 

Incidentally, (again) Prince Repnin-Volkonsky who was governor-general of  Dresden and the Sate of Saxony after the battle of Leipzig against Napoleon in 1813, is a very popular historical figure here. He is mentioned in many history books and tour guides of Dresden. You can find him in German websites in Internet under the name Wolkonski.

With best wishes and regards,

Oleg Volkonsky

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