Last name is Vadkovsky. Fedor Fedorovich Vadkovsky: biography Vadkovsky Pavel Fedorovich

Fedor Fedorovich Vadkovsky (May 1 (13) ( 18000513 ) year, s. Pyatnitskoye, Oryol province - January 8 (20), p. Oyok, Irkutsk province) - poet, musician, ensign of the Nezhinsky Horse-Jager Regiment (1825); Decembrist. Convicted of 1st category.

Biography

The middle son of the senator and chamberlain of the court, Fyodor Fedorovich Vadkovsky (-) and Ekaterina Ivanovna Vadkovskaya, née Countess Chernysheva. Born in the village. Pyatnitsky (Izvaly) near Yelets, Oryol province. The younger brother of Ivan Fedorovich Vadkovsky (-) and the older brother of Alexander Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1802-1845), also convicted in the Decembrist case. He received his primary education at the Moscow University boarding school and at the Main German School of St. Peter (1815-1818). From January 25, 1818, lieutenant ensign of the Life Guards. Semenovsky regiment. Transferred to the Cavalry Regiment on April 20, 1820 as a cadet, on August 27, 1820 as an estandard cadet, and as a cornet on January 1, 1822. On June 19, 1824, he was transferred to the Nizhyn Cavalry Regiment as an ensign for satirical poetry.

Decembrist society

He was sent to Siberia on November 17, 1827, arrived in the Chita prison on January 5, 1828, and at the Petrovsky Plant in September 1830. One of the organizers of the Small Artel. At the Petrovsky Plant he gave a course of lectures on astronomy. On November 8, 1832, the term was reduced to 15, and on December 14, 1835 to 13 years.

In his poem “Desire,” written after 1836, Vadkovsky proclaimed the Decembrist program: 1. Destruction of autocracy. 2. Liberation of the peasants. 3. Transformations in the troops. 4. Equality before the law. 5. Abolition of corporal punishment. 6. Publicity of legal proceedings. 7. Freedom of printing. 8. Recognition of people's power. 9. Chamber of Representatives. 10. Public army. 11. Initial training. 12. Destruction of estates.

Appointed to settle in the village. Manzurka, Irkutsk province. July 10, 1839. However, due to health reasons, he was released to Turkinsky Mineral Waters. From September 1839 in Irkutsk, from September 5, 1840 in a settlement in the village of Oyok. He was engaged in the trade of bread and clay. He left notes published in the collection “Memoirs and Stories of Secret Society Figures of the 1820s” (-). Author of the essay “White Church” (the history of the uprising of the Chernigov regiment according to the stories of its participants). Died January 8, 1844. His executors were E.I. Trubetskaya and A.N. Sutgof. The grave of F.F. Vadkovsky has not survived.

Documentation

  • . Decembrist revolt. Documentation. T.XI, pp.189-236.

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Links

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Literature

  • Dorofeev V. Yelets Decembrists. // newspaper "Red Banner". - December 2, 1982.
  • Dorofeev V. Rebellious family. // newspaper “Orlovskaya Pravda”. - December 14, 1982.
  • Dorofeev V. He intended to commit regicide. // weekly magazine “Literary Russia”. - September 5, 1986.
  • Dorofeev Vladlen. Rebellious family. // Cure for loneliness. - M., 2005. - ISBN 5-7949-0136-5.

An excerpt characterizing Vadkovsky, Fedor Fedorovich

Everyone in the house felt for whom Prince Andrei was traveling, and he, without hiding, tried to be with Natasha all day. Not only in Natasha’s frightened, but happy and enthusiastic soul, but in the whole house one could feel the fear of something important that was about to happen. The Countess looked at Prince Andrei with sad and seriously stern eyes when he spoke to Natasha, and timidly and feignedly began some insignificant conversation as soon as he looked back at her. Sonya was afraid to leave Natasha and was afraid to be a hindrance when she was with them. Natasha turned pale with fear of anticipation when she remained alone with him for minutes. Prince Andrei amazed her with his timidity. She felt that he needed to tell her something, but that he could not bring himself to do so.
When Prince Andrey left in the evening, the Countess came up to Natasha and said in a whisper:
- Well?
“Mom, for God’s sake don’t ask me anything now.” “You can’t say that,” Natasha said.
But despite this, that evening Natasha, sometimes excited, sometimes frightened, with fixed eyes, lay for a long time in her mother’s bed. Either she told her how he praised her, then how he said that he would go abroad, then how he asked where they would live this summer, then how he asked her about Boris.
- But this, this... has never happened to me! - she said. “Only I’m scared in front of him, I’m always scared in front of him, what does that mean?” That means it's real, right? Mom, are you sleeping?
“No, my soul, I’m scared myself,” answered the mother. - Go.
- I won’t sleep anyway. What nonsense is it to sleep? Mom, mom, this has never happened to me! - she said with surprise and fear at the feeling that she recognized in herself. – And could we think!...
It seemed to Natasha that even when she first saw Prince Andrey in Otradnoye, she fell in love with him. She seemed to be frightened by this strange, unexpected happiness, that the one whom she had chosen back then (she was firmly convinced of this), that the same one had now met her again, and, it seemed, was not indifferent to her. “And he had to come to St. Petersburg on purpose now that we are here. And we had to meet at this ball. It's all fate. It is clear that this is fate, that all this was leading to this. Even then, as soon as I saw him, I felt something special.”
- What else did he tell you? What verses are these? Read... - the mother said thoughtfully, asking about the poems that Prince Andrei wrote in Natasha’s album.
“Mom, isn’t it a shame that he’s a widower?”
- That's enough, Natasha. Pray to God. Les Marieiages se font dans les cieux. [Marriages are made in heaven.]
- Darling, mother, how I love you, how good it makes me feel! – Natasha shouted, crying tears of happiness and excitement and hugging her mother.
At the same time, Prince Andrei was sitting with Pierre and telling him about his love for Natasha and his firm intention to marry her.

On this day, Countess Elena Vasilyevna had a reception, there was a French envoy, there was a prince, who had recently become a frequent visitor to the countess’s house, and many brilliant ladies and men. Pierre was downstairs, walked through the halls, and amazed all the guests with his concentrated, absent-minded and gloomy appearance.
Since the time of the ball, Pierre had felt the approaching attacks of hypochondria and with desperate effort tried to fight against them. From the time the prince became close to his wife, Pierre was unexpectedly granted a chamberlain, and from that time on he began to feel heaviness and shame in large society, and more often the old gloomy thoughts about the futility of everything human began to come to him. At the same time, the feeling he noticed between Natasha, whom he protected, and Prince Andrei, the contrast between his position and the position of his friend, further intensified this gloomy mood. He equally tried to avoid thoughts about his wife and about Natasha and Prince Andrei. Again everything seemed insignificant to him in comparison with eternity, again the question presented itself: “why?” And he forced himself to work day and night on Masonic works, hoping to ward off the approach of the evil spirit. Pierre, at 12 o'clock, having left the countess's chambers, was sitting upstairs in a smoky, low room, in a worn dressing gown in front of the table, copying out authentic Scottish acts, when someone entered his room. It was Prince Andrei.
“Oh, it’s you,” said Pierre with an absent-minded and dissatisfied look. “And I’m working,” he said, pointing to a notebook with that look of salvation from the hardships of life with which unhappy people look at their work.
Prince Andrei, with a radiant, enthusiastic face and renewed life, stopped in front of Pierre and, not noticing his sad face, smiled at him with the egoism of happiness.
“Well, my soul,” he said, “yesterday I wanted to tell you and today I came to you for this.” I've never experienced anything like it. I'm in love, my friend.
Pierre suddenly sighed heavily and collapsed with his heavy body on the sofa, next to Prince Andrei.
- To Natasha Rostova, right? - he said.
- Yes, yes, who? I would never believe it, but this feeling is stronger than me. Yesterday I suffered, I suffered, but I wouldn’t give up this torment for anything in the world. I haven't lived before. Now only I live, but I cannot live without her. But can she love me?... I'm too old for her... What aren't you saying?...

The middle son of the senator and chamberlain of the court, Fyodor Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1764-1806) and Ekaterina Ivanovna Vadkovskaya, née Countess Chernysheva. Born in the village. Pyatnitsky (Izvaly) near Yelets, Oryol province. The younger brother of Ivan Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1790-1849) and the older brother of Alexander Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1801-1845), also convicted in the Decembrist case. He received his primary education at the Moscow University boarding school and at the Main German School of St. Peter (1815-1818). From January 25, 1818, lieutenant ensign of the Life Guards. Semenovsky regiment. Transferred to the Cavalry Regiment on April 20, 1820 as a cadet, on August 27, 1820 as an estandard cadet, and as a cornet on January 1, 1822. On June 19, 1824, he was transferred to the Nizhyn Cavalry Regiment as an ensign for satirical poetry.

Decembrist society

Member of the Northern Society since 1823. On the board of the Southern Society since 1824. At the beginning of December 1825, he was in Kursk, where he was arrested on December 11 following Sherwood’s denunciation. Sherwood met Vadkovsky, from whom he learned about the secret society, in December 1824. Vadkovsky was kept first in Shlisselburg, then in the Peter and Paul Fortress. Convicted under the first category to death, upon confirmation on June 10, 1826 to eternal hard labor, on August 22, 1826 the term was reduced to 20 years. From July 27, 1826 he was kept in the Kexholm fortress, from April 24 of the following year - in Shlisselburg.

He was sent to Siberia on November 17, 1827, arrived at the Chita prison on January 5, 1828, and at the Petrovsky Plant in September 1830. One of the organizers of the Small Artel. At the Petrovsky Plant he gave a course of lectures on astronomy. On November 8, 1832, the term was reduced to 15, and on December 14, 1835 to 13 years.

In his poem “Desire,” written after 1836, Vadkovsky proclaimed the Decembrist program: 1. Destruction of autocracy. 2. Liberation of the peasants. 3. Transformations in the troops. 4. Equality before the law. 5. Abolition of corporal punishment. 6. Publicity of legal proceedings. 7. Freedom of printing. 8. Recognition of people's power. 9. Chamber of Representatives. 10. Public army. 11. Initial training. 12. Destruction of estates.

Appointed to settle in the village. Manzurka, Irkutsk province. July 10, 1839. However, due to health reasons, he was released to Turkinsky Mineral Waters. From September 1839 in Irkutsk, from September 5, 1840 in a settlement in the village. Oyok. He was engaged in the trade of bread and clay. He left notes published in the collection “Memoirs and Stories of Figures of Secret Societies of the 1820s” (1931-1933). Author of the essay “White Church” (the history of the uprising of the Chernigov regiment according to the stories of its participants). Died January 8, 1844. His executors were E.I. Trubetskaya and A.N. Sutgof. The grave of F.F. Vadkovsky has not survived.

Vadkovsky F. F.

Fedor Fedorovich (1800, Moscow - 8(20) I 1844, village Oyok, Irkutsk province) - Russian. composer and violinist. Son of a senator. He was brought up in Moscow. university (until 1812) and private St. Petersburg. boarding houses. From 1822 to military service. service. Member North and Yuzh. Society of Decembrists. In 1825 he was sentenced to hard labor (he was imprisoned in Kexholm, Shlisselburg, Chita, and Petrovsky plant). From 1839 he settled in the village. Oyok. A talented musician, V. wrote a number of romances and songs, of which the most popular were “Slavic Maidens” (lyrics by A. I. Odoevsky), “What is not the wind rustling in a damp forest” (lyrics by M. A. Bestuzhev). V. was also an outstanding violinist, led the quartet of exiled Decembrists (N. A. Kryukov, A. P. Yushnevsky, P. N. Svistunov, V.), in whose repertoire variations in Russian occupied a large place. adv. songs.


Musical encyclopedia. - M.: Soviet Encyclopedia, Soviet composer. Ed. Yu. V. Keldysh. 1973-1982 .

See what "Vadkovsky F.F." is in other dictionaries:

    Vadkovsky is a Russian surname. Vadkovsky noble family. Famous bearers: Anthony (Vadkovsky) (1846 1912) Metropolitan of the Russian Orthodox Church Vadkovsky, Ivan Fedorovich (1790 1849) Russian military leader, Decembrist ... ... Wikipedia

    Fedor Fedorovich (1800 January 8, 1844, village of Oyok, now Irkutsk region), Decembrist; ensign of the Nezhinsky regiment. Since 1823, member of the Northern Society of Decembrists. In 1824 he joined the St. Petersburg council of the Southern Society, shared its republican... ...

    Fedor Fedorovich (1800 8.1.1844) Decembrist. Ensign of the Nezhinsky regiment. Since 1823 members North about va Decembrists. In 1824 he entered St. Petersburg. administration of South about va, shared his rep. program. Sentenced to eternal hard labor, reduced to 13 years. During the investigation... ... Soviet historical encyclopedia

    Vadkovsky F. F.- VADKOVSKY Fedor Fedorovich (180044), Decembrist, member of the Northern. and Yuzh. about in, ensign. Sentenced to eternal hard labor. From 1826 in the Kexholm and Shlisselburg fortresses, from 1828 in the Nerchinsk mines, from 1839 in the settlement... Biographical Dictionary

    Vadkovsky, Feodor Feodorovich Decembrist (1799 1844). He studied first at the university, then at a private boarding school. From the cornets of the Cavalry Guard Regiment he was transferred to the Nizhyn Cavalry Jaeger Regiment for bold conversations. Belonged to the Northern society. IN … Biographical Dictionary

    Moscow ... Wikipedia

    - (1800 44) Decembrist, ensign. Member of the Northern and Southern Societies. Sentenced to eternal hard labor. From 1826 in the Kexholm fortress, from 1828 in the Nerchinsk mines, from 1839 in the settlement... Big Encyclopedic Dictionary

    Son of F.I. Vadkovsky (see), d.t.s., chamberlain of the court of Catherine II; R. 21 Dec 1764, † 27 Aug. 1806 (Polovtsov) ... Large biographical encyclopedia

    - (1800 ≈ January 8, 1844, village of Oyok, now Irkutsk region), Decembrist; ensign of the Nezhinsky regiment. Since 1823, member of the Northern Society of Decembrists. In 1824 he joined the St. Petersburg council of the Southern Society and shared its republican program. Sentenced to eternal... Great Soviet Encyclopedia

    Ivan Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1790 1849) colonel, battalion commander of the Life Guards Semenovsky Regiment (1820); one of the four officers convicted in the case of the uprising of the Semenovsky regiment, brother of the Decembrists Fyodor Fedorovich and Alexander... ... Wikipedia

Books

  • , A V Vadkovsky. Orthodox interlocutor, 1872, 5, p. 3-37; 10, p. 121-141; 1873, I, p. 390-430. Reproduced in the author's original spelling. IN…
  • St. Basil the Great, his life and preaching works, A V Vadkovsky. Orthodox interlocutor, 1872, 5, p. 3-37; 10, p. 121-141; 1873, I, p. 390-430. Reproduced in the author's original spelling…

The middle son of the senator and chamberlain of the court, Fyodor Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1764-1806) and Ekaterina Ivanovna Vadkovskaya, née Countess Chernysheva. Born in the village. Pyatnitsky (Izvaly) near Yelets, Oryol province. The younger brother of Ivan Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1790-1849) and the older brother of Alexander Fedorovich Vadkovsky (1801-1845), also convicted in the Decembrist case. He received his primary education at the Moscow University boarding school and at the Main German School of St. Peter (1815-1818). From January 25, 1818, lieutenant ensign of the Life Guards. Semenovsky regiment. Transferred to the Cavalry Regiment on April 20, 1820 as a cadet, on August 27, 1820 as an estandard cadet, and as a cornet on January 1, 1822. On June 19, 1824, he was transferred to the Nizhyn Cavalry Regiment as an ensign for satirical poetry.

Decembrist society

Member of the Northern Society since 1823. On the board of the Southern Society since 1824. At the beginning of December 1825, he was in Kursk, where he was arrested on December 11 following Sherwood’s denunciation. Sherwood met Vadkovsky, from whom he learned about the secret society, in December 1824. Vadkovsky was kept first in Shlisselburg, then in the Peter and Paul Fortress. Condemned to death under the first category, upon confirmation on June 10, 1826 to eternal hard labor, on August 22, 1826 the term was reduced to 20 years. From July 27, 1826, he was kept in the Kexholm fortress, from April 24 of the following year - in Shlisselburg.

He was sent to Siberia on November 17, 1827, arrived at the Chita prison on January 5, 1828, and at the Petrovsky Plant in September 1830. One of the organizers of the Small Artel. At the Petrovsky Plant he gave a course of lectures on astronomy. On November 8, 1832, the term was reduced to 15, and on December 14, 1835 to 13 years.

In his poem “Desire,” written after 1836, Vadkovsky proclaimed the Decembrist program: 1. Destruction of autocracy. 2. Liberation of the peasants. 3. Transformations in the troops. 4. Equality before the law. 5. Abolition of corporal punishment. 6. Publicity of legal proceedings. 7. Freedom of printing. 8. Recognition of people's power. 9. Chamber of Representatives. 10. Public army. 11. Initial training. 12. Destruction of estates.

Appointed to settle in the village. Manzurka, Irkutsk province. July 10, 1839. However, due to health reasons, he was released to Turkinsky Mineral Waters. From September 1839 in Irkutsk, from September 5, 1840 in a settlement in the village. Oyok. He was engaged in the trade of bread and clay. He left notes published in the collection “Memoirs and Stories of Figures of Secret Societies of the 1820s” (1931-1933). Author of the essay “White Church” (the history of the uprising of the Chernigov regiment according to the stories of its participants). Died January 8, 1844. His executors were E.I. Trubetskaya and A.N. Sutgof. The grave of F.F. Vadkovsky has not survived.

Vadkovsky Fedor Fedorovich (1800-1844) - Decembrist: from 1823 he was a member of the “Southern Society”; on December 14, 1925 he was an ensign. By court verdict, he was deprived of ranks and nobility, served his sentence in Siberia - eternal hard labor; from July 1839 on the settlement.

Vadkovsky Fedor Fedorovich (1800 - 01/08/1844) - Decembrist. Ensign of the Nezhinsky regiment. Since 1823 - member of the Northern Society of Decembrists. In 1824 he joined the St. Petersburg council of the Southern Society and shared its republican program. Sentenced to eternal hard labor, reduced to 13 years. During the investigation he expressed repentance, but during hard labor in Siberia he returned to his previous views. Together with I.I. Pushchin, he initiated the creation of a prison “artel” of Decembrists.

Soviet historical encyclopedia. In 16 volumes. - M.: Soviet Encyclopedia. 1973-1982. Volume 2. BAAL - WASHINGTON. 1962.

Vadkovsky 1st Fedor Fedorovich (1800 - 8.1.1844). Ensign of the Nizhyn Cavalry Regiment (brother of the previous one).
From the nobles. Born on his parents' Eletsk estate in the village. Pyatnitsky. He was educated at the Moscow University boarding school (1810-1812), then under Abbot Lemri in St. Petersburg and at the boarding houses of Ginrichs and Gadenius. He entered service as a second ensign in the Life Guards. Semyonovsky Regiment - 25.1.1818, transferred to the Cavalry Regiment as a cadet - 21.4.1820, estandard cadet - 27.8.1820, cornet - 1.1.1822, “by the highest order for indecent behavior” (jokes about the emperor and a satirical song he composed) transferred to the Nezhinsky Horse-Jager Regiment with renaming to ensigns - 19.6.1824. Poet, memoirist.
Member of the Southern Society (1823), active organizer of the Decembrist cell in the Cavalry Regiment.
According to the instructions of the Chief of the General Staff I.I. Dibicha from 12/9/1825 was arrested in Kursk - 12/11/1825 and taken to Shlisselburg, 12/21/1825 brought to the Peter and Paul Fortress (“We must keep Vatkovsky completely secret, but let him write what he wants, on my face or whoever he wants”) in No. 6 of the Zotov Bastion, 12/22/1825 was taken to the palace for interrogation.
Convicted of the first category and upon confirmation on July 10, 1826, sentenced to hard labor forever. Sent to Kexholm - 7/27/1826, the term was reduced to 20 years - 8/22/1826, sent to Shlisselburg - 4/24/1827, sent to Siberia - 11/17/1827 (height 2 arshins 10 vershoks, “white-faced, clean, fair-haired, brown eyes, long nose"), delivered to the Chita prison - January 5, 1828, arrived at the Petrovsky plant in September 1830, the term was reduced to 15 years - November 8, 1832 and to 13 years - December 14, 1835. At the end of the term, by decree of July 10, 1839, he was appointed to settle in the village. Manzurka of the Irkutsk province, where he did not go, having been released due to illness to the Turkinsky mineral waters, where he stayed until the beginning of September 1839, and then on September 16 he arrived in Irkutsk, at the request of the Governor-General of Eastern Siberia V.Ya. Rupert was given the highest permission on September 5, 1840 to settle him in the village. Oek of the Irkutsk district (arrived there on March 16, 1841), where he died, entrusting the disposal of his inheritance to Prince. E.I. Trubetskoy and A.N. Sutgof (the grave has not survived). He was engaged in the trade in clay and bread.

VD, XI, 187-236; GARF, f. 109, 1 exp., 1826, d. 61, part 8, 35.

Materials used from Anna Samal's website "Virtual Encyclopedia of the Decembrists" - http://decemb.hobby.ru/

The portrait was sent by Vladimir Leonidovich Chernyshev, associate professor of NTU “KhPI”, Kharkov.

Read further:

Decembrist movement (References).

Decembrists (biographical reference book).

Rumyantsev V.B. And they went out to the square... (A view from the 21st century).

Essays:

White Church, in collection: Recollections. and stories of figures of secret societies of the 1820s, vol. 1, M., 1931;

Requirements of society, "KA", 1925, vol. 3;

Notre Comité d'enquête en 1825 (verse), in the collection: Decembrists. Materials, M., 1907;

Desires. Song, "KA", 1925, vol. 3;

Three letters from R. P. Vadkovsky to I. I. Pushchin, in the book: Decembrists in the Settlement, (M.), 1926;

Notes of the Department of Manuscripts of the All-Union Library. them. V.I. Lenin, V. 3, M., 1939.

Literature:

Restore Decembrists, vol. 6, 8, 11 M., 1925-54;

Decembrists. 86 portraits, M., (1906).



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