Anna Popova: Difference between revisions
Tchaikovsky Research
m (1 revision imported) |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Maternal great-grandmother of the composer (b. ca.1752 in [[Moscow]]; d. ca.1823), born '''''Anna Dmitriyevna Rykovskaya''''' (Анна Дмитриевна Рыковская); known after her marriage as '''''Anna Dmitriyevna Popova''''' (Анна Дмитриевна Попова) | Maternal great-grandmother of the composer (b. ca. 1752 in [[Moscow]]; d. ca. 1823), born '''''Anna Dmitriyevna Rykovskaya''''' (Анна Дмитриевна Рыковская); known after her marriage as '''''Anna Dmitriyevna Popova''''' (Анна Дмитриевна Попова). | ||
Anna was the only daughter of [[Dmitry Rykovsky]] (1721–1757) and his wife [[Yevfimiya Rykovskaya|Yevfimiya]] (b. Iosifovich, 1727–?). On 1/12 June 1774 she married [[Mikhail Popov]] (1752–1792) at the Church of Saint | Anna was the only daughter of [[Dmitry Rykovsky]] (1721–1757) and his wife [[Yevfimiya Rykovskaya|Yevfimiya]] (b. Iosifovich, 1727–?). On 1/12 June 1774, she married [[Mikhail Popov]] (1752–1792) at the Church of Saint Sergiev in [[Saint Petersburg]], and they had five children: Varvara (b. 1776); [[Yekaterina Assier|Yekaterina]] (1778–1816), grandmother of the composer; [[Nikolay Popov|Nikolay]] (1779–1869); Maria (b. 1783); and Sergey (1785–1851). | ||
[[Category:People|Popova, Anna]] | [[Category:People|Popova, Anna]] | ||
[[Category:Family|Popova, Anna]] | [[Category:Family|Popova, Anna]] |
Latest revision as of 13:49, 7 January 2023
Maternal great-grandmother of the composer (b. ca. 1752 in Moscow; d. ca. 1823), born Anna Dmitriyevna Rykovskaya (Анна Дмитриевна Рыковская); known after her marriage as Anna Dmitriyevna Popova (Анна Дмитриевна Попова).
Anna was the only daughter of Dmitry Rykovsky (1721–1757) and his wife Yevfimiya (b. Iosifovich, 1727–?). On 1/12 June 1774, she married Mikhail Popov (1752–1792) at the Church of Saint Sergiev in Saint Petersburg, and they had five children: Varvara (b. 1776); Yekaterina (1778–1816), grandmother of the composer; Nikolay (1779–1869); Maria (b. 1783); and Sergey (1785–1851).