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Catherine II, Empress of Russia (1729–1796)
Imperial Charter issued by Catherine II, granting privileges
for service to the state
[St. Petersburg], August 10, 1775
NYPL, Spencer Collection
In 1744, the fourteen-year-old Princess Sophia of Anhalt-Zerbst
arrived in Russia. She soon learned that to gain acceptance
at court, she needed to learn Russian, convert to Orthodoxy,
adapt to local customs, and lavish gifts on those soon
to be surrounding her. When she ascended the throne in
1762 as Empress Catherine II (known as Catherine the
Great), she continued her generosity. As one example,
this signed document grants hereditary land rights to
Argirii Bostanzhian (fl. 18th century), a former Chamberlain
of the Moldavian principality, as compensation for service
to Russia. Catherine kept a glittering court, rivaling
those in the rest of Europe, as this handsomely illuminated
manuscript attests.
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