Helene Dolgoruki (1789-1860) (also known as Yelena in Russian), best remembered in the United States as the grandmother, and surrogate mother of Blavatsky.
In 1813 she married Andrei Mikhailovich Fadeyev (1789-1867) and the family resided near the village of Rzhishchevo, in the Province of Kiev, where the estate of the Dolgorukovs was located.
The girl-wife returned to her parents in Ekaterinoslav (now Dnipropetrovsk), in the heart of the Ukraine, and it was there that Helena was born, prematurely, on the night of August 12, 1831 (July 30, on the Russian calendar). A short time later, the two Helenas rejoined Peter and the family apparently travelled from one Army camp to another as he was reassigned. Three more children were to follow, one of which died as a baby. And in 1842 Helena Fadeyev herself died.
Saratov was, a semi-Asiatic city on the Volga, two hundred miles north of Stalingrad. "The Governor's palace was a rambling eighteenth-century castle, honeycombed with underground passages." (G. Williams)
Helene Dolgoruki supervised, not only the education of her two granddaughters by her deceased daughter Helena, but also that of her grandson Sergei Witte who "learned his letters at her knee." The Witte family lived with the Fadeyev's during this time period. Count Witte's memoirs paint a glowing picture of his grandmother.
Her greatest passion was botany. She devoted an entire wing of her palace to an important collected of Caucasian flora, each labelled with Latin names and scientific descriptions. These are well-remembered by all three of her grandchildren who each left us descriptions in their writings.
== Last Years A frequent visitor to the family at Tiflis, General P S Nikolayeff has left a description of the palatial splendor, in which they lived. The mansion had previously been the home of Prince Chavchavadze. Blavatsky stayed with her again in the last year of her grandmother's life. Helene died in August of 1860. Andrei outlived her by a few years.
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It uses material from the
"Princess Helene Dolgoruki".
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