Empress
Catherine II gave birth to her only official illegitimate son on April 11, 1762, several months before her ascension to the throne. Catherine had to conceal the pregnancy. When the due date came, to distract her husband, Emperor
Peter III, her trusted servant
Vasily Shkurin was ordered to burn his own house, knowing that the Emperor had a passion to watch the fires. The child was named Aleksey after his uncle and godfather, Count
Aleksey Orlov. He was brought up in
Bobriki, a village in the
Tula guberniya. On April 2, 1781, Catherine sent him a letter, in which she openly avowed her maternity. She named him Bobrinsky, a surname derived from the estate he lived in. On the 5th day of his reign,
Emperor Paul made his half-brother a count of the
Russian Empire and promoted him to general-major. He married Baroness
Anna Dorothea von Ungern-Sternberg (1769–1846) and had issue that continues to this day. The first Count Bobrinsky died on June 20, 1813, in his estate of Bogoroditsk, to the east of
Tula. Bobrinsky Palace, the Bobrinsky family seat in
Bogoroditsk, was designed by
Ivan Starov and constructed in the 1770s and 1780s, starting in 1773. The nearby was completed by 1778. The park was laid out by the palace's administrator,
Andrey Bolotov (1738–1833), who is better known as one of the first Russian economists. It was Bolotov who established the Children's Theatre in Bogoroditsk. The palace and estate were renovated in the 1870s. In the 20th century, the premises suffered enormous damage from the
Bolsheviks, who demolished the wings of the palace in 1929, and from the
Wehrmacht, who blew up the chateau in December 1941. The palace was restored in the 1960s and now functions as a museum. ==Bobrinskys in business==