Ancestry shows the execution of
Ivan Petrovich Chelyadnin (right) after a mock coronation organized by
Ivan IV (1870s) The Chelyadnins were descended from Ratsha, court servant (tiun) to Prince
Vsevolod II of Kiev and the oppressive manager of serfs in
Kiev. Several other Russian noble families are also descended from Ratsha, including the
Pushkin,
Aminoff,
Buturlin,
Kuritsyn,
Kamensky families. Ratsha's great-grandson Gavrila Aleksich was a boyar under the famed
Alexander Nevsky and played an important role in the
Battle of Neva. Gavrila Aleksich's son Akinf Gavrilovich the Great was a boyar under two
Grand Princes of Vladimir,
Andrey of Gorodets and
Mikhail of Tver. The founder of the Chelyadnin family was Mikhail Andreevich Chelyadnya, son of Akinf and seventh-generation descendant of
Ratsha.
Rise to power Mikhail Andreevich Chelyadnya's son, Ivan Mikhailovich Chelyadnin, married Princess Elena Yuryevna Patrikeeva, grand daughter of Grand Prince
Vasily I. In the 14th, 15th and early 16th centuries, the Chelyadnins often occupied one of the highest positions at court. They often became
boyars, bypassing the stage of
okolnichiy. The family went extinct in the 16th century when Tsar
Ivan the Terrible executed Ivan Petrovich Fedorov-Chelyadnin, an influential boyar belonging to the
Daydov-Khromy branch of the Chelyadnin family. Subsequently, the
oprichniks under the tsar looted and thoroughly destroyed all the vast Chelyadnin estates, and all close relatives and servants of Ivan Petrovich were brutally killed. == Notable Chelyadnins ==