Russia , granted to them on 1 January 1798 by
Emperor Paul I , in his
World War I officer's uniform, 1914 ; today it is the site of the
Nabokov museum. from his maternal uncle; Nabokov owned it for one year before losing it in the
October Revolution. Nabokov was born on in
Saint Petersburg to a wealthy and prominent family of the
Russian nobility. His family claimed descent from the 14th-century
Tatar prince Nabok
Murza, who entered into the service of the Tsars, and from whom the family name is derived. His father was
Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov, a liberal lawyer, statesman, and journalist, and his mother was the heiress Yelena Ivanovna
née Rukavishnikova, the granddaughter of a millionaire gold-mine owner. His father was a leader of the pre-Revolutionary liberal
Constitutional Democratic Party, and wrote numerous books and articles about criminal law and politics. His cousins included the composer
Nicolas Nabokov. His paternal grandfather, Dmitry Nabokov, was Russia's Justice Minister during the reign of
Alexander II. His paternal grandmother was the
Baltic German Baroness Maria von Korff. Through his father, he was a descendant of the composer
Carl Heinrich Graun. Vladimir was the family's eldest and favorite child. He had four younger siblings:
Sergey, Olga, Elena, and Kirill. Sergey was killed in a Nazi concentration camp in 1945 after publicly denouncing Hitler's regime. Writer
Ayn Rand recalled Olga (her close friend at Stoiunina Gymnasium) as a supporter of constitutional monarchy who first awakened Rand's interest in politics. Elena, who in later years became Vladimir's favorite sibling, published her correspondence with him in 1985. She was an important source for Nabokov's biographers. Nabokov spent his childhood and youth in Saint Petersburg and at the country estate Vyra near
Siverskaya, south of the city. His childhood, which he called "perfect" and "cosmopolitan", was remarkable in several ways. The family spoke Russian, English, and French in their household, and Nabokov was trilingual from an early age. He related that the first English book his mother read to him was
Misunderstood, by
Florence Montgomery. Much to his patriotic father's disappointment, Nabokov could read and write in English before he could in Russian. In his memoir
Speak, Memory, Nabokov recalls numerous details of his privileged childhood. His ability to recall his past in vivid detail was a boon to him during his permanent exile, providing a theme that runs from his first book,
Mary, to later works such as
Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle. While the family was nominally
Orthodox, it had little religious fervor. Vladimir was not forced to attend church after he lost interest. In 1916, Nabokov inherited the estate
Rozhdestveno, next to Vyra, from his uncle Vasily Ivanovich Rukavishnikov ("Uncle Ruka" in
Speak, Memory). He lost it in the
October Revolution one year later; this was the only house he ever owned. Nabokov's adolescence was the period in which he made his first serious literary endeavors. In 1916, he published his first book,
Stikhi (
Poems), a collection of 68 Russian poems. At the time he was attending Tenishev school in Saint Petersburg, where his literature teacher Vladimir Vasilievich Gippius had criticized his literary accomplishments. Some time after the publication of
Stikhi,
Zinaida Gippius, renowned poet and first cousin of his teacher, told Nabokov's father at a social event, "Please tell your son that he will never be a writer." After the 1917
February Revolution, Nabokov's father became a secretary of the
Russian Provisional Government in Saint Petersburg.
October Revolution After the
October Revolution, the family fled the city for Crimea, at first not expecting to be away for very long. They lived at a friend's estate and in September 1918 moved to
Livadiya, at the time under the separatist
Crimean Regional Government, in which Nabokov's father became a minister of justice.
University of Cambridge After the withdrawal of the
German Army in November 1918 and the defeat of the
White Army in early 1919, the Nabokovs sought exile in western Europe, along with other Russian refugees. They settled briefly in England, where Nabokov gained admittance to the
University of Cambridge, where he attended
Trinity College and studied
zoology and later
Slavic and
Romance languages. His examination results on the first part of the
Tripos exam, taken at the end of his second year, were a
starred first. He took the second part of the exam in his fourth year just after his father's death, and feared he might fail it. But his exam was marked
second-class. His final examination result also ranked second-class, and his
BA was conferred in 1922. Nabokov later drew on his Cambridge experiences to write several works, including the novels
Glory and
The Real Life of Sebastian Knight. At Cambridge, one journalist wrote in 2014, "the coats-of-arms on the windows of his room protected him from the cold and from the melancholy over the recent loss of his country. It was in this city, in his moments of solitude, accompanied by
King Lear, ''Le Morte d'Arthur
, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
or Ulysses'', that Nabokov made the firm decision to become a Russian writer." ==Career==