Zvegintzov was born in Russia into an
aristocratic family, the son of Colonel Dimitry Ivanovitch Zvegintzov (1880–1967) and Princess Maria Obolensky (1882–1947), the daughter of
Ivan Mikhailovich Obolensky. During the
Russian Revolution of 1917, his family moved to England, fearing the repercussions of the
Bolshevik takeover. He was subsequently educated at
Bloxham School, where he was nicknamed "Zog", and served as
drum major in the
Officers' Training Corps band, with the rank of Cadet Serjeant. On 17 September 1931, Zvegintzov, then working as a clerk and living in
Barons Court, London, became a naturalised British subject, having been granted a Certificate of Naturalization, and sworn the
Oath of Allegiance. He joined the Supplementary Reserve of Officers in May 1933, receiving promotion to lieutenant on 1 February 1938. He saw service during the
Second World War, being promoted to captain on 1 February 1943, and having the
war substantive rank of major by the end of the conflict. He remained in the army post-war, being promoted to major on 25 January 1947. On 1 July 1952 he was
brevetted as a lieutenant-colonel, eventually being promoted to that rank on 5 April 1955. He was promoted again, to colonel, on 12 September 1957, and to brigadier on 12 September 1961. Zvegintzov was made a
Commander of the Order of the British Empire on 1 January 1963, and eventually retired from the army on 2 February 1965. In April 1968 he was made an
Officer of the Order of Saint John. Zvegintzov died on 23 April 1984 at his home in
Glasbury on Wye, Wales. His funeral was held at All Saints Church, Glasbury on Wye, and he was cremated on the 27th at Hereford Crematorium. ==Personal life==