In 1794, Raevsky married Sofia Alexandrovna Konstantinova, the granddaughter and heiress of the scientist
Mikhail Lomonosov. Sofia brought with her a substantial
dowry, consisting of an estate at
Oranienbaum with over six thousand serfs. Boltyshka was a large estate near the banks of the
Dnieper River in
Kirovohrad Oblast,
Ukraine; the land was fertile and there were over ten thousand serfs to cultivate it. The General's eldest son, Alexander, served as the model for the
protagonist of Pushkin's poem
The Demon. While Raevsky's daughter
Maria's youthful frolics inspired Pushkin to write some of the most famous lines in Russian literature ("
Eugene Onegin", I-XXXIII). Raevsky's favorite child,
Maria, was wed at the age of nineteen to
Prince Sergey Volkonsky, a wealthy, liberal aristocrat, who had fought alongside General Raevsky during the Napoleonic Wars. Raevsky's eldest daughter, Ekaterina, married the wealthy young General
Mikhail Fyodorovich Orlov, also a veteran of the Napoleonic Wars. Once interested in discussion of liberal reforms, western democracy, and the teachings of the
Enlightenment philosophers, by 1825 Raevsky had abandoned his youthful idealism, rejecting the notion that Russia could be anything other than an absolute monarchy. Both of Raevsky's sons and his son-in-law, Mikhail Orlov, withdrew from the
Southern Society long before the Decembrist Revolt occurred, and took no part in the uprising. Raevsky's half-brother, Vasily Davydov, and Prince Volkonsky, remained in the Society. Against her father's wishes, Maria fought for the right to accompany her husband to
Siberia, and managed to personally persuade the Emperor to allow her to share Prince Volkonsky's exile. The Volkonskys would remain in Siberia for more than thirty years. They were only allowed to return to European Russia after the death of
Nicholas I, having received a pardon from his son,
Alexander II. Maria's courage, and that of the other Decembrist wives, was romanticized by
Nekrasov in the poem "Russian Women". Raevsky died at Boltyshka four years after the Decembrist Revolt, a broken and embittered man, of pneumonia contracted while travelling to petition the Emperor for leniency on his daughter's behalf. As he lay dying, he is said to have looked at a portrait of his daughter Maria and whispered: "That is the most remarkable woman I have ever known in my life." ==Legacy==