Early life Platon Grigoryevich Ustinov was born into wealth in the
Russian Empire. He was the fourth child and second son of
court councillor Grigori Mikhailovich Ustinov (1803–1860) and his wife, noblewoman Maria Ivanovna Panshina (1817–1846). Platon's father Grigori was the youngest son of (1755–1836), a millionaire merchant from
Saratov, a major port on the
Volga River. Grigori held a manor estate in , in today's
Balashovsky District,
Saratov Oblast. Platon's uncle (1800–1871) was Russian ambassador to
Constantinople. When he returned to Jaffa in September 1865, he was pleased with the Metzlers' investment of his funds. Indeed, in May 1862, the Metzlers opened a new infirmary staffed with two
deaconesses from the Riehen deaconesses' mother house, related to the St. Chrischona Pilgrim missionaries. In early 1869, Ustinov asked the Metzlers to join him in Ustinovka, hoping to draw on their management expertise. Metzler then sold much of his real estate on 5 March 1869 to the
Temple Society, a religious group seeking a new home in the Holy Land. The Templers also continued to run the infirmary according to the charitable principles of the Metzlers and Ustinov. Dorothea Metzler died in Ustinovka after a difficult childbirth. While she was on her deathbed, Ustinov promised her that he would marry her daughter Marie, a promise he kept.
Protestant conversion and German naturalisation (1875-1876) In 1875, Ustinov, a baptised
Russian Orthodox, decided to convert to
Lutheran Protestantism. Being a Russian aristocrat, his conversion would mean losing his estates and status, as all the tsar's Orthodox subjects were forbidden to convert. Ustinov was exiled to
Germany in 1875
First marriage (1876-1889) Ustinov married Marie Metzler, as promised, in
Korntal, Württemberg, on 4 October 1876. They lived in Württemberg for two years before returning to Jaffa and settling there permanently. They bought a mansion in the
Colony of the Templers which would become the
Hôtel du Parc. However, the marriage was very unhappy and the couple divorced in 1888, with costly divorce proceedings between 1881 and 1889. In 1885, the Protestant pastor Carl Schlicht (1855–1930) began to
proselytise among the schismatics and succeeded in converting many of them. -->
Second marriage (1889-1918) On 12 January 1889, Ustinov, then aged 48, married the 20-year-old (1868–1945), with whom he would have five children. Their daughter-in-law
Nadia Benois, who married their eldest son Jona, described Ustinov as removed from his wife's social life: "When his wife received guests, he retired to his rooms and did not appear again until they had departed." Magdalena had been born in
Mäqdäla in central
Ethiopia on 13 April 1868, the day when British forces took the fortress by storm at the
Battle of Magdala, liberating her family and others from captivity. Her family had later moved to
Jaffa. Magdalena's family background was very multicultural. Her father was
Moritz Hall (1838–1914), a Jew from
Kraków and cannon-caster of Negus (King)
Tewodros II of Ethiopia. Hall was converted to Protestantism by missionaries of the St. Chrischona Pilgrim Mission, the same group as the Metzlers with whom Ustinov had been friends. Magdalena's mother was the Ethiopian
court-lady Wälättä Iyäsus (1850–1932), also known as Katharina (or Katherine) Hall. She would become adviser to Empress
Taytu and lobby Ustinov, her son-in-law, to acquire property in Jerusalem. The couple's eldest child,
Jona von Ustinov (1892–1962), became a journalist and diplomat who worked for
MI5 during the time of the
Nazi regime and fathered the Anglo-Russian actor
Peter Ustinov. Followed Peter (1895–1917), or Petja, the only child born outside of Jaffa. Instead, he was born in
Bad Tölz,
Bavaria and was killed in action in
Hollebeke during the
First World War, in which he was served in the German army with his older brother. The three youngest moved to the Americas: Plato(n) (1903–1990), a celebrated
British Columbian artist, Tabitha (1900–1991), who died in
Pasadena,
California, and Gregory, or Grisha, Tich (1907-1990), who died in
Buenos Aires.
End of life back in Europe (1913-1918) By 1913, Ustinov had run out of money. Facing personal bankruptcy just as Europe and the Middle East were set to explode into war, Ustinov had no other choice but to sell his properties in Jaffa and Jerusalem as well as the collection of Greek, Roman and Egyptian antiquities he had amassed. He first went to
London before returning to Russia via
Stockholm. Indeed, he was granted special permission to go to
Saint Petersburg by
Tsar Nicholas II. ==Intellectual pursuits==