Pylyp Orlyk married Hanna Hertsyk in on November 13, 1698. She was of Jewish descent, a daughter of the colonel
Pavlo Semenovych Hertsyk (a close ally of Mazepa) of the
Poltava regiment. Pylyp and Hanna had eight children. They were: • Anastasiya Orlyk (1699–1728) – born in
Poltava. Married the Swedish nobleman and officer Johan Stenflycht (1681–1758) in 1723. They had two sons: • Carl Gustaf (1724–1758) – colonel in the French regiment Royal Pologne. • Filip (1726–1739) – died in Hamburg. •
Grégoire Orlyk (; November 5, 1702 – † November 14, 1759) – born in
Baturyn, Ukraine. His godfather was
Hetman Ivan Mazepa. He studied at
Lund University (1717–1718). After leaving
Sweden in 1720 he first lived with his mother in
Kraków, Poland. He later became a Lieutenant General in France where he called himself ''Comte d'Orlik''. Although he kept the contact with
Sweden and in 1742 he also visited
Stockholm. In 1747 he married a French noblewoman, but they didn't have any children. He was killed in 1759 at the
Battle of Minden in Germany where he also is buried. • Mykhailo Orlyk (1704–?) – born in
Baturyn, Ukraine. His godfather was
Hetman Ivan Mazepa. • Varvara Orlyk – born in
Baturyn, Ukraine. Her godfather was
Hetman Ivan Mazepa. • Yakiv Orlyk (1711–?) – born in
Bender,
Ottoman Empire. His godfather was king
Charles XII of Sweden. • Marta Orlyk (1713–?) – born in
Bender,
Ottoman Empire. Her godfather was king
Stanisław Leszczyński of Poland. • Maryna Orlyk (1715–?) – born in
Altefähr,
Rügen,
Swedish Pomerania. Her godparents were
king Charles XII of Sweden's sister
Ulrika Eleonora and king
Stanisław Leszczyński of Poland. • Kateryna Orlyk (November 5, 1718–?) – born in
Kristianstad,
Skåne, Sweden and probably died already in 1719. ==See also==