House of Golitsyn

[2] Among its members were warlords, landlords, knyazes (princes), knights, diplomats, Prime Ministers, admirals, stewards, State Counsellors and statesmen.

The family is among the first Russian aristocratic dynasties and its members bear the honorific predicate His Serene Highness.

According to legend, the family descends from Lithuanian prince Jurgis (George), son of Patrikas and grandson of Narimantas and thus a great-grandson of Gediminas (d. 1341), Grand Duke of Lithuania.

[c] After the extinction of the Korecki family in the 17th century, the Golitsyns claimed dynastic seniority in the House of Gediminas.

[5][better source needed] His son Yuri Mikhailovich Bulgakov continued with the family line Golytsin and his great-grandson Prince Vasily Golitsyn was claimant to the Russian throne during the Time of Troubles and went as an ambassador to Poland to offer the Russian crown to Prince Władysław; he died in prison.

Vasily Golitsyn. The Velvet Book was an official register of genealogies of Russia's most illustrious families ( Russian nobility ).
Golitsyn Palace in Gaspra (Crimea)
Dubrovitsy Estate
A Golitsyn family by Vladimir Borovikovsky (1810), National Museum in Warsaw
Dmitriy Vladimirovich Golitsyn. Military Gallery of the Winter Palace, State Hermitage Museum (Saint Petersburg)
Alexander Mikhailovich Golitsyn, a 1772 portrait by Dmitry Levitzky
House of Prince Golitsyn on Fontanka , 20
Golitsyn Hospital
17th century estate of Fedor Golovin in Khamovniki District , later Golitsyn family
Sergey Mikhailovich Golytsin, the founder of the hospital, by V. Tropinin
Grebnevo Estate in 2007
Vladimir Mikhailovich Golitsyn resigned in 1905 as mayor of Moscow; painting by Valentin Serov ( Tretyakov gallery )
Prince Galatzine (Galitzine), 5th husband of Aimée Crocker
The graves of Princes George and Emanuel Galitzine, Brompton Cemetery , London