Oslan left the Golden Horde to lead an army supporting the Prince of Moscow Dmitry Donskoy during wars with other principalities and against Tartar domination.
He went on to marry the daughter of Prince Dimitri's Stolnik (Zotik Zhitov), Maria Zotikova Zhitova.
[citation needed] Evsievy was the Stolnik of Tsaritsa for Natalya Kirillovna Naryshkina, the second spouse of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich.
[citation needed] Nadieshda was Princess Dolgorukova and married to Prince Ivan Aleksievich Dolgorukov (Russian: Долгоруковы) (d.
On October 3rd, 1798, Colonel Somov was the chief of the Kamchatka Garrison Battalion and on June 8th, 1799 received the rank of Major General.
On the 21st of January 1803, Somov was appointed chief of the Tula Musketeer Regiment (1806-1807), which fought against the French Army in Eastern Prussia.At the 1807 Battle of Eylau, he commanded a brigade composed of the Polotsk, Tobolsk and Tula Musketeer Regiments and pushed the French out of the city.
[citation needed] Juliana was Princess Galitzina, married to Prince Nikolai Borisovich Galitzine (1802–1876).
[citation needed] His son, Sergey Sergeievich Somov, and his wife, Natalia Vasilievna Naryshkin, hid a valuable treasure in the Naryshkin-Trubetskoy Palace before immigrating to France.
Mihail Alexandrovich Somov (Marshal of Nobility) and Princess Maria Pavlovna Chirinsky-Chikhmatov (of the Crimean Khanate).
[3][4] The Somov family is divided into several branches and is listed in genealogical records of the Voronezh, Ekaterinoslav, Kazan, Kaluga, Kursk, Moscow, Novgorod, Orel, Saratov, Smolensk, Tambov, Tver, Tula, and Kharkov provinces.
The Somov heraldry was included in the Armorial General of the Nobility of the Russian Empire (chapter IV, 110).