Ivan Ratiev

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Full name
Ivane Dimitris dze Ratishvili
Born(1868-07-17)July 17, 1868
Oryol, Russian Empire
DiedApril 26, 1958(1958-04-26) (aged 89)
Tbilisi, Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union
Ivan Ratiev
Portrait of Ratiev in military uniform
Full name
Ivane Dimitris dze Ratishvili
Born(1868-07-17)July 17, 1868
Oryol, Russian Empire
DiedApril 26, 1958(1958-04-26) (aged 89)
Tbilisi, Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union
Noble familyRatishvili
WifeEkaterine Bagration-Gruzinskaya
OccupationMilitary Officer

Ivan Dimitrievich Ratiev (Russian: Иван Дмитриевич Ратиев), also known as Ivane Dimitris dze Ratishvili (Georgian: ივანე რატიშვილი) (July 17, 1868 – April 26, 1958) was a Georgian prince and a prominent officer of the Imperial Russian Army. Serving as a high-ranking official at the Winter Palace during the Russian Revolution of 1917, Ratiev is best known for saving the imperial treasures from being looted during the revolutionary turmoil.[1] Ratiev spent several years in the Gulag but had his sentence commuted, at which point he retired to Tbilisi, Georgia where he remained until his death.

Ivan Ratiev was born in Oryol of a branch of the Georgian princely house of Ratishvili, which had emigrated to the Russian Empire in 1724. His father was an officer in the Russian army. Ivan Ratiev graduated from the Oryol Cadet Corps and then from the Nicholas Cavalry College [ru]. In 1890 he joined the 44th Nizhegorod Dragoon Regiment, deployed in Georgia. There he married, in 1896, Ekaterina Irakliyevna, the Serene Princess Gruzinskaya (February 13, 1872 – 1917), a great-granddaughter of King Heraclius II of Georgia and a lady-in-waiting of the empress consort Alexandra Feodorovna.[2]

Winter Palace

Later life

References

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