Unkovsky


Unkovsky is an ancient Russian noble family, most likely of Novgorodian origin. The lineage can be traced back to the 15th century. In the 1495 cadastral book of the Shelonskaya Pyatina, compiled by Matvei Valuev, the village of Unkovichi in the Frolovsky parish is recorded. Other documents from the same period mention the first known family members — Alexei and Ivan, landowners in the same district.
According to Bobrinsky's armorial, the ancestors of the Unkovsky family held estates from 1652. However, the “Siege List” of 1618, a manuscript relating to the defense of Moscow, records that Vasily Yakovlevich Unkovsky had already been granted estates in Vologodsky Uyezd as well as in two volosts of Yaroslavsky Uyezd, as a reward for his “Yaroslavl service.”

Coat of arms

The shield is quartered. In the first quarter, in a blue field, three golden hexagonal stars. In the second, in a golden field, an armored arm emerging from a cloud holds a sword raised upwards. In the third, in a silver field, a cuirass. In the fourth, in a green field, a golden cornucopia with flowers. The shield is surmounted by a noble helmet and a coronet with three ostrich feathers. The mantling is green and gold, lined with gold and blue. The supporters are two lions.

Notable family members

Many members of the Unkovsky family served the Russian state in military, administrative and cultural roles from the 16th to the 20th centuries.