Mytropolskyi Family Office
Est. 1911
113 years of perserverance & prowess in science, merchantry, business and militrary.
Firm Values | Integrity | Committment | Resilliance
XVII century
Earliest yet found, Family tree records reachs Fedor Charnysh and his son Ivan Fedorovich Charnysh a military chancellor and statesman (1698 A.D) both of whom's birthdays remain unkown.
XVIII century
XIX century
XX century
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1911, Mytropolskyi Family Name & Crest is official established and registered with the Imperial Authorities By Savvich Oleksiyovich Mytropolskyi (1883-1936) a participant in the First-World-War, soon after in 1917 the Bolshevik Revolution and their rise to power in Russia and it's colonies, leading to the majority of the family fleeing to western Europe. As part of crackdowns on the nobility, the family had it's lands and industry nationalized & collectivized, Despite the threat of significant punishment by the communist authorities, family documents and history were kept, hidden in secret.
Notably, the family showed it's perserverance through the actions of Yuri Oleksiyovich Mytropolskyi (1917-2008) who participated in the Served in the Great Patriotic War (WW2), he fought in the Baltics as part of the 137th Army Cannon Artillery Brigade of the 1st Shock Army, in August 1944 and June 1945 was awarded two Orders of the Red Star, ending his service as an adjutant to the brigade commander. Later he became the director of Institute of the Institute of Mathematics of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukraine SSR (Kyiv), for his work in mathematics, mechanics and cybernetics, and more specifically asymptotic methods of nonlinear mechanics he was one of only two ukrainains to recieve the Hero of Socialist Labour Award (1986) and in 2007 by The Order of the State was awarded the title Hero of Ukraine by then President Viktor Yuchenko.
Although, records have been lost to history, likely dispearing in the fleeing of the petrograds (modern day St. Petersburg) 1905 Bloody Sunday Massacre and subsequent Revolutionary movements.
The family name is believed to have been decreed by the Orthodox Church somewhere in the XVII century St. Petersburg to an ancestor who worked as a Metropolitan, a title in slav-speaking orthodox churches used to designate heads of autocephalous churches (a church that enjoys total canonical and administrative independence and elects its own primates and bishops). Metropolitans were typically high-ranking bishops, one of only few who could read and write within their parish. and therefore were dutied with making copies of the bible and other church texts & records, as well as the handle the beurocratic and financial administration of the church and it's a territorial area coextinsive with a civil province.