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  1. Countess Darya Petrovna Saltykova (Russian: Дарья Петровна Салтыкова; née Chernyshyova/Chernysheva (Чернышёва); September 20, 1739 – December 23, 1802) was a Russian lady-in-waiting, socialite and noble and Dame of the Order of St. Catherine's first degree.

  2. Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova (comúnmente conocida como Saltychija en ruso Дарья Николаевна Салтыкова) (1730 - 1801) fue una aristócrata y asesina rusa. Siendo joven, en Moscú, se hizo famosa por torturar y matar a aproximadamente 138 de sus siervos, sobre todo mujeres jóvenes.

    • Ivanova
    • 27 de noviembre de 1801jul. o 1801, Moscú (Imperio ruso)
    • Cementerio de Donskoy
    • 11 de marzo de 1730jul. o 1730, Imperio ruso
    • Making A Murderess of Darya Saltykova
    • The Violence of Russia’s Blood Countess
    • The Politician Who Would Bring Saltykova’S Demise
    • An End to The Reign of Terror

    Whenever her blood-soaked career started, Darya Saltykova wasn’t seen as a monster in her early days. Born in 1730, Saltykova was said to be extremely pious as a young woman, visiting sacred shrines and hitting all the marks for a religious aristocrat. She married young to Gleb Saltykov, a captain in the imperial guard, whose family connections inc...

    Like bloodthirsty Hungarian aristocrat Elizabeth Bathory, Saltykova preyed almost exclusively on girls often as young as 12 years old. These victims belonged to the serf class, a uniquely Russian status somewhere between slave and indentured servant. These girls existed to serve their masters — or mistress, in this case — and had very little recour...

    Meanwhile, Catherine the Great was born Sophie Friederike Auguste, Prinzessin von Anhalt-Zerbst in a minor German state in 1729. It would be the reforms and strong rule in her later life that earned Catherine the moniker “the Great.” Yet in some ways, she was nearly as ruthless as Saltykova. She married the heir apparent to the Russian throne and u...

    That is how a whopping 21 complaints from serfs against their mistress Saltykova went ignored. It wouldn’t be until the 22nd complaint in 1762 that Saltykova’s bloody reign was finally ended. A stable-hand in Darya Saltykova’s employ overcame his fear of crossing the mistress and reached out to Catherine the Great personally. He revealed to her tha...

  3. 25 de jul. de 2020 · Top image: Darya Saltykova, aka Saltychikha, was an abusive and unchecked aristocrat, known for murdering 139 serfs on Yroitskoe estate near Moscow in Russia. Adapted from Portrait of Countess Darya Petrovna Saltykova by François-Hubert Drouais. Source: Public domain

  4. Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova (Russian: Да́рья Никола́евна Салтыко́ва; née Ivanova, Ива́нова; March 11, 1730 – December 9, 1801), commonly known as Saltychikha (Russian: Салтычи́ха, IPA: [səltɨˈt͡ɕixə]), was a Russian noblewoman from the Saltykov family, sadist, and serial killer ...

    • 17 October 1768
    • 26–138
  5. 22 de ene. de 2024 · Darya Saltykova 'La Torturadora': 138 asesinatos por puro capricho. Un expediente que revela el caso de una asesina, durante el reinado de la zarina Catalina la Grande en la Rusia del siglo...

  6. hmn.wiki › es › Darya_Petrovna_SaltykovaDaria Petrovna Saltykova

    La condesa Darya Petrovna Saltykova ( ruso: Дарья Петровна Салтыкова; de soltera Chernyshyova / Chernysheva (Чернышёва); 20 de septiembre de 1739 - 23 de diciembre de 1802) fue una dama de honor, socialité y noble rusa y dama de la Orden de Santa Catalina. El primer grado.