The TurzyakOv merchants' album contains photographs of several generations and family friends. There are several relics of this kind in the museum funds: a Staurotheke (from Greek, stauros ‘cross’ and theke ‘container’, an icon board with an inserted cross), an icon of St. Stephen of Perm, a photo album, a costume and dresses of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
In the 1890s o Yakov TurzyakOv was listed among the DedyUkhin merchants of the 2nd guild, in UsOlye he kept a shop selling the manufactory. DedyUkhin town was located in the north of the present Perm Territory, on the left bank of the KAma River.
The Turzyakov (a family of UsOlye merchants) stemmed from the Old Believers of the Vladimir Governorate. Adhering to their grandfather’s traditions, the Turzyakov lived modestly. Their children were brought up in severity. YAkov TurzyakOv chose wives for his sons Peter and Fyodor from other Old Believer families as prescribed by the old rite.
The Old Believers strove to preserve the church institutions and traditions of the ancient Russian Orthodox Church and refused to accept the church reform undertaken in the 17th century by Patriarch Nikon.
“The 2nd guild merchant Dedyukhin Yakov Maksimov TurzyakOv told the police department that he, being a member of the Old Believers and having a 22-year-old son Fedor, intends to marry him according to his rite to the daughter of the Nizhny Novgorod merchant Ivan Konstantinov Danilov — Maria Ivanova and therefore asks the police department to make the orders established on this subject… " - the assistant to the police chief of SolikAmsk district police department informed the clergy of DedyUkhin.
YAkov TurzyakOv and his eldest son Peter worked in their own shops. Sometimes they hired the younger Fyodor as a seller. Probably, the lack of own shop saved the life of Fyodor and his family later on after the revolution. His daughters happily lived in UsOlye to an old age and were buried in the town cemetery.
Olga YakImova was the granddaughter of Elena TurzyakOva, whose father owned a haberdashery shop in UsOlye, expanded the museum’s collection on the history of Usolye merchants and donated personal items: household items, clothes, documents and photographs, family heirlooms belonging to the Turzyakov dynasty in 1985.
In the 1890s o Yakov TurzyakOv was listed among the DedyUkhin merchants of the 2nd guild, in UsOlye he kept a shop selling the manufactory. DedyUkhin town was located in the north of the present Perm Territory, on the left bank of the KAma River.
The Turzyakov (a family of UsOlye merchants) stemmed from the Old Believers of the Vladimir Governorate. Adhering to their grandfather’s traditions, the Turzyakov lived modestly. Their children were brought up in severity. YAkov TurzyakOv chose wives for his sons Peter and Fyodor from other Old Believer families as prescribed by the old rite.
The Old Believers strove to preserve the church institutions and traditions of the ancient Russian Orthodox Church and refused to accept the church reform undertaken in the 17th century by Patriarch Nikon.
“The 2nd guild merchant Dedyukhin Yakov Maksimov TurzyakOv told the police department that he, being a member of the Old Believers and having a 22-year-old son Fedor, intends to marry him according to his rite to the daughter of the Nizhny Novgorod merchant Ivan Konstantinov Danilov — Maria Ivanova and therefore asks the police department to make the orders established on this subject… " - the assistant to the police chief of SolikAmsk district police department informed the clergy of DedyUkhin.
YAkov TurzyakOv and his eldest son Peter worked in their own shops. Sometimes they hired the younger Fyodor as a seller. Probably, the lack of own shop saved the life of Fyodor and his family later on after the revolution. His daughters happily lived in UsOlye to an old age and were buried in the town cemetery.
Olga YakImova was the granddaughter of Elena TurzyakOva, whose father owned a haberdashery shop in UsOlye, expanded the museum’s collection on the history of Usolye merchants and donated personal items: household items, clothes, documents and photographs, family heirlooms belonging to the Turzyakov dynasty in 1985.