Nicholas Engalitcheff
Prince Nicholas Engalitcheff (ru: Николай Енгалычев, 1874–1935) was a member of Russian nobility and later the Imperial Russian Vice Consul to Chicago during the early 1900s.[1]
Biography
He married Evelyn Pardridge Clayton, the daughter of Charles Pardridge, on October 1898.[1] They had a son, Vladimir N. Engalitcheff (1902–1923).[2] They lived in a home on 526 W. Deming in Chicago.[1] They divorced in 1916.[1] He married Mélanie de Bertrand-Lyteuil in 1916.[3] By 1921 he was in debt owing over $2,400.[4] He divorced in 1933 and married Susanna Bransford Emery Holmes Delitch.[5][6] He died in 1935.[7]
gollark: I believe this is O(n!), actually.
gollark: The performance is great too. It's not O(n²), it's an even more biggerer and thus superior order.
gollark: Of course.
gollark: I'm not entirely sure how, but it seems to construct a tree/maybe deterministic finite automaton/finite state machine/I don't know theoretical CS which matches anagrams and unmatches unanagrams.
gollark: ```pythonimport collectionsdef do_thing(s): if len(s) == 1: return { s[0]: True } out = {} for i, c in enumerate(s): without = s[:i] + s[i + 1:] things = do_thing(without) out[c] = things return outdef match(r, s): print(r) c = r for i, x in enumerate(s): print(x) try: c = c[x] if c == True: if i + 1 == len(s): return True # full match else: return False # characters remain except KeyError: return False # no match return False # incomplete matchentry = lambda a, b: match(do_thing(a.lower().replace(" ", "")), b.lower().replace(" ", ""))```Here is my entry (pending a port to osmarkslisp™️). This is definitely my entry.
References
- Severinsen, Kay (2008-07-20). "Princely mansion". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
Shortly after his arrival, he met a likely prospect, Evelyn Pardridge Clayton, daughter of the fabulously wealthy Chicago real estate investor Charles Pardridge. Perhaps this was not a marriage of convenience, in which she got a title and he got financial stability. Perhaps they were truly in love. They married in 1898, when he was 26.
- "Died". Time magazine. March 17, 1923. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
Prince Vladimir N. Engalitcheff, 21, son of the Princess Evelyn Pardridge Engalitcheff and Prince Nicholas Engalitcheff, Russian Vice-Consul in Chicago during the imperial regime. He graduated from Brown University in 1922 and was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon. Heart disease.
- "Mme. Engalitcheff Accused of Fraud In Paris Purchases". New York Times. February 26, 1921. Retrieved 2009-12-29.
The identity of Mme. Melanie de Bertrand Lyteuil who married Prince Nicholas Engalitcheff, Russian diplomat, in Paris in December, 1916.
- "Engalitcheff Lives in Waldorf and Owes $2,400 to Garages". New York Times. June 15, 1921. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
- "He Was an Imperial Russian Vice Consul at Chicago. Bride's Fourth Husband". New York Times. November 6, 1933. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
- Severinsen, Kay (June 22, 2008). "3 heiresses, then death at sea". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
They divorced in 1933 ... He married Susanna Bransford Emery Holmes Delitch, who added one more last name and the title Princess to her moniker.
- "Prince Engalitcheff Dies in Exile at 61. One-Time Consul of Czarist Russia in Chicago Was an Officer in Imperial Army". New York Times. March 28, 1935. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
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