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Alexander Obolensky

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Title
  
Prince

Name
  
Alexander Obolensky

Parents
  
Naryshkina


Alexander Obolensky AlexanderObolenskyJPG

Born
  
17 February 1916 (
1916-02-17
)
Petrograd, Russian Empire

Died
  
March 29, 1940, RAF Martlesham Heath

Education
  
Trent College, Brasenose College, Oxford, University of Oxford

Prince alexander obolensky twickenham 1936


Prince Alexander Sergeevich Obolensky (Russian: Александр Серге́евич Оболенский; 17 February 1916 — 29 March 1940) was a Rurikid prince of Russian origin who became a naturalised Briton, having spent most of his life in England, and who went on to represent England in international rugby union. He was, and remains, popularly known as "The Flying Prince", "The Flying Slav", or simply as "Obo" to many sports fans.

Contents

Alexander Obolensky Alexander Obolensky Immortals of British Sport

Russian rugby alexander obolensky


Biography

Alexander Obolensky Rewind to 1914 The man who set up Obolensky39s try Live

A member of the Rurik dynasty, he was born at Petrograd (now Saint Petersburg) on 17 February 1916, the son of Prince Sergei Alexandrovich Obolensky, an officer in the Tsar's Imperial Horse Guards and his wife Princess Lubov' (née Naryshkina). The family name derives from the ancient Russian city of Obolensk; they fled Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and settled in Muswell Hill, London. He was appointed a Knight of St John in 1938.

Alexander Obolensky httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Obolensky was educated at The Ashe boys' preparatory school, Etwall and Trent College, Long Eaton, both in Derbyshire, before going up to Brasenose College, Oxford in Michaelmas 1934, where he held a College Exhibition and read Politics, Philosophy and Economics; he graduated with a Fourth Class degree (BA (Oxon)) in 1938. At Oxford he won two rugby blues representing Oxford University RFC as a wing/three-quarter. Having previously played for Chesterfield FC whilst still at school, he played for Leicester FC between 1934 and 1939, as well as Rosslyn Park FC; his selection for England caused a stir because he was not a British subject, although he was naturalised British in March 1936.

Alexander Obolensky The day a Russian prince in an England shirt beat the All

On 4 January 1936 Obolensky scored two tries on his England debut in a 13-0 victory over the All Blacks, the first time England had beaten New Zealand. Aided by Pathé News footage of the game, his name has entered into legend, since the first try, beating several All Blacks in a run of three-quarters of the length of the field, was widely regarded as the greatest try of the time, and one of the greatest tries ever scored by England.

Alexander Obolensky RugbyPioneers Prince Alexander Obolensky 1937

Prince Obolensky won three England caps later that year (against Wales on 18 January, Ireland on 8 February and Scotland on 21 March), but scored no further tries. He was selected as a member of the touring party for the 1936 British Lions tour to Argentina. He also played seven games for the "invitation only" Barbarian F.C. between 1937 and 1939, scoring 3 tries.

On 12 August 1939, Obolensky was commissioned as an Acting Pilot Officer in 615 Squadron (Royal Auxiliary Air Force (RAuxAF)), being stationed at RAF Kenley and at the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, he joined RAF 504 Squadron. On 29 March 1940, a day after being recalled to the England squad to play Wales, Pilot Officer Obolensky was killed during training when his Hawker Hurricane Mark 1 overshot the runway at Martlesham Heath Airfield, Suffolk. His aircraft, reference number L1946, dropped into a ravine at the end of the runway during landing, breaking his neck. Aged 24, Prince Obolensky was buried at Ipswich New Cemetery.

Legacy

  • The "Obolensky Lecture" is given annually on the subject of rugby football, and at Twickenham there is a suite named Obolensky's in his honour.
  • In February 2008 a project was launched in Ipswich to erect a permanent memorial, resulting in a £50,000 statue being unveiled on 18 February 2009 by his niece, Princess Alexandra Obolensky; the statue by Harry Gray stands on Cromwell Square in the town.
  • A building is named in his memory at his former school, Trent College.
  • The "Prince Obolensky Award" is presented annually by the Prince Obolensky Association at Rosslyn Park F.C.
  • The children's author Gerard Siggins based his fourth 'Rugby Spirit' series novel on Obolensky. In Rugby Flyer his hero, Eoin Madden, meets Obolensky's ghost and learns about his life and death, and recreates one of his famous tries.
  • References

    Alexander Obolensky Wikipedia