Other names The Saltychikha Name Darya Saltykova | Victims 38-147 Role Serial Killer Span of killings ?–1762 Date apprehended 1762 | |
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Full Name Darya Nikolayevna Ivanova Born November 3, 1730 ( 1730-11-03 ) Died December 27, 1801, Moscow, Russia | ||
Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova - The Saltychika - Serial Killer
Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova (Russian: Дарья Николаевна Салтыкова; née Ivanova; 1730 – December 27, 1801), commonly known as Saltychikha (Russian: Салтычиха; [səltɨˈt͡ɕixə]), was a Russian noblewoman, sadist, and serial killer from Moscow, who became notorious for torturing and killing more than one hundred of her serfs, mostly women and girls. Saltykova has been compared to the earlier Hungarian "Blood Countess", Elizabeth Báthory, who committed similar crimes in her castle against servant girls and local serfs.
Contents
- Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova The Saltychika Serial Killer
- ruthless killer
- Early life
- Marriage and family
- Sadist and serial killer
- Imprisonment and death
- References
Мэтт является безжалостным убийцей (ruthless killer)
Early life
Darya Nikolayevna was born to the Russian nobles Nikolai Avtonomovich Ivanov and Anna Ivanovna Davydova.
Marriage and family
Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova married the noble Gleb Alexeyevich Saltykov, uncle of Nikolai Saltykov. Darya Nikolayevna married young, into the famous Saltykov Family. She had two sons: Theodore (1750–1801) and Nicholas (d. 1775). Darya Saltykova was widowed in 1755 at the age of 26. With her husband's death she inherited a substantial estate, where she lived with her two young sons and a great number of serfs.
Sadist and serial killer
Many early complaints to authorities about the deaths at the Saltykova estate were ignored, or resulted in punishment for complaining. Darya Nikolayevna was well connected with those in power at the Russian royal court and with the Russian nobility. Eventually relatives of the murdered women were able to bring a petition before Empress Catherine II. Catherine decided to try Saltykova publicly, in order to further her "lawfulness" initiative. Saltykova was arrested in 1762.
Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova was held for six years until 1768 while the authorities conducted a painstaking investigation. Catherine's Collegium of Justice questioned many witnesses and examined the records of the Saltykova estate. The investigating official counted as many as 138 suspicious deaths, of which the vast majority were attributed to Saltykova.
Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova was found guilty of having killed 38 female serfs by beating and torturing them to death, but the Empress Catherine was unsure how to punish her; the death penalty was abolished in Russia in 1754, and the new Czarina needed the support of the nobility.
Imprisonment and death
In 1768, Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova was chained on a public platform in Moscow for one hour, with a sign around her neck with the text: "This woman has tortured and murdered." Many people came to look at her while she was being scornfully ridiculed. Afterward, Saltykova was sent to imprisonment for life, in the cellar of Ivanovsky Convent in Moscow. Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova died on December 27, 1801 and was buried next to her relatives in the Donskoy Monastery necropolis.