GALITZIN GALLITZIN. GALYZIN, or GOLYZIN one of the most powerful and distin guished Russian families, whose mem bers have been equally prominent in war and diplomacy from the 16th century downward. VASILI, surnamed the Great, born in 1643, was the councillor and favorite of Sophia, the sister -of Peter the Great, and regent during his minor ity. His great aim was to bring Russia into contact with the W. of Europe, and to encourage the arts and sciences in Russia. His design to marry Sophia and plant himself on the Russian throne mis carried. Sophia was placed by her brother in a convent and Vasili banished (1689) to a spot on the Frozen Ocean, where in 1714 he died. AMALIE, PRIN CESS GALITZIN (1746-1806), daughter of the Prussian general, Count von Schmet tau. She was remarkable for her literary culture, her sympathetic relations with scholars and poets, but, above all, for her ardent piety. Having separated from her husband, she took up her residence in Minster, where she gathered round her a circle of learned companions, including Jacobi, Hemsterhuis, Hamann, and Count Stolberg. Prince DIMITRI ALEXEIEVITCH,
a Russian diplomat and statesman; born Dec. 21, 1738; was ambassador to the court of France in 1763, and to The Hague in 1773. He was in correspond ence with Voltaire and was the author of several works relating to geology. He died in Brunswick, Germany, March 21, 1803. DIMITRI AUGUSTINE, SOI1 of the foregoing; born in The Hague, Dec. 22, 1770; became a Roman Catholic in his 17th year; was ordained a priest in the United States by Bishop Carroll of Baltimore in 1795; and betook himself to a bleak region among the Alle gheny Mountains in Pennsylvania, where he was known as "Father Smith." Here he laid the foundation of a town called Loretto. He was for some years vicar general of the diocese of Philadelphia. He wrote various controversial works, including a "Defense of Catholic Prin ciples" (1816), "Letter to a Protestant Friend" (1820), and "Appeal to the Prot estant Public" (1834). He died in Loretto, Pa., May 6, 1841.