Generated by GPT-5-mini| Dmitry Goremykin | |
|---|---|
| Name | Dmitry Goremykin |
| Birth date | 1978 |
| Birth place | Moscow, Russia |
| Occupation | Historian; archivist; museum curator |
| Alma mater | Moscow State University; Russian State University for the Humanities |
| Notable works | The Archive of the Northern Expedition (2009); The Courts of the Romanovs (2016) |
| Awards | State Prize of the Russian Federation; Pushkin Medal |
Dmitry Goremykin is a Russian historian, archivist, and curator known for his archival scholarship on Imperial Russian institutions, archival restoration, and museum curation. His work bridges primary-source editing, institutional history, and public exhibitions that have engaged scholars associated with Oxford University, Harvard University, and the Russian Academy of Sciences. He has collaborated with major repositories including the Russian State Archive, the State Historical Museum, and the British Library.
Born in Moscow in 1978, Goremykin grew up amid the final decade of the Soviet Union and the early years of the Russian Federation, environments that shaped his interest in historical preservation and legal-institutional continuity. He completed undergraduate studies in history at Moscow State University where he worked with faculty connected to the Institute of Russian History of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He pursued graduate studies at the Russian State University for the Humanities, producing a dissertation that drew on collections from the State Archive of the Russian Federation and the Russian State Archive of Ancient Documents. During postgraduate research he spent visiting terms at University of Cambridge and consulting fellowships at the National Archives (United Kingdom) and the Bavarian State Library.
Goremykin began his professional career as an archivist at the State Historical Museum and later held curatorial posts at the Museum of Russian History and the Hermitage Museum satellite programs. He served as a research fellow with the Russian Academy of Sciences and was appointed senior editor at the Russian State Archive where he led projects to conserve documents from the reigns of Nicholas I of Russia and Alexander II of Russia. He has been a visiting lecturer at Saint Petersburg State University and a guest scholar at Yale University and the University of Chicago. His institutional collaborations include the Library of Congress, the Bibliothèque nationale de France, and the German Historical Institute in Moscow. Administrative roles included chairing advisory panels for digitization initiatives funded by the European Union and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Goremykin's scholarship focuses on primary-source editions, institutional history of the Imperial courts, and the provenance of manuscript collections. His monograph The Archive of the Northern Expedition (2009) synthesized materials from the Russian Geographical Society holdings, the Naval Museum (Russia), and private papers formerly in the collections of the Romanov family. In The Courts of the Romanovs (2016) he examined correspondence preserved in the State Archive of the Russian Federation, registry books in the Imperial Chancellery, and office records associated with Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia and Emperor Alexander III. His edited volumes include collections of archival inventories produced in collaboration with the International Council on Archives and the Society for the Study of French History for comparative circulations of court documents across Europe, tying Russian practice to records at the British Museum and the Vatican Apostolic Archive.
He has published articles in journals affiliated with Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, and the Slavonic and East European Review, treating topics such as diplomatic correspondence with the Ottoman Empire, fiscal registers tied to the Ministry of Finance (Russian Empire), and conservation techniques developed in partnership with the Smithsonian Institution. Goremykin led digitization projects linking metadata standards from the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions and the Dublin Core schema, enabling cross-search with datasets at the National Library of Russia and the Princeton University Library.
Goremykin is married and resides in Moscow Oblast. He participates in public history programs with organizations such as the Russian Geographic Society and the Open Russia movement’s cultural initiatives. Outside academic work he has collaborated with documentary filmmakers associated with Channel One Russia and independent producers who screened films at the Moscow International Film Festival and the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival. He maintains ongoing exchange relationships with curators at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the State Tretyakov Gallery.
His contributions to archival scholarship and public exhibitions have been recognized with national and international honors, including the Pushkin Medal and a departmental commendation from the Russian Academy of Sciences. He was a recipient of a research grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and received a prize administered by the State Prize of the Russian Federation committee for work on primary-source editions. Institutions such as the Library of Congress and the British Library have cited his editions in curated exhibitions and reference guides.
Goremykin’s work has impacted how repositories in Russia and abroad approach provenance research, cataloguing, and digital access for pre-1917 collections. His editions have become reference points for scholars working on the reigns of Nicholas II of Russia and Alexander III of Russia and for comparative studies involving the Habsburg Monarchy and the Ottoman Empire. By integrating standards from the International Council on Archives and collaborating with major libraries and museums, he contributed to increased interoperability between the Russian State Archive systems and Western digital infrastructures at institutions such as Harvard University Library and the Bodleian Libraries. His curatorial exhibitions have toured venues including the State Historical Museum and the Hermitage Museum, shaping public understanding of Imperial archival legacies and archival science practice.
Category:Russian historians Category:Archivists Category:People from Moscow