Background
Christian Ignatius, not yet Borissow, was born in Hamina, a Finnish and Swedish speaking small coastal city, which at that time belonged to the Russian Empire, as the fifth of ten children of chaplain Bengt Jacob Ignatius (1746–1803), a minister of the Lutheran Church in the fifth generation, and his wife Katharina Elfvengren (1759–1803).
Career
He worked most of his active years in Bradford and other locations in Yorkshire. He is known as the author of several books on commerce and languages published during the 19th century. The family soon moved to Ruokolahti, a small Finnish-speaking rural parish in Russian-governed Southeastern Finland, where the father held the vicar’s office from 1790 until his death in 1803.
Soon after this he moved to Saint St. Petersburg, the fast-growing capital of the Russian empire, and was employed there as a merchant.
From there he emigrated to Great Britain probably in late 1810s. He also functioned as a Consul of the Russian Empire in Bristol.
At this time he had already adopted his new Russian-type surname Borissow. In the 1820s Christian and his family moved to Yorkshire, and he was employed as a teacher of languages in Huddersfield in 1829 and again in 1834.
He continued in the teaching profession at least till the mid-1850s.
Christian was already in his late 60s when he returned to publishing. The English Tourist’s Continental Calculator, a little guide on "moneys, weights and measures" in the countries of the European continent was published in 1857. A reprint was published in 2010.
Commercial Phraseology, an English-French-English glossary of commercial terms and phrases was published in 1860.
This book has been reprinted in the United States in 2008. Christian Ignatius Borissow died in 1867 and is buried in the family grave at Undercliffe Cemetery in Bradford.
He was the Master and Headteacher of The Royal Latin School in Buckingham, England from 1869 to 1871 and after that a long-time (1871–1901) Chaplain and Precentor of Trinity College at Cambridge University. One of Christian Ignatius Borissow’s grandsons, Charles Kirby Borissow (1873–1939), was a Commander in the Royal Naval Reserve and a Chief Salvage Officer of the Royal Navy in the Mediterranean during the First World War.