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  1. The Empress Maria Feodorovna Fund. The future Empress of Russia was born in Copenhagen in September 1847 and was named Sophia-Frederica Dagmar, by her parents, the King and Queen of Denmark. Her childhood was a simple and happy one and she grew into a charming young girl whom, by common consent, the Russian and Danish sovereigns intended for ...

  2. Alexander and Maria Feodorovna were both vehemently anti-German and did not want Alix as a daughter-in-law. Maria Feodorovna told her sister Alexandra of Denmark that the youngest daughter of an undistinguished grand duke was not worthy to marry the heir to the Russian throne, and she believed that Alix was too tactless and unlikeable to be a successful empress. [26]

  3. Maria Feodorovna (märē´ä fyô´dərəvnə), 1847–1928, czarina of Russia, consort of Alexander III and mother of Nicholas II. Originally named Dagmar, she was the daughter of Christian IX of Denmark and the sister of Queen Alexandra of Great Britain. She devoted herself to philanthropic and educational activities, especially the Red Cross.

  4. 4 de set. de 2009 · 28 September 2006 / The Crown Prince couple participate in arrangements in connection with the reburial of Tsarina Dagmar in St. Petersburg.The tranference o...

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  5. Maria Feodorovna, known before her marriage as Princess Dagmar of Denmark, was a Danish princess who became Empress of Russia as spouse of Emperor Alexander III. She was the second daughter and fourth child of King Christian IX of Denmark and of Louise of Hesse-Kassel; her siblings included Queen Alexandra of the United Kingdom, King Frederick ...

  6. Maria Feodorovna (Dagmar của Đan Mạch) Dagmar của Đan Mạch ( 26 tháng 11 năm 1847 – 13 tháng 10 năm 1928 ), sau khi lấy chồng thì sử dụng tên tiếng Nga Maria Feodorovna (Nga: Мария Фёдоровна ), là Hoàng hậu của Đế quốc Nga trong vai trò là vợ của Hoàng đế Aleksandr III, trị vì ...

  7. 28 de set. de 2021 · On 28 September 2006, Empress Maria Feodorovna, born Princess Dagmar of Denmark, was finally buried next to her beloved husband at the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg, Russia. While her husband, Emperor Alexander III of Russia, had died in 1894, Maria Feodorovna had lived through the Russian Revolution and had only begrudgingly fled [read more]