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  1. 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 ...

  2. Um de seus últimos residentes foi Maria Feodorovna, mãe de Nicolau 2°. O imperador também passou sua infância ali. Aliás, Nicolau 2° gostava muito mais do Palácio Anitchkov que do Palácio de Inverno e passou grande parte de seu tempo lá, mesmo depois de ter subido ao trono.

  3. Isabel Feodorovna Por Friedrich August von Kaulbach. Em 1891, Isabel e Sérgio Alexandrovich que não tinham filhos, praticamente adoptaram os seus sobrinhos Maria e Dmitri Pavlovich, filhos do irmão de Sérgio, Paulo Alexandrovich. A mãe das crianças tinha caído quando tentava saltar para um barco em andamento e estava grávida de Dmitri.

  4. Biography Empress of Russia; born Sophie Dorothea Augusta, eldest daughter of Frederick II Duke of Württemberg and Frederica of Brandenburg-Schwedt; married 7 October 1776 Paul Petrovitz (q.v.), son of Catherine the Great (q.v.), upon which occasion she took the name of Maria Feodorowna; mother of Tsar Alexander I, Grand Duke Constantine and Tsar Nicholas I.

  5. 9 de abr. de 2020 · Olga, a caçula de Maria Feodorovna e do czar Alexandre III, casou-se em 1901 com o duque Pedro de Oldemburgo. Sobrinho-neto da imperatriz Dona Amélia de Leuchtenberg, segunda esposa do imperador do Brasil, dom Pedro I. Petya, como Pedro de Oldemburgo era tratado na família, era viciado em jogos de azar e gastava o dinheiro da esposa.

  6. Maria Feodorovna was born as Marie Sophia Frederika Dagmar on November 26, 1847, at Gule Palace, Copenhagen, Denmark. She was the fourth child of her parents, then Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, and his wife Princess Louise of Hesse-Kassel. She was known by the name Dagmar when she was a girl.

  7. However, only two years later, a British battleship was sent to Crimea to rescue the 72-year-old Maria Feodorovna (1847-1928), Nicholas II’s mother and, at the same time, George V’s aunt.