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  1. Maria Feodorovna (26 November 1847 – 13 Oktober 1928), diromanisasi: Mariya Fyodorovna dan dikenal sebelum pernikahannya sebagai Putri Dagmar dari Denmark, adalah seorang putri Denmark yang menjadi Permaisuri Rusia sebagai pasangan Kaisar Aleksandr III dari Rusia (bertakhta 1881 - 1894. Dia adalah putri kedua dan anak keempat Raja Christian ...

  2. Encontre fotos de stock e imagens editoriais de notícias de Maria Feodorovna Dagmar Of Denmark na Getty Images. Escolha entre fotos premium de Maria Feodorovna Dagmar Of Denmark da melhor qualidade.

  3. One of these marrying Glucksburgs was none other than Princess Dagmar of Denmark, better known as the Empress Maria-Feodorovna. Small-framed and vivacious, Dagmar was born at the family's modest home, the "Yellow Palace," in Copenhagen on November 26, 1847. At the time of Dagmar's birth her father served in the small Danish army, while her ...

  4. 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 VIII of Denmark and King George I of Greece.

  5. 14 de mar. de 2024 · Since it’s publication in 1999, she has written a number of new articles about Empress Marie Feodorovna and her family based on new research. These works are presented in DAGMAR, and include chapters on Tsar Alexander III’s Imperial Fishing Lodge in Finland; the friendship of French tutor Ferdinand Thormeyer and Alexander III’s family ...

  6. Khi Maria Feodorovna gửi tối hậu thư cho sa hoàng, bà đã thuyết phục ông lệnh cho mẹ mình rời khỏi kinh đô. Do vậy, trong cùng năm ấy, Thái hậu đã rời Sankt-Peterburg và tới sống ở Cung điện Mariyinsky tại Kiev .

  7. 29 de set. de 2014 · Marie Feodorovna: Empress of All the Russias. In 1881, Marie Feodorovna’s father-in-law, Tsar Alexander II, was assassinated, by members of the revolutionary group, “The People’s Will,” who threw a bomb into his open carriage. The Tsar’s legs were blown off and he bled to death that afternoon in the Winter Palace.