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  1. 14 de ago. de 2021 · Princess Dagmar of Denmark, known as Maria Feodorovna after her marrage in 1866, was born a princess of Denmark as the second daughter of the later King Chri...

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  2. Maria Feodorovna Pozharskaya (died 1607), a Russian lady-in-waiting and favorite of tsarina Maria Skuratova-Belskaya. Maria Feodorovna Morozova (1830–1911), a Russian entrepreneur; Maria Fjodorovna Zibold (1849–1939), a Russian and Serbian physician; Maria Fedorovna Andreeva née Yurkovskaya (1868–1953), a Russian actress and Bolshevik ...

  3. 8 de nov. de 2017 · Now, this article will focus on her years as Empress. The death of Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna marked the end of the age of Imperial Russia. She had lived fifty years of her life in Russia and had gained the love of her people. She had been called the “Mother of Her People”. [1] Her life has often been associated with tragedy.

  4. 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]

  5. 13 de nov. de 2023 · At 18, she bid farewell to her beloved fiancé, at 47, she lost her devoted husband, and at 70, she saw off her son, daughter-in-law, and grandchildren… Maria...

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  6. 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.

  7. Maria Feodorovna Romanova was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark, but through her marriage to Alexander III she became Empress Consort of Russia – and mother of the last Russian monarch, Nicholas II. Her family provided royal consorts for the thrones of Russia, Great Britain, Romania and Spain, giving Christian IX of Denmark and his wife the title of “grandparents of Europe.”