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  1. Grand Duchess of Russia. This page was last edited on 23 April 2024, at 07:10. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  2. Media in category "Olga Pavlovna of Russia". The following 6 files are in this category, out of 6 total. Family of Paul I of Russia.jpg 2,083 × 1,400; 392 KB. Olga Pavlovna's grave, Blagoveschenskaya church 01 by shakko.JPG 2,708 × 4,274; 2.59 MB. Olga Pavlovna's grave, Blagoveschenskaya church 02 by shakko.JPG 4,608 × 3,456; 5.25 MB.

  3. Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia ( Russian: Великая Княгиня Мария Павловна; 18 April [ O.S. 6 April] 1890 – 13 December 1958), known as Maria Pavlovna the Younger, was a granddaughter of Alexander II of Russia. She was a paternal first cousin of Nicholas II (Russia's last Tsar) and Marie of Edinburgh (consort ...

  4. Grand Duchess Anna Pavlovna of Russia, circa 1813. Anna Pavlovna was born in 1795 at Gatchina Palace, the eighth child and sixth daughter of Paul I of Russia and Empress Maria Feodorovna (born Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg), [1] and thus was Her Imperial Highness Grand Duchess Anna Pavlovna of Russia. Her father became the emperor in 1796 ...

  5. Monogram of Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna. Maria Vladimirovna is a patrilineal descendant of Alexander II of Russia.The original House of Romanov had died out with Empress Elizabeth of Russia in 1762 and was continued by Peter III of Russia, who was born a Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, a branch of the House of Oldenburg, from which the current reigning monarchs of Denmark, Norway and Great ...

  6. 7 mag 2024 · Genealogy for Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia (Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov), Großherzogin zu Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (1786 - 1859) family tree on Geni, with over 260 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

  7. Although male grand dukes of Russia (sons or male-line grandsons of reigning emperors) existed after 1917, when the imperial house was deposed, none of them contracted an equal marriage after that date; so the title grand duchess was not gained by marriage thereafter — though it would have been technically possible.