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  1. 10 nov 2009 · File: Alexander II of Russia by N.Lavrov (1868, Museum of Artillery).jpg. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Jump to navigation Jump to search.

  2. 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 ...

  3. After the publication of the Tsar's Manifesto of October 17, 1905, pogroms erupted in 660 towns mainly in the present-day Ukraine, in the Southern and Southeastern areas of the Pale of Settlement. In contrast, there were no pogroms in present-day Lithuania. There were also very few incidents in Belarus or Russia proper.

  4. Princess Cecilie of Baden. Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia ( Russian: Александр Михайлович Aleksandr Mikhailovich; 13 April 1866 – 26 February 1933) was an Imperial Grand Duke and dynast of the House of Romanov of the Russian Empire, a naval officer, an author, explorer, the brother-in-law of Emperor Nicholas II ...

  5. Attempted assassination of Alexander III Ulyanov and his comrades conspired to assassinate Alexander III of Russia . On 1 March 1887 ( Julian calendar ), the day of the sixth anniversary of Alexander II 's murder, three party members were arrested in the Nevsky Prospekt carrying handmade bombs filled with dynamite and lead pellets poisoned with strychnine .

  6. Alexander II of Russia, Czar of the Russian Empire, Grand Duke of Finland, King of Poland, was born 29 April 1818 in Moscow, Russia to Nicholas I of Russia (1796-1855) and Charlotte von Preußen (1798-1860) and died 1 March 1881 Saint Petersburg, Russia of assassination. He married Maria von Hessen und bei Rhein (1824-1880) 28 April 1841 in Saint Petersburg, Russia. He married Yekaterina ...

  7. Konstantin's brother, Alexander II of Russia was supposed [by whom?] to have said: "Let the Poles have their own court and intrigues." Though the Grand Duke tried to show a liberal attitude towards the Poles, his efforts came too late and he was recalled with the outbreak of the January Uprising in 1863.