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  1. Elena Vladimirovna di Russia; Principessa di Grecia e Danimarca; Stemma Trattamento: Sua Altezza Imperiale: Altri titoli: Granduchessa di Russia: Nascita: Carskoe Selo, Russia, 17 gennaio 1882: Morte: Atene, Grecia, 13 marzo 1957: Luogo di sepoltura: Cimitero Reale, Palazzo di Tatoi: Dinastia: Romanov: Padre: Vladimir Aleksandrovič ...

  2. Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna of Russia (29 January 1882 – 13 March 1957), sometimes known as Helen, Helena, Helene, Ellen, Yelena, Hélène, or Eleni, was the only daughter and youngest child of Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia and Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin.

  3. 18 gen 2023 · Royals. The glamorous and difficult life of the ‘snobbish’ Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna of Russia, grandmother of the Queen’s cousins. The royal, who married Prince Nicholas of Greece, was exiled from both Russia and Athens following two revolutions. Now, Tatler reflects on the life of a Grand Duchess who was described as ‘snobbish’ by some.

  4. Elena Vladímirovna Románova (en ruso: Еле́на Влади́мировна Ромáновa) Tratamiento: Alteza Imperial y Real: Otros títulos: Princesa de Dinamarca; Gran duquesa de Rusia; Nacimiento: 29 de enero de 1882 Tsárskoye Seló, San Petersburgo, Imperio ruso: Fallecimiento: 13 de marzo de 1957 (75 años) Atenas, Reino de Grecia ...

    • Elena Vladímirovna Románova (en ruso: Еле́на Влади́мировна Ромáновa)
  5. 27 set 2017 · Elena Pavlovna appears in every serious account of Russia’s Great Reforms, yet her name is much better known than her life. Marina Soroka and Charles Ruud have attempted to resolve this conundrum in their new book. Soroka and Ruud only address the question of the Great Reforms in the final chapters of their book.

    • Michael Hughes
    • 2017
  6. 1 ott 2021 · A descendant of Russia's former imperial family married his Italian bride on Friday in the first royal wedding to take place on Russian soil since tsarist times more than a century ago.

  7. 1 mar 2016 · A study of the Grand Duchess Elena of Russia offers a new understanding of Russian and international events of the time, the Romanovs’ role in them, the degree of autonomy enjoyed by high-born women in Russia and the ways in which new ideas gained ground in the nineteenth-century Russian empire.