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| | <b>Alexandrab> Fyodorovna of Hesse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> was married relatively late for her rank in her era, having refused a proposal from Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence (the eldest son of the Prince of Wales) despite strong familial pressure. |  | | <b>Alexandrab>, Nicholas and their children (except Alexei and one daughter, believed to be Marie, whose remains were missing) were reinterred in the Romanov family crypt in the Peter and Paul Cathedral in 1998, with much ceremony, on the 80th anniversary of the execution. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> is remembered as the last Tsarina of Russia, as one of the most famous genetic carriers of hemophilia, as well as for her authoritarian control over the country. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_of_Hesse
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| | <b>Alexandrab>'s Story: When breast cancer became her world, she gave the world Cancerlinks.org |
 | | <b>Alexandrab>, who humbly describes herself as a "Webmaster with a God-given talent for pulling things together in a useful way," is to be commended for her courage, creativity, resourcefulness, and strength of spirit. |  | | <b>Alexandrab>, you see, was diagnosed with a relatively rare (1- 4%) and particularly deadly form of breast cancer, Inflammatory Breast Cancer (IBC), in November 1997. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> is a Web pioneer of sorts -- she wasn't the first to create websites about specific diseases, and she probably wont be the last. |
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http://medicalreporter.health.org/tmr092001/alex1.html
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| | Women: <b>Alexandrab> Kollantai |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> Kollantai is probably the best-known woman among Russian revolutionaries, the first woman elected as a full member of the Bolshevik central committee and the first female commissar (minister) elected after the October 1917 revolution. |  | | Kollantai was involved in a campaign to hold meetings of women workers to elect delegates to the congress where they could argue against the feminists and promote the needs and demands of working-class women. |  | | The congress, which Kollantai had to leave to avoid arrest, marked the demise of the feminist movement in this period. |
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http://www.socialistworld.net/eng/2003/03/02women.html
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| | Princess Alix of Hesse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> and Nicholas married on November 26, 1894 at the Winter Palace in St. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> was married relatively late for her rank in her era, having refused the proposal of Prince Albert Edward of England (the eldest son of the Prince of Wales) despite strong familial pressure. |  | | <b>Alexandrab>, Nicholas and their children (except Alexei and one daughter, whose remains were missing) were reinterred in the Romanov family crypt in the Peter and Paul Cathedral in 1998, with much ceremony, on the 80th anniversary of the execution. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_of_Hesse
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| | Talk:Russian Tsar Nicholas II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | His engagement to Princess Alix only slightly preceeded his father's death, and his wedding to the now <b>Alexandrab> came very shortly after the last ceremony of his father's funeral. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> Fedorovna Romanova (born Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt), a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of Great Britain through her mother, Grand Duchess Alice of Hesse. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> bore him four daughters before their son, Alexis, was born on 12 Aug 1904. |
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http://en2.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Russian_Tsar_Nicholas_II
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| | 1105312041_2004_Modern_History_Notes_Unknown.doc |
 | | Even though, Kollontai played a leading role in reforms to laws relating to marriage, divorce, childcare, maternity, abortion, and womens rights, nevertheless, many of these gains did not survive during the Stalinist regime. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> Kollontai was famous as the leading female figure in the Russian revolution. |  | | Norways decision to recognise the USSR resulted in Kollontai being appointed Soviet Ambassador in Norway. |
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http://www.boredofstudies.org/courses/arts/history/modern/1105312041_2004_Modern_History_Notes_Unknown.doc
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| | All Things Beautiful |
 | | The west is the source of the liberating ideas of individual liberty, political democracy, the rule of law, human rights and cultural freedom. |  | | Many of us have bitterly complained about the American MSM's lack of courage to stand up for what in pretty much any other circumstance it would have vociferously defended: Its freedom of expression. |  | | Contract with the ACLU another hostile power, (Jay are you listening?) to function as it’s Justice and State Dept. Then at least they would be honest in their ongoing war with the United States. |
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http://www.allthingsbeautiful.com
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| | Nicholas II: Definition and Much More From Answers.com |
 | | This act led to a constant stream of resignations from the ministers; their posts were filled by the sycophants of <b>Alexandrab>, who was completely dominated by Rasputin until his murder in 1916. |  | | A blood sample from Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, whose maternal grandmother was <b>Alexandrab>'s sister, was used to identify the Empress and her daughters through their mitochondrial genes. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> bore him four daughters before their son Alexei was born on August 12, 1904. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/nicholas-ii
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| | NSW HSC ONLINE - Modern History |
 | | Kollontai was busy as an organiser in the countryside and became so exhausted that she was laid low by a bout of typhus in October. |  | | The Central Committee attempted unsuccessfully to expel her from the Party, and in 1922 Kollontai was assigned work outside Russia, by Stalin, as acting Party Secretary. |  | | Children born to single women gained the same rights as children born in marriage. |
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http://hsc.csu.edu.au/modern_history/national_studies/russia/russia_key_features/page134.htm
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| | Royal & Imperial Russia |
 | | At first, Nicholas hesitated to act against his Prime Minister, but gradually he yielded to <b>Alexandrab>'s pressure, and ordered that he not speak of Rasputin in his presence again. |  | | <b>Alexandrab>, who was shattered by news of the assassination, never gave up her faith in the saintliness of "our friend", as the royal family always called Rasputin. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> was making the sign of the cross when she fell dead, hit by a single bullet. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/pa/ImperialRussian/royalty/russia/na5.html
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| | Kollantai's marxism |
 | | Given the prevalence of such distorted pictures of Kollontai it is important to seriously assess her strengths, and weaknesses, of her contribution to the development of the Marxist programme for the emancipation of women. |  | | Although Kollontai was not involved directly in the development of Rabotnitsa, she continued to elaborate her own ideas on the basis of the experience of the German and Russian womens movements. |  | | Kollontais failure to convince either the Bolsheviks or the Mensheviks of the need for a special party structure to carry out this work; reflected her isolation from the leaderships of both factions. |
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http://www.fifthinternational.org/LFIfiles/kollantai'smarxism.html
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| | The <b>Alexandrab> Kollontai Archive |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> Kollontai was a major figure in the Russian socialist movement from the turn of the century through the revolution and civil war. |  | | As ambassador to Norway and Sweden, as a trade delegate to Mexico, as a delegate to the League of Nations, and as negotiator of the Finno-Soviet peace treaty of 1940, she served the USSR with what was generally regarded as great finesse. |  | | In June she was a Russian delegate to the 9th Congress of the Finnish Social Democratic Party and reported back to the First All-Russian Congress of Soviets on the national question and Finland. |
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http://www.marxists.org/archive/kollonta/into.htm
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| | Victorian Fashion, Queen <b>Alexandrab> |
 | | The gown and train were embroidered especially for H.M. Queen <b>Alexandrab> by the wives of all the ruling princes of India, made up in Paris, and presented to her on her becoming Queen of England; worn for one of the Courts held after the Coronation, April 25, l904. |  | | Worn by H.M. the Queen in Portugal (1904) on a visit to the King and Queen of Portugal; also worn for State visits and at the Grand Opera, Lisbon. |  | | Worn by H.M. the Queen for the State Opening of Parliament on several occasions; worn with the Garter Robe Orders, the Victoria and Albert, the Crown of India, the St. Catherine of Russia, and the Danish Royal Family Orders. |
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http://www.victoriana.com/library/queen.html
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| | <b>Alexandrab> of Denmark - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Queen <b>Alexandrab>'s arms were the Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom impaled with the arms of her father, King Christain IX of Denmark. |  | | Princess <b>Alexandrab> of Denmark (1 December 1844–20 November 1925) as Queen <b>Alexandrab> was Queen Consort of King Edward VII of the United Kingdom 1901–1910. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> of Denmark was not her first choice, since the Danes were at loggerheads with the Prussians, and most of the British royal family's relations were German. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_of_Denmark
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| | <b>Alexandrab> Fyodorovna of Hesse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> and Nicholas married on November 26, 1894 at the Winter Palace in St. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> was married relatively late for her rank in her era, having refused a proposal from Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence (the eldest son of the Prince of Wales) despite strong familial pressure. |  | | <b>Alexandrab>, Nicholas and their children (except Alexei and one daughter, whose remains were missing) were reinterred in the Romanov family crypt in the Peter and Paul Cathedral in 1998, with much ceremony, on the 80th anniversary of the execution. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_of_Hesse
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| | UKAuthors - Heartless Reign |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> approved of the gown and stood on a dressing stool and removed her dressing robes. |  | | As <b>Alexandrab> glided down the richly decorated corridors of the palace, passing servants bowed to show their respect, and if they were senior staff, they were allowed to comment on her looks, just as long as they were good remarks. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> introduced Nicholas to them all, and Meredith took a liking to him, but <b>Alexandrab> could see that Charlotte looked at him with nothing more than a tint of jealousy, but was oblivious to the fact that this was to <b>Alexandrab>'s knowledge. |
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http://www.ukauthors.com/article168.html
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| | <b>Alexandrab> College Dublin - Secondary Private School Dublin, Ireland |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> College was founded in 1866 and has a long and distinguished history in the field of education for women. |  | | We are proud of the educational opportunities and community spirit of <b>Alexandrab> College and are eager to share it with you. |  | | The College is under Church of Ireland management and the Archbishop of Dublin acts as Chairman of the Council, which is the governing body. |
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http://www.alexandracollege.ie
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| | <b>Alexandrab> of Hesse - definition of <b>Alexandrab> of Hesse in Encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Alexandrab>, Nicholas and their children (except Aelexi and one daughter, whose remains were missing) were reinterred in the Romanov family crypt in the Peter and Paul Cathedral in 1998 with much ceremony on the 80th anniversary of the execution. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> was married relatively late for her rank and era, having refused the proposal of Prince Eddy of England, (at the time the heir to the Prince of Wales) despite strong familial pressure. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> had lost a brother to the disease, and her uncle, HRH Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany It also spread to the Spanish royal family and the Prussian, via other grand daughters of Queen Victoria. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/Alexandra_of_Hesse
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| | Encyclopedia: Nicholas II of Russia |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> bore him four daughters before their son Alexei was born on August 12, 1904. |  | | Witte, unable to grasp the seemingly insurmountable problems of reforming Russia and the monarchy wrote to Nicholas on 14 April 1906 resigning his office (however, other accounts have said that Witte was forced to resign by the Tsar). |  | | Rasputin seemed to help when Alexei was suffering from internal bleeding, and <b>Alexandrab> became increasingly dependent on him and his advice, which she accepted as coming directly from God. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Nicholas-II-of-Russia
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| | Russian Royal Family |
 | | See 45.4 - Grand Duchess <b>Alexandrab> who was dying of tuberculosis went into labour when she was six months' pregnant, her son Wilhelm lived only for a few hours with his mother dying a few hours later. |  | | See 9.1 - Willem II succeeded his father King Willem I who had become unpopular because of his opposition to reform and who abdicated on 7 October 1840. |  | | Constantine renounced his succession rights in 1822 in favour of his younger brother Nicholas on account of his second marriage to Joann Grudna-Grudzinski being morganatic. |
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http://www.btinternet.com/~allan_raymond/Russian_Royal_Family.htm
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| | Line of Succession to the British Throne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | HSH Princess <b>Alexandrab> of Leiningen, daughter of Prince Hermann |  | | The Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, great-great grandson of Queen Victoria through Prince Alfred and his daughter <b>Alexandrab> |  | | Lord Frederick Windsor, great-grandson of King George V through Prince George (skipped his father HRH |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Line_of_Succession_to_the_British_Throne
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| | Worldwide Queen's College / Queens' College / Queens College |
 | | Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London, UK |  | | Queen's College Birmingham, UK Queen's Marlborough College, Cambridge, UK (no connection with Queens' College Cambridge) |  | | Queens College, City University of New York, New York, USA |
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http://www.quns.cam.ac.uk/Queens/Misc/OtherQC.html
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| | <b>Alexandrab> Kollontai: Passionate architect of feminism in the early Soviet Union |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> Mikhailovna Domontovich was born in 1872 into a family of liberal aristocrats. |  | | Kollontai helped to write many of the Soviet laws legalizing abortion, divorce, birth control, and homosexuality unheard of in 1917! |  | | New laws banned polygamy, child marriage, and limits on freedom of political expression. |
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http://www.socialism.com/fsarticles/vol24no3/kollontai.html
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| | Sunbirds.com: Portrait of <b>Alexandrab> Rosset Smirnova - Russian Lacquer item |
 | | She was a woman of fashion, a maid of honor of the Imperial Court (she served Empress Marya Fedorovna and the wife of Nicholas I, <b>Alexandrab> Fedorovna), an owner of the Art Salon and an author of the magnificent literary productions "Notes" and "Autobiography". |  | | <b>Alexandrab> Iosivovna Rosset-Smirnova was born on March 6, 1809 and died on June 7, 1882. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> married the diplomat N.M. Smirnov and spent many years abroad. |
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http://www.sunbirds.com/lacquer/box/250315
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| | Rasputin |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> pushed Anna into a loveless marriage to Alexander Vyrubov, who was a survivor of the battle of Tsushima, in the Ruso-Japanese war, and was menthally disturbed. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> protested but Nicholas supported his minister and Rasputin had to leave. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> began to hate the minister; he had deprived her from the only man who could relief his son from pain. |
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http://www.geocities.com/jesusib/Rasputin.html
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| | Baby |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> Christine Kaiss was born August 18, 2002 at 12:12am by c-section at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland. |  | | Alex, lifting her head while on her belly. |  | | She enjoys her swing, ceiling fans, and her Aunty Caroline's "Shake Your Booty" dance. |
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http://www.geocities.com/christypappert/Baby.html
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| | vamplust |
 | | Ingrid received a silent command to stop and she got up, moving to sit spreadeagled in front of <b>Alexandrab>, who was still on all fours. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> had learned of several myths during her month-long stay, which was about to end the next day when she was to fly back home. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> was silently commanded to spread the lips of her vagina and had no choice but to comply. |
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http://members.tripod.com/~eridus/vamplust.htm
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| | woodgate - pafg58 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File |
 | | <b>Alexandrab> Fedorovna "Alix" Tsarina [ Parents ] was born on 6 Jun 1872 in Darmstadt,,,Germany. |  | | He married <b>Alexandrab> Fedorovna "Alix" Tsarina on 26 Nov 1894 in Winter Palace,,St. Petersburg,Russia. |
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http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~woodgate/pafg58.htm
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| | <b>Alexandrab> Kollontai |
 | | After a brief stint in 1922 in Ukraine as Commissar of Propaganda and Agitation, Kollontai continued as a diplomat. |  | | <b>Alexandrab> Mikhailovna Kollontai was born into an aristocratic family on March 31 [March 19, old style], 1872, in St. Petersburg. |  | | Kollontai's first article, dealing with the relationship between the development of children and their surroundings, was published in the Marxist journal Obrazovaniie in 1898. |
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http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/kollont.htm
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