Alexandra Fyodorovna <b>of< - Polsearch
About us  |  Why use us?  |  Press  |  Contact us

 

Topic: Alexandra Fyodorovna <b>of<



  
 <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> of Hesse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<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.
<b>Alexandrab> was now in a perilous position as the wife of the deposed Tsar, hated by the Russian people.
<b>Alexandrab> and Nicholas married on November 26, 1894 at the Winter Palace in St.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_of_Hesse   (2030 words)

  
 Talk:<b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> of Hesse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"<b>Alexandrab> Feodorovna of Hesse" is a horrible abortion, I can't believe y'all are serious about it.
<b>Alexandrab> Feodorovna married Emperor Nicholas II of Russia immediately after her conversion, and became Russian Empress.
<b>Alexandrab> (or Aleksandra, or whatever) was the name that Princess Alix of Hesse took upon her conversion to the Orthodox faith, just as her predecessor Princess Charlotte of Prussia took the same name, or her mother-in-law Princess Dagmar of Denmark took the name Marie/Maria.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Alexandra_Fyodorovna_of_Hesse   (12841 words)

  
 Nicholas II of Russia Online Research :: Information about Nicholas II of Russia
Nicholas fell in love with <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> of Hesse, a daughter of Ludwig IV, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine and Princess Alice of the United Kingdom.
<b>Alexandrab> bore him four daughters before their son Tsarevich Alexei of Russia was born on August 12, 1904.
Witte, unable to grasp the seemingly insurmountable problems of reforming Russia and the monarchy wrote to Nicholas on April 14 1906 resigning his office (however, other accounts have said that Witte was forced to resign by the Tsar).
http://www.ncweddingplanner.com/search/Nicholas_II_of_Russia.html   (2183 words)

  
 Miek's Fabergé Timeline
At the Nordic Exhibition in Stockholm, Sweden, Karl Fabergé is appointed "Goldsmith to the Court of the King of Sweden and Norway".
1899- Grand Duchess Marie (third daughter) is born to Tsar Nicholas II and <b>Alexandrab>.
Nicholas (II) is born to Alexander III and Maria <b>Fyodorovnab>.
http://www.mieks.com/Faberge2/Timeline.htm   (1216 words)

  
 I2036: Alix Victoria Helena Louise Beatrice Of Hesse (Princess) (6 JUN 1872 - JUL 1918)
<b>Alexandrab> was born in the small German Duchy of Hesse on the Rhine River near Frankfurt.
<b>Alexandrab> maintained a slim, willowy figure until she turned 40, when she began to gain weight and developed a double chin, which made herself-conscious of her appearance.
The death of her father deeply troubled Alix.
http://web.ukonline.co.uk/nigel.battysmith/Database/D0015/I2036.html   (2819 words)

  
 The Russian Monarchy
On July 17, 1918, former Emperor Nicholas II, his wife <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>, and their five children were executed at the order of the revolutionary government.
Eldest son of Emperor Nicholas I (1796-1855) and Empress <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> (1798-1860).
Daughter of Tsar Ivan V Alexeevich (1666-1696) and Tsaritsa Praskovia <b>Fyodorovnab>, nee Saltykova (1664-1723).
http://eng.tzar.ru/history/monarchy   (1886 words)

  
 the romanov portal
<b>Alexandrab> gave birth to four daugthers Olga (1895), Tatiana (1897), Maria (1899) and Anastasia (1901).
Nicholas and <b>Alexandrab> loved their daugthers but they had no son to inherit the Russian throne.
Nicholas proposed to <b>Alexandrab> but she refused him.
http://web.telia.com/~u25012983/love.html   (600 words)

  
 Grigori Rasputin
He also convinced <b>Alexandrab> to fill some government offices with his own handpicked candidates.
Many blamed <b>Alexandrab> and Rasputin, because of his influence over her, for this.
Rasputin played an important role in the lives of the Russian TsarsTsar Nicholas II of RussiaNikolai II, his wife, the Tsaritsa <b>Alexandrab> of HesseAlexandra and their only son, the Tsarevich Tsarevich Alexei of RussiaAlexei, who was a haemophiliahaemophilia/ patient.
http://www.infothis.com/find/Grigori_Rasputin   (2821 words)

  
 chron.html
Crown Prince Nicholas engaged to Princess Alisa of Hesse (the future <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>).
Nicholas, <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> and daughter Maria transferred (new calendar) from Tobolsk to Yekaterinburg.
First meeting with Princess Alisa of Hesse at the wedding of Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich to her sister Ella (Elizaveta <b>Fyodorovnab>).
http://imperator.spbnews.ru/nw/english/chron.html   (469 words)

  
 imp-alexandra_en.html
The last Russian empress, <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>, is undoubtedly one of the most tragic figures of the Romanov Imperial House.
With this belief in Providence <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> lived her whole life, and it helped her, in the end, to face Death.
The widespread gossip of "Rasputinism" and "dark forces" in the court made even the most fantastic slander seem probable.
http://imperator.spbnews.ru/nw/english/imp-alexandra_en.html   (526 words)

  
 Tsar Alexander: Biography
The future Alexander II was the eldest son of the grand duke Nikolay Pavlovich (who, in 1825, became the emperor Nicholas I) and his wife, <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> (who, before her marriage to the Grand Duke and baptism into the Orthodox Church, had been the princess Charlotte of Prussia).
Alexander's youth and early manhood were overshadowed by the overpowering personality of his dominating father, from whose authoritarian principles of government he was never to free himself.
A period of repression after 1866 led to a resurgence of revolutionary terrorism and to Alexander's own assassination.
http://bahai-library.com/resources/tablets-notes/lawh-malik-rus/bio.html   (1928 words)

  
 Tsarina: Insights on Alexander
Our amble ended at the Museum of Fine Arts where, mouths agape, we wandered through a dazzling exhibition of the private possessions and artifacts of Tsar Nicholas and his Tsarina, <b>Alexandrab>.
Tsarina <b>Alexandrab> to Tsar Nicholas II of Russia
<b>Alexandrab> was troubled by the requirement she renounce her Lutheran faith, as a Russian Tsarina had to be Orthodox; but she was persuaded and eventually became a fervent, even fanatic convert.
http://alexanderii.flowalexander.com/tsarina   (874 words)

  
 Saints2
Grand Duchess Maria Romanov was the daughter of Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina <b>Alexandrab>, and was the sister of Grand Duke Tsarevich Alexis, Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, and Anastasia.
Tsaritsa <b>Alexandrab> was able to make the sign of the Cross before she, too, fell.
Amid screams, the children were shot, clubbed and bayoneted, in an act of indescribable brutality.
http://www.orthodoxyordeath.com/Monarchy.html   (20009 words)

  
 Gennadi Obatnin: Arkaismin diskurssi venäläisessä kulttuurissa
The young Empress <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>, as Princess Alice of Hesse, occupied herself with the dry mysticism of the English philosopher-moralist David Strauss.
On becoming Russian Empress she developed an interest in the American Presbyterian minister James Russel Miller), leaving hundreds of pages of synopses
Nicholas had mystical leanings, as evidenced by his association with Rasputin who, even after his murder, the imperial family believed to be saintly.
http://www.slav.helsinki.fi/studies/huttunen/mosaiikki/en/own-alien/go1_eng.htm   (4199 words)

  
 Tsarina <b>Alexandrab>
<b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>, her husband and children, were executed on 16th July 1918.
<b>Alexandrab>, the grand-daughter of Queen Victoria, married Nicholas II, the Tsar of Russia, in October, 1894.
<b>Alexandrab> was a strong believer in the autocratic power of Tsardom and urged him to resist demands for political reform.
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUSalexandra.htm   (1307 words)

  
 Tsaritsa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Several Tsaritsas were the rulers of Russia including Catherine I, Catherine the Great and Elizabeth I. Others who gained the title by marrying a Tsar were Elizabeth Alexeevna, <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> (Charlotte of Prussia), Maria Alexandrovna (Marie of Hesse-Rhein), and Marie Romanova.
The last Tsaritsa was <b>Alexandrab> of Hesse who was married to Nicholas II of Russia.
http://www.encyclopedia-online.info/Tsaritsa   (104 words)

  
 <b>Alexandrab> - Britannica Concise
Rasputin, Grigory (Yefimovich) - Russian mystic influential at the court of Tsar Nicholas II and <b>Alexandrab>.
<b>Alexandrab> - queen consort of King Edward VII of Great Britain.
<b>Alexandrab> - consort of the Russian emperor Nicholas II.
http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9354955?tocId=9354955   (388 words)

  
 Darmstadt - Psychology Central
The Russian Chapel was built as a private chapel for the last Tzar of Russia, Nicholass II, whose wife <b>Alexandrab> was born in Darmstadt.
The seat of the ruling landgraves (1567-1806) and thereafter (to 1918) to the Grand Dukes of Hesse, the city grew in population during the 19th century from little over 10,000 to 72,000 inhabitants.
It was the residence of the counts of Hesse-Darmstadt, later as Grand Dukes of Hesse by the grace of Napoleon.
http://www.psychcentral.com/psypsych/wiki/Darmstadt   (1016 words)

  
 BIGpedia - Tsaritsa - Encyclopedia and Dictionary Online
Others who gained the title by marrying a Tsar were Yelizaveta Alexeevna, <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> (Charlotte of Prussia), Maria Alexandrovna (Marie of Hesse-Rhein), Marie Romanova and Eleonore, Princess Reuss-Köstritz, who became Tsaritsa of Bulgaria following her marriage to Tsar Ferdinand.
The last Russian Tsaritsa was Princess Alix of Hesse who was married to Nicholas II of Russia.
http://www.bigpedia.com/encyclopedia/Tsarina   (136 words)

  
 Alexander Palace - Expenses of <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> - Palace Archives
On <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>'s name-day Nickolas II gave her as presents: a cross of 11 big diamonds (that was made of Bokhara piece of jewelry), a big brooch with 5 big and 9 small aquamarines, a comb "Galique" with 3 big and small diamonds.
<b>Alexandrab> was responsible for her own expenses, those of her children and the general running of the Tsar's 'home'.
This discovery of jewels triggered a vast investigation in which all surviving witnesses to the exile of the Romanovs in Russia were ferreted out and interrogated by the Secret Police.
http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/aexpenses.html   (1804 words)

  
 The State Hermitage Museum: Exhibitions
Those who attended them unanimously agreed that Empress <b>Alexandrab> Fiodorovna was stunningly beautiful in a dress sprinkled with diamonds, but everyone also noticed how burdensome she found the performance of her public duties.
Empress <b>Alexandrab> Fiodorovna and her daughters worked in the hospital as nursing assistants.
The personal apartments of Nicholas II and his wife were created in the second storey of the north-western corner block, beyond the Malachite Room that was among the state rooms of the palace whose historical appearance was preserved.
http://www.hermitagemuseum.org/html_En/12/2004/hm12_3_4_9_2.html   (637 words)

  
 RNW: Tsarist splendour
Nicholas Romanov and <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> of Hesse-Darmstadt were crowned tsar and tsarina of Russia in 1896.
Tsar Nicholas II, his wife the tsarina <b>Alexandrab>, and their five children were murdered in 1918.
Given their dramatic fate and the controversy that has surrounded the last imperial family to this day, it is truly surprising that so many of their personal possessions have survived the turmoil of the past century.
http://www.radionetherlands.nl/features/dutchhorizons/weeklyfeature/041103dh   (534 words)

  
 22ND GENERATION
She was also known as <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>, Empress of Russia.
<b>Alexandrab> of HESSE-DARMSTADT Tsarina of Russia was born on 6 Jun 1872 in Hesse - dtr of Louis IV - aka Alix or Alicky.
<b>Alexandrab> of HESSE-DARMSTADT Tsarina of Russia and Tsar Nicholas II of RUSSIA had the following children:
http://home.att.net/~hamiltonclan/hamilton/gilbert/d7767.htm   (261 words)

  
 Grigory Efimovich Rasputin
She married Tsar Nikolai II of Russia in 1894, and converted to the Russian Orthodox Church, and was christened Empress <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>.
When Nikolai abdicated in 1917, <b>Alexandrab> and her family moved permanently into the summer palace at Tsarskoe Selo, where they had lived during most of Nikolai's early reign.
<b>Alexandrab>, whose maternal grandmother was Queen Victoria of Great Britian, carried the gene for hemophilia and passed it on to Alexei.
http://home.swbell.net/whetston/rasputin/alix.htm   (190 words)

  
 Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia -
Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia (Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanova) (In Russian Великая Княжна Татьяна Николаевна) Tanya, Tatya or Tanushka (June 10, 1897- July 17, 1918) was the second daughter of Nicholas II of Russia and <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> of Hesse.
This page was last modified 19:19, 22 January 2006.
http://www.yikipedia.org/mediawiki/index.php/Grand_Duchess_Tatiana_Nikolaevna_of_Russia   (280 words)

  
 Anastasia's Parents
Her Imperial Majesty, <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>, Tsarina of all the Russias was born on June 6th, 1872 in the Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany.
She was born Victoria Alix Louise Beatrix, but when she came to Russia to marry Nicholas, she took on the more Russian name of <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab>.
Emperor Nicholas II Anastasia's father, by the Grace of God, His Imperial Majesty Nicholas II, Tsar, Emperor, and All-Russian Autocrat was born on May 6th, 1868 in the Alexander Palace to Tsar Alexander III and Tsarina Marie <b>Fyodorovnab>.
http://it.stlawu.edu/~rkreuzer/pdennis/herparents.html   (219 words)

  
 <b>Alexandrab> Feodorovna - Columbia Encyclopedia® article about <b>Alexandrab> Feodorovna
During World War I, when Nicholas took command (Sept., 1915) of the forces at the front, <b>Alexandrab> Feodorovna assumed control in St. Petersburg and prevailed upon her husband to replace independent and liberal ministers with those favored by Rasputin.
<b>Alexandrab> Christina, Princess of Denmark, Countess of Frederiksborg
Alexander III gave his son little training in affairs of state, and Nicholas proved to be a charming but ineffective and easily influenced ruler.
http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/Alexandra+Feodorovna   (261 words)

  
 The Escape of Alexei. Son of Tsar Nicholas II
On November 14, 1894, he married <b>Alexandrab> <b>Fyodorovnab> (nee Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt), a granddaughter of Queen Victoria.
Only in Yurovsky's depositions is it specifically stated that only three of the children--Tatiana, Olga, and Anastasia--were wearing "some kind of special corsets." Of course, these were not ordinary corsets but special corsets made by <b>Alexandrab> herself, or on her orders.
For example, in their reminiscences of the execution and burial, they all talk about the "corsets" or "brassieres" with diamonds sewn into them that were discovered on the victims' bodies.
http://partners.nytimes.com/books/first/p/petrov-alexei.html   (7060 words)

  
 Nicholas II of Russia - OrthodoxWiki
In 1884, St Nicholas met the future Empress St. <b>Alexandrab>, then Princess Alice Victoria Helen Louise Beatrix von Hessen-Darmstadt, at the wedding of the latter's sister, Grand Duches-Martyr St Elizabeth <b>Fyodorovnab> with the Emperor's uncle, Grand Duke Sergey Alexandrovich.
In 2000, after some 8 years of study, the council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church voted unanimously to recognize Nicholas, <b>Alexandrab> and their five children as saints.
Together with his wife, <b>Alexandrab> Fyodoronova, formerly <b>Alexandrab> of Hesse-Darmstad, and their children Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia and Alexey, and their servants Doctor Evgeni Botkin, cook Ivan Kharitonov, attendant Aleksey Trupp and attendant Anna Demidova, they are recognized as Passion-bearers by the Russian Orthodox Church.
http://www.orthodoxwiki.org/Nicholas_II_of_Russia   (601 words)

  
 The State Hermitage Museum: Collection Highlights
This important event was depicted by the Danish painter Laurits Tuxen in his Marriage of Emperor Nicholas II and Empress <b>Alexandrab> Feodorovna (1895).
In November 1894, the young Emperor Nicholas II married Princess Alice of Hesse-Darmstadt, who took the name <b>Alexandrab> Feodorovna after her adoption of the Russian Orthodox religion.
Noteworthy are the icon St. Nicholas and St. Tsaritsa <b>Alexandrab>, presented to the royal family by the icon-painter A. Tsepkov, and the icon Selected Saints, representing the patron saints of members of the royal family.
http://monarch.hermitage.ru/html_En/03/hm3_6_7.html   (622 words)

 About us   |  Why use us?   |  Press   |  Contact us

 Copyright © 2006 Polsearch.com Usage implies agreement with terms.