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  1. 17 de ene. de 2024 · Prince Mirko of Montenegro Yet, when the time came, Mirko of Montenegro chose a bride with connections closer to home. While in Nice, around 1901, he met Natalija “Lili” Konstantinović (1882-1950), the daughter of Colonel Alexander Konstantinović, himself the son of Alexander Konstantinović and Princess Anka Obrenović (1821-1868).

  2. 17 de ene. de 2024 · Prince Mirko of Montenegro Yet, when the time came, Mirko of Montenegro chose a bride with connections closer to home. While in Nice, around 1901, he met Natalija “Lili” Konstantinović (1882-1950), the daughter of Colonel Alexander Konstantinović, himself the son of Alexander Konstantinović and Princess Anka Obrenović (1821-1868).

  3. Prince Michael Petrović-Njegoš of Montenegro (Serbian Cyrillic: Принц Михаило Петровић Његош; 14 September 1908 – 24 March 1986) was the third (but eldest surviving) son of Prince Mirko of Montenegro, Grand Voivode of Grahovo and Zeta (1879–1918), and Natalija Konstantinović, a cousin of Aleksandar Obrenović of Serbia. He was pretender to the throne of ...

  4. 23 de may. de 2018 · Danilo Petrović Njegoš, was the Metropolitan or Prince-Bishop of Montenegro (as Danilo II) and later prince of Montenegro from 1851 to 1860 (as Danilo I). During his reign, Montenegro became a secular state, a lay principality instead of a bishopric-principality. He became involved in a war with the Ottoman Empire in 1852, the Porte claiming ...

  5. Prince Mirko of Montenegro (17 April 1879 – 2 March 1918) he married Natalija Konstantinović, descendant of the House of Obrenović and second cousin of King Alexander I of Serbia on 25 July 1902. They had five sons. Princess Xenia of Montenegro (22 April 1881 – 10 March 1960); Princess Vjera of Montenegro (22 February 1887 – 31 October ...

  6. Princess Xenia of Montenegro was born in Cetinje on 22 April 1881 as the eighth daughter of Nicholas I of Montenegro and his wife, Milena of Montenegro. [2] Unlike her eldest sisters, Princess Xenia was not sent to study in Russia at the Smolny Institute. [3] Along with her younger sister, Princess Vera, Xenia was educated at home by tutors in ...

  7. He lives in Montenegro and occupies part of the former royal palace and the historic family home in Njeguši. Read more on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Nicholas, Crown Prince of Montenegro has received more than 244,042 page views. His biography is available in 20 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 19 in 2019).