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  1. 13 de jun. de 2018 · Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia was born on 13 June [O.S. 1 June] 1882 as the daughter of Tsar Alexander III of Russia and Dagmar of Denmark, now known as Maria Feodorovna. She was thus one of the two sisters of the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II. Olga was a somewhat frail and sickly baby, and this was [read more]

  2. Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna, in her own account stated that after a year in seclusion, she and her second husband, Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky, finally escaped to Denmark where they remained until emigrating to Canada in 1948. They settled on a 200-acre farm near Milton. Olga Koulikovsky died on November 24, 1960 in Toronto at the age ...

  3. Olga seguía manteniendo correspondencia con la comunidad rusa en el exilio y con exmiembros del Ejército Imperial Ruso. [88] El 5 de febrero de 1935, en al iglesia ortodoxa de san Alejandro Nevski de Copenhague, fueron los padrinos, junto con su primo el príncipe Gustav de Dinamarca, de Aleksander Schalburg, hijo de un oficial danés nacido en Rusia, Christian Frederik von Schalburg. [ 115 ]

  4. Olga Alexandrovna Yurievskay. Historial del archivo. Haz clic sobre una fecha y hora para ver el archivo tal como apareció en ese momento. Fecha y hora Miniatura

  5. 25 de mar. de 2011 · Olga Alexandrovna was the youngest daughter of Alexander III, the penultimate Emperor of Russia. As his daughter, her formal title was Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna. Olga’s early life among the Romanovs was uneventful, until her marriage at the age of 19 to the Duke of Oldenburg, Peter Alexandrovich in 1901.

  6. 16 de oct. de 2017 · On November 24, 1960, after three centuries in power, the Romanov line came to an end above a barber shop in the east end of Toronto. It was there, in a small apartment belonging to a friend, that Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna died, a continent and an ocean away from her homeland.

  7. Trabajo de la autora sobre Olga Ladyzhenskaya y Olga Oleinik. Irina Titova, Russian mathematician Olga Ladyzhenskaya dies at 81, 26 de enero de 2004; Wojciech Zajączkowski, Olga Alexandrovna Ladyzhenskaya (1922–2004), vol. 26, septiembre de 2005, 5–7 p. (Math Reviews 2179347, zbMATH 1082.01516, ), chap. 1 2005