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  1. Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia (18 April 1890 – 13 December 1958), known as Maria Pavlovna the Younger, was a granddaughter of Alexander II of Russia. She was a paternal first cousin of Nicholas II (Russia's last Tsar) and paternal first cousin of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (consort of Elizabeth II).

  2. Queen Dowager. Born Imperial Grand Duchess of Russia as the daughter of Paul I of Russia and Maria Feodorovna, she maintained strict royal etiquette even in the Netherlands, where she never felt at home. Anna was a proud and distant queen, rather hot-tempered and elitist. She had no political influence, but was active in charity work.

  3. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 203541120. Source citation. Grand Duchess of Russia. She was the fifth (second youngest) daughter and seventh child of Emperor Paul I of Russia and his empress consort, Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg. She was the only one of her parent's ten children that did not live to adulthood, dying as a result of a persistent ...

  4. Catherine I of Russia. Grand Duchess Anna Petrovna of Russia, Tsesarevna of Russia ( Anna Petrovna Romanova Russian: Анна Петровна; 27 January 1708, in Moscow – 4 March 1728, in Kiel) was the elder daughter of Emperor Peter I of Russia and Empress Catherine I of Russia. Her sister, Elizabeth of Russia, ruled as Empress between ...

  5. When Natalia Petrovna died in St. Petersburg of measles, on 4 March 1725. [5] Though it had been more than a month after the death of her father, Peter was not yet buried, and the coffin of the young grand duchess was placed in the same room. She was buried alongside other young children in the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg .

  6. 3 de may. de 2021 · Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna (1890-1958) was the daughter of Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich of Russia and his first wife, Princess Alexandra of Greece and Denmark. Maria’s royal connections were wide-ranging and fascinating: her first cousins included both Empreror Nicholas II of Russia, the last tsar, and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.