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  1. Ana Pávlovna de Rusia (en ruso: Анна Павловна; San Petersburgo, 18 de enero de 1795- La Haya, 1 de marzo de 1865) fue reina consorte de los Países Bajos por su matrimonio con Guillermo II. Era hija del zar Pablo I de Rusia y de la duquesa Sofía Dorotea de Wurtemberg, y a su vez nieta de la zarina Catalina II la Grande .

  2. Catalina Pávlovna de Rusia (en ruso: Екатерина Павловна, Yekaterina Pávlovna; Tsárskoye Seló, 10 de mayo de 1788- Stuttgart, 9 de enero de 1819) fue la cuarta hija del zar Pablo I de Rusia y de Sofía Dorotea de Wurtemberg (María Fiódorovna).

  3. Elena Pávlovna (en ruso: Елена Павловна; San Petersburgo, 24 de diciembre de 1784-Ludwigslust, 24 de septiembre de 1803) fue una gran duquesa de Rusia como la cuarta hija de los entonces herederos al trono ruso, Pablo Petróvich y María Fiódorovna.

    • Youth
    • Marriage
    • Crown Princess
    • Queen
    • Queen Dowager
    • Children
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    Anna Pavlovna was born in 1795 at Gatchina Palace, the eighth child and sixth daughter of Paul I of Russia and Empress Maria Feodorovna (born Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg), and thus was Her Imperial Highness Grand Duchess Anna Pavlovna of Russia. Her father became the emperor in 1796, and was deposed and killed in 1801, when she was six years old...

    On 21 February 1816 at the Grand Church of the Winter Palace in St Petersburg, she married the Prince of Orange, who would later become King William II of the Netherlands. The marriage had been suggested by her brother the Tsar Alexander I in 1815, as a symbol of the alliance created after the Congress of Vienna. Since Peter the Great had decided t...

    In the Netherlands, Anna and William were given the Kneuterdijk Palace and Soestdijk Palaceas their residence. Anna Pavlovna was shocked over the differences between Russia and her new home country, as the distance between royalty and commoners as well as between the aristocracy and the rest of society was much more egalitarian in the Netherlands t...

    On 7 October 1840, on the abdication of her father-in-law William I of the Netherlands, she became queen consort of the Netherlands, and her husband was inaugurated in the Nieuwe Kerk, Amsterdam. Anna attended his inauguration in a dress of silver cloth. As queen, Anna was described as dignified, proud and distant toward the public: she was never t...

    King William was taken ill and died in March 1849. Anna was present with her son the crown prince. The sudden death of William was reportedly a shock for Anna. He died with large debts. Anna was forced to sell some of her own possessions in order to keep her preferred residence, the Soestdijk Palace. As a queen dowager, Anna left the royal palace, ...

    Anna and William II of the Netherlands had five children: 1. William III of the Netherlands (1817–1890). Married firstly Sophie of Württemberg and secondly Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont 2. William Alexander Frederick Constantine Nicholas Michael "Sasha" of the Netherlands(1818–1848). 3. William Frederick Henry "the Navigator" of the Netherlands (1820...

    The municipality Anna Paulowna in the Dutch province of North Hollandis named after her. The genus of trees Paulownia was coined by the German botanist Philipp Franz von Siebold to honour Anna Pavlovna. The common name of Paulownia tomentosais Royal Paulownia, (also known as Empress Tree, Princess Tree, and Foxglove Tree.

    Media related to Anna Pavlovna of Russiaat Wikimedia Commons
  4. La gran duquesa Ana Pávlovna de Rusia fue Reina de los Países Bajos por su matrimonio con Willem II. Era hija del emperador Pablo I de Rusia y de la empera...

  5. 14 de abr. de 2017 · Artista única y fundamental en la historia del ballet, la bailarina rusa Anna Pávlova fue una revolución viviente. Líder de la generación conocida como “nuevo ballet ruso”, fundó su propia compañía, con la que conquistó el planeta, y fue fundamental para el surgimiento del “fenómeno del ballet estadounidense” de principios del siglo XX.

  6. 18 de ene. de 2022 · Grand Duchess Anna Pavlovna, the youngest daughter of Tsar Paul I, was born in Saint -Petersburg in 1795. She stayed in the Netherlands for 48 years, always close to ‘her Willem’. Although she saw herself mainly as a devoted wife, mother and sister, Russia may have remained her biggest love.