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  1. Grand Duchess Alexandra Alexandrovna, by Woldemar Hau. Grand Duchess Alexandra Alexandrovna of Russia (30 August 1842 – 10 July 1849) was the eldest child and first daughter of Tsar Alexander II of Russia and his first wife Marie of Hesse and by Rhine. She died from infant meningitis at the age of six and a half.

  2. Russia's great reforms, 1855-1881. Indiana University Press. Lincoln, W. Bruce (1990). The great reforms: Autocracy, bureaucracy, and the politics of change in imperial Russia. Northern Illinois University Press. pp. 105–117. McCoubrey, H. (1980). "The reform of the Russian legal system under Alexander II." Culture, Theory and Critique 24 (1 ...

  3. Hesya Mirovna (Meerovna) Helfman (Yiddish: העסיע העלפֿמאַן; Russian: Геся Мировна (Мееровна) Гельфман, romanized: Gesya Mirovna Gelfman; 1855 — 13 February [O.S. 1 February] 1882) was a Belarusian-Jewish revolutionary member of Narodnaya Volya, who was implicated in the assassination of Alexander II of Russia.

  4. Archivo:Alexander II of Russia by K.Makovskiy (1881, GTG).jpg. Tamaño de esta previsualización: 400 × 599 píxeles. Otras resoluciones: 160 × 240 píxeles · 320 × 480 píxeles · 512 × 768 píxeles · 683 × 1024 píxeles · 1400 × 2098 píxeles. Este es un archivo de Wikimedia Commons, un depósito de contenido libre hospedado por la ...

  5. Alexander II of Russia: Caucasian Imamate: Caucasian Imamate: Caucasian War: 1860 Alexander II of Russia: East of the Ussuri River: Qing Empire (China) Second Opium War: 1730–1863 gradual Kazakhstan: Lesser Horde, Middle Horde, Great Horde: Incorporation of the Kazakh Khanate: 1864 Alexander II of Russia: Circassia: Circassians: Caucasian War ...

  6. Monogram of Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna. Maria Vladimirovna is a patrilineal descendant of Alexander II of Russia.The original House of Romanov had died out with Empress Elizabeth of Russia in 1762 and was continued by Peter III of Russia, who was born a Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, a branch of the House of Oldenburg, from which the current reigning monarchs of Denmark, Norway and Great ...

  7. Nicholas I [pron 1] (6 July [ O.S. 25 June] 1796 – 2 March [ O.S. 18 February] 1855) was Emperor of Russia, King of Congress Poland, and Grand Duke of Finland. He was the third son of Paul I and younger brother of his predecessor, Alexander I. Nicholas's reign began with the failed Decembrist revolt. He is mainly remembered in history as a ...