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  1. 30 August 1917. After the Germans had conquered France in World War II, Vladimir Kirillovich was placed in a concentration camp because he did not want to invite the Russian emigrants to fight for Nazi Germany against Soviet Russia. The Russian Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich was born on this day in 1917. From 1938 to 1992, he was considered ...

  2. Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia as Mozart, 1880. As exemplary and dedicated (and even conservative) as KR's public life was, his private turmoil was intense. Had it not been for the publication of KR's strikingly candid diaries long after his death, the world would have never known that this most prolific of Grand Dukes, the father of nine children, was tormented by his ...

  3. Vladimir III is the Tsar of Vyatka, head of the house of Romanov, and the legitimate heir to the Russian throne. Born into exile in 1917, Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich Romanov became head of the exiled Imperial Family of Russia in 1938 following the death of his father Kirill Vladimirovich, cousin of the late Emperor Nicholas II. Vladimir was residing in France when World War II broke out ...

  4. Grand Duke Alexander's father was heir apparent to the Russian throne as the eldest living son of Emperor Alexander II of Russia. The Grand Duke was Alexander and Marie's second child, second son, and the younger brother of the future Emperor Nicholas II. Alexander died of bacterial meningitis in 1870, one month before his first birthday.

  5. Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov. Father. Alexander II of Russia. Mother. Marie of Hesse and by Rhine. Nicholas Alexandrovich ( Russian: Николай Александрович; 20 September [ O.S. 8 September] 1843 – 24 April [ O.S. 12 April] 1865) was tsesarevich —the heir apparent —of Imperial Russia from 2 March 1855 until his death in 1865.

  6. Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich of Russia (Russian: Владимир Кириллович Романов; 30 August [O.S. 17 August] 1917 – 21 April 1992) was the Head of the Imperial Family of Russia, a position which he claimed from 1938 to his death.

  7. 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 ...