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  1. Princess Tarakanova (c. 1745 – December 15 [O.S. December 4] 1775) was a pretender to the Russian throne. She styled herself, among other names, Knyazhna Yelizaveta Vladimirskaya (Princess Elizabeth of Vladimir), Fräulein Frank, and Madame Trémouille.

  2. Yelizaveta ( Isabel) Alekséyevna Tarakánova ( circa 1745-4 de diciembre jul. / 15 de diciembre de 1775 greg.) fue una supuesta princesa y pretendiente al trono del Imperio ruso. Fue llamada Knyazhná Yelizaveta Vladímirskaya, «princesa Isabel de Vladímir », Fräulein Frank y Madame Trémouille .

  3. The pictured lady is Elizaveta Vladimirskaya a.k.a. Princess Tarakanova, one of Russia’s most famous female adventurers and imposters claiming the Russian throne! She died in the prison of...

  4. Konstantin Flavitskys (1830–66) Princess Tarakanova, the pièce de résistance of the annual exhibition at the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg in 1864–65, was one of the first examples of a nineteenth-century artwork depicting a historical event from the post-Petrine epoch (fig. 1).

  5. The Death of the Princess Tarakanoff. This painting, also known by the title Princess Tarakanova, in the Peter and Paul Fortress at the Time of the Flood, is the most famous painting by the Russian painter Konstantin Flavitsky (1830-1867).

  6. Yelizaveta Alekseyevna Tarakanova was an adventuress and pretender to the Russian throne who claimed to be the daughter of the unmarried empress Elizabeth (reigned 1741–62) and Count Aleksey G. Razumovsky. She claimed to have been reared in St. Petersburg, but she was probably not Russian, and her.

  7. The story of the Princess Tarakanova, in Russian Княжна Тараканова, has two origins from which the painter Konstantin Flavitsky (1830 – 1866) could have drawn his inspiration.