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  1. Ana I de Rusia o Anna Ioánnovna de Rusia (ruso: А́нна Иоа́нновна) (Moscú, 7 de febrero de 1693-San Petersburgo, 28 de octubre de 1740) fue emperatriz de Rusia de 1730 a 1740. Fue hija de Iván V, por tanto sobrina de Pedro el Grande y tía segunda de Pedro II (nieto de Pedro el Grande

  2. 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 .

  3. www.wikiwand.com › es › Ana_de_RusiaAna de Rusia - Wikiwand

    Ana I de Rusia o Anna Ioánnovna de Rusia (ruso: А́нна Иоа́нновна) ( Moscú, 7 de febrero de 1693- San Petersburgo, 28 de octubre de 1740) fue emperatriz de Rusia de 1730 a 1740. Datos rápidos Emperatriz y Autócrata de Todas las Rusias, Predecesor ... Cerrar.

  4. Catalina Ivánovna de Rusia o Catalina Ioánnovna ( Moscú, 20 de octubre de 1691- San Petersburgo, 14 de junio de 1733) era hija del zar Iván V de Rusia y de Praskovia Saltykova, y la madre de la gran duquesa Ana Leopóldovna, regente de Rusia.

    • Early Life
    • Courland Regency
    • Accession
    • Empress of Russia
    • Relationship with Biron
    • Death and Succession
    • Legacy
    • See Also
    • References
    • External Links

    Anna was born in Moscow as the daughter of Tsar Ivan V by his wife Praskovia Saltykova. Ivan V was co-ruler of Russia along with his younger half-brother Peter the Great, but he was mentally disabled and reportedly had limited capacity of administering the country effectively, and Peter effectively ruled alone. Ivan V died in February 1696, when An...

    In 1710, Peter the Great arranged for the 17-year-old Anna to marry Frederick William, Duke of Courland, who was about the same age as her. Her wedding was held on a grand scale, as per her own inclinations, on 11 November 1710; and her uncle gave her a fabulous dowry of 200,000 roubles.At the feast which followed the wedding, two dwarfs performed ...

    In 1730, Tsar Peter II (grandson of Anna's uncle Peter the Great) died childless at a young age. His death rendered extinct the male line of the Romanov dynasty, which had ruled Russia for over a century, since 1613. There were four possible candidates for the throne: the three surviving daughters of Ivan V, namely Catherine (born 1691), Anna herse...

    Anna continued to lavish architectural advances in St. Petersburg. She completed a waterway that began construction under Peter the Great and called for seafaring ships to accompany this new canal and continue naval expansion. Anna's lover Ernst Johann von Biron was a Baltic German and due to his influence Baltic Germans were favored with governmen...

    After being widowed just weeks following her wedding, Anna never remarried. As empress of Russia, she enjoyed the power she held over all men and may have thought that marriage would undermine her power and position. Nevertheless, Anna's reign is often referred to as "The Age of Biron" (Bironovschina), after her German lover Ernst Johann Biron.Hist...

    As her health declined Anna declared her grandnephew, Ivan VI, as her successor and appointed Biron as regent. This was an attempt to secure the line of her father, Ivan V, and exclude the descendants of Peter the Great from inheriting the throne. It was recorded that she had an ulcer on her kidneys, and she continued having attacks of gout; as her...

    In the West, Anna's reign was traditionally viewed as a continuation of the transition from the old Muscovy ways to the European court envisioned by Peter the Great. Her government, on the whole, was prudent, beneficial and even glorious; but it was undoubtedly severe and became at last universally unpopular. Within Russia Anna's reign is often ref...

    Baynes, T. S., ed. (1878), "Anna Ivanovna" , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 2 (9th ed.), New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, p. 60
    This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Anne, Empress of Russia". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed....
    Curtiss, Mini (1974), A Forgotten Empress: Anna Ivanovna and Her Era., New York: Frederick Unga Publishing Company
    Lipski, Alexander (1950), "Some Aspects of Westernization during the Reign of Anna Ioannovna, 1730–1740", American Slavic and East European Review(1): 1–11

    Romanovs. The fourth film. Anna Ioannovna; Anna Leopoldovna; Elizabeth Petrovna on YouTube– Historical reconstruction "The Romanovs". StarMedia. Babich-Design(Russia, 2013)

  5. Emperatriz de Rusia (1730-1740) Nació el 28 de enero de 1693 en Moscú. Sobrina del emperador Pedro I el Grande. En el año 1730 el alto Consejo Secreto de Rusia, órgano asesor de la nobleza rusa, la nombró emperatriz, aunque se establecieron condiciones que limitaban su poder como soberana.

  6. Ana de Rusia, conocida también como Ana Ivánovna, fue una emperatriz que gobernó Rusia desde 1730 hasta su muerte en 1740. Aunque su reinado se caracterizó por el fortalecimiento del poder central y la opresión de la nobleza, su figura trascendió en la historia y entró en el terreno de la mitología , convirtiéndose en una leyenda ...