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  1. Agrippina, Countess von Zarnekau (née Agrippina Constantines asuli Japaridze; Georgian: აგრაფინა ჯაფარიძე, გრაფინია ფონ ზარნეკაუ) (October 25 [6 November o.s.] , 1855 - October 18, 1926) was a Georgian aristocrat, socialite and patron of numerous educational ...

    • Agrippina Constantines asuli Japaridze, Countess von Zarnekau
  2. Agrippina, Countess von Zarnekau was a Georgian aristocrat, socialite and patron of numerous educational establishments in Russian Imperial Georgia. She was known for her scandalous divorce and her even more controversial role in the secret marriage of Grand Duke George Alexandrovich of Russia, which caused a rupture in the Russian Imperial Family.

  3. When she married to a Russian Duke in 1882, Agrippina was given the title "Countess von Zarnekau." She is remembered in Russian history books as the mother of the six Counts and Countesses von Zarnekau. In Georgia, however, she is seen as a member of Georgian royalty.

    • Female
    • October 18, 1926
    • October 25, 1855
  4. Countess Alexandra Constantinovna von Zarnekau (Russian: графиня Александра Константиновна Зарнекау, 10 May [O.S. 28 April] 1883 – 28 May 1957) was the eldest daughter of Duke Constantine Petrovich of Oldenburg and his Georgian wife, Princess Agrippina Japaridze, Countess von Zarnekau ...

  5. Agrippina, Countess von Zarnekau (née Agrippina Constantines asuli Japaridze; Georgian: აგრაფინა ჯაფარიძე, გრაფინია ფონ ზარნეკაუ) (October 25 [6 November o.s.], 1855 - October 18, 1926) was a Georgian aristocrat, socialite and patron of numerous educational establishments in ...

  6. Biography. Countess Alexandra Constantinovna von Zarnekau (Russian: графиня Александра Константиновна Зарнекау, 10 May [22 May] 1883 - 28 May 1957) was the eldest daughter of Duke Constantine Petrovich of Oldenburg and his morganatic wife Agrippina Djaparidze, Countess von Zarnekau.

  7. Grand Duke Peter II, head of the House of Oldenburg, created her Countess von Zarnekau on the day of their wedding, with the same title passing to their children. Between 1883 and 1892 they produced six children, all of them born in Kutais, the Caucasus: