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  1. Princess Anna Petrovna Lopukhina (Russian: Анна Петровна Лопухина; 8 November 1777 – 25 April 1805) was a royal mistress to Emperor Paul of Russia. In 1798, she replaced Catherine Nelidova as the chief mistress.

    • 8 October 1777
    • Russian
    • 25 April 1805 (aged 27)
  2. 2 de abr. de 2016 · 2. Paul I and Anna Lopukhina. Source: Vladimir Borovikovsky, Stepan Shchukin. Catherine II's son Paul I was a Grand Master of the Maltese Order and considered himself a real knight, and every...

  3. Though he had been married to a Russian noble lady Eudoxia Lopukhina since 1689, he had no feelings for the wife imposed on him, but immediately fell for Anna Mons, a young and beautiful German...

  4. Natalia Fyodorovna Lopukhina (November 11 1699– March 11 1763) was a Russian noble, court official and alleged political conspirator. She was a daughter of Matryona Balk, who was sister of Anna Mons and Willem Mons. She is famous for the Lopukhina affair, an alleged conspiracy engineered by the diplomacy of Holstein and France at ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anna_MonsAnna Mons - Wikipedia

    Her niece was the infamous Natalia Lopukhina (1699–1763) later victim of the so-called Lopukhina Affair in 1742. As Peter's relations with the tsarina Eudoxia Lopukhina gradually worsened, Anna Mons took the place as his permanent and semi-official royal mistress. In the 1690s, he gave her 295 farms and a mansion near Moscow.

  6. But when Paul became infatuated with the nineteen-year-old beauty Anna Lopukhina shortly after the birth of their tenth son, Michael, in 1798, Maria saw red. Anna was from one of Russia’s oldest noble families—the same family that Paul’s first wife had belonged to.

  7. Anastasiya Lopukhina, Anna Laurinavichyute, Svetlana Malyutina, Galina Ryazanskaya, Elena Savinova, Aleksandra Simdianova, Anastasia Antonova, Irina Korkina (2021). Reliance on semantic and structural heuristics in sentence comprehension across the lifespan .