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Title: Elena Pavlovna Fadeeva drawings Dates: undated Collection Number: 94054 Creator: Fadeeva, Elena Pavlovna, 1788-1860. Collection Size: 1 manuscript box (0.4 linear feet) Repository: Hoover Institution Archives Stanford, California 94305-6010 Abstract: Botanical drawings of flowers. Physical Location: Hoover Institution Archives Languages ...
Archivo:Elena Pavlovna of Russia.jpg. Tamaño de esta previsualización: 441 × 599 píxeles. Otras resoluciones: 177 × 240 píxeles · 353 × 480 píxeles · 817 × 1110 píxeles. Este es un archivo de Wikimedia Commons, un depósito de contenido libre hospedado por la Fundación Wikimedia.Más abajo se reproduce su página de descripción ...
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 .
In 1823, she was received into the Russian Orthodox Church and was given the name Elena Pavlovna. In 1824 she married Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich of Russia and the couple had five daughters. In 1849, on the death of her husband, she became a notable patron of charities and the arts. She founded the Saint Petersburg Conservatoire as well as ...
Elena Pavlovna was a German princess from the Kingdom of Wurttemburg who was selected to be the wife of Grand Duke Mikhail, the brother of Emperors Alexander I and Nicholas I. Princess Isabel was the daughter of the Brazilian emperor Dom Pedro II and heir to the throne.
The volume is especially strong in charting Elena Pavlovna’s transformation from a weepy German princess, caught in a loveless marriage to Emperor Paul’s youngest son, into a brilliant salonnière and supporter of the Red Cross, the Petersburg conservatory, and the emancipation of the serfs." Cynthia Hyla Whittaker, The Russian Review, 2016
Few could have predicted that Princess Fredericke Charlotte, the future Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, was destined to become one of the architects of the emancipation of serfs in the Russian Empire. Her moral framework, her intellect and her political skills made a substantial contribution not only to the ending of serfdom, but no less importantly to the conditions on which it was ended.