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  1. Introduction to Nikolai Kulikovsky, 1903. In April, 1903, the Grand Duchess Olga was introduced by her brother Michael to a Blue Cuirassier Guards officer, Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky, during a royal military review at Pavlovsk Palace. Early life of Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky

  2. Brief Life History of Tikhon Nikolaievich. When Tikhon Nikolaievich Kulikovsky was born on 25 August 1917, in Crimea, Russia, his father, Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky, was 35 and his mother, Grand Duchess Olga Aleksandrovna Romanovna of Russia, was 35. He married Agnete Carla Petersen in 1942, in København, Denmark.

  3. Mykola Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky (Russian: Николай Овсянико-Куликовский, 1768–1846) was the purported author of a famous musical hoax Symphony No. 21 (Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky), perpetrated by composer and violinist Mikhail Goldstein . In 1948, Goldstein announced that he had discovered the manuscript of a symphony by ...

  4. Nikolai Ovsianiko-Kulikovski. Nikolay Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky (1768–1846) was a Ukrainian composer, founder and conductor of an orchestra of serfs. The orchestra had been performing at the Odessa Theater since 1810, and Ovsianiko-Kulikovsky passed it as a gift to the city government ten years later. Nikolay's only surviving work is a symphony On ...

  5. Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky (5 November 1881 – 11 August 1958) was the second husband of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia, the sister of Tsar Nicholas II and daughter of Tsar Alexander III.

  6. Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky [2] (5 November 1881 – 11 August 1958) was the second husband of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia, the sister of Tsar Nicholas II and daughter of Tsar Alexander III. He was born into a military landowning family from the south of the Russian Empire, and followed the family tradition by entering the army.

  7. Details. In 1919 Russian Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna Romanov, a World War I army nurse and youngest sister of Tsar Nicholas II, fled the Bolshevik Revolution with her husband Col. Nikolai Kulikovsky, and their sons, three year-old Tihon and infant Gury, through the Ukraine to a refugee ship in the Crimea .