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  1. Count Michael Mikhailovich de Torby (8 October 1898 in Wiesbaden – 25 April 1959 in London) was the son of Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich of Russia (1861–1929) and his morganatic wife Countess Sophie of Merenberg (1868–1927). The great-grandson of Emperor Nicholas I of Russia and Alexander Pushkin .

  2. The grand duke's son, Michael, Count de Torby (known familially as Boy Torby), lost his employment and came to live with them, but the relationship was difficult, not least because Boy suffered a recurring form of depression.

  3. 23 de ene. de 2022 · Contents. 1 Also Known As. 1.1 Grand Duke Michael. 1.2 Countess de Torby. 2 Acquaintances, Friends and Enemies. 3 Organizations. 4 Timeline. 5 Costume at the Duchess of Devonshire's 2 July 1897 Fancy-dress Ball. 5.1 Sophie, Countess de Torby. 5.2 Grand Duke Michael of Russia. 6 Demographics. 6.1 Residences. 7 Family. 8 Questions and Notes.

  4. Count Michael Mikhailovich de Torby (8 October 1898 – 8 May 1959); an artist, who was not married. Later life and death. She and her husband lived at Kenwood House in Hampstead, London, prior to World War I. However, the Russian Revolution reduced the Grand Duke's finances.

  5. Count Michael Mikhailovich de Torby (1898 – 1959) Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich (right) with his children (from left to right), Nadejda, Michael, and Anastasia These Romanov morganatic wives and children from morganatic marriages managed to escape:

  6. Countess Sophie von Merenberg (Geneva, 1 June 1868 – London, 14 September 1927); created Countess de Torby in 1891; married in Sanremo on 26 February 1891, Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich of Russia (Peterhof Palace, Peterhof, 16 October 1861 – London, 26 April 1929) and had issue.

  7. 6 de ago. de 2020 · Count Michael Mikhailovich of Torby (October 8, 1898 - May 8, 1959) an artist who was not married. Conflicting relationship with his mother-in-law Duchess Olga Fedorovna.