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Alexander III of Russia

Alexander III (Russian: Алекса́ндр III Алекса́ндрович Романов, tr. Aleksandr III Aleksandrovich Romanov; 10 March 1845 – 1 November 1894)[1] was Emperor of Russia, King of Congress Poland and Grand Duke of Finland from 13 March 1881 until his death in 1894.[2] He was highly reactionary in domestic affairs and reversed some of the liberal reforms of his father, Alexander II. This policy is known in Russia as "counter-reforms" (Russian: контрреформы). Under the influence of Konstantin Pobedonostsev (1827–1907), he opposed any socio-economic moves that limited his autocratic rule.

Alexander III
Portrait photograph, 1885
Emperor of Russia
Reign13 March 1881 – 1 November 1894
Coronation27 May 1883
PredecessorAlexander II
SuccessorNicholas II
Born(1845-03-10)10 March 1845
Winter Palace, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died1 November 1894(1894-11-01) (aged 49)
Maley Palace, Livadia, Taurida Governorate, Russian Empire (now Ukraine)
Burial18 November 1894
Spouse
(m. 1866)
Issue
Detail
Names
Alexander Alexandrovich Romanov
HouseRomanov-Holstein-Gottorp
FatherAlexander II of Russia
MotherMarie of Hesse and by Rhine
ReligionRussian Orthodox
Signature

During his reign, Russia fought no major wars as well. He therefore came to be known as "The Peacemaker" (Russian: Миротворец, tr. Mirotvorets, IPA: [mʲɪrɐˈtvorʲɪt͡s]), with that laudatory title enduring into the 21st Century among historians (as the Tsar’-Mirotvorets).[3] Outside of politics, Alexander was additionally known for his striking appearance, with an American historian later noting how he stood out as being a "tall, heavy-set man, of enormous muscular strength." Alexander's major foreign policy achievement was helping forge the Russo-French Alliance and thus directing a major shift in the international relations of Russian society that endured for decades. His political legacy represented a direct challenge to the European cultural order set forth by German statesman Otto von Bismarck, intermingling Russian influences with the shifting balances of power.[4]

Alexander's long, multifaceted legacy has been commemorated in public installations across multiple nations. A notable example outside of Russia is the Pont Alexandre III, an ornate arch bridge spanning the Seine in Paris, France. That installation has received mass attention for over a century.

Personality edit

 
Alexander III as Tsesarevich, by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky, 1865

In disposition, Alexander bore little resemblance to his soft-hearted, liberal father, and still less to his refined, philosophic, sentimental, chivalrous, yet cunning great-uncle Emperor Alexander I. Although an enthusiastic amateur musician and patron of the ballet, Alexander was seen as lacking refinement and elegance. Indeed, he rather relished the idea of being of the same rough texture as some of his subjects. His straightforward, abrupt manner savoured sometimes of gruffness, while his direct, unadorned method of expressing himself harmonized well with his rough-hewn, immobile features and somewhat sluggish movements. His education was not such as to soften these peculiarities.[5]

Alexander was extremely strong. He tore packs of cards in half with his bare hands to entertain his children.[6] When the Austrian ambassador in St. Petersburg said that Austria would mobilize two or three army corps against Russia, he twisted a silver fork into a knot and threw it onto the plate of the ambassador.[7] He said, "That is what I am going to do to your two or three army corps."[7]

Unlike his extroverted wife, Alexander disliked social functions and avoided St. Petersburg. At palace balls, he was impatient for the events to end. He would order each musician of the orchestra to leave and turn off the lights until the guests left.[7]

Alexander was afraid of horses. In his childhood, he had had an unpleasant experience on a bad-tempered mount.[8] His wife once convinced him to go on a carriage ride with her. As he reluctantly entered the carriage, the ponies reared back. He immediately left the carriage and no amount of pleading from his wife could convince him to get back in.[8]

An account from the memoirs of the artist Alexander Benois gives one impression of Alexander III:

After a performance of the ballet Tsar Kandavl at the Mariinsky Theatre, I first caught sight of the Emperor. I was struck by the size of the man, and although cumbersome and heavy, he was still a mighty figure. There was indeed something of the muzhik [Russian peasant] about him. The look of his bright eyes made quite an impression on me. As he passed where I was standing, he raised his head for a second, and to this day I can remember what I felt as our eyes met. It was a look as cold as steel, in which there was something threatening, even frightening, and it struck me like a blow. The Tsar's gaze! The look of a man who stood above all others, but who carried a monstrous burden and who every minute had to fear for his life and the lives of those closest to him. In later years I came into contact with the Emperor on several occasions, and I felt not the slightest bit timid. In more ordinary cases Tsar Alexander III could be at once kind, simple, and even almost homely.

Early life edit

Grand Duke Alexander Alexandrovich was born on 10 March 1845 at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire, the second son and third child of Tsesarevich Alexander (Future Alexander II) and his first wife Maria Alexandrovna (née Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine). He was born during the reign of his grandfather Nicholas I.

Though he was destined to be a strongly counter-reforming emperor, Alexander had little prospect of succeeding to the throne during the first two decades of his life, as he had an elder brother, Nicholas, who seemed of robust constitution. Even when Nicholas first displayed symptoms of delicate health, the notion that he might die young was never taken seriously, and he was betrothed to Princess Dagmar of Denmark, daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and Queen Louise of Denmark, and whose siblings included King Frederik VIII of Denmark, Queen Alexandra of the United Kingdom and King George I of Greece. Great solicitude was devoted to the education of Nicholas as tsesarevich, whereas Alexander received only the training of an ordinary Grand Duke of that period. This included acquaintance with French, English and German, and military drill.[9]

As Tsarevich edit

 
Grand painting by artist Georges Becker of the coronation of Emperor Alexander III and Empress Maria Fyodorovna, which took place on 27 May [O.S. 15 May] 1883 at the Uspensky Sobor of the Moscow Kremlin. On the left of the dais can be seen his young son and heir, the Tsarevich Nicholas, and behind Nicholas can be seen a young Grand Duke George.

Alexander became tsesarevich upon Nicholas's sudden death in 1865. He had been very close to his older brother, and he was devastated by Nicholas' passing. When he became tsar, he reflected that "no one had such an impact on my life as my dear brother and friend Nixa [Nicholas]"[10] and lamented that "a terrible responsibility fell on my shoulders" when Nicholas died.

As tsesarevich, Alexander began to study the principles of law and administration under Konstantin Pobedonostsev, then a professor of civil law at Moscow State University and later (from 1880) chief procurator of the Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church in Russia. Pobedonostsev instilled into the young man's mind the belief that zeal for Russian Orthodox thought was an essential factor of Russian patriotism to be cultivated by every right-minded emperor. While he was heir apparent from 1865 to 1881 Alexander did not play a prominent part in public affairs, but allowed it to become known that he had ideas which did not coincide with the principles of the existing government.[9]

On his deathbed, Nicholas allegedly expressed the wish that his fiancée, Princess Dagmar of Denmark, should marry Alexander.[9] Alexander's parents encouraged the match. On 2 June 1866, Alexander went to Copenhagen to visit Dagmar. When they were looking at photographs of the deceased Nicholas, Alexander proposed to Dagmar.[11] On 9 November [O.S. 28 October] 1866 in the Grand Church of the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, Alexander wed Dagmar, who converted to Orthodox Christianity and took the name Maria Feodorovna. The union proved a happy one to the end; unlike nearly all of his predecessors since Peter I, there was no adultery in his marriage. The couple spent their wedding night at the Tsarevich's private dacha known as "My Property".

Alexander and his father became estranged due to their different political views. In 1870, Alexander II supported Prussia in the Franco-Prussian War, which angered the younger Alexander. Influenced by his Danish wife Dagmar, Alexander criticized the "shortsighted government" for helping the "Prussian pigs".[12]

Alexander resented his father for having a long-standing relationship with Princess Catherine Dolgorukova (with whom he had several illegitimate children) while his mother, the Empress, was suffering from chronic ill-health.[13] Two days after Empress Marie died, his father told him, "I shall live as I wish, and my union with Princess Dolgorukova is definite" but assured him that "your rights will be safeguarded."[14] Alexander was furious over his father's decision to marry Catherine a month after his mother's death, which he believed "forever ruined all the dear good memories of family life."[15] His father threatened to disinherit him if he left court out of protest against the marriage.[16] He privately denounced Catherine as "the outsider" and complained that she was "designing and immature".[17] After his father's assassination, he reflected that his father's marriage to Catherine had caused the tragedy: "All the scum burst out and swallowed all that was holy. The guardian angel flew away and everything turned to ashes, finally culminating in the dreadful incomprehensible 1 March."[18]

Reign edit

On 13 March 1881 (N.S.) Alexander's father, Alexander II, was assassinated by members of the extremist organization Narodnaya Volya. As a result, Alexander ascended to the Russian imperial throne in Nennal. He and Maria Feodorovna were officially crowned and anointed at the Assumption Cathedral in Moscow on 27 May 1883. Alexander's ascension to the throne was followed by an outbreak of anti-Jewish riots.[19][20][21][22]

Alexander III disliked the extravagance of the rest of his family. It was also expensive for the Crown to pay so many grand dukes each year. Each one received an annual salary of 250,000 rubles, and grand duchesses received a dowry of a million when they married. He limited the title of grand duke and duchess to only children and male-line grandchildren of emperors. The rest would bear a princely title and the style of Serene Highness. He also forbade morganatic marriages, as well as those outside of the Orthodoxy.[23]

Domestic policies edit

 
Alexander receiving rural district elders in the yard of Petrovsky Palace in Moscow; painting by Ilya Repin

On the day of his assassination, Alexander II signed an ukaz setting up consultative commissions to advise the monarch. On ascending to the throne, however, Alexander III took Pobedonostsev's advice and cancelled the policy before its publication. He made it clear that his autocracy would not be limited.

All of Alexander III's internal reforms aimed to reverse the liberalization that had occurred in his father's reign. The new Emperor believed that remaining true to Russian Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality (the ideology introduced by his grandfather, Emperor Nicholas I) would save Russia from revolutionary agitation.[citation needed]

 
Photograph about arriving of Alexander III at the Fontell House (also known as "The House of Emperor") for the first time on August 4, 1885, in Lappeenranta, Finland.

Alexander weakened the power of the zemstvo (elective local administrative bodies) and placed the administration of peasant communes under the supervision of land-owning proprietors appointed by his government, "land captains" (zemskiye nachalniki). These acts weakened the nobility and the peasantry and brought Imperial administration under the Emperor's personal control. In such policies Alexander III followed the advice of Konstantin Pobedonostsev, who retained control of the Church in Russia through his long tenure as Procurator of the Holy Synod (from 1880 to 1905) and who became tutor to Alexander's son and heir, Nicholas. (Pobedonostsev appears as "Toporov" in Tolstoy's novel Resurrection.)[citation needed] Other conservative advisors included Count D. A. Tolstoy (minister of education, and later of internal affairs) and I. N. Durnovo (D. A. Tolstoy's successor in the latter post). Mikhail Katkov and other journalists supported the emperor in his autocracy.[citation needed]

 
5-ruble coin of Alexander III, 1888

The Russian famine of 1891–92, which caused 375,000 to 500,000 deaths, and the ensuing cholera epidemic permitted some liberal activity, as the Russian government could not cope with the crisis and had to allow zemstvos to help with relief (among others, Leo Tolstoy helped with relief efforts on his estate and through the British press,[24] and Chekhov directed anti-cholera precautions in several villages).[citation needed]

Alexander had the political goal of Russification, which involved homogenizing the language and religion of Russia's people. He implemented changes such as teaching only the Russian language in Russian schools in Germany, Poland, and Finland. He also patronized Eastern Orthodoxy and destroyed German, Polish, and Swedish cultural and religious institutions.[25]

Alexander was hostile to Jews; his reign witnessed a sharp deterioration in the Jews' economic, social, and political condition. His policy was eagerly implemented by tsarist officials in the "May Laws" of 1882. These laws encouraged open anti-Jewish sentiment and dozens of pogroms across the western part of the empire. As a result, many Jews emigrated to Western Europe and the United States.[26] They banned Jews from inhabiting rural areas and shtetls (even within the Pale of Settlement) and restricted the occupations in which they could engage.[27][28]

Encouraged by its successful assassination of Alexander II, the Narodnaya Volya movement began planning the murder of Alexander III. The Okhrana uncovered the plot and five of the conspirators, including Aleksandr Ulyanov, the older brother of Vladimir Lenin, were captured and hanged in May 1887.

Foreign policy edit

 
The Borki Cathedral was one of many churches built to commemorate the Tsar's miraculous survival in the 1888 train crash

The general negative consensus about the tsar's foreign policy follows the conclusions of the British Prime Minister Lord Salisbury in 1885:

It is very difficult to come to any satisfactory conclusion as to the real objects of Russian policy. I am more inclined to believe there are none; that the Emperor is really his own Minister, and so bad a Minister that no consequent or coherent policy is pursued; but that each influential person, military or civil, snatches from him as opportunity offers the decisions which such person at the moment wants and that the mutual effect of these decisions on each other is determined almost exclusively by chance.[29][30]

In foreign affairs Alexander III was a man of peace, but not at any price, and held that the best means of averting war is to be well-prepared for it. Diplomat Nikolay Girs, scion of a rich and powerful family, served as his Foreign Minister from 1882 to 1895 and established the peaceful policies for which Alexander has been given credit.[citation needed] Girs was an architect of the Franco-Russian Alliance of 1891, which was later expanded into the Triple Entente with the addition of Great Britain. That alliance brought France out of diplomatic isolation, and moved Russia from the German orbit to a coalition with France, one that was strongly supported by French financial assistance to Russia's economic modernisation.[citation needed] Girs was in charge of a diplomacy that featured numerous negotiated settlements, treaties and conventions. These agreements defined Russian boundaries and restored equilibrium to dangerously unstable situations. The most dramatic success came in 1885, settling long-standing tensions with Great Britain, which was fearful that Russian expansion to the south would be a threat to India.[31] Girs was usually successful in restraining the aggressive inclinations of Tsar Alexander convincing him that the very survival of the Tsarist system depended on avoiding major wars. With a deep insight into the tsar's moods and views, Girs was usually able to shape the final decisions by outmaneuvering hostile journalists, ministers, and even the Tsarina, as well as his own ambassadors.

 
Alexander III and French President Marie François Sadi Carnot forge an alliance

Though Alexander was indignant at the conduct of German chancellor Otto von Bismarck towards Russia, he avoided an open rupture with Germany—even reviving the League of Three Emperors for a period of time and in 1887, signed the Reinsurance Treaty with the Germans. However, in 1890, the expiration of the treaty coincided with the dismissal of Bismarck by the new German emperor, Kaiser Wilhelm II (for whom the Tsar had an immense dislike), and the unwillingness of Wilhelm II's government to renew the treaty. In response Alexander III then began cordial relations with France, eventually entering into an alliance with the French in 1892.[32]

Despite chilly relations with Berlin, the Tsar nevertheless confined himself to keeping a large number of troops near the German frontier. With regard to Bulgaria he exercised similar self-control. The efforts of Prince Alexander and afterwards of Stambolov to destroy Russian influence in the principality roused his indignation, but he vetoed all proposals to intervene by force of arms.[33]

In Central Asian affairs he followed the traditional policy of gradually extending Russian domination without provoking conflict with the United Kingdom (see Panjdeh incident), and he never allowed the bellicose partisans of a forward policy to get out of hand. His reign cannot be regarded as an eventful period of Russian history; but under his hard rule the country made considerable progress.[34]

 
Alexander III and Maria Feodorovna in the family circle on the porch of his home in Langinkoski, Finland in summer 1889.

Alexander and his wife regularly spent their summers at Langinkoski manor along the Kymi River near Kotka on the Finnish coast, where their children were immersed in a Scandinavian lifestyle of relative modesty.

Alexander rejected foreign influence, German influence in particular, thus the adoption of local national principles was deprecated in all spheres of official activity, with a view to realizing his ideal of a Russia homogeneous in language, administration and religion.[citation needed] These ideas conflicted with those of his father, who had German sympathies despite being a patriot; Alexander II often used the German language in his private relations, occasionally ridiculed the Slavophiles and based his foreign policy on the Prussian alliance.[9]

 
Alexander III and Nicholas II on French stamps, c. 1896

Some differences between father and son had first appeared during the Franco-Prussian War, when Alexander II supported the cabinet of Berlin while the Tsesarevich made no effort to conceal his sympathies for the French.[citation needed] These sentiments would resurface during 1875–1879, when the Eastern question excited Russian society. At first, the Tsesarevich was more Slavophile than the Russian government.[how?] However, his phlegmatic nature restrained him from many exaggerations, and any popular illusions he may have imbibed were dispelled by personal observation in Bulgaria where he commanded the left wing of the invading army. Never consulted on political questions, Alexander confined himself to military duties and fulfilled them in a conscientious and unobtrusive manner. After many mistakes and disappointments, the army reached Constantinople and the Treaty of San Stefano was signed, but much that had been obtained by that important document had to be sacrificed at the Congress of Berlin.[9]

Bismarck failed to do what was expected of him by the Russian emperor. In return for the Russian support which had enabled him to create the German Empire,[35] it was thought that he would help Russia to solve the Eastern question in accordance with Russian interests, but to the surprise and indignation of the cabinet of Saint Petersburg he confined himself to acting the part of "honest broker" at the Congress, and shortly afterwards contracted an alliance with Austria-Hungary for the purpose of counteracting Russian designs in Eastern Europe.[9]

The Tsesarevich could refer to these results as confirmation of the views he had expressed during the Franco-Prussian War; he concluded that for Russia, the best thing was to recover as quickly as possible from her temporary exhaustion, and prepare for future contingencies by military and naval reorganization. In accordance with this conviction, he suggested that certain reforms should be introduced.[9]

Trade and Industry edit

Alexander III took initiatives to stimulate the development of trade and industry, as his father did before him. Russia's economy was still challenged by the Russian-Turkish war of 1877–1878, which created a deficit, so he imposed customs duties on imported goods. To further alleviate the budget deficit, he implemented increased frugality and accounting in state finances. Industrial development increased during his reign.[36] Also during his reign, construction of the Trans Siberian Railway was started.[37]

Family life edit

 
Left to Right: Emperor Alexander III, Prince George (later George V of the United Kingdom), Marie Feodorovna, Maria of Greece, Tsesarevich Nicholas (later Emperor Nicholas II of Russia). Probably taken on the imperial yacht near Denmark, c. 1893.

Following his father's assassination, Alexander III was advised that it would be difficult for him to be kept safe at the Winter Palace. As a result, Alexander relocated his family to the Gatchina Palace, located 30 kilometres (20 mi) south of St. Petersburg. The palace was surrounded by moats, watch towers, and trenches, and soldiers were on guard night and day.[38] Under heavy guard, he would make occasional visits into St. Petersburg, but even then he would stay in the Anichkov Palace, as opposed to the Winter Palace.[citation needed] Alexander resented having to take refuge at Gatchina. Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia remembered hearing Alexander say, "To think that after having faced the guns of the Turks I must retreat now before these skunks."[39]

In the 1860s, Alexander fell in love with his mother's lady-in-waiting, Princess Maria Elimovna Meshcherskaya. Dismayed to learn that Prince zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn had proposed to her in early 1866, he told his parents that he was prepared to give up his rights of succession in order to marry his beloved "Dusenka". On 19 May 1866, Alexander II informed his son that Russia had come to an agreement with the parents of Princess Dagmar of Denmark, the fiancée of his late elder brother Nicholas. Initially, Alexander refused to travel to Copenhagen because he wanted to marry Maria. Enraged, Alexander II ordered him to go straight to Denmark and propose to Princess Dagmar. Alexander wrote in his diary "Farewell, dear Dusenka."

Despite his initial reluctance, Alexander grew fond of Dagmar. By the end of his life, they loved each other deeply. A few weeks after their wedding, he wrote in his diary: "God grant that... I may love my darling wife more and more... I often feel that I am not worthy of her, but even if this was true, I will do my best to be."[40] When she left his side, he missed her bitterly and complained: "My sweet darling Minny, for five years we've never been apart and Gatchina is empty and sad without you."[41] In 1885, he commissioned Peter Carl Fabergé to produce the first of what were to become a series of jeweled Easter eggs (now called "Fabergé eggs") for her as an Easter gift. Dagmar was so delighted by the First Hen egg that Alexander gave her an egg every year as an Easter tradition. After Alexander died, his heir Nicholas continued the tradition and commissioned two eggs, one for his wife, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, and one for his mother, Dagmar, every Easter. When she nursed him in his final illness, Alexander told Dagmar, "Even before my death, I have got to known an angel."[42] He died in Dagmar's arms, and his daughter Olga noted that "my mother still held him in her arms" long after he died.[43]

Alexander had six children by Dagmar, five of whom survived into adulthood: Nicholas (b. 1868), George (b. 1871), Xenia (b. 1875), Michael (b. 1878) and Olga (b. 1882). He told Dagmar that "only with [our children] can I relax mentally, enjoy them and rejoice, looking at them."[44] He wrote in his diary that he "was crying like a baby"[45] when Dagmar gave birth to their first child, Nicholas. He was much more lenient with his children than most European monarchs, and he told their tutors, "I do not need porcelain, I want normal healthy Russian children."[46] General Cherevin believed that the clever George was "the favourite of both parents". Alexander enjoyed a more informal relationship with his youngest son Michael and doted on his youngest daughter, Olga.

Alexander was concerned that his heir-apparent, Nicholas, was too gentle and naive to become an effective Emperor. When Witte suggested that Nicholas participate in the Trans-Siberian Committee, Alexander said, "Have you ever tried to discuss anything of consequence with His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke? Don't tell me you never noticed the Grand Duke is . . . an absolute child. His opinions are utterly childish. How could he preside over such a committee?"[47] He was worried that Nicholas had no experiences with women and arranged for the Polish ballerina Mathilde Kschessinskaya to become his son's mistress.[48] Even at the end of his life, he considered Nicholas a child and told him, "I can't imagine you as a fiancé – how strange and unusual!"[49]

 
Alexander and his wife Empress Maria Fyodorovna on holiday in Copenhagen in 1893.

Each summer his parents-in-law, King Christian IX and Queen Louise, held family reunions at the Danish royal palaces of Fredensborg and Bernstorff, bringing Alexander, Maria and their children to Denmark.[50] His sister-in-law, the Princess of Wales, would come from Great Britain with some of her children, and his brother-in-law and cousin-in-law, King George I of Greece, his wife, Queen Olga, who was a first cousin of Alexander and a Romanov Grand Duchess by birth, came with their children from Athens.[50] In contrast to the strict security observed in Russia, Alexander and Maria revelled in the relative freedom that they enjoyed in Denmark, Alexander once commenting to the Prince and Princess of Wales near the end of a visit that he envied them being able to return to a happy home in England, while he was returning to his Russian prison.[51] In Denmark, he was able to enjoy joining his children, nephews and nieces, in muddy ponds looking for tadpoles, sneaking into his father-in-law's orchard to steal apples, and playing pranks, such as turning a water hose on the visiting King Oscar II of Sweden.[51]

Alexander had an extremely poor relationship with his brother Grand Duke Vladimir. At a restaurant, Grand Duke Vladimir had a brawl with the French actor Lucien Guitry when the latter kissed his wife, Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin.[52] The prefect of St. Petersburg needed to escort Vladimir out of the restaurant.[52] Alexander was so furious that he temporarily exiled Vladimir and his wife and threatened to exile them permanently to Siberia if they did not leave immediately.[52] When Alexander and his family survived the Borki train disaster in 1888, Alexander joked, "I can imagine how disappointed Vladimir is going to be when he learns that we all stayed alive!"[53] This tension was reflected in the rivalry between Maria Feodorovna and Vladimir's wife, Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna.[54]

Alexander had better relationships with his other brothers: Alexei (who he made rear admiral and then a grand admiral of the Russian Navy), Sergei (who he made governor of Moscow) and Paul.

Despite the antipathy that Alexander had towards his stepmother, Catherine Dolgorukov, he nevertheless allowed her to remain in the Winter Palace for some time after his father's assassination and to retain various keepsakes of him. These included Alexander II's blood-soaked uniform that he died wearing, and his reading glasses.[55]

Even though he disliked their mother, Alexander was kind to his half-siblings. His youngest half-sister Princess Catherine Alexandrovna Yurievskaya remembered when he would play with her and her siblings: "The Emperor... seemed a playful and kind Goliath among all the romping children."[56]

On 29 October [O.S. 17 October] 1888 the Imperial train derailed in an accident at Borki. At the moment of the crash, the imperial family was in the dining car. Its roof collapsed, and Alexander held its remains on his shoulders as the children fled outdoors. The onset of Alexander's kidney failure was later attributed to the blunt trauma suffered in this incident.[57][self-published source]

Illness and death edit

 
Alexander III in the uniform of the Danish Royal Life Guards, 1894

In 1894, Alexander III became ill with terminal kidney disease (nephritis). His first cousin, Queen Olga of Greece, offered him to stay at her villa Mon Repos, on the island of Corfu, in the hope that it might improve the Tsar's condition.[58] By the time that they reached Crimea, they stayed at the Maly Palace in Livadia, as Alexander was too weak to travel any farther.[59] Recognizing that the Tsar's days were numbered, various imperial relatives began to descend on Livadia. Clergyman John of Kronstadt paid a visit and administered Communion to the Tsar.[60] On 21 October, Alexander received Nicholas's fiancée, Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt, who had come from her native Darmstadt to receive the Tsar's blessing.[61] Despite being exceedingly weak, Alexander insisted on receiving Alix in full dress uniform, an event that left him exhausted.[62] Soon after, his health began to deteriorate more rapidly. He died in the arms of his wife, and in the presence of his physician, Ernst Viktor von Leyden, at Maly Palace in Livadia on the afternoon of 1 November [O.S. 20 October] 1894 at the age of forty-nine, and was succeeded by his eldest son Tsesarevich Nicholas, who took the throne as Nicholas II. After leaving Livadia on 6 November and traveling to St. Petersburg by way of Moscow, his remains were interred on 18 November at the Peter and Paul Fortress, with his funeral being attended by numerous foreign relatives, including King Christian IX of Denmark, the Prince and Princess of Wales, and Duke of York, and Duke and Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, and his daughter-in-law to be, Alix of Hesse, and her brother, Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse.

Monuments edit

 
The equestrian statue of Alexander III, by Prince Paolo Troubetzkoy, shows the Emperor sitting heavily on the back of a ponderous horse
 
Memorial dedicated to Alexander III in Pullapää, Estonia

In 1909, a bronze equestrian statue of Alexander III sculpted by Paolo Troubetzkoy was placed in Znamenskaya Square in front of the Moscow Rail Terminal in St. Petersburg. Both the horse and rider were sculpted in massive form, leading to the nickname of "hippopotamus". Troubetzkoy envisioned the statue as a caricature, jesting that he wished "to portray an animal atop another animal", and it was quite controversial at the time, with many, including the members of the Imperial Family, opposed to the design, but it was approved because the Empress Dowager unexpectedly liked the monument. Following the Revolution of 1917, the statue remained in place as a symbol of tsarist autocracy until 1937 when it was placed in storage. In 1994, it was again put on public display, although in a different place – in front of the Marble Palace.[63] Another pre-revolutionary memorial is located in the city of Irkutsk at the Angara embankment.

For Alexander's role in forging the Franco-Russian Alliance, the French Republic commissioned a bridge named in his honour, Pont Alexandre III. It was opened by his son, Nicholas II, and exists to this day.

On 18 November 2017, Vladimir Putin unveiled a bronze monument to Alexander III on the site of the former Maly Livadia Palace in Crimea. The four-meter monument by Russian sculptor Andrey Kovalchuk depicts Alexander III sitting on a stump, his stretched arms resting on a sabre. An inscription says "Russia has only two allies: the Army and the Navy", although historians dispute whether the Tsar actually said those words.[64][65] Alexander III is believed to be one of Putin's admired historic leaders, along with Joseph Stalin.[66] On 5 June 2021, he unveiled another monument to Alexander on the site of Gatchina Palace, Leningrad Oblast.[67]

Honours edit

Domestic[68][self-published source?]

Foreign[68]

Arms edit

 
Lesser Coat of Arms of the Russian Empire

Issue edit

 
Alexander III with his wife and their children

Alexander III had six children (five of whom survived to adulthood) of his marriage with Princess Dagmar of Denmark, also known as Marie Feodorovna.

(Note: all dates prior to 1918 are in the Old Style Calendar)

Name Birth Death Notes
Emperor Nicholas II of Russia 18 May 1868 17 July 1918 married 26 November 1894, Princess Alix of Hesse (1872–1918); had five children
Grand Duke Alexander Alexandrovich of Russia 7 June 1869 2 May 1870 died of meningitis, aged 10 months and 26 days
Grand Duke George Alexandrovich of Russia 9 May 1871 10 July 1899 died of tuberculosis, aged 28; had no issue
Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia 6 April 1875 20 April 1960 married 6 August 1894, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia (1866–1933); had seven children
Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia 4 December 1878 13 June 1918 married 16 October 1912, Natalia Sergeyevna Wulfert (1880–1952); had one child
Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia 13 June 1882 24 November 1960 married 9 August 1901, Duke Peter Alexandrovich of Oldenburg (1868–1924); div. 16 October 1916; had no issue.

married 16 November 1916, Colonel Nikolai Kulikovsky (1881–1958); had two children

Ancestors edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 10 March [O.S. 26 February] 1845 – 1 November [O.S. 20 October] 1894
  2. ^ 13 March [O.S. 1 March] 1881 – 1 November [O.S. 20 October] 1894.
  3. ^ Fedyashin, Anton (2023). "Book Review: Istoriia rossiiskogo gosudarstva. Tsar'-osvoboditel' i tsar'-mirotvorets. Lekarstvo dlia imperii [History of the Russian State. The Tsar-Liberator and the Tsar-Peacemaker. Medicine for the Empire] by Boris Akunin". European History Quarterly. 53 (4): 698–700. doi:10.1177/02656914231199945a. S2CID 263705950.
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  5. ^ Wallace 1911, pp. 561–562.
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Bibliography edit

  • Dorpalen, Andreas. "Tsar Alexander III and the Boulanger Crisis in France." Journal of Modern History 23.2 (1951): 122–136. online
  • Etty, John. "Alexander III, Tsar of Russia 1881–1889." History Review 60 (2008): 1–5. online
  • Hutchinson, John F. Late Imperial Russia: 1890–1917
  • Lincoln, W. Bruce. The Romanovs : autocrats of all the Russias (1981) online free to borrow
  • Lowe, Charles. Alexander III of Russia (1895) online free full-length old biography
  • Nelipa, M., Alexander III His Life and Reign'm (2014), Gilbert's Books
  • Polunov, A. Iu. "Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev – Man and Politician". Russian Studies in History 39.4 (2001): 8–32. online[dead link], by a leading scholar
  • Polunov, A. Iu. "The Orthodox Church in the Baltic Region and the Policies of Alexander Ill's Government." Russian Studies in History 39.4 (2001): 66–76. online[dead link]
  • Suny, Ronald Grigor. "Rehabilitating Tsarism: The Imperial Russian State and Its Historians. A Review Article" Comparative Studies in Society and History 31#1 (1989) pp. 168–179 online
  • Thomson, Oliver. Romanovs: Europe's Most Obsessive Dynasty (2008) ch 13
  • Whelan, Heide W. Alexander III & the State Council: bureaucracy & counter-reform in late imperial Russia (Rutgers UP, 1982).

External links edit

  • A short biography
  • Romanovs. The eighth film. Alexander III; Nicholas II. on YouTube – Historical reconstruction "The Romanovs". StarMedia. Babich-Design(Russia, 2013)
Alexander III of Russia
Cadet branch of the House of Oldenburg
Born: 10 March 1845 Died: 1 November 1894
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of Russia
Grand Duke of Finland

1881–1894
Succeeded by

alexander, russia, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, alexandrovich, family, name, romanov, alexander, russian, Алекса, ндр, Алекса, ндрович, Романов, aleksandr, aleksandrovich, romanov, march, 1845, november, 1894, em. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Alexandrovich and the family name is Romanov Alexander III Russian Aleksa ndr III Aleksa ndrovich Romanov tr Aleksandr III Aleksandrovich Romanov 10 March 1845 1 November 1894 1 was Emperor of Russia King of Congress Poland and Grand Duke of Finland from 13 March 1881 until his death in 1894 2 He was highly reactionary in domestic affairs and reversed some of the liberal reforms of his father Alexander II This policy is known in Russia as counter reforms Russian kontrreformy Under the influence of Konstantin Pobedonostsev 1827 1907 he opposed any socio economic moves that limited his autocratic rule Alexander IIIPortrait photograph 1885Emperor of RussiaReign13 March 1881 1 November 1894Coronation27 May 1883PredecessorAlexander IISuccessorNicholas IIBorn 1845 03 10 10 March 1845Winter Palace Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireDied1 November 1894 1894 11 01 aged 49 Maley Palace Livadia Taurida Governorate Russian Empire now Ukraine Burial18 November 1894Peter and Paul Cathedral Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireSpouseDagmar of Denmark m 1866 wbr IssueDetailNicholas II of Russia Grand Duke Alexander Grand Duke George Grand Duchess Xenia Grand Duke Michael Grand Duchess OlgaNamesAlexander Alexandrovich RomanovHouseRomanov Holstein GottorpFatherAlexander II of RussiaMotherMarie of Hesse and by RhineReligionRussian OrthodoxSignatureDuring his reign Russia fought no major wars as well He therefore came to be known as The Peacemaker Russian Mirotvorec tr Mirotvorets IPA mʲɪrɐˈtvorʲɪt s with that laudatory title enduring into the 21st Century among historians as the Tsar Mirotvorets 3 Outside of politics Alexander was additionally known for his striking appearance with an American historian later noting how he stood out as being a tall heavy set man of enormous muscular strength Alexander s major foreign policy achievement was helping forge the Russo French Alliance and thus directing a major shift in the international relations of Russian society that endured for decades His political legacy represented a direct challenge to the European cultural order set forth by German statesman Otto von Bismarck intermingling Russian influences with the shifting balances of power 4 Alexander s long multifaceted legacy has been commemorated in public installations across multiple nations A notable example outside of Russia is the Pont Alexandre III an ornate arch bridge spanning the Seine in Paris France That installation has received mass attention for over a century Contents 1 Personality 2 Early life 3 As Tsarevich 4 Reign 4 1 Domestic policies 4 2 Foreign policy 4 3 Trade and Industry 4 4 Family life 5 Illness and death 6 Monuments 7 Honours 7 1 Arms 8 Issue 9 Ancestors 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksPersonality edit nbsp Alexander III as Tsesarevich by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky 1865In disposition Alexander bore little resemblance to his soft hearted liberal father and still less to his refined philosophic sentimental chivalrous yet cunning great uncle Emperor Alexander I Although an enthusiastic amateur musician and patron of the ballet Alexander was seen as lacking refinement and elegance Indeed he rather relished the idea of being of the same rough texture as some of his subjects His straightforward abrupt manner savoured sometimes of gruffness while his direct unadorned method of expressing himself harmonized well with his rough hewn immobile features and somewhat sluggish movements His education was not such as to soften these peculiarities 5 Alexander was extremely strong He tore packs of cards in half with his bare hands to entertain his children 6 When the Austrian ambassador in St Petersburg said that Austria would mobilize two or three army corps against Russia he twisted a silver fork into a knot and threw it onto the plate of the ambassador 7 He said That is what I am going to do to your two or three army corps 7 Unlike his extroverted wife Alexander disliked social functions and avoided St Petersburg At palace balls he was impatient for the events to end He would order each musician of the orchestra to leave and turn off the lights until the guests left 7 Alexander was afraid of horses In his childhood he had had an unpleasant experience on a bad tempered mount 8 His wife once convinced him to go on a carriage ride with her As he reluctantly entered the carriage the ponies reared back He immediately left the carriage and no amount of pleading from his wife could convince him to get back in 8 An account from the memoirs of the artist Alexander Benois gives one impression of Alexander III After a performance of the ballet Tsar Kandavl at the Mariinsky Theatre I first caught sight of the Emperor I was struck by the size of the man and although cumbersome and heavy he was still a mighty figure There was indeed something of the muzhik Russian peasant about him The look of his bright eyes made quite an impression on me As he passed where I was standing he raised his head for a second and to this day I can remember what I felt as our eyes met It was a look as cold as steel in which there was something threatening even frightening and it struck me like a blow The Tsar s gaze The look of a man who stood above all others but who carried a monstrous burden and who every minute had to fear for his life and the lives of those closest to him In later years I came into contact with the Emperor on several occasions and I felt not the slightest bit timid In more ordinary cases Tsar Alexander III could be at once kind simple and even almost homely Early life editGrand Duke Alexander Alexandrovich was born on 10 March 1845 at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg Russian Empire the second son and third child of Tsesarevich Alexander Future Alexander II and his first wife Maria Alexandrovna nee Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine He was born during the reign of his grandfather Nicholas I Though he was destined to be a strongly counter reforming emperor Alexander had little prospect of succeeding to the throne during the first two decades of his life as he had an elder brother Nicholas who seemed of robust constitution Even when Nicholas first displayed symptoms of delicate health the notion that he might die young was never taken seriously and he was betrothed to Princess Dagmar of Denmark daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and Queen Louise of Denmark and whose siblings included King Frederik VIII of Denmark Queen Alexandra of the United Kingdom and King George I of Greece Great solicitude was devoted to the education of Nicholas as tsesarevich whereas Alexander received only the training of an ordinary Grand Duke of that period This included acquaintance with French English and German and military drill 9 As Tsarevich edit nbsp Grand painting by artist Georges Becker of the coronation of Emperor Alexander III and Empress Maria Fyodorovna which took place on 27 May O S 15 May 1883 at the Uspensky Sobor of the Moscow Kremlin On the left of the dais can be seen his young son and heir the Tsarevich Nicholas and behind Nicholas can be seen a young Grand Duke George Alexander became tsesarevich upon Nicholas s sudden death in 1865 He had been very close to his older brother and he was devastated by Nicholas passing When he became tsar he reflected that no one had such an impact on my life as my dear brother and friend Nixa Nicholas 10 and lamented that a terrible responsibility fell on my shoulders when Nicholas died As tsesarevich Alexander began to study the principles of law and administration under Konstantin Pobedonostsev then a professor of civil law at Moscow State University and later from 1880 chief procurator of the Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church in Russia Pobedonostsev instilled into the young man s mind the belief that zeal for Russian Orthodox thought was an essential factor of Russian patriotism to be cultivated by every right minded emperor While he was heir apparent from 1865 to 1881 Alexander did not play a prominent part in public affairs but allowed it to become known that he had ideas which did not coincide with the principles of the existing government 9 On his deathbed Nicholas allegedly expressed the wish that his fiancee Princess Dagmar of Denmark should marry Alexander 9 Alexander s parents encouraged the match On 2 June 1866 Alexander went to Copenhagen to visit Dagmar When they were looking at photographs of the deceased Nicholas Alexander proposed to Dagmar 11 On 9 November O S 28 October 1866 in the Grand Church of the Winter Palace in St Petersburg Alexander wed Dagmar who converted to Orthodox Christianity and took the name Maria Feodorovna The union proved a happy one to the end unlike nearly all of his predecessors since Peter I there was no adultery in his marriage The couple spent their wedding night at the Tsarevich s private dacha known as My Property Alexander and his father became estranged due to their different political views In 1870 Alexander II supported Prussia in the Franco Prussian War which angered the younger Alexander Influenced by his Danish wife Dagmar Alexander criticized the shortsighted government for helping the Prussian pigs 12 Alexander resented his father for having a long standing relationship with Princess Catherine Dolgorukova with whom he had several illegitimate children while his mother the Empress was suffering from chronic ill health 13 Two days after Empress Marie died his father told him I shall live as I wish and my union with Princess Dolgorukova is definite but assured him that your rights will be safeguarded 14 Alexander was furious over his father s decision to marry Catherine a month after his mother s death which he believed forever ruined all the dear good memories of family life 15 His father threatened to disinherit him if he left court out of protest against the marriage 16 He privately denounced Catherine as the outsider and complained that she was designing and immature 17 After his father s assassination he reflected that his father s marriage to Catherine had caused the tragedy All the scum burst out and swallowed all that was holy The guardian angel flew away and everything turned to ashes finally culminating in the dreadful incomprehensible 1 March 18 Reign editOn 13 March 1881 N S Alexander s father Alexander II was assassinated by members of the extremist organization Narodnaya Volya As a result Alexander ascended to the Russian imperial throne in Nennal He and Maria Feodorovna were officially crowned and anointed at the Assumption Cathedral in Moscow on 27 May 1883 Alexander s ascension to the throne was followed by an outbreak of anti Jewish riots 19 20 21 22 Alexander III disliked the extravagance of the rest of his family It was also expensive for the Crown to pay so many grand dukes each year Each one received an annual salary of 250 000 rubles and grand duchesses received a dowry of a million when they married He limited the title of grand duke and duchess to only children and male line grandchildren of emperors The rest would bear a princely title and the style of Serene Highness He also forbade morganatic marriages as well as those outside of the Orthodoxy 23 Domestic policies edit nbsp Alexander receiving rural district elders in the yard of Petrovsky Palace in Moscow painting by Ilya RepinOn the day of his assassination Alexander II signed an ukaz setting up consultative commissions to advise the monarch On ascending to the throne however Alexander III took Pobedonostsev s advice and cancelled the policy before its publication He made it clear that his autocracy would not be limited All of Alexander III s internal reforms aimed to reverse the liberalization that had occurred in his father s reign The new Emperor believed that remaining true to Russian Orthodoxy Autocracy and Nationality the ideology introduced by his grandfather Emperor Nicholas I would save Russia from revolutionary agitation citation needed nbsp Photograph about arriving of Alexander III at the Fontell House also known as The House of Emperor for the first time on August 4 1885 in Lappeenranta Finland Alexander weakened the power of the zemstvo elective local administrative bodies and placed the administration of peasant communes under the supervision of land owning proprietors appointed by his government land captains zemskiye nachalniki These acts weakened the nobility and the peasantry and brought Imperial administration under the Emperor s personal control In such policies Alexander III followed the advice of Konstantin Pobedonostsev who retained control of the Church in Russia through his long tenure as Procurator of the Holy Synod from 1880 to 1905 and who became tutor to Alexander s son and heir Nicholas Pobedonostsev appears as Toporov in Tolstoy s novel Resurrection citation needed Other conservative advisors included Count D A Tolstoy minister of education and later of internal affairs and I N Durnovo D A Tolstoy s successor in the latter post Mikhail Katkov and other journalists supported the emperor in his autocracy citation needed nbsp 5 ruble coin of Alexander III 1888The Russian famine of 1891 92 which caused 375 000 to 500 000 deaths and the ensuing cholera epidemic permitted some liberal activity as the Russian government could not cope with the crisis and had to allow zemstvos to help with relief among others Leo Tolstoy helped with relief efforts on his estate and through the British press 24 and Chekhov directed anti cholera precautions in several villages citation needed Alexander had the political goal of Russification which involved homogenizing the language and religion of Russia s people He implemented changes such as teaching only the Russian language in Russian schools in Germany Poland and Finland He also patronized Eastern Orthodoxy and destroyed German Polish and Swedish cultural and religious institutions 25 Alexander was hostile to Jews his reign witnessed a sharp deterioration in the Jews economic social and political condition His policy was eagerly implemented by tsarist officials in the May Laws of 1882 These laws encouraged open anti Jewish sentiment and dozens of pogroms across the western part of the empire As a result many Jews emigrated to Western Europe and the United States 26 They banned Jews from inhabiting rural areas and shtetls even within the Pale of Settlement and restricted the occupations in which they could engage 27 28 Encouraged by its successful assassination of Alexander II the Narodnaya Volya movement began planning the murder of Alexander III The Okhrana uncovered the plot and five of the conspirators including Aleksandr Ulyanov the older brother of Vladimir Lenin were captured and hanged in May 1887 Foreign policy edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Borki Cathedral was one of many churches built to commemorate the Tsar s miraculous survival in the 1888 train crashMain article Foreign policy of the Russian Empire The general negative consensus about the tsar s foreign policy follows the conclusions of the British Prime Minister Lord Salisbury in 1885 It is very difficult to come to any satisfactory conclusion as to the real objects of Russian policy I am more inclined to believe there are none that the Emperor is really his own Minister and so bad a Minister that no consequent or coherent policy is pursued but that each influential person military or civil snatches from him as opportunity offers the decisions which such person at the moment wants and that the mutual effect of these decisions on each other is determined almost exclusively by chance 29 30 In foreign affairs Alexander III was a man of peace but not at any price and held that the best means of averting war is to be well prepared for it Diplomat Nikolay Girs scion of a rich and powerful family served as his Foreign Minister from 1882 to 1895 and established the peaceful policies for which Alexander has been given credit citation needed Girs was an architect of the Franco Russian Alliance of 1891 which was later expanded into the Triple Entente with the addition of Great Britain That alliance brought France out of diplomatic isolation and moved Russia from the German orbit to a coalition with France one that was strongly supported by French financial assistance to Russia s economic modernisation citation needed Girs was in charge of a diplomacy that featured numerous negotiated settlements treaties and conventions These agreements defined Russian boundaries and restored equilibrium to dangerously unstable situations The most dramatic success came in 1885 settling long standing tensions with Great Britain which was fearful that Russian expansion to the south would be a threat to India 31 Girs was usually successful in restraining the aggressive inclinations of Tsar Alexander convincing him that the very survival of the Tsarist system depended on avoiding major wars With a deep insight into the tsar s moods and views Girs was usually able to shape the final decisions by outmaneuvering hostile journalists ministers and even the Tsarina as well as his own ambassadors nbsp Alexander III and French President Marie Francois Sadi Carnot forge an allianceThough Alexander was indignant at the conduct of German chancellor Otto von Bismarck towards Russia he avoided an open rupture with Germany even reviving the League of Three Emperors for a period of time and in 1887 signed the Reinsurance Treaty with the Germans However in 1890 the expiration of the treaty coincided with the dismissal of Bismarck by the new German emperor Kaiser Wilhelm II for whom the Tsar had an immense dislike and the unwillingness of Wilhelm II s government to renew the treaty In response Alexander III then began cordial relations with France eventually entering into an alliance with the French in 1892 32 Despite chilly relations with Berlin the Tsar nevertheless confined himself to keeping a large number of troops near the German frontier With regard to Bulgaria he exercised similar self control The efforts of Prince Alexander and afterwards of Stambolov to destroy Russian influence in the principality roused his indignation but he vetoed all proposals to intervene by force of arms 33 In Central Asian affairs he followed the traditional policy of gradually extending Russian domination without provoking conflict with the United Kingdom see Panjdeh incident and he never allowed the bellicose partisans of a forward policy to get out of hand His reign cannot be regarded as an eventful period of Russian history but under his hard rule the country made considerable progress 34 nbsp Alexander III and Maria Feodorovna in the family circle on the porch of his home in Langinkoski Finland in summer 1889 Alexander and his wife regularly spent their summers at Langinkoski manor along the Kymi River near Kotka on the Finnish coast where their children were immersed in a Scandinavian lifestyle of relative modesty Alexander rejected foreign influence German influence in particular thus the adoption of local national principles was deprecated in all spheres of official activity with a view to realizing his ideal of a Russia homogeneous in language administration and religion citation needed These ideas conflicted with those of his father who had German sympathies despite being a patriot Alexander II often used the German language in his private relations occasionally ridiculed the Slavophiles and based his foreign policy on the Prussian alliance 9 nbsp Alexander III and Nicholas II on French stamps c 1896Some differences between father and son had first appeared during the Franco Prussian War when Alexander II supported the cabinet of Berlin while the Tsesarevich made no effort to conceal his sympathies for the French citation needed These sentiments would resurface during 1875 1879 when the Eastern question excited Russian society At first the Tsesarevich was more Slavophile than the Russian government how However his phlegmatic nature restrained him from many exaggerations and any popular illusions he may have imbibed were dispelled by personal observation in Bulgaria where he commanded the left wing of the invading army Never consulted on political questions Alexander confined himself to military duties and fulfilled them in a conscientious and unobtrusive manner After many mistakes and disappointments the army reached Constantinople and the Treaty of San Stefano was signed but much that had been obtained by that important document had to be sacrificed at the Congress of Berlin 9 Bismarck failed to do what was expected of him by the Russian emperor In return for the Russian support which had enabled him to create the German Empire 35 it was thought that he would help Russia to solve the Eastern question in accordance with Russian interests but to the surprise and indignation of the cabinet of Saint Petersburg he confined himself to acting the part of honest broker at the Congress and shortly afterwards contracted an alliance with Austria Hungary for the purpose of counteracting Russian designs in Eastern Europe 9 The Tsesarevich could refer to these results as confirmation of the views he had expressed during the Franco Prussian War he concluded that for Russia the best thing was to recover as quickly as possible from her temporary exhaustion and prepare for future contingencies by military and naval reorganization In accordance with this conviction he suggested that certain reforms should be introduced 9 Trade and Industry edit Alexander III took initiatives to stimulate the development of trade and industry as his father did before him Russia s economy was still challenged by the Russian Turkish war of 1877 1878 which created a deficit so he imposed customs duties on imported goods To further alleviate the budget deficit he implemented increased frugality and accounting in state finances Industrial development increased during his reign 36 Also during his reign construction of the Trans Siberian Railway was started 37 Family life edit nbsp Left to Right Emperor Alexander III Prince George later George V of the United Kingdom Marie Feodorovna Maria of Greece Tsesarevich Nicholas later Emperor Nicholas II of Russia Probably taken on the imperial yacht near Denmark c 1893 Following his father s assassination Alexander III was advised that it would be difficult for him to be kept safe at the Winter Palace As a result Alexander relocated his family to the Gatchina Palace located 30 kilometres 20 mi south of St Petersburg The palace was surrounded by moats watch towers and trenches and soldiers were on guard night and day 38 Under heavy guard he would make occasional visits into St Petersburg but even then he would stay in the Anichkov Palace as opposed to the Winter Palace citation needed Alexander resented having to take refuge at Gatchina Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia remembered hearing Alexander say To think that after having faced the guns of the Turks I must retreat now before these skunks 39 In the 1860s Alexander fell in love with his mother s lady in waiting Princess Maria Elimovna Meshcherskaya Dismayed to learn that Prince zu Sayn Wittgenstein Sayn had proposed to her in early 1866 he told his parents that he was prepared to give up his rights of succession in order to marry his beloved Dusenka On 19 May 1866 Alexander II informed his son that Russia had come to an agreement with the parents of Princess Dagmar of Denmark the fiancee of his late elder brother Nicholas Initially Alexander refused to travel to Copenhagen because he wanted to marry Maria Enraged Alexander II ordered him to go straight to Denmark and propose to Princess Dagmar Alexander wrote in his diary Farewell dear Dusenka Despite his initial reluctance Alexander grew fond of Dagmar By the end of his life they loved each other deeply A few weeks after their wedding he wrote in his diary God grant that I may love my darling wife more and more I often feel that I am not worthy of her but even if this was true I will do my best to be 40 When she left his side he missed her bitterly and complained My sweet darling Minny for five years we ve never been apart and Gatchina is empty and sad without you 41 In 1885 he commissioned Peter Carl Faberge to produce the first of what were to become a series of jeweled Easter eggs now called Faberge eggs for her as an Easter gift Dagmar was so delighted by the First Hen egg that Alexander gave her an egg every year as an Easter tradition After Alexander died his heir Nicholas continued the tradition and commissioned two eggs one for his wife Empress Alexandra Feodorovna and one for his mother Dagmar every Easter When she nursed him in his final illness Alexander told Dagmar Even before my death I have got to known an angel 42 He died in Dagmar s arms and his daughter Olga noted that my mother still held him in her arms long after he died 43 Alexander had six children by Dagmar five of whom survived into adulthood Nicholas b 1868 George b 1871 Xenia b 1875 Michael b 1878 and Olga b 1882 He told Dagmar that only with our children can I relax mentally enjoy them and rejoice looking at them 44 He wrote in his diary that he was crying like a baby 45 when Dagmar gave birth to their first child Nicholas He was much more lenient with his children than most European monarchs and he told their tutors I do not need porcelain I want normal healthy Russian children 46 General Cherevin believed that the clever George was the favourite of both parents Alexander enjoyed a more informal relationship with his youngest son Michael and doted on his youngest daughter Olga Alexander was concerned that his heir apparent Nicholas was too gentle and naive to become an effective Emperor When Witte suggested that Nicholas participate in the Trans Siberian Committee Alexander said Have you ever tried to discuss anything of consequence with His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke Don t tell me you never noticed the Grand Duke is an absolute child His opinions are utterly childish How could he preside over such a committee 47 He was worried that Nicholas had no experiences with women and arranged for the Polish ballerina Mathilde Kschessinskaya to become his son s mistress 48 Even at the end of his life he considered Nicholas a child and told him I can t imagine you as a fiance how strange and unusual 49 nbsp Alexander and his wife Empress Maria Fyodorovna on holiday in Copenhagen in 1893 Each summer his parents in law King Christian IX and Queen Louise held family reunions at the Danish royal palaces of Fredensborg and Bernstorff bringing Alexander Maria and their children to Denmark 50 His sister in law the Princess of Wales would come from Great Britain with some of her children and his brother in law and cousin in law King George I of Greece his wife Queen Olga who was a first cousin of Alexander and a Romanov Grand Duchess by birth came with their children from Athens 50 In contrast to the strict security observed in Russia Alexander and Maria revelled in the relative freedom that they enjoyed in Denmark Alexander once commenting to the Prince and Princess of Wales near the end of a visit that he envied them being able to return to a happy home in England while he was returning to his Russian prison 51 In Denmark he was able to enjoy joining his children nephews and nieces in muddy ponds looking for tadpoles sneaking into his father in law s orchard to steal apples and playing pranks such as turning a water hose on the visiting King Oscar II of Sweden 51 Alexander had an extremely poor relationship with his brother Grand Duke Vladimir At a restaurant Grand Duke Vladimir had a brawl with the French actor Lucien Guitry when the latter kissed his wife Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg Schwerin 52 The prefect of St Petersburg needed to escort Vladimir out of the restaurant 52 Alexander was so furious that he temporarily exiled Vladimir and his wife and threatened to exile them permanently to Siberia if they did not leave immediately 52 When Alexander and his family survived the Borki train disaster in 1888 Alexander joked I can imagine how disappointed Vladimir is going to be when he learns that we all stayed alive 53 This tension was reflected in the rivalry between Maria Feodorovna and Vladimir s wife Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna 54 Alexander had better relationships with his other brothers Alexei who he made rear admiral and then a grand admiral of the Russian Navy Sergei who he made governor of Moscow and Paul Despite the antipathy that Alexander had towards his stepmother Catherine Dolgorukov he nevertheless allowed her to remain in the Winter Palace for some time after his father s assassination and to retain various keepsakes of him These included Alexander II s blood soaked uniform that he died wearing and his reading glasses 55 Even though he disliked their mother Alexander was kind to his half siblings His youngest half sister Princess Catherine Alexandrovna Yurievskaya remembered when he would play with her and her siblings The Emperor seemed a playful and kind Goliath among all the romping children 56 On 29 October O S 17 October 1888 the Imperial train derailed in an accident at Borki At the moment of the crash the imperial family was in the dining car Its roof collapsed and Alexander held its remains on his shoulders as the children fled outdoors The onset of Alexander s kidney failure was later attributed to the blunt trauma suffered in this incident 57 self published source Illness and death edit nbsp Alexander III in the uniform of the Danish Royal Life Guards 1894In 1894 Alexander III became ill with terminal kidney disease nephritis His first cousin Queen Olga of Greece offered him to stay at her villa Mon Repos on the island of Corfu in the hope that it might improve the Tsar s condition 58 By the time that they reached Crimea they stayed at the Maly Palace in Livadia as Alexander was too weak to travel any farther 59 Recognizing that the Tsar s days were numbered various imperial relatives began to descend on Livadia Clergyman John of Kronstadt paid a visit and administered Communion to the Tsar 60 On 21 October Alexander received Nicholas s fiancee Princess Alix of Hesse Darmstadt who had come from her native Darmstadt to receive the Tsar s blessing 61 Despite being exceedingly weak Alexander insisted on receiving Alix in full dress uniform an event that left him exhausted 62 Soon after his health began to deteriorate more rapidly He died in the arms of his wife and in the presence of his physician Ernst Viktor von Leyden at Maly Palace in Livadia on the afternoon of 1 November O S 20 October 1894 at the age of forty nine and was succeeded by his eldest son Tsesarevich Nicholas who took the throne as Nicholas II After leaving Livadia on 6 November and traveling to St Petersburg by way of Moscow his remains were interred on 18 November at the Peter and Paul Fortress with his funeral being attended by numerous foreign relatives including King Christian IX of Denmark the Prince and Princess of Wales and Duke of York and Duke and Duchess of Saxe Coburg Gotha and his daughter in law to be Alix of Hesse and her brother Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse Monuments edit nbsp The equestrian statue of Alexander III by Prince Paolo Troubetzkoy shows the Emperor sitting heavily on the back of a ponderous horse nbsp Memorial dedicated to Alexander III in Pullapaa EstoniaIn 1909 a bronze equestrian statue of Alexander III sculpted by Paolo Troubetzkoy was placed in Znamenskaya Square in front of the Moscow Rail Terminal in St Petersburg Both the horse and rider were sculpted in massive form leading to the nickname of hippopotamus Troubetzkoy envisioned the statue as a caricature jesting that he wished to portray an animal atop another animal and it was quite controversial at the time with many including the members of the Imperial Family opposed to the design but it was approved because the Empress Dowager unexpectedly liked the monument Following the Revolution of 1917 the statue remained in place as a symbol of tsarist autocracy until 1937 when it was placed in storage In 1994 it was again put on public display although in a different place in front of the Marble Palace 63 Another pre revolutionary memorial is located in the city of Irkutsk at the Angara embankment For Alexander s role in forging the Franco Russian Alliance the French Republic commissioned a bridge named in his honour Pont Alexandre III It was opened by his son Nicholas II and exists to this day On 18 November 2017 Vladimir Putin unveiled a bronze monument to Alexander III on the site of the former Maly Livadia Palace in Crimea The four meter monument by Russian sculptor Andrey Kovalchuk depicts Alexander III sitting on a stump his stretched arms resting on a sabre An inscription says Russia has only two allies the Army and the Navy although historians dispute whether the Tsar actually said those words 64 65 Alexander III is believed to be one of Putin s admired historic leaders along with Joseph Stalin 66 On 5 June 2021 he unveiled another monument to Alexander on the site of Gatchina Palace Leningrad Oblast 67 Honours editDomestic 68 self published source Knight of St Andrew 10 March 1845 Knight of St Alexander Nevsky 10 March 1845 Knight of St Anna 1st Class 10 March 1845 Knight of the White Eagle 10 March 1845 Knight of St Vladimir 4th Class 1864 3rd Class 1870 Knight of St Stanislaus 1st Class 1865 Knight of St George 2nd Class 1877Foreign 68 nbsp Austrian Empire Grand Cross of the Royal Hungarian Order of St Stephen 1866 69 nbsp Baden 70 Knight of the House Order of Fidelity 1872 Grand Cross of the Zahringer Lion 1872 nbsp Kingdom of Bavaria Knight of St Hubert 1865 71 nbsp Belgium Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold military 7 June 1865 72 nbsp Empire of Brazil Grand Cross of the Southern Cross 14 January 1866 Grand Cross of the Order of Pedro I 15 September 1868 nbsp Principality of Bulgaria Order of Bravery 1st Class 73 nbsp Denmark 74 Knight of the Elephant 29 June 1865 Cross of Honour of the Order of the Dannebrog 3 July 1866 Grand Commander of the Dannebrog 9 November 1891 Commemorative Medal for the Golden Wedding of King Christian IX and Queen Louise 1892 nbsp nbsp nbsp Ernestine duchies Grand Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order 1884 75 nbsp France Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 9 June 1878 76 nbsp Kingdom of Greece Grand Cross of the Redeemer 15 July 1866 nbsp Kingdom of Hawaii Grand Cross of the Order of Kamehameha I 1881 77 nbsp Kingdom of Hanover 78 Knight of St George 1865 Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order 1865 nbsp Grand Duchy of Hesse Grand Cross of the Ludwig Order 8 June 1857 79 nbsp Kingdom of Italy Knight of the Annunciation 5 July 1865 80 nbsp Sovereign Military Order of Malta Bailiff Grand Cross of Honour and Devotion 12 January 1876 nbsp Empire of Japan Grand Cordon of the Rising Sun 28 August 1879 Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum 20 May 1880 81 nbsp Mecklenburg Grand Cross of the Wendish Crown with Crown in Ore 4 July 1865 82 Cross for Distinction in War Strelitz 3 December 1877 nbsp Mexican Empire Grand Cross of the Mexican Eagle with Collar 10 April 1866 nbsp Monaco Grand Cross of St Charles 14 August 1883 83 nbsp Principality of Montenegro Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Danilo I 4 January 1867 nbsp Netherlands Grand Cross of the Netherlands Lion 19 May 1865 Grand Cross of the Military William Order 17 March 1881 84 nbsp Oldenburg Grand Cross of the Order of Duke Peter Friedrich Ludwig with Golden Crown 28 July 1860 85 nbsp Ottoman Empire Order of Osmanieh 1st Class 1 April 1866 Order of Distinction 3 December 1884 nbsp Kingdom of Portugal 86 Grand Cross of the Tower and Sword 22 June 1865 Grand Cross of the Sash of the Two Orders 1 May 1873 Three Orders 25 May 1881 nbsp Persian Empire Order of the August Portrait 15 December 1869 nbsp Kingdom of Prussia 87 Knight of the Black Eagle 10 March 1855 with Collar 1868 Grand Commander s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern 25 September 1872 Pour le Merite military 27 December 1877 nbsp Kingdom of Romania Grand Cross of the Star of Romania 15 November 1877 Military Virtue Medal 17 January 1878 Crossing of the Danube Cross military 10 May 1879 nbsp Kingdom of Saxony Knight of the Rue Crown 1866 88 nbsp Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the White Falcon 3 October 1864 89 nbsp Principality of Serbia Grand Cross of the Cross of Takovo 26 March 1878 Bronze Commemorative Medal for the Russo Turkish War 17 April 1878 Grand Cross of the White Eagle 29 April 1883 nbsp Siam Knight of the Order of the Royal House of Chakri 15 July 1891 nbsp Spain Knight of the Golden Fleece 6 September 1865 90 nbsp nbsp Sweden Norway Knight of the Seraphim 2 June 1865 91 Grand Cross of St Olav 25 August 1879 92 nbsp United Kingdom Stranger Knight Companion of the Garter 2 April 1881 93 nbsp Wurttemberg Grand Cross of the Wurttemberg Crown 1864 94 Arms edit nbsp Lesser Coat of Arms of the Russian EmpireIssue edit nbsp Alexander III with his wife and their childrenAlexander III had six children five of whom survived to adulthood of his marriage with Princess Dagmar of Denmark also known as Marie Feodorovna Note all dates prior to 1918 are in the Old Style Calendar Name Birth Death NotesEmperor Nicholas II of Russia 18 May 1868 17 July 1918 married 26 November 1894 Princess Alix of Hesse 1872 1918 had five childrenGrand Duke Alexander Alexandrovich of Russia 7 June 1869 2 May 1870 died of meningitis aged 10 months and 26 daysGrand Duke George Alexandrovich of Russia 9 May 1871 10 July 1899 died of tuberculosis aged 28 had no issueGrand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia 6 April 1875 20 April 1960 married 6 August 1894 Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia 1866 1933 had seven childrenGrand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia 4 December 1878 13 June 1918 married 16 October 1912 Natalia Sergeyevna Wulfert 1880 1952 had one childGrand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia 13 June 1882 24 November 1960 married 9 August 1901 Duke Peter Alexandrovich of Oldenburg 1868 1924 div 16 October 1916 had no issue married 16 November 1916 Colonel Nikolai Kulikovsky 1881 1958 had two childrenAncestors editAncestors of Alexander III of Russia8 Paul I of Russia4 Nicholas I of Russia9 Duchess Sophie Dorothea of Wurttemburg2 Alexander II of Russia10 Frederick William III of Prussia5 Princess Charlotte of Prussia11 Duchess Louise of Mecklenburg Strelitz1 Alexander III of Russia12 Louis I Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine6 Louis II Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine13 Princess Louise of Hesse Darmstadt3 Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine14 Charles Louis Hereditary Prince of Baden7 Princess Wilhelmine of Baden15 Princess Amalie of Hesse DarmstadtSee also edit nbsp History portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Russia portalRussian America Tsars of Russia family tree List of Russian monarchs Emperor of all the Russias President of the Soviet UnionReferences edit 10 March O S 26 February 1845 1 November O S 20 October 1894 13 March O S 1 March 1881 1 November O S 20 October 1894 Fedyashin Anton 2023 Book Review Istoriia rossiiskogo gosudarstva Tsar osvoboditel i tsar mirotvorets Lekarstvo dlia imperii History of the Russian State The Tsar Liberator and the Tsar Peacemaker Medicine for the Empire by Boris Akunin European History Quarterly 53 4 698 700 doi 10 1177 02656914231199945a S2CID 263705950 Kennan George F 1979 The Decline of Bismarck s European Order Princeton University Press doi 10 2307 j ctv141649s JSTOR j ctv141649s S2CID 241648947 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Wallace 1911 pp 561 562 John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 101 a b c John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 132 a b John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 133 a b c d e f g Wallace 1911 p 562 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 407 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 409 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 415 Van Der Kiste John The Romanovs 1818 1959 Sutton Publishing 2003 p 94 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 441 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 442 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 445 John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 86 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 451 ALEXANDER III ALEXANDROVICH Emperor of Russia JewishEncyclopedia com www jewishencyclopedia com Die Judenverfolgung in Russland in der Kronungswoche in German Das interessante Blatt 7 June 1883 Rioting and Politics in Russia The New York Times 1 June 1883 YIVO Pogroms www yivoencyclopedia org Sebag Montefiore p 668 Kelly Luke November 2016 British humanitarianism and the Russian famine 1891 2 Historical Research 89 246 824 845 doi 10 1111 1468 2281 12140 via EBSCO Florinsky Michael T 6 March 2019 Alexander III Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica inc Retrieved 5 September 2019 I Michael Aronson The Attitudes of Russian Officials in the 1880s toward Jewish Assimilation and Emigration Slavic Review 34 1 1975 1 18 online This day May 15 in Jewish history Cleveland Jewish News Archived from the original on 19 May 2014 Retrieved 18 May 2014 I Michael Aronson The Prospects for the Emancipation of Russian Jewry during the 1880s Slavonic and East European Review 1977 348 369 online Margaret Maxwell A Re examination of the Role of N K Giers as Russian Foreign Minister under Alexander III pp 352 53 S C M Paine 1996 Imperial Rivals China Russia and Their Disputed Frontier M E Sharpe p 248 ISBN 9781563247248 Raymond A Mohl Confrontation in Central Asia 1885 History Today 1969 119 3 pp 176 183 Van Der Kiste John The Romanovs 1818 1959 Sutton Publishing 2003 p 162 Charles Jelavich Russo Bulgarian relations 1892 1896 with particular reference to the problem of the bulgarian succession Journal of Modern History 24 4 1952 341 351 Online Wallace 1911 p 563 Baynes Thomas Spencer 1902 The Encyclopaedia Britannica A Dictionary of Arts Sciences and General Literature Little Brown p 260 The Economical Policy of Alexander III Retrieved 14 August 2020 The Trans Siberian Railway History Today Carolly Erickson Alexandra The Last Tsarina p 19 Alexander Mikhailovich Once a Grand Duke p 65 Julia P Gelardi From Splendor to Revolution p 29 Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs p 459 The Romanovs p 483 The Romanovs p 484 The Romanovs p 460 Miranda Carter George Nicholas and Wilhelm Three Royal Cousins and the Road to World War I p 54 John Curtis Perry The Flight of the Romanovs p 54 The Romanovs p 475 The Romanovs p 477 The Romanovs p 479 a b Van Der Kiste John The Romanovs 1818 1959 Sutton Publishing 2003 p 151 a b Van Der Kiste p 152 a b c John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 121 Julia P Gelardi From Splendor to Revolution p 128 Van Der Kiste p 141 Van Der Kiste p 118 Van Der Kiste p 119 Scott Malsom Diaries and Letters Alexander III Alexander Palace Time Machine Retrieved 1 February 2018 King Greg The Court of the Last Tsar Pomp Power and Pageantry in the Reign of Nicholas II John Wiley amp Sons 2006 p 325 King p 325 John Perry amp Constantine Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs a Family Saga Basic Books 1999 p 62 King p 326 King p 327 Figes Orlando 1997 A People s Tragedy Pimlico p 15 ISBN 0 7126 7327 X Putin unveils monument to Russia s Tsar Alexander III in Crimea TASS 18 November 2017 Retrieved 19 November 2017 Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia Alexander Mikhailovich 1933 Book of Memories Illustrated Russia Retrieved 12 May 2021 Torbakov Igor 12 January 2018 The Royal Role Model Historical Revisionism in Russia Eurasianet Retrieved 9 April 2021 Unveiling of monument to Emperor Alexander III Kremlin ru 5 June 2021 a b Russian Imperial Army Emperor Alexander III of Russia Archived 17 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine In Russian A Szent Istvan Rend tagjai Archived 22 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogtum Baden 1876 Grossherzogliche Orden pp 58 71 Bayern 1867 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Konigreichs Bayern 1867 Landesamt p 10 Liste des Membres de l Ordre de Leopold Almanach Royal Officiel in French 1866 p 52 via Archives de Bruxelles Knights of the Order of Bravery in Bulgarian Bille Hansen A C Holck Harald eds 1894 1st pub 1801 Statshaandbog for Kongeriget Danmark for Aaret 1894 State Manual of the Kingdom of Denmark for the Year 1894 PDF Kongelig Dansk Hof og Statskalender in Danish Copenhagen J H Schultz A S Universitetsbogtrykkeri pp 3 6 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 16 September 2019 via da DIS Danmark Staatshandbucher fur das Herzogtum Sachsen Coburg und Gotha 1890 Herzogliche Sachsen Ernestinischer Hausorden p 46 M amp B Wattel 2009 Les Grand Croix de la Legion d honneur de 1805 a nos jours Titulaires francais et etrangers Paris Archives amp Culture p 516 ISBN 978 2 35077 135 9 Kalakaua to his sister 12 July 1881 quoted in Greer Richard A editor 1967 The Royal Tourist Kalakaua s Letters Home from Tokio to London Archived 19 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Hawaiian Journal of History vol 5 p 96 Staat Hannover 1865 Hof und Staatshandbuch fur das Konigreich Hannover 1865 Berenberg pp 38 81 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogtum Hessen 1879 Grossherzogliche Orden und Ehrenzeichen p 11 Calendario reale per l anno 1887 Vincenzo Bona Torino 1886 p 136 刑部芳則 2017 明治時代の勲章外交儀礼 PDF in Japanese 明治聖徳記念学会紀要 p 143 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Grossherzogliche Orden und Ehrenzeichen Hof und Staatshandbuch des Grossherzogtums Mecklenburg Strelitz 1878 in German Neustrelitz Druck und Debit der Buchdruckerei von G F Spalding und Sohn 1878 p 11 Sovereign Ordonnance of 14 August 1883 Militaire Willems Orde Romanov Aleksandr III Nikolajevitsj Military William Order Romanov Alexander III Alexandrovich Ministerie van Defensie in Dutch 17 March 1881 Retrieved 12 March 2016 Staat Oldenburg 1873 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Grossherzogtums Oldenburg fur 1872 73 Schulze p 29 Braganca Jose Vicente de Estrela Paulo Jorge 2017 Troca de Decoracoes entre os Reis de Portugal e os Imperadores da Russia Exchange of Decorations between the Kings of Portugal and the Emperors of Russia Pro Phalaris in Portuguese 16 10 Retrieved 19 March 2020 Koniglich Preussische Ordensliste Preussische Ordens Liste in German Berlin 1 5 15 934 1886 Staatshandbuch fur den Freistaat Sachsen 1867 in German Konigliche Ritter Orden p 4 Staatshandbuch fur das Grossherzogtum Sachsen Sachsen Weimar Eisenach 1869 Grossherzogliche Hausorden p 12 Archived 8 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine Caballeros de la insigne orden del toison de oro Guia Oficial de Espana in Spanish 1887 p 146 Retrieved 21 March 2019 Sveriges och Norges Statskalender in Swedish 1866 p 435 retrieved 20 February 2019 via runeberg org Norges Statskalender in Norwegian 1890 p 595 retrieved 6 January 2018 via runeberg org Shaw Wm A 1906 The Knights of England I London p 66 Wurttemberg 1866 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreichs Wurttemberg 1866 p 31 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Wallace Donald Mackenzie 1911 Alexander III In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 561 563 Bibliography editSee also Bibliography of Russian history 1613 1917 Dorpalen Andreas Tsar Alexander III and the Boulanger Crisis in France Journal of Modern History 23 2 1951 122 136 online Etty John Alexander III Tsar of Russia 1881 1889 History Review 60 2008 1 5 online Hutchinson John F Late Imperial Russia 1890 1917 Lincoln W Bruce The Romanovs autocrats of all the Russias 1981 online free to borrow Lowe Charles Alexander III of Russia 1895 online free full length old biography Nelipa M Alexander III His Life and Reign m 2014 Gilbert s Books Polunov A Iu Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev Man and Politician Russian Studies in History 39 4 2001 8 32 online dead link by a leading scholar Polunov A Iu The Orthodox Church in the Baltic Region and the Policies of Alexander Ill s Government Russian Studies in History 39 4 2001 66 76 online dead link Suny Ronald Grigor Rehabilitating Tsarism The Imperial Russian State and Its Historians A Review Article Comparative Studies in Society and History 31 1 1989 pp 168 179 online Thomson Oliver Romanovs Europe s Most Obsessive Dynasty 2008 ch 13 Whelan Heide W Alexander III amp the State Council bureaucracy amp counter reform in late imperial Russia Rutgers UP 1982 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alexander III of Russia nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Alexander III of Russia Alexander III Historical photos A short biography Romanovs The eighth film Alexander III Nicholas II on YouTube Historical reconstruction The Romanovs StarMedia Babich Design Russia 2013 Alexander III of RussiaHouse of Holstein Gottorp RomanovCadet branch of the House of OldenburgBorn 10 March 1845 Died 1 November 1894Regnal titlesPreceded byAlexander II Emperor of RussiaGrand Duke of Finland1881 1894 Succeeded byNicholas II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander III of Russia amp oldid 1207853600, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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