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Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg-Strelitz

Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (Russian: Георгий Георгиевич Мекленбург-Стрелицкий; 6 June 1859 – 5 December 1909) was the eldest of the two surviving sons of Duke Georg August of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and of Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia. He was a great-grandson of Emperor Paul and a cousin of Emperor Alexander III of Russia. Although he was a German prince of the House of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, he was raised in Imperial Russia, where he lived all his life.

Duke Georg Alexander
Born(1859-06-06)6 June 1859
Remplin, Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
Died5 December 1909(1909-12-05) (aged 50)
St. Petersburg
SpouseNatalia Feodorovna Vanljarskya
IssueCountess Catherine of Carlow
Countess Maria of Carlow
Countess Natalia of Carlow
George, Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
Names
Georg Alexander Michael Friedrich Wilhelm Franz Karl
HouseMecklenburg-Strelitz
FatherDuke Georg August of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
MotherGrand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia

He followed a career as an officer in the Russian army and was Major General, Commander of the Life Guard Dragoon Regiment. Georg Alexander was a music lover, a skillful cellist and composer. In 1896 he formed a private string quartet called the Mecklenburg Quartet. He contracted a morganatic marriage and his rights and inheritance passed to his younger brother Charles Michael, Duke of Mecklenburg. His four children received the title of Counts of Carlow, but after Duke Georg Alexander's death, his unmarried brother adopted his son Georg, Count of Carlow, who became the heir to the House of Mecklenburg-Strelitz in 1934.

Early life

 
Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia surrounded by her children: Helene, Georg Alexander and Karl Michael.

Georg Alexander Michael Friedrich Wilhelm Franz Carl of Mecklenburg-Strelitz was born on 6 June  [O.S. 25 May] 1859 at Remplin,[1] a family estate acquired by his parents in Mecklenburg shortly before his birth.[2] His father, Duke Georg August of Mecklenburg (1824–1876), was the second son of Grand Duke Georg of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. His mother, Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia, was a granddaughter of Emperor Paul I of Russia. Although Duke Georg Alexander was, by birth, a German prince of the house of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, his father had settled in Russia within his wife’s family.[3] Georg and his siblings were raised in Russia, but kept the Lutheran religion of his paternal ancestors. He was known in Russia as George Georgievich jr, to distinguish him from his father who had the same name and patronymic.[4]

He received a military education and followed a career in the Russian service. Raised in the Mikhailovsky Palace, the household of his maternal grandmother Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, he took a great interest in music from an early age under her grandmother's guidance.[5] From age 12 his teacher was Karl Davydov, a composer, professor of the St Petersburg Conservatory and Russia’s most prominent cellist of the time.[4] Georg-Alexander passion for music made him consider for a time to follow a career as a professional cellist.[4] He was a good pianist, an excellent cello player and was fond of writing musical compositions. From 1879 to 1881 he studied fine arts and philosophy at the Universities of Leipzig and Strasbourg.

Marriage

 
Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg-Strelitz in military uniform.

Georg Alexander fell in love with his mother’s lady in waiting Natalia Feodorovna Vanliarskya (Saint Petersburg, 16 May 1858 - Cannes, 14 March 1921), the daughter of Feodor Ardalionovich Vanliarsky (23 December 1833 - 2 February 1903), a Russian State Councillor, who served in the Ministry of Finance, and wife Maria Feodorovna Uvarova, paternal granddaughter of Ardalion Alexeievich Vanliarsky and wife Anastasia Mikhailovna Simanovskaya (? - 26 March 1891) and maternal granddaughter of Feodor Feodorovich Uvarov and wife Maria Petrovna Joukova.[6][7] She was a member of the Russian nobility who came from Germany in 17th century whose name was originally von Lahr.[8] Vanljarskya was a skillful singer and the couple was brought together by their shared passion for music.[9] Grand Duchess Catherine Mikahilovna opposed their union and fired Natalia, hoping that his son would forget the affair and would marry a bride of royal background. However Georg Alexander persisted and in June 1889 he went to Germany to obtain the permission to marry from the head of the family, his uncle, Grand Duke Frederick William (1819-1904). With his uncle's consent, George Georgievich married Natalia Vanliarskya on 14 February 1890 in Saint Petersburg.[1] As Natalia was not of member of reigning royal family their union was treated as morganatic and she received from the Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz the title of Countess von Carlow (the name Carlow came from the estate Karlivka in Poltava province, that belonged to Georg-Alexander) on 18 March 1890 that would pass to their children.[8] Their marriage was a happy one and Natalia eventually became loved by her husband’s family.[9]

The couple initially lived in a western wing of the Mikhailovski palace, where fifteen rooms were given to them.[9] After the death of Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna in 1894, the Mikhailovski palace and the bulk of her inheritance passed to Duke Georg Alexander's younger brother Karl Michael and their sister Helene. The palace was bought by Emperor Nicholas II in 1895 to house the collection of the Russian Museum, named in honor of Emperor Alexander III. Georg Alexander moved with his family to his own residence located at No 46 Fontanka embankment. The house was designed with his own personal plans and immediately became a center for musicians and artist. During the first years of their marriage, Vanljarskya did not take part in court life and only years later she began to accompany her husband at court balls and receptions in the Winter Palace.

The couple's four children received the title of Counts of Carlow after the mother:

  • Countess Catherine von Carlow (25 July 1891 - 9 October 1940, victim of a German air aid on London) having married Prince Vladimir Galitzine (1884-1954) in 1913 .[citation needed]
  • Countess Maria von Carlow (31 October 1893 - 5 September 1979), who married Prince Boris Dmitrievich Golitsyn (1892-1919) in 1916, became a widow in 1919, and married Count Vladimir Petrovich Kleinmichel (1901-1982).[citation needed]
  • Countess Natalia von Carlow ( 20 November 1894 - 4 December 1913).[citation needed]
  • George, Duke of Mecklenburg (5 Oct 1899 - 6 Jul 1963).[citation needed]

Later life

 
Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg-Strelitz with his wife and their children: Catherine, Maria, Natalia and George

Georg Alexander was head of the committee for the fiftieth anniversary of the career of Anton Rubinstein celebrated in 1889. After Rubinstein’s death in 1894, his family gave his conducting baton to Duke Georg Alexander.[4] In 1896, Georg Alexander organized a string quartet, which bore the name "Mecklenburg Quartet" (after 1917, it became part of the Petrograd Philharmonic). Performances were a great success not only in the Russian capital, but also abroad. It was the first Russian quartet to go on a European tour, receiving favorable reviews at their London performance in 1907.[4]

Duke Georg Alexander was also an art collector. From his grandfather, Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich, he inherited a rich collection of French lithographs, paintings, Meissen porcelain and luxury editions of books. He constantly added new works to his collections and participated in exhibitions. Georg Alexander was well respected not only in the music world. Despite his high rank, he was an approachable man devoid of any snobbery.

Parallel to his passion for music he continued with his military career. In 1902 he was appointed Major General, Commander of the Life Guard Dragoon Regiment and from 1906 commander of the 1st Brigade of the 1st Guards Cavalry Division. In 1907 he was made chief of the troops at the disposal of the Guard in Saint Petersburg Military District. He was engaged on military reforms on behalf of the minister of war. He was author and translator of military theory and historical works.

Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg-Strelitz died suddenly on 5 December 1909, aged fifty.[1] He was buried in the palace of Oranienbaum, the summer residence in the Gulf of Finland of his family.[1] Over his grave was erected a black marble cross with a plate that bore the inscription: "Here lies a deeply revered husband and father and a great citizen of Oranienbaum." After the revolution, the grave was destroyed and the inscription disappeared. His daughter Natalia, who died young, was also buried in Oranienbaum. The Duke's widow and their three other children survived the Russian revolution and emigrated to western Europe. Natalia died in Cannes France in 1921. The couple's youngest child and only son, George Alexander, was adopted by his uncle Karl-Michael, and then took the title of Duke of Mecklenburg, Count of Carlow.[9] After the other lines of the house of Mecklenburg died out his descendants became their sole heirs. Georg Alexander's great-grandson, Duke Borwin, is the current head of the House of Mecklenburg.[9]

Orders and decorations

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Katin-Yartsev & Shumkov, Costume Ball at the Winter Palace, p. 60
  2. ^ Beéche, The Grand Duchesses, p. 41.
  3. ^ Beéche, The Grand Duchesses, p. 40.
  4. ^ a b c d e Korneva & Cheboksarova, Russia & Europe: Dynastic Ties , p. 54
  5. ^ Korneva & Cheboksarova, Russia & Europe: Dynastic Ties , p. 52
  6. ^ Burke's Royal Families of the World, Europe and Latin America
  7. ^ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels
  8. ^ a b Beéche, The Grand Duchesses, p. 42.
  9. ^ a b c d e Korneva & Cheboksarova, Russia & Europe: Dynastic Ties , p. 55
  10. ^ a b c Grossherzoglich Mecklenburg-Strelitzscher Staatskalendar, 1907, p. 3
  11. ^ Grossherzoglich Mecklenburg-Strelitzscher Staatskalendar, 1907, p. 14
  12. ^ Staatshandbuch für das Großherzogtum Sachsen / Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (1900), "Großherzogliche Hausorden", p. 16

Bibliography

  • Beéche, Arturo. The Grand Duchesses. Eurohistory, 2004. ISBN 0-9771961-1-9
  • Katin-Yartsev, M and Shumkov, A. Costume Ball at the Winter Palace. Russky Antiquariat, 2003, ISBN 5981290021
  • Korneva, Galina & Cheboksarova, Tatiana. Russia & Europe: Dynastic Ties . Eurohistory, 2013. ISBN 978-0-9854603-2-7

duke, georg, alexander, mecklenburg, strelitz, russian, Георгий, Георгиевич, Мекленбург, Стрелицкий, june, 1859, december, 1909, eldest, surviving, sons, duke, georg, august, mecklenburg, strelitz, grand, duchess, catherine, mikhailovna, russia, great, grandso. Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg Strelitz Russian Georgij Georgievich Meklenburg Strelickij 6 June 1859 5 December 1909 was the eldest of the two surviving sons of Duke Georg August of Mecklenburg Strelitz and of Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia He was a great grandson of Emperor Paul and a cousin of Emperor Alexander III of Russia Although he was a German prince of the House of Mecklenburg Strelitz he was raised in Imperial Russia where he lived all his life Duke Georg AlexanderBorn 1859 06 06 6 June 1859Remplin Duchy of Mecklenburg StrelitzDied5 December 1909 1909 12 05 aged 50 St PetersburgSpouseNatalia Feodorovna VanljarskyaIssueCountess Catherine of Carlow Countess Maria of Carlow Countess Natalia of Carlow George Duke of Mecklenburg StrelitzNamesGeorg Alexander Michael Friedrich Wilhelm Franz KarlHouseMecklenburg StrelitzFatherDuke Georg August of Mecklenburg StrelitzMotherGrand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of RussiaHe followed a career as an officer in the Russian army and was Major General Commander of the Life Guard Dragoon Regiment Georg Alexander was a music lover a skillful cellist and composer In 1896 he formed a private string quartet called the Mecklenburg Quartet He contracted a morganatic marriage and his rights and inheritance passed to his younger brother Charles Michael Duke of Mecklenburg His four children received the title of Counts of Carlow but after Duke Georg Alexander s death his unmarried brother adopted his son Georg Count of Carlow who became the heir to the House of Mecklenburg Strelitz in 1934 Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage 3 Later life 4 Orders and decorations 5 Ancestry 6 Notes 7 BibliographyEarly life Edit Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia surrounded by her children Helene Georg Alexander and Karl Michael Georg Alexander Michael Friedrich Wilhelm Franz Carl of Mecklenburg Strelitz was born on 6 June O S 25 May 1859 at Remplin 1 a family estate acquired by his parents in Mecklenburg shortly before his birth 2 His father Duke Georg August of Mecklenburg 1824 1876 was the second son of Grand Duke Georg of Mecklenburg Strelitz His mother Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia was a granddaughter of Emperor Paul I of Russia Although Duke Georg Alexander was by birth a German prince of the house of Mecklenburg Strelitz his father had settled in Russia within his wife s family 3 Georg and his siblings were raised in Russia but kept the Lutheran religion of his paternal ancestors He was known in Russia as George Georgievich jr to distinguish him from his father who had the same name and patronymic 4 He received a military education and followed a career in the Russian service Raised in the Mikhailovsky Palace the household of his maternal grandmother Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna he took a great interest in music from an early age under her grandmother s guidance 5 From age 12 his teacher was Karl Davydov a composer professor of the St Petersburg Conservatory and Russia s most prominent cellist of the time 4 Georg Alexander passion for music made him consider for a time to follow a career as a professional cellist 4 He was a good pianist an excellent cello player and was fond of writing musical compositions From 1879 to 1881 he studied fine arts and philosophy at the Universities of Leipzig and Strasbourg Marriage Edit Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg Strelitz in military uniform Georg Alexander fell in love with his mother s lady in waiting Natalia Feodorovna Vanliarskya Saint Petersburg 16 May 1858 Cannes 14 March 1921 the daughter of Feodor Ardalionovich Vanliarsky 23 December 1833 2 February 1903 a Russian State Councillor who served in the Ministry of Finance and wife Maria Feodorovna Uvarova paternal granddaughter of Ardalion Alexeievich Vanliarsky and wife Anastasia Mikhailovna Simanovskaya 26 March 1891 and maternal granddaughter of Feodor Feodorovich Uvarov and wife Maria Petrovna Joukova 6 7 She was a member of the Russian nobility who came from Germany in 17th century whose name was originally von Lahr 8 Vanljarskya was a skillful singer and the couple was brought together by their shared passion for music 9 Grand Duchess Catherine Mikahilovna opposed their union and fired Natalia hoping that his son would forget the affair and would marry a bride of royal background However Georg Alexander persisted and in June 1889 he went to Germany to obtain the permission to marry from the head of the family his uncle Grand Duke Frederick William 1819 1904 With his uncle s consent George Georgievich married Natalia Vanliarskya on 14 February 1890 in Saint Petersburg 1 As Natalia was not of member of reigning royal family their union was treated as morganatic and she received from the Duke of Mecklenburg Strelitz the title of Countess von Carlow the name Carlow came from the estate Karlivka in Poltava province that belonged to Georg Alexander on 18 March 1890 that would pass to their children 8 Their marriage was a happy one and Natalia eventually became loved by her husband s family 9 The couple initially lived in a western wing of the Mikhailovski palace where fifteen rooms were given to them 9 After the death of Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna in 1894 the Mikhailovski palace and the bulk of her inheritance passed to Duke Georg Alexander s younger brother Karl Michael and their sister Helene The palace was bought by Emperor Nicholas II in 1895 to house the collection of the Russian Museum named in honor of Emperor Alexander III Georg Alexander moved with his family to his own residence located at No 46 Fontanka embankment The house was designed with his own personal plans and immediately became a center for musicians and artist During the first years of their marriage Vanljarskya did not take part in court life and only years later she began to accompany her husband at court balls and receptions in the Winter Palace The couple s four children received the title of Counts of Carlow after the mother Countess Catherine von Carlow 25 July 1891 9 October 1940 victim of a German air aid on London having married Prince Vladimir Galitzine 1884 1954 in 1913 citation needed Countess Maria von Carlow 31 October 1893 5 September 1979 who married Prince Boris Dmitrievich Golitsyn 1892 1919 in 1916 became a widow in 1919 and married Count Vladimir Petrovich Kleinmichel 1901 1982 citation needed Countess Natalia von Carlow 20 November 1894 4 December 1913 citation needed George Duke of Mecklenburg 5 Oct 1899 6 Jul 1963 citation needed Later life Edit Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg Strelitz with his wife and their children Catherine Maria Natalia and GeorgeGeorg Alexander was head of the committee for the fiftieth anniversary of the career of Anton Rubinstein celebrated in 1889 After Rubinstein s death in 1894 his family gave his conducting baton to Duke Georg Alexander 4 In 1896 Georg Alexander organized a string quartet which bore the name Mecklenburg Quartet after 1917 it became part of the Petrograd Philharmonic Performances were a great success not only in the Russian capital but also abroad It was the first Russian quartet to go on a European tour receiving favorable reviews at their London performance in 1907 4 Duke Georg Alexander was also an art collector From his grandfather Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich he inherited a rich collection of French lithographs paintings Meissen porcelain and luxury editions of books He constantly added new works to his collections and participated in exhibitions Georg Alexander was well respected not only in the music world Despite his high rank he was an approachable man devoid of any snobbery Parallel to his passion for music he continued with his military career In 1902 he was appointed Major General Commander of the Life Guard Dragoon Regiment and from 1906 commander of the 1st Brigade of the 1st Guards Cavalry Division In 1907 he was made chief of the troops at the disposal of the Guard in Saint Petersburg Military District He was engaged on military reforms on behalf of the minister of war He was author and translator of military theory and historical works Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg Strelitz died suddenly on 5 December 1909 aged fifty 1 He was buried in the palace of Oranienbaum the summer residence in the Gulf of Finland of his family 1 Over his grave was erected a black marble cross with a plate that bore the inscription Here lies a deeply revered husband and father and a great citizen of Oranienbaum After the revolution the grave was destroyed and the inscription disappeared His daughter Natalia who died young was also buried in Oranienbaum The Duke s widow and their three other children survived the Russian revolution and emigrated to western Europe Natalia died in Cannes France in 1921 The couple s youngest child and only son George Alexander was adopted by his uncle Karl Michael and then took the title of Duke of Mecklenburg Count of Carlow 9 After the other lines of the house of Mecklenburg died out his descendants became their sole heirs Georg Alexander s great grandson Duke Borwin is the current head of the House of Mecklenburg 9 Orders and decorations Edit Mecklenburg Grand Cross of the House Order of the Wendish Crown with Crown in Ore 16 February 1876 10 11 Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the Order of the White Falcon 1881 12 Ernestine duchies Grand Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order 10 Russian Empire 10 Knight of the Imperial Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle the First called Knight of the Imperial Order of Saint Prince Vladimir 3rd and 4th ClassesAncestry EditAncestors of Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg Strelitz8 Charles II Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Strelitz4 George Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Strelitz9 Princess Friederike of Hesse Darmstadt2 Duke Georg August of Mecklenburg Strelitz10 Prince Frederick of Hesse Kassel5 Princess Marie of Hesse Kassel11 Princess Caroline of Nassau Usingen1 Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg Strelitz12 Paul I of Russia6 Grand Duke Michael Pavlovich of Russia13 Duchess Sophie Dorothea of Wurttemberg3 Grand Duchess Catherine Mikhailovna of Russia14 Prince Paul of Wurttemberg7 Princess Charlotte of Wurttemberg15 Princess Charlotte of Saxe HildburghausenNotes Edit a b c d Katin Yartsev amp Shumkov Costume Ball at the Winter Palace p 60 Beeche The Grand Duchesses p 41 Beeche The Grand Duchesses p 40 a b c d e Korneva amp Cheboksarova Russia amp Europe Dynastic Ties p 54 Korneva amp Cheboksarova Russia amp Europe Dynastic Ties p 52 Burke s Royal Families of the World Europe and Latin America Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels a b Beeche The Grand Duchesses p 42 a b c d e Korneva amp Cheboksarova Russia amp Europe Dynastic Ties p 55 a b c Grossherzoglich Mecklenburg Strelitzscher Staatskalendar 1907 p 3 Grossherzoglich Mecklenburg Strelitzscher Staatskalendar 1907 p 14 Staatshandbuch fur das Grossherzogtum Sachsen Sachsen Weimar Eisenach 1900 Grossherzogliche Hausorden p 16Bibliography EditBeeche Arturo The Grand Duchesses Eurohistory 2004 ISBN 0 9771961 1 9 Katin Yartsev M and Shumkov A Costume Ball at the Winter Palace Russky Antiquariat 2003 ISBN 5981290021 Korneva Galina amp Cheboksarova Tatiana Russia amp Europe Dynastic Ties Eurohistory 2013 ISBN 978 0 9854603 2 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg Strelitz amp oldid 1164855621, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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