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Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia

Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia (Russian: Влади́мир Александрович; 22[1] April 1847 – 17 February 1909) was a son of Emperor Alexander II of Russia, a brother of Emperor Alexander III of Russia and the senior Grand Duke of the House of Romanov during the reign of his nephew, Emperor Nicholas II.

Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich
Vladimir Alexandrovich, c. 1894
Born(1847-04-22)22 April 1847
Winter Palace, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died17 February 1909(1909-02-17) (aged 61)
Vladimir Palace, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Burial
Grand Ducal Mausoleum, Fortress of St. Peter and Paul, St. Petersburg, Russian Empire
Spouse
(m. 1874)
IssueGrand Duke Alexander Vladimirovich
Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich
Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich
Grand Duke Andrei Vladimirovich
Elena Vladimirovna, Princess of Greece and Denmark
HouseHolstein-Gottorp-Romanov
FatherAlexander II of Russia
MotherMarie of Hesse and by Rhine
ReligionRussian Orthodoxy

Grand Duke Vladimir followed a military career and occupied important military positions during the reigns of the last three Russian Emperors. Interested in artistic and intellectual pursuits; he was appointed President of the Academy of Fine Arts. He functioned as a patron of many artists and as a sponsor of the Imperial ballet.[2]

During the reign of his father, Emperor Alexander II, he was made Adjutant-General, senator in 1868 and a member of the Council of State in 1872. His brother, Alexander III, also promoted his career. He became a member of the Council of Ministers, Commander of the Imperial Guards Corps[3] and Military Governor of Saint Petersburg. He tried to exert some influence over his nephew Tsar Nicholas II, but had to content himself with holding a rival court with his wife Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna at his palace in Saint Petersburg. The events of Bloody Sunday in 1905, while he was Military Governor of St Petersburg, tarnished his reputation. During the last years of his life, the rift between his family and that of Nicholas II widened.[4] He died after a stroke in 1909.

Early life

Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich was born on 22 April 1847 at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg.[5] He was fourth among the eight children of Alexander II of Russia and his wife Maria Alexandrovna, born Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine.

He was eight years old when at the death of his grandfather Nicholas I, his father became Russian tsar.[5] Grand Duke Vladimir was well educated and through his life he was interested in literature and the arts. However, as all male members of the Romanov family he had to follow a military career. As only the third son in a numerous family, he was far from the succession to the Russian throne.[5] Nevertheless, in 1865, the early death of his eldest brother, the Tsarevich Nicholas, left Vladimir unexpectedly close to the throne as heir presumptive after his second brother Alexander.[5] Unlike Alexander, the new heir, Vladimir was witty and ambitious. Rumors circulated at the time, that Alexander II would have his eldest surviving son removed from the succession placing Vladimir as his heir. Alexander himself would have preferred to step aside from the succession hoping to marry morganatically, but eventually he yielded to family pressure and married a suitable bride.[6] Relations between the two brothers, although cordial, were never warm.

A Russian Grand Duke

 
Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich was a notorious playboy in his youth[7] photo by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky

In 1867 Grand Duke Vladimir was named honorary president of the Russian ethnographic society, the same year he accompanied his father and his brother Alexander to the World Fair in Paris, where his father was shot by a Polish nationalist.[5] In 1871 he visited the Caucasus region, Georgia, Chechnya and Dagestan with his father and his brothers.[5] In 1872 he accompanied his father to Vienna at the reunion of the three emperors: Russia, Germany and Austria.[5]

A member of the European beau monde, he made frequent trips to Paris. He became portly as a young man, although in later life he slimmed down. He was a skillful painter and gathered an important book collection. He was a well known gourmet, accumulating a collection of menus copied after meals, adding notations with his impressions about the food.

Marriage

 
Grand Duke Vladimir and Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg Schwerin. Engagement photograph, spring 1874[8]

While traveling through Germany with his family in June 1871, Grand Duke Vladimir met Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (14 May 1854 – 6 September 1920), daughter of Friedrich Franz II, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Augusta of Reuss-Köstritz.[9] She was seventeen years old and was already engaged to a distant relative, Prince George of Schwarzburg.[9] Grand Duke Vladimir was then twenty four.[9] They were smitten with each other. Vladimir was a second cousin of Maria's father Friedrich Franz II, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, a grandson of Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna of Russia. They were also second cousins in descent from Frederick William III of Prussia. In order to marry Vladimir, Maria broke off her previous engagement, but she refused to yield to the necessary conversion to the Orthodox religion.[10] This delayed the couple's engagement for almost two years. Finally, Tsar Alexander II consented to Marie's continued adherence to her Lutheran faith, allowing Vladimir to marry her without loss of his rights to the Russian throne. The engagement was announced in April 1874.[10]

The wedding took place in Saint Petersburg on 28 August 1874 at the Winter palace.[10] Vladimir's wife adopted the patronymic Pavlovna upon her marriage and was known as Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia. Only decades later, after Vladimir's death, she converted to the Russian Orthodox confession, then, Emperor Nicholas II bestowed her the title "the Orthodox Grand Duchess". Grand Duke Vladimir and his wife were both witty and ambitious. They enjoyed entertaining and their residence in St. Petersburg became the heart of the Imperial capital social life. Well suited to each other, they had a long and happy marriage.[7][11]

Vladimir's palace

By the time of his marriage, construction had already been completed on Vladimir's own residence and he moved there with his wife.[11] Named the Vladimir Palace, it was one of the last imperial palaces constructed in Saint Petersburg. Grand Duke Vladimir appointed architect Aleksandr Rezanov to head the project because of his knowledge of ancient Russian architecture.[12] A team of architects assisted Rezanov: Vasily Kenel, Andrei Huhn [ru], Ieronim Kitner [ru] and Vladimir Shreter. The foundation stone was laid on 15 July 1867.[13] Construction work lasted five years, from 1867 to 1872. The furniture was designed by architect Victor Shroeter.

The site chosen for the palace was the Embankment near the Winter Palace in the center of St Petersburg.[12] It had previously been occupied by the house of Count Vorontsov-Dashkov [ru] which had been bought by the treasury. The lot was enlarged by purchasing the neighboring house of Madame Karatinga.[12] The total construction and furnishing cost of Vladimir Palace was 820,000 rubles, a much modest amount than the one spent building previous palaces for other grand dukes a decade earlier.[12]

The Vladimir palace stands, like the Winter Palace and the Marble Palace, by the Neva on the Dvorstsovaya Embankment.[14] The façade, richly ornamented with stucco rustication, was patterned after Leon Battista Alberti's palazzi in Florence. The main porch is built of Bremen sandstone and adorned with griffins, coats-of-arms, and cast-iron lanterns. Other details are cast in Portland cement.

The palace and its outbuildings contain some 360 rooms, all decorated in eclectic historic styles: Neo-Renaissance (reception room, parlor), Gothic Revival (dining room), Russian Revival (Oak Hall), Rococo (White Hall), Byzantine style (study), Louis XIV, various oriental styles, and so on. This interior ornamentation, further augmented by Maximilian Messmacher in 1881–1891, is considered by art historians, such as Nikolay Punin, a major monument to the 19th-century passion for historicism.[15] Grand Duke Vladimir decorated his apartments with his collection of Russian paintings by the best artists of his time, such as[14] Ilya Repin, Ivan Aivazovsky, Feodor Bruni, Vasili Vereshchagin, Ivan Kramskoy, Mikhail Vrubel, Nikolai Sverchkov and Rudolf Ferdinandovich Frentz [ru].[16]

Children

Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich and his wife Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna had five children:

During three reigns

 
Grand Duke Vladimir with his wife and children in 1884. The children, from left to right: Boris, Elena, Kirill and Andrei.[17]

Grand Duke Vladimir occupied important military positions during three reigns. He experienced battle in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, taking part in the campaign alongside his father and his brothers Alexander and Sergei.[18] He fought against the Turkish troops as the commanding officer of the XII Corps of the Russian army. However, his military career interested him less than art and literature.[19] In 1880 his father appointed him President of the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts.[5] He also became a member of the Academy of Science and an agent of the Rumyantsev Museum.[2][20] Grand Duke Vladimir was in the Imperial capital when his father was assassinated and succeeded by Alexander III in 1881. It fell upon Vladimir, who regained his composure more quickly than his brother, to announce their father's death to the public.[21] Vladimir inherited his father's personal library, which the Grand Duke added to his large book-collection that was arranged in three libraries at the Vladimir Palace.[22] (After the Russian Revolution of 1917 these books were sold off randomly by weight and currently form part of several American university-collections.[22])

Although Alexander III was not close to Vladimir and there was a rivalry between their wives, he promoted his brother's career. The day after their father's death he appointed Vladimir as Military Governor of St Petersburg, a post previously held by their uncle Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich.[20] Vladimir served on the State Council and chaired the official commission that supervised the building of the Church of the Saviour, built between 1883 and 1907 on the site of the assassination of his father, Emperor Alexander II of Russia.[20]

Grand Duke Vladimir was a keen philanthropist. A talented painter himself, he became a famous patron of the arts.[2] He frequented many artists and gathered a valuable collection of paintings and old icons.[23] He later took a great interest in ballet. He financed the tour of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes.[2]

Emperor Alexander III's three sons rendered Vladimir and Vladimir's own three sons remote in the line of succession to Russia's throne. Nevertheless, Vladimir seemed unexpectedly close to becoming Emperor in 1888 when Alexander III with his wife and all of their children were involved in a train accident at Borki (in present-day Ukraine). Vladimir and his wife, then in Paris, did not bother to come back to Russia. This annoyed Alexander III, who commented that if he had died with his children, Vladimir would have rushed to return to Russia to become Emperor.[24] At Alexander III's death in 1894 there were unfounded rumors that the army intended to proclaim Grand Duke Vladimir emperor in place of his nephew Nicholas II.[25] Vladimir tried to influence the new Emperor, particularly at the beginning of Nicholas II's reign.[26]

Although the Grand Duke was conservative in his political views, he did not believe in human virtues. Something of a rascal himself, he preferred the company of amusing witty people - regardless of their ideology or background.[15] The more liberal members of Russian society were invited to lavish parties at his residence. He often intimidated people with his coarseness, rudeness and hot temper.[15] Vladimir Alexandrovich was also a devoted family man, close to his children.

Last years

 
The Vladimirs, on the occasion of their silver wedding in 1899. From the left: Grand Duke Andrei, Grand Duke Vladimir, Grand Duchess Elena, Grand Duke Kirill, Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna, and Grand Duke Boris.[27]

In January 1905 a wave of strikes broke out in St. Petersburg.[28] On 9 January (O.S.)/22 (N.S.) a peaceful procession of workers led by a priest, Father Georgy Gapon, marched towards the Winter Palace from different points in the city hoping to present requests for reforms directly to Emperor Nicholas II.[29] The Tsar, however, was not in the capital.[30] General Ivan Fullon, St Petersburg Governor, tried to stop the march.[29] When a large group of workers reached Winter Palace Square, troops acting on direct orders from Guards Commander Prince Sergei Vasilchikov opened fire upon the demonstrators. More than 100 marchers were killed and several hundred were wounded.[30] Although Grand Duke Vladimir claimed no direct responsibility about that tragedy, since he was also away from the city, his reputation was tarnished. The massacre, known as Bloody Sunday, was followed by a series of strikes in other cities, peasant uprisings in the country, and mutinies in the armed forces, which seriously threatened the tsarist regime and became known as the Revolution of 1905.[30] A month after Bloody Sunday, Vladimir's brother Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich was killed by a terrorist bomb in Moscow.[31]

In October 1905, Vladimir's eldest son and heir Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich of Russia married his first cousin Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, daughter of Vladimir's sister Maria. Nicholas II was enraged by the marriage, which was contracted without his permission and was in violation of the Russian Orthodox ban on marriages between first cousins. Nicholas stripped Kirill of his imperial titles and banished him.[32] Vladimir protested the treatment given to his son and resigned from all his posts in protest.[33] Vladimir “shouted so violently at his nephew that the court chamberlain, waiting outside the door, feared for his master’s safety and almost ran off to summon the imperial guards.”[34] Vladimir slammed his fists on Nicholas' desk and ripped off the military decorations from his uniform, shouting, "I have served your father, your grandfather and you. But now as you have degraded my son I no longer wish to serve you.”[35] Eventually, Nicholas II relented and forgave his cousins for marrying without his consent, but he did not allow them to return to Russia.[33] The full pardon came only after several deaths in the family, including Vladimir's own, had placed Kirill third in the line of succession to the Imperial Throne.[33]

Grand Duke Vladimir died suddenly on 4(O.S.)/17(N.S.) February 1909 after suffering a major cerebral hemorrhage.[36] Vladimir's widow and their four children survived the Russian Revolution of 1917. In 1924 in exile, Kirill proclaimed himself Emperor de jure, Vladimir's line thereby claimed headship of the Imperial House. Vladimir was the paternal grandfather and namesake of the future pretender claimant Grand Duke Vladimir of Russia, born 1917. His granddaughter Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark becomes a British princess by marriage to Prince George, Duke of Kent, fourth son of King George V and Queen Mary, in 1934. Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich's great granddaughter, Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna, is the current claimant and his great grandson Prince Michael becomes a honorary member of the Romanov Family Association.[37]

Honours and awards

The Grand Duke received the following Russian and foreign decorations:[38]

Russian
Foreign

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ Gregorian calendar date. The Russian (Julian) calendar date is 10 April. See Comte Paul Vasili, La Sainte Russie : la cour, l'armée, le clergé, la bourgeoisie et le peuple, Libraire de Firmin-Didot et Cie, Paris, 1890
  2. ^ a b c d Perry & Pleshakov, The Flight of the Romanovs , p. 35
  3. ^ Alexander, Once a Grand Duke, p. 139
  4. ^ Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 98
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Chavchavadze, The Grand Dukes, p. 103
  6. ^ Chavchavadze, The Grand Dukes, p. 105
  7. ^ a b Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 96
  8. ^ Zeepvat, The Camera and the Tsars, p. 45
  9. ^ a b c Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 94
  10. ^ a b c Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 95
  11. ^ a b Van der Kiste, The Romanovs 1818–1959, p. 68
  12. ^ a b c d Belyakova, The Romanov Legacy , p. 158
  13. ^ Belyakova, The Romanov Legacy , p. 160
  14. ^ a b Perry & Pleshakov, The Flight of the Romanovs , p. 36
  15. ^ a b c Belyakova, The Romanov Legacy , p. 172
  16. ^ Belyakova, The Romanov Legacy , p. 162
  17. ^ Zeepvat, The Camera and the Tsars, p. 47
  18. ^ Van der Kiste, The Romanovs 1818–1959, p. 72
  19. ^ Alexander, Once a Grand Duke, p. 138
  20. ^ a b c Zeepvat, The Camera and the Tsars, p. 136
  21. ^ Van der Kiste, The Romanovs 1818–1959, p. 91
  22. ^ a b Perry & Pleshakov, The Flight of the Romanovs , p. 37
  23. ^ Alexander, Once a Grand Duke, p. 137
  24. ^ Chavchavadze, The Grand Dukes, p. 104
  25. ^ Perry & Pleshakov, The Flight of the Romanovs , p. 63
  26. ^ Perry & Pleshakov, The Flight of the Romanovs , p. 67.
  27. ^ Zeepvat, The Camera and the Tsars, p. 54
  28. ^ Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 645
  29. ^ a b Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 649
  30. ^ a b c Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 650
  31. ^ Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 651
  32. ^ Perry & Pleshakov, The Flight of the Romanovs, p. 100
  33. ^ a b c Perry & Pleshakov, The Flight of the Romanovs, p. 101
  34. ^ Julia P. Gelardi, From Splendor to Revolution, p.207
  35. ^ Julia P. Gelardi, From Splendor to Revolution, p.208
  36. ^ Van der Kiste, The Romanovs 1818–1959, p. 180
  37. ^ Romanovich, Nikolai (20 March 2010). "The Romanov Family Association". The Romanov Family Association. Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  38. ^ Russian Imperial Army – Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich (In Russian)
  39. ^ Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Großherzogtum Hessen (1879), "Großherzogliche Orden und Ehrenzeichen" p. 11
  40. ^ "Königlich Preussische Ordensliste", Preussische Ordens-Liste (in German), Berlin, 1: 5, 15, 934, 1886 – via hathitrust.org
  41. ^ Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. p. 623.
  42. ^ Hof- und Staatshandbuch des Großherzogtums Oldenburg: für das Jahr 1872/73, "Der Großherzogliche Haus-und Verdienst Orden" p. 29
  43. ^ Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Königreich Württemberg (1907), "Königliche Orden" p. 27
  44. ^ Pedersen, Jørgen (2009). Riddere af Elefantordenen, 1559–2009 (in Danish). Syddansk Universitetsforlag. p. 274. ISBN 978-87-7674-434-2.
  45. ^ M. & B. Wattel (2009). Les Grand'Croix de la Légion d'honneur de 1805 à nos jours. Titulaires français et étrangers. Paris: Archives & Culture. p. 515. ISBN 978-2-35077-135-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  46. ^ Cibrario, Luigi (1869). Notizia storica del nobilissimo ordine supremo della santissima Annunziata. Sunto degli statuti, catalogo dei cavalieri (in Italian). Eredi Botta. p. 123. Retrieved 4 March 2019.
  47. ^ Sveriges statskalender (in Swedish), 1881, p. 377, retrieved 6 January 2018 – via runeberg.org
  48. ^ Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Großherzogtum Baden (1876), "Großherzogliche Orden" p. 58
  49. ^ Staatshandbücher für das Herzogtum Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha (1884), "Herzogliche Sachsen-Ernestinischer Hausorden" p. 33
  50. ^ "Caballeros de la insigne orden del toisón de oro", Guía Oficial de España (in Spanish), 1905, p. 146, retrieved 4 June 2020
  51. ^ Hof- und Staats-Handbuch des Königreich Bayern (1908), "Königliche Orden" p. 9
  52. ^ 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. 150.
  53. ^ The London Gazette, issue 27630, p. 8563

References

External links

  Media related to Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia at Wikimedia Commons

grand, duke, vladimir, alexandrovich, russia, russian, Влади, мир, Александрович, april, 1847, february, 1909, emperor, alexander, russia, brother, emperor, alexander, russia, senior, grand, duke, house, romanov, during, reign, nephew, emperor, nicholas, grand. Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia Russian Vladi mir Aleksandrovich 22 1 April 1847 17 February 1909 was a son of Emperor Alexander II of Russia a brother of Emperor Alexander III of Russia and the senior Grand Duke of the House of Romanov during the reign of his nephew Emperor Nicholas II Grand Duke Vladimir AlexandrovichVladimir Alexandrovich c 1894Born 1847 04 22 22 April 1847Winter Palace Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireDied17 February 1909 1909 02 17 aged 61 Vladimir Palace Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireBurialGrand Ducal Mausoleum Fortress of St Peter and Paul St Petersburg Russian EmpireSpouseMarie of Mecklenburg Schwerin m 1874 wbr IssueGrand Duke Alexander VladimirovichGrand Duke Kirill VladimirovichGrand Duke Boris VladimirovichGrand Duke Andrei VladimirovichElena Vladimirovna Princess of Greece and DenmarkHouseHolstein Gottorp RomanovFatherAlexander II of RussiaMotherMarie of Hesse and by RhineReligionRussian OrthodoxyGrand Duke Vladimir followed a military career and occupied important military positions during the reigns of the last three Russian Emperors Interested in artistic and intellectual pursuits he was appointed President of the Academy of Fine Arts He functioned as a patron of many artists and as a sponsor of the Imperial ballet 2 During the reign of his father Emperor Alexander II he was made Adjutant General senator in 1868 and a member of the Council of State in 1872 His brother Alexander III also promoted his career He became a member of the Council of Ministers Commander of the Imperial Guards Corps 3 and Military Governor of Saint Petersburg He tried to exert some influence over his nephew Tsar Nicholas II but had to content himself with holding a rival court with his wife Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna at his palace in Saint Petersburg The events of Bloody Sunday in 1905 while he was Military Governor of St Petersburg tarnished his reputation During the last years of his life the rift between his family and that of Nicholas II widened 4 He died after a stroke in 1909 Contents 1 Early life 2 A Russian Grand Duke 3 Marriage 4 Vladimir s palace 5 Children 6 During three reigns 7 Last years 8 Honours and awards 9 Ancestry 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly life EditGrand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich was born on 22 April 1847 at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg 5 He was fourth among the eight children of Alexander II of Russia and his wife Maria Alexandrovna born Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine He was eight years old when at the death of his grandfather Nicholas I his father became Russian tsar 5 Grand Duke Vladimir was well educated and through his life he was interested in literature and the arts However as all male members of the Romanov family he had to follow a military career As only the third son in a numerous family he was far from the succession to the Russian throne 5 Nevertheless in 1865 the early death of his eldest brother the Tsarevich Nicholas left Vladimir unexpectedly close to the throne as heir presumptive after his second brother Alexander 5 Unlike Alexander the new heir Vladimir was witty and ambitious Rumors circulated at the time that Alexander II would have his eldest surviving son removed from the succession placing Vladimir as his heir Alexander himself would have preferred to step aside from the succession hoping to marry morganatically but eventually he yielded to family pressure and married a suitable bride 6 Relations between the two brothers although cordial were never warm A Russian Grand Duke Edit Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich was a notorious playboy in his youth 7 photo by Sergei Lvovich LevitskyIn 1867 Grand Duke Vladimir was named honorary president of the Russian ethnographic society the same year he accompanied his father and his brother Alexander to the World Fair in Paris where his father was shot by a Polish nationalist 5 In 1871 he visited the Caucasus region Georgia Chechnya and Dagestan with his father and his brothers 5 In 1872 he accompanied his father to Vienna at the reunion of the three emperors Russia Germany and Austria 5 A member of the European beau monde he made frequent trips to Paris He became portly as a young man although in later life he slimmed down He was a skillful painter and gathered an important book collection He was a well known gourmet accumulating a collection of menus copied after meals adding notations with his impressions about the food Marriage Edit Grand Duke Vladimir and Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg Schwerin Engagement photograph spring 1874 8 While traveling through Germany with his family in June 1871 Grand Duke Vladimir met Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg Schwerin 14 May 1854 6 September 1920 daughter of Friedrich Franz II Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Schwerin and Augusta of Reuss Kostritz 9 She was seventeen years old and was already engaged to a distant relative Prince George of Schwarzburg 9 Grand Duke Vladimir was then twenty four 9 They were smitten with each other Vladimir was a second cousin of Maria s father Friedrich Franz II Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Schwerin a grandson of Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna of Russia They were also second cousins in descent from Frederick William III of Prussia In order to marry Vladimir Maria broke off her previous engagement but she refused to yield to the necessary conversion to the Orthodox religion 10 This delayed the couple s engagement for almost two years Finally Tsar Alexander II consented to Marie s continued adherence to her Lutheran faith allowing Vladimir to marry her without loss of his rights to the Russian throne The engagement was announced in April 1874 10 The wedding took place in Saint Petersburg on 28 August 1874 at the Winter palace 10 Vladimir s wife adopted the patronymic Pavlovna upon her marriage and was known as Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia Only decades later after Vladimir s death she converted to the Russian Orthodox confession then Emperor Nicholas II bestowed her the title the Orthodox Grand Duchess Grand Duke Vladimir and his wife were both witty and ambitious They enjoyed entertaining and their residence in St Petersburg became the heart of the Imperial capital social life Well suited to each other they had a long and happy marriage 7 11 Vladimir s palace EditMain article Vladimir Palace By the time of his marriage construction had already been completed on Vladimir s own residence and he moved there with his wife 11 Named the Vladimir Palace it was one of the last imperial palaces constructed in Saint Petersburg Grand Duke Vladimir appointed architect Aleksandr Rezanov to head the project because of his knowledge of ancient Russian architecture 12 A team of architects assisted Rezanov Vasily Kenel Andrei Huhn ru Ieronim Kitner ru and Vladimir Shreter The foundation stone was laid on 15 July 1867 13 Construction work lasted five years from 1867 to 1872 The furniture was designed by architect Victor Shroeter The site chosen for the palace was the Embankment near the Winter Palace in the center of St Petersburg 12 It had previously been occupied by the house of Count Vorontsov Dashkov ru which had been bought by the treasury The lot was enlarged by purchasing the neighboring house of Madame Karatinga 12 The total construction and furnishing cost of Vladimir Palace was 820 000 rubles a much modest amount than the one spent building previous palaces for other grand dukes a decade earlier 12 The Vladimir palace stands like the Winter Palace and the Marble Palace by the Neva on the Dvorstsovaya Embankment 14 The facade richly ornamented with stucco rustication was patterned after Leon Battista Alberti s palazzi in Florence The main porch is built of Bremen sandstone and adorned with griffins coats of arms and cast iron lanterns Other details are cast in Portland cement The palace and its outbuildings contain some 360 rooms all decorated in eclectic historic styles Neo Renaissance reception room parlor Gothic Revival dining room Russian Revival Oak Hall Rococo White Hall Byzantine style study Louis XIV various oriental styles and so on This interior ornamentation further augmented by Maximilian Messmacher in 1881 1891 is considered by art historians such as Nikolay Punin a major monument to the 19th century passion for historicism 15 Grand Duke Vladimir decorated his apartments with his collection of Russian paintings by the best artists of his time such as 14 Ilya Repin Ivan Aivazovsky Feodor Bruni Vasili Vereshchagin Ivan Kramskoy Mikhail Vrubel Nikolai Sverchkov and Rudolf Ferdinandovich Frentz ru 16 Children EditGrand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich and his wife Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna had five children Grand Duke Alexander Vladimirovich of Russia 31 August 1875 16 March 1877 He died in infancy Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich of Russia 12 October N S 1876 12 October 1938 He married his first cousin Victoria Melita of Saxe Coburg and Gotha They had three children Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich of Russia 1877 1943 He married his mistress Zinaida Rashevskaya He did not leave legitimate descendants Grand Duke Andrei Vladimirovich of Russia 1879 1956 He married his mistress Matilda Kchessinska They had one son Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna of Russia 1882 1957 She married Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark third son of George I of Greece and Grand Duchess Olga Constantinovna of Russia They had three daughters During three reigns Edit Grand Duke Vladimir with his wife and children in 1884 The children from left to right Boris Elena Kirill and Andrei 17 Grand Duke Vladimir occupied important military positions during three reigns He experienced battle in the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 taking part in the campaign alongside his father and his brothers Alexander and Sergei 18 He fought against the Turkish troops as the commanding officer of the XII Corps of the Russian army However his military career interested him less than art and literature 19 In 1880 his father appointed him President of the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts 5 He also became a member of the Academy of Science and an agent of the Rumyantsev Museum 2 20 Grand Duke Vladimir was in the Imperial capital when his father was assassinated and succeeded by Alexander III in 1881 It fell upon Vladimir who regained his composure more quickly than his brother to announce their father s death to the public 21 Vladimir inherited his father s personal library which the Grand Duke added to his large book collection that was arranged in three libraries at the Vladimir Palace 22 After the Russian Revolution of 1917 these books were sold off randomly by weight and currently form part of several American university collections 22 Although Alexander III was not close to Vladimir and there was a rivalry between their wives he promoted his brother s career The day after their father s death he appointed Vladimir as Military Governor of St Petersburg a post previously held by their uncle Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich 20 Vladimir served on the State Council and chaired the official commission that supervised the building of the Church of the Saviour built between 1883 and 1907 on the site of the assassination of his father Emperor Alexander II of Russia 20 Grand Duke Vladimir was a keen philanthropist A talented painter himself he became a famous patron of the arts 2 He frequented many artists and gathered a valuable collection of paintings and old icons 23 He later took a great interest in ballet He financed the tour of Diaghilev s Ballets Russes 2 Emperor Alexander III s three sons rendered Vladimir and Vladimir s own three sons remote in the line of succession to Russia s throne Nevertheless Vladimir seemed unexpectedly close to becoming Emperor in 1888 when Alexander III with his wife and all of their children were involved in a train accident at Borki in present day Ukraine Vladimir and his wife then in Paris did not bother to come back to Russia This annoyed Alexander III who commented that if he had died with his children Vladimir would have rushed to return to Russia to become Emperor 24 At Alexander III s death in 1894 there were unfounded rumors that the army intended to proclaim Grand Duke Vladimir emperor in place of his nephew Nicholas II 25 Vladimir tried to influence the new Emperor particularly at the beginning of Nicholas II s reign 26 Although the Grand Duke was conservative in his political views he did not believe in human virtues Something of a rascal himself he preferred the company of amusing witty people regardless of their ideology or background 15 The more liberal members of Russian society were invited to lavish parties at his residence He often intimidated people with his coarseness rudeness and hot temper 15 Vladimir Alexandrovich was also a devoted family man close to his children Last years Edit The Vladimirs on the occasion of their silver wedding in 1899 From the left Grand Duke Andrei Grand Duke Vladimir Grand Duchess Elena Grand Duke Kirill Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna and Grand Duke Boris 27 In January 1905 a wave of strikes broke out in St Petersburg 28 On 9 January O S 22 N S a peaceful procession of workers led by a priest Father Georgy Gapon marched towards the Winter Palace from different points in the city hoping to present requests for reforms directly to Emperor Nicholas II 29 The Tsar however was not in the capital 30 General Ivan Fullon St Petersburg Governor tried to stop the march 29 When a large group of workers reached Winter Palace Square troops acting on direct orders from Guards Commander Prince Sergei Vasilchikov opened fire upon the demonstrators More than 100 marchers were killed and several hundred were wounded 30 Although Grand Duke Vladimir claimed no direct responsibility about that tragedy since he was also away from the city his reputation was tarnished The massacre known as Bloody Sunday was followed by a series of strikes in other cities peasant uprisings in the country and mutinies in the armed forces which seriously threatened the tsarist regime and became known as the Revolution of 1905 30 A month after Bloody Sunday Vladimir s brother Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich was killed by a terrorist bomb in Moscow 31 In October 1905 Vladimir s eldest son and heir Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich of Russia married his first cousin Victoria Melita of Saxe Coburg and Gotha daughter of Vladimir s sister Maria Nicholas II was enraged by the marriage which was contracted without his permission and was in violation of the Russian Orthodox ban on marriages between first cousins Nicholas stripped Kirill of his imperial titles and banished him 32 Vladimir protested the treatment given to his son and resigned from all his posts in protest 33 Vladimir shouted so violently at his nephew that the court chamberlain waiting outside the door feared for his master s safety and almost ran off to summon the imperial guards 34 Vladimir slammed his fists on Nicholas desk and ripped off the military decorations from his uniform shouting I have served your father your grandfather and you But now as you have degraded my son I no longer wish to serve you 35 Eventually Nicholas II relented and forgave his cousins for marrying without his consent but he did not allow them to return to Russia 33 The full pardon came only after several deaths in the family including Vladimir s own had placed Kirill third in the line of succession to the Imperial Throne 33 Grand Duke Vladimir died suddenly on 4 O S 17 N S February 1909 after suffering a major cerebral hemorrhage 36 Vladimir s widow and their four children survived the Russian Revolution of 1917 In 1924 in exile Kirill proclaimed himself Emperor de jure Vladimir s line thereby claimed headship of the Imperial House Vladimir was the paternal grandfather and namesake of the future pretender claimant Grand Duke Vladimir of Russia born 1917 His granddaughter Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark becomes a British princess by marriage to Prince George Duke of Kent fourth son of King George V and Queen Mary in 1934 Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich s great granddaughter Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna is the current claimant and his great grandson Prince Michael becomes a honorary member of the Romanov Family Association 37 Honours and awards EditThe Grand Duke received the following Russian and foreign decorations 38 RussianKnight of St Andrew 22 April 1847 Knight of St Alexander Nevsky 22 April 1847 Knight of St Anna 1st Class 22 April 1847 Knight of the White Eagle 22 April 1847 Knight of St Stanislaus 1st Class 11 June 1865 Knight of St George 3rd Class 14 November 1877 Knight of St Vladimir 4th Class 22 April 1868 2nd Class with Swords 15 September 1877 1st Class 15 May 1883Foreign Grand Duchy of Hesse Grand Cross of the Ludwig Order 8 June 1857 39 Kingdom of Prussia 40 Knight of the Black Eagle 22 April 1857 with Collar 1872 Grand Commander s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern 25 September 1872 Pour le Merite military 27 December 1877 Principality of Serbia Grand Cross of the Cross of Takovo 27 July 1857 41 Oldenburg Grand Cross of the Order of Duke Peter Friedrich Ludwig with Golden Crown 28 July 1860 42 Wurttemberg Grand Cross of the Wurttemberg Crown 1864 43 Denmark Knight of the Elephant 14 June 1866 44 French Empire Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 6 June 1867 45 Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the White Falcon 17 June 1867 Kingdom of Greece Grand Cross of the Redeemer 28 June 1867 Principality of Montenegro Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Danilo I 22 November 1868 Kingdom of Italy Knight of the Annunciation April 1869 46 Sweden Norway Knight of the Seraphim 27 July 1869 47 Belgium Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold 13 June 1870 Netherlands Grand Cross of the Netherlands Lion 1 July 1870 Austria Hungary Grand Cross of the Royal Hungarian Order of St Stephen 19 August 1872 Baden Knight of the House Order of Fidelity 29 August 1872 48 Grand Cross of the Zahringer Lion with Collar 29 August 1872 Mecklenburg Grand Cross of the Wendish Crown with Crown in Ore 22 April 1874 United Principalities of Romania Iron Cross for the Crossing of the Danube 1877 1878 Ernestine duchies Grand Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order 1880 49 Spain Knight of the Golden Fleece 29 October 1891 50 Kingdom of Bavaria Knight of St Hubert 1897 51 Empire of Japan Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum 13 April 1902 52 United Kingdom Honorary Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order 29 December 1903 53 Ancestry EditAncestors of Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich 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 Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich 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 DarmstadtNotes Edit Gregorian calendar date The Russian Julian calendar date is 10 April See Comte Paul Vasili La Sainte Russie la cour l armee le clerge la bourgeoisie et le peuple Libraire de Firmin Didot et Cie Paris 1890 a b c d Perry amp Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs p 35 Alexander Once a Grand Duke p 139 Zeepvat Romanov Autumn p 98 a b c d e f g h Chavchavadze The Grand Dukes p 103 Chavchavadze The Grand Dukes p 105 a b Zeepvat Romanov Autumn p 96 Zeepvat The Camera and the Tsars p 45 a b c Zeepvat Romanov Autumn p 94 a b c Zeepvat Romanov Autumn p 95 a b Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 68 a b c d Belyakova The Romanov Legacy p 158 Belyakova The Romanov Legacy p 160 a b Perry amp Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs p 36 a b c Belyakova The Romanov Legacy p 172 Belyakova The Romanov Legacy p 162 Zeepvat The Camera and the Tsars p 47 Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 72 Alexander Once a Grand Duke p 138 a b c Zeepvat The Camera and the Tsars p 136 Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 91 a b Perry amp Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs p 37 Alexander Once a Grand Duke p 137 Chavchavadze The Grand Dukes p 104 Perry amp Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs p 63 Perry amp Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs p 67 Zeepvat The Camera and the Tsars p 54 Lincoln The Romanovs p 645 a b Lincoln The Romanovs p 649 a b c Lincoln The Romanovs p 650 Lincoln The Romanovs p 651 Perry amp Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs p 100 a b c Perry amp Pleshakov The Flight of the Romanovs p 101 Julia P Gelardi From Splendor to Revolution p 207 Julia P Gelardi From Splendor to Revolution p 208 Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 180 Romanovich Nikolai 20 March 2010 The Romanov Family Association The Romanov Family Association Retrieved 24 March 2018 Russian Imperial Army Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich In Russian Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogtum Hessen 1879 Grossherzogliche Orden und Ehrenzeichen p 11 Koniglich Preussische Ordensliste Preussische Ordens Liste in German Berlin 1 5 15 934 1886 via hathitrust org Acovic Dragomir 2012 Slava i cast Odlikovanja među Srbima Srbi među odlikovanjima Belgrade Sluzbeni Glasnik p 623 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Grossherzogtums Oldenburg fur das Jahr 1872 73 Der Grossherzogliche Haus und Verdienst Orden p 29 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreich Wurttemberg 1907 Konigliche Orden p 27 Pedersen Jorgen 2009 Riddere af Elefantordenen 1559 2009 in Danish Syddansk Universitetsforlag p 274 ISBN 978 87 7674 434 2 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 515 ISBN 978 2 35077 135 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Cibrario Luigi 1869 Notizia storica del nobilissimo ordine supremo della santissima Annunziata Sunto degli statuti catalogo dei cavalieri in Italian Eredi Botta p 123 Retrieved 4 March 2019 Sveriges statskalender in Swedish 1881 p 377 retrieved 6 January 2018 via runeberg org Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogtum Baden 1876 Grossherzogliche Orden p 58 Staatshandbucher fur das Herzogtum Sachsen Coburg und Gotha 1884 Herzogliche Sachsen Ernestinischer Hausorden p 33 Caballeros de la insigne orden del toison de oro Guia Oficial de Espana in Spanish 1905 p 146 retrieved 4 June 2020 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreich Bayern 1908 Konigliche Orden p 9 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 150 The London Gazette issue 27630 p 8563References EditAlexander Grand Duke of Russia Once a Grand Duke Cassell London 1932 Belyakova Zoia The Romanov Legacy The Palaces of St Petersburg Studio ISBN 0 670 86339 4 Chavchavadze David The Grand Dukes Atlantic 1989 ISBN 0 938311 11 5 King Greg The Court of the Last Tsar Wiley 2006 ISBN 978 0 471 72763 7 Lincoln W Bruce The Romanovs Autocrats of All the Russias Anchor ISBN 0 385 27908 6 Perry John and Pleshakov Constantine The Flight of the Romanovs Basic Books 1999 ISBN 0 465 02462 9 Van der Kiste John The Romanovs 1818 1959 Sutton Publishing 1999 ISBN 0 7509 2275 3 Zeepvat Charlotte The Camera and the Tsars Sutton Publishing 2004 ISBN 0 7509 3049 7 Zeepvat Charlott Romanov Autumn stories from the last century of Imperial Russia Sutton Publishing 2000 ISBN 9780750923378External links Edit Media related to Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia amp oldid 1150985170, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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