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Natalie of Serbia

Natalija Obrenović (Serbian Cyrillic: Наталија Обреновић; 15 May 1859 – 8 May 1941), née Keshko (Romanian: Natalia Cheșcu; Russian: Наталья Кешко), known as Natalie of Serbia, was the Princess of Serbia from 1875 to 1882 and then Queen of Serbia from 1882 to 1889 as the wife of Milan I of Serbia.

Natalie of Serbia
Portrait of Natalie by Vlaho Bukovac
Queen consort of Serbia
Tenure6 March 1882 – 6 March 1889
Princess consort of Serbia
Tenure17 October 1875 – 6 March 1882
Born(1859-05-15)15 May 1859
Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany
Died8 May 1941(1941-05-08) (aged 81)
Saint-Denis, German-occupied France
Burial
Old Cemetery of Lardy, Essonne[1]
SpouseMilan I of Serbia
IssueAlexander I of Serbia
Prince Sergei
Names
Natalija Obrenović
HouseKeșco (by birth)
Obrenović (by marriage)
FatherColonel Petre Cheșcu
MotherPrincess Pulcheria Sturdza
ReligionEastern Orthodox; later Roman Catholic
Portrait of Queen Natalie by Adèle Riché, 1875
Natalie and her brother Ioan at a costume ball
Natalie as a girl
Colonel Peter Keshko, father of Queen Natalie
Princess Pulcheria Sturdza, Natalie's mother
Queen Natalie in 1897
Queen Nathalie with Ruža Orešković, her lady-in-waiting and best friend, a relative of the poet Mira Alečković, Paris, beginning of 20th century

A celebrated beauty during her youth,[2] she was later regarded as one of the most beautiful queens in Europe.[3][4]

Early life and ancestry edit

She was born in 1859 in Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany (now Italy), into an old noble House of Keshko, as the first child of Russian colonel Petre Keșco[5] (1830–1865) of Bessarabia and his wife, Moldavian Princess Pulcheria Sturdza (1831–1874). Her father was the son of Ioan Keșco (1809–1863), a Marshal of Nobility of Bessarabia,[5] and Romanian noblewoman Natalia Balș (1812–1830), daughter of Iordache Balș (1776-1849), Grand treasurer of Moldavia and Princess Ruxandra Sturdza (1785-1844). Maternally, she was granddaughter of Prince Nicolae Sturdza (1790-1832) and Princess Maria Ghika (1805-1887). When her grandfather died, her grandmother Maria (1805-1887) remarried to Prince Nicolae George Rosetti (1794-1858). Natalie's great-grandfather was Ioan Sandu Sturdza, the ruling Prince of Moldavia.[6] Natalie grew up in Dănuțeni, Bessarabia, Odessa, then part of the Russian Empire and Iași, United Romania.[2]

She had two sisters and one brother:

  • Marieta (Maria) (1861–1935), who married on 13 April 1886 Prince Grigore Ghika-Brigadier (1847–1913).
  • Ecaterina (Catherine) (1864-1934), who married on 5 February 1883 their relative Prince Eugen Ghika-Comănești (1840–1912).
  • Ioniță (John), only brother (1860-1877); he was the fourth and last child.

After she became orphaned by both parents, she was taken into the care by Prince Ivan Manucbey (1810-1893) and raised along with his children. The other guardian was her eldest maternal aunt, Princess Ecaterina Sturdza (1826), second wife of Prince Constantin Moruzi (1819-1886), Chamberlain at the Imperial Court of Russia.[2][7]

Princess and Queen edit

Before the marriage, there was a proposal from her second cousin, Prince Ivan Mikhailovich Obolensky, member of the Rurikid princely Obolensky family and also hopes that she would one day become wife of Prince Grigore Grisha Manukbey (1855-1902), her childhood friend who was enchanted with her. In the end, she married Prince Milan Obrenović IV of Serbia on 17 October 1875, whom she previously met at a ball in Vienna, despite initial objections from both Muruzi and Manukbey families. They were second cousins, as her grandmother Nathalia (1812–1830) was sister of Milan's grandmother Smaranda Balș (1811–1886), whose family, although noble, dubiously claimed descent from an old medieval House of Balšić.[8] A delegation from Romania, which included members of the Romanian noble families Moruzi and Catargiu (Milan's maternal family to whom Natalia was related), attended her wedding ceremony.[9] She had two sons with him, the future King Alexander, born 1876, whose godfather was Tsar Alexander II of Russia, and his younger brother Sergei (Sergej), who, prematurely born, died just a four days after his birth in 1878.

When Prince Milan proclaimed the Kingdom of Serbia in 1882 after securing international recognition, Princess Natalie assumed the title and rank of a Queen.

At the Easter reception of 1886, Queen Natalie publicly slapped the wife of the Greek ambassador. The Greek woman was rumored to have an affair with King Milan.[10]

Royal conflict and divorce edit

The relationship of the royal couple reached a critical level in 1887, following not only many affairs of the King with other women, but even political differences between King and Queen. The King pursued a pro-Austrian foreign policy which the Russian-born and slavophile Queen would not tolerate.[11][12]

These conflict developed into a public scandal when the Queen - accompanied by her child, the eleven-year-old Crown Prince Alexander - left Serbia and settled in the Russian Crimea in May 1887. Slavophile public in Russia honoured the Serbian Queen demonstratively. Rumours spread about a royal divorce in the near future, and there was public talk about the King's abdication in favour of his son. These rumours proved to be premature - the divorce occurred one year later, the abdication followed in 1889. In July 1887, the Queen and her son returned to Belgrade, in August the Queen left her country again for Austria-Hungary. In October, the King and Queen met in Budapest for a formal reconciliation, and with the King's approval the Queen and the Crown Prince left for another foreign travel to Italy until November.

In 1888, Queen Natalie and her son left for another long foreign stay in Wiesbaden - obviously without intention to return to Belgrade. The public private scandal turned into politics when the King used the German police in July 1888 to bring the young Crown Prince back to his kingdom.[13][14]

Soon afterwards King Milan opened the ecclesiastical procedures of divorce. Even the development of these procedures put a shadow on the royal reputation. The Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church met in Belgrade and declared itself incompetent in the royal divorce. When the consistorium of Belgrade took over the case the Queen rejected the King's wish for divorce and advocated the several attempts to reconcile the couple according to ecclesiastical law. When the King managed to get his divorce by a single decision of the Metropolite of the Serbian church, the Queen rejected that decision in public and demanded a return to Belgrade.[15]

An immediate political consequence of these dynastic conflicts was the new right of succession to the throne proclaimed during the parliamentary sessions regarding the new constitution of Serbia. The new constitution declared Crown Prince Alexander and his future children (that were never born) to be single legal heirs of the Serbian crown. Possible children of a second marriage of King Milan should be excluded from succession even in the case that King Alexander's line should become extinct. A clear votum of mistrust for the former king in the handling of his family affairs that foreshadowed his following abdication in March 1889.

Conflicts with the Regency and private reconciliation edit

On 6 March 1889, as consequence of the surprising abdication of her (former) husband, Natalie's son Alexander I became King of Serbia. Until 1893, when Alexander assumed government himself, he was put under a regency council led by former prime minister Jovan Ristic.[16][17] The former King Milan secured the educational rights for his son for himself and ordered the regency council not to allow the Queen Mother a permanent stay in Serbia during the minority of King Alexander. Short meetings between mother and son in foreign countries should be possible with permission of the regency.

Queen Natalie did not accept these restricted conditions. In August 1889, she announced publicly to visit her son in the royal palace in Belgrade. She demanded to see her son every Sunday and holiday, but was offered to see him twice a year instead with King Milan regulating.[15] When the Queen Mother arrived in Belgrade on 29 August 1889, she was enthusiastically welcomed by the population.

But the regency denied her royal style (she should be announced just as Mme Keshko) and - after she insisted to be still the ex-king's wife and rightful Queen of Serbia - any meeting with her son. In October 1889 the ex-king and the regents allowed meetings between mother and son every 14 days - but strictly outside the royal palace.

In July 1890, the Synod of the Serbian Orthodox church declared the divorce between Milan and Natalie to be legal.

In April 1891, ex-king Milan - after several interferences in government affairs - announced his intention to leave Serbia until his son should be old enough to take over the rule. The parliament instructed the government to ask Queen Mother Natalie to act accordingly. When the Queen refused to leave the country, the police attempted to expel her by force on 18 May 1891 but a crowd of civilians fought the police and the military, resulting in two being killed and several wounded. The next day the whole force of the garrison was used to send her into exile.[18]

In January 1893, the exiled royals Milan and Natalija reconciled and asked the Serbian government to revoke their divorce. The Metropolite and the synod declared the divorce act of 1888 illegal and the royal marriage still in force in March 1893.[18]

Shortly afterwards their son King Alexander declared himself mature and deposed the regency council in April 1893.

Return, second exile and death edit

After ex-king Milan had returned to Serbia in January 1894 and took the position as deputy of his son and commander-in-chief of the army, King Alexander ordered the complete rehabilitation of his parents and the restoration of their royal prerogatives in April 1894 - despite the protests of the radical opposition. Natalie, who lived mainly in France, returned to Belgrade not before May 1895 but kept her habit of frequent foreign travels.

When King Alexander affianced himself with Draga Mašin, a court lady of Queen Natalie, in 1900, his parents rejected the future queen as an improper and impossible choice. His parents had previously arranged a marriage to a suitable German Princess Alexandra Karoline of Schaumburg-Lippe, sister of the Queen of Württemberg, which never took place.[19] After that, ex-king Milan resigned as army commander and left Serbia for the rest of his life; he died in Vienna a year later, in 1901. Even the relationship between Natalie and Alexander was broken up. Because the Queen Mother was a strong opponent of her son's marriage to Draga, Natalie was banished from Serbia by her son.

King Alexander and his wife Draga were killed in 1903 during a military coup. This left Natalie the sole member of the Obrenović dynasty. She donated the inheritance to the University of Belgrade and various churches and monasteries around Serbia. The same year, Queen Natalie became a member of the Roman Catholic Church and a nun, converting from Serbian Orthodoxy.

Queen Natalie spent the remaining years of her life in exile in France under the name Comtesse de Roudnik (Countess of Rudnik), which stood in her diplomatic passport, opting to officially hide her true identity. The last winter before she died in 1941, she spent with her friend, Jehanne Henriette Emilie Vivaux, née Piarron de Mondesir (1886-1966), niece of General Jean Frédéric Lucien Piarron de Mondésir in Lardy, Essonne, a small town near Paris, where she was buried at the local cemetery. There is still a dispute where exactly she died, some sources say it was in Saint-Denis, France, while other sources indicate Paris. Her unpublished memoirs were kept in the Vatican, but were published in Belgrade in 1999.

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Royal Tombs
  2. ^ a b c Mitican 2008.
  3. ^ "How A Queen Keeps Beauty". Reading Eagle. 9 January 1897.
  4. ^ "Ex-Queen Natalie of Serbia is Found in Paris Convent" (PDF). New York Evening Post. 3 February 1930.
  5. ^ a b Vulpe 2012.
  6. ^ "Pedigree Chart for Natalija Kesko: Genealogics".
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-09-22.
  8. ^ Lucian-Iorgan, Filip. "Mitologiile genealogice, mitologii politice1". revistasferapoliticii.ro (in Romanian).
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-08-08. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  10. ^ Hall, Thornton (1913). Love affairs of the Courts of Europe by Thornton Hall. Project Gutenberg. p. 14.
  11. ^ Buchan, John (1923). Yugoslavia; the Nations of To-day: A New History of the World. Houghton, Mifflin. p. 62.
  12. ^ Dragnich, Alex N. (2004). Serbia Through the Ages. East European Monographs. p. 71. ISBN 9780880335416.
  13. ^ Sleicher, John Albert (21 July 1888). "King Milan I of Servia has finally got possession of his son". Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper.
  14. ^ The Illustrated American, Volume 7. Illustrated American Publishing Company. 1891. p. 112.
  15. ^ a b Appletons' Annual Cyclopædia and Register of Important Events of the Year. D. Appleton & Company. 1891. p. 771.
  16. ^ Martin, Frederick; Keltie, Sir John Scott; Renwick, Isaac Parker Anderson; Epstein, Mortimer; Steinberg, Sigfrid Henry; Paxton, John; Hunter, Brian, eds. (1900). The Statesman's Year-book, Volume 37. St. Martin's Press. p. 1003.
  17. ^ Stead, Alfred (1909). Servia by the Servians. W. Heinemann. p. 359.
  18. ^ a b Haydn, Joseph (1906). Haydn's Dictionary of Dates and Universal Information Relating to All Ages and Nations (24 ed.). G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 1199.
  19. ^ "Royal Musings: A princess all dressed up". 18 May 2011.

Sources edit

  • Vulpe, Viorica (2012). "Momente și personalități ale dinastiei Keșco". Curaj.[better source needed]
  • Mitican, Ion (2008). "Regina Serbiei, în vizită la bunica de la Iaşi". Ziarul Lumina. Archived from the original on July 9, 2013.[better source needed]
Royal titles
Preceded by Princess consort of Serbia
17 October 1875 – 6 March 1882
Succeeded by
Herself as Queen consort
Preceded by
Herself as Princess consort
Queen consort of Serbia
6 March 1882 – 6 March 1889
Succeeded by

natalie, serbia, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Natalie of Serbia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Natalija Obrenovic Serbian Cyrillic Nataliјa Obrenoviћ 15 May 1859 8 May 1941 nee Keshko Romanian Natalia Cheșcu Russian Natalya Keshko known as Natalie of Serbia was the Princess of Serbia from 1875 to 1882 and then Queen of Serbia from 1882 to 1889 as the wife of Milan I of Serbia Natalie of SerbiaPortrait of Natalie by Vlaho BukovacQueen consort of SerbiaTenure6 March 1882 6 March 1889Princess consort of SerbiaTenure17 October 1875 6 March 1882Born 1859 05 15 15 May 1859Florence Grand Duchy of TuscanyDied8 May 1941 1941 05 08 aged 81 Saint Denis German occupied FranceBurialOld Cemetery of Lardy Essonne 1 SpouseMilan I of SerbiaIssueAlexander I of SerbiaPrince SergeiNamesNatalija ObrenovicHouseKeșco by birth Obrenovic by marriage FatherColonel Petre CheșcuMotherPrincess Pulcheria SturdzaReligionEastern Orthodox later Roman Catholic Portrait of Queen Natalie by Adele Riche 1875 Natalie and her brother Ioan at a costume ball Natalie as a girl Colonel Peter Keshko father of Queen Natalie Princess Pulcheria Sturdza Natalie s mother Queen Natalie in 1897 Queen Nathalie with Ruza Oreskovic her lady in waiting and best friend a relative of the poet Mira Aleckovic Paris beginning of 20th century A celebrated beauty during her youth 2 she was later regarded as one of the most beautiful queens in Europe 3 4 Contents 1 Early life and ancestry 2 Princess and Queen 3 Royal conflict and divorce 4 Conflicts with the Regency and private reconciliation 5 Return second exile and death 6 Gallery 7 References 8 SourcesEarly life and ancestry editShe was born in 1859 in Florence Grand Duchy of Tuscany now Italy into an old noble House of Keshko as the first child of Russian colonel Petre Keșco 5 1830 1865 of Bessarabia and his wife Moldavian Princess Pulcheria Sturdza 1831 1874 Her father was the son of Ioan Keșco 1809 1863 a Marshal of Nobility of Bessarabia 5 and Romanian noblewoman Natalia Balș 1812 1830 daughter of Iordache Balș 1776 1849 Grand treasurer of Moldavia and Princess Ruxandra Sturdza 1785 1844 Maternally she was granddaughter of Prince Nicolae Sturdza 1790 1832 and Princess Maria Ghika 1805 1887 When her grandfather died her grandmother Maria 1805 1887 remarried to Prince Nicolae George Rosetti 1794 1858 Natalie s great grandfather was Ioan Sandu Sturdza the ruling Prince of Moldavia 6 Natalie grew up in Dănuțeni Bessarabia Odessa then part of the Russian Empire and Iași United Romania 2 She had two sisters and one brother Marieta Maria 1861 1935 who married on 13 April 1886 Prince Grigore Ghika Brigadier 1847 1913 Ecaterina Catherine 1864 1934 who married on 5 February 1883 their relative Prince Eugen Ghika Comănești 1840 1912 Ioniță John only brother 1860 1877 he was the fourth and last child After she became orphaned by both parents she was taken into the care by Prince Ivan Manucbey 1810 1893 and raised along with his children The other guardian was her eldest maternal aunt Princess Ecaterina Sturdza 1826 second wife of Prince Constantin Moruzi 1819 1886 Chamberlain at the Imperial Court of Russia 2 7 Princess and Queen editBefore the marriage there was a proposal from her second cousin Prince Ivan Mikhailovich Obolensky member of the Rurikid princely Obolensky family and also hopes that she would one day become wife of Prince Grigore Grisha Manukbey 1855 1902 her childhood friend who was enchanted with her In the end she married Prince Milan Obrenovic IV of Serbia on 17 October 1875 whom she previously met at a ball in Vienna despite initial objections from both Muruzi and Manukbey families They were second cousins as her grandmother Nathalia 1812 1830 was sister of Milan s grandmother Smaranda Balș 1811 1886 whose family although noble dubiously claimed descent from an old medieval House of Balsic 8 A delegation from Romania which included members of the Romanian noble families Moruzi and Catargiu Milan s maternal family to whom Natalia was related attended her wedding ceremony 9 She had two sons with him the future King Alexander born 1876 whose godfather was Tsar Alexander II of Russia and his younger brother Sergei Sergej who prematurely born died just a four days after his birth in 1878 When Prince Milan proclaimed the Kingdom of Serbia in 1882 after securing international recognition Princess Natalie assumed the title and rank of a Queen At the Easter reception of 1886 Queen Natalie publicly slapped the wife of the Greek ambassador The Greek woman was rumored to have an affair with King Milan 10 Royal conflict and divorce editThe relationship of the royal couple reached a critical level in 1887 following not only many affairs of the King with other women but even political differences between King and Queen The King pursued a pro Austrian foreign policy which the Russian born and slavophile Queen would not tolerate 11 12 These conflict developed into a public scandal when the Queen accompanied by her child the eleven year old Crown Prince Alexander left Serbia and settled in the Russian Crimea in May 1887 Slavophile public in Russia honoured the Serbian Queen demonstratively Rumours spread about a royal divorce in the near future and there was public talk about the King s abdication in favour of his son These rumours proved to be premature the divorce occurred one year later the abdication followed in 1889 In July 1887 the Queen and her son returned to Belgrade in August the Queen left her country again for Austria Hungary In October the King and Queen met in Budapest for a formal reconciliation and with the King s approval the Queen and the Crown Prince left for another foreign travel to Italy until November In 1888 Queen Natalie and her son left for another long foreign stay in Wiesbaden obviously without intention to return to Belgrade The public private scandal turned into politics when the King used the German police in July 1888 to bring the young Crown Prince back to his kingdom 13 14 Soon afterwards King Milan opened the ecclesiastical procedures of divorce Even the development of these procedures put a shadow on the royal reputation The Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church met in Belgrade and declared itself incompetent in the royal divorce When the consistorium of Belgrade took over the case the Queen rejected the King s wish for divorce and advocated the several attempts to reconcile the couple according to ecclesiastical law When the King managed to get his divorce by a single decision of the Metropolite of the Serbian church the Queen rejected that decision in public and demanded a return to Belgrade 15 An immediate political consequence of these dynastic conflicts was the new right of succession to the throne proclaimed during the parliamentary sessions regarding the new constitution of Serbia The new constitution declared Crown Prince Alexander and his future children that were never born to be single legal heirs of the Serbian crown Possible children of a second marriage of King Milan should be excluded from succession even in the case that King Alexander s line should become extinct A clear votum of mistrust for the former king in the handling of his family affairs that foreshadowed his following abdication in March 1889 Conflicts with the Regency and private reconciliation editOn 6 March 1889 as consequence of the surprising abdication of her former husband Natalie s son Alexander I became King of Serbia Until 1893 when Alexander assumed government himself he was put under a regency council led by former prime minister Jovan Ristic 16 17 The former King Milan secured the educational rights for his son for himself and ordered the regency council not to allow the Queen Mother a permanent stay in Serbia during the minority of King Alexander Short meetings between mother and son in foreign countries should be possible with permission of the regency Queen Natalie did not accept these restricted conditions In August 1889 she announced publicly to visit her son in the royal palace in Belgrade She demanded to see her son every Sunday and holiday but was offered to see him twice a year instead with King Milan regulating 15 When the Queen Mother arrived in Belgrade on 29 August 1889 she was enthusiastically welcomed by the population But the regency denied her royal style she should be announced just as Mme Keshko and after she insisted to be still the ex king s wife and rightful Queen of Serbia any meeting with her son In October 1889 the ex king and the regents allowed meetings between mother and son every 14 days but strictly outside the royal palace In July 1890 the Synod of the Serbian Orthodox church declared the divorce between Milan and Natalie to be legal In April 1891 ex king Milan after several interferences in government affairs announced his intention to leave Serbia until his son should be old enough to take over the rule The parliament instructed the government to ask Queen Mother Natalie to act accordingly When the Queen refused to leave the country the police attempted to expel her by force on 18 May 1891 but a crowd of civilians fought the police and the military resulting in two being killed and several wounded The next day the whole force of the garrison was used to send her into exile 18 In January 1893 the exiled royals Milan and Natalija reconciled and asked the Serbian government to revoke their divorce The Metropolite and the synod declared the divorce act of 1888 illegal and the royal marriage still in force in March 1893 18 Shortly afterwards their son King Alexander declared himself mature and deposed the regency council in April 1893 Return second exile and death editAfter ex king Milan had returned to Serbia in January 1894 and took the position as deputy of his son and commander in chief of the army King Alexander ordered the complete rehabilitation of his parents and the restoration of their royal prerogatives in April 1894 despite the protests of the radical opposition Natalie who lived mainly in France returned to Belgrade not before May 1895 but kept her habit of frequent foreign travels When King Alexander affianced himself with Draga Masin a court lady of Queen Natalie in 1900 his parents rejected the future queen as an improper and impossible choice His parents had previously arranged a marriage to a suitable German Princess Alexandra Karoline of Schaumburg Lippe sister of the Queen of Wurttemberg which never took place 19 After that ex king Milan resigned as army commander and left Serbia for the rest of his life he died in Vienna a year later in 1901 Even the relationship between Natalie and Alexander was broken up Because the Queen Mother was a strong opponent of her son s marriage to Draga Natalie was banished from Serbia by her son King Alexander and his wife Draga were killed in 1903 during a military coup This left Natalie the sole member of the Obrenovic dynasty She donated the inheritance to the University of Belgrade and various churches and monasteries around Serbia The same year Queen Natalie became a member of the Roman Catholic Church and a nun converting from Serbian Orthodoxy Queen Natalie spent the remaining years of her life in exile in France under the name Comtesse de Roudnik Countess of Rudnik which stood in her diplomatic passport opting to officially hide her true identity The last winter before she died in 1941 she spent with her friend Jehanne Henriette Emilie Vivaux nee Piarron de Mondesir 1886 1966 niece of General Jean Frederic Lucien Piarron de Mondesir in Lardy Essonne a small town near Paris where she was buried at the local cemetery There is still a dispute where exactly she died some sources say it was in Saint Denis France while other sources indicate Paris Her unpublished memoirs were kept in the Vatican but were published in Belgrade in 1999 Gallery edit nbsp Princess Natalie in 1875 nbsp Bust of Natalija Obrenovic Queen of Serbia by Alajos Strobl Historical Museum of Serbia nbsp Diplomatic passport of Queen Natalie issued in 1937 under the name Comtesse de Roudnik by King Peter II of Yugoslavia nbsp Grave of Queen Natalie in LardyReferences edit Royal Tombs a b c Mitican 2008 How A Queen Keeps Beauty Reading Eagle 9 January 1897 Ex Queen Natalie of Serbia is Found in Paris Convent PDF New York Evening Post 3 February 1930 a b Vulpe 2012 Pedigree Chart for Natalija Kesko Genealogics Familia Sturdza Genealogia lui Lovendal Archived from the original on 2016 09 22 Lucian Iorgan Filip Mitologiile genealogice mitologii politice1 revistasferapoliticii ro in Romanian Natalia Kescu o basarabeanca Regina Serbiei Archived from the original on 2014 08 08 Retrieved 2014 06 28 Hall Thornton 1913 Love affairs of the Courts of Europe by Thornton Hall Project Gutenberg p 14 Buchan John 1923 Yugoslavia the Nations of To day A New History of the World Houghton Mifflin p 62 Dragnich Alex N 2004 Serbia Through the Ages East European Monographs p 71 ISBN 9780880335416 Sleicher John Albert 21 July 1888 King Milan I of Servia has finally got possession of his son Frank Leslie s Illustrated Newspaper The Illustrated American Volume 7 Illustrated American Publishing Company 1891 p 112 a b Appletons Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events of the Year D Appleton amp Company 1891 p 771 Martin Frederick Keltie Sir John Scott Renwick Isaac Parker Anderson Epstein Mortimer Steinberg Sigfrid Henry Paxton John Hunter Brian eds 1900 The Statesman s Year book Volume 37 St Martin s Press p 1003 Stead Alfred 1909 Servia by the Servians W Heinemann p 359 a b Haydn Joseph 1906 Haydn s Dictionary of Dates and Universal Information Relating to All Ages and Nations 24 ed G P Putnam s Sons p 1199 Royal Musings A princess all dressed up 18 May 2011 Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Natalija Obrenovic Vulpe Viorica 2012 Momente și personalități ale dinastiei Keșco Curaj better source needed Mitican Ion 2008 Regina Serbiei in vizită la bunica de la Iasi Ziarul Lumina Archived from the original on July 9 2013 better source needed Royal titles Preceded byJulia Hunyady von Kethely Princess consort of Serbia17 October 1875 6 March 1882 Succeeded byHerself as Queen consort Preceded byHerself as Princess consort Queen consort of Serbia6 March 1882 6 March 1889 Succeeded byDraga Masin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Natalie of Serbia amp oldid 1221659499, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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