Saturday, May 23, 2020

In Memory of Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna of Russia (1914-2010)

On 23 May 2010, Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna died at La Paz Hospital in Madrid. The grand duchess was ninety-five years-old. She was the last surviving member of the Imperial House of Romanov to have been born in the Russian Empire before its fall in 1917.
The website of the Russian Imperial House offered a detailed account of the last few days in the extraordinary life of Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna:
On 21 May 2010, the grand duchess’s health began to deteriorate sharply. Doctors were summoned and were able to stop the heart attack; and on the following day, Her Imperial Highness was feeling somewhat better. But by evening, the pain and labored breathing had returned. 
On 10/23 May, on the Feast Day of the Holy Trinity, Grand Duchess Maria Wladimirovna informed Fr. Andrei Kordochkin, the rector of the Church of the Nativity of Christ, a parish of the Moscow Patriarchate, of her most august mother’s illness. Fr. Andrei immediately arrived at the Imperial Family’s apartment and gave the grand duchess the Most Holy Mysteries of Christ, and read the Canon for the Departure of the Soul. In the evening, Her Imperial Highness was taken to “La Paz” hospital. At her side the entire time was Grand Duchess Maria Wladimirovna. At 11:55pm local time, the Dowager Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna departed this life in the Lord. 
News of the death of the senior member of the Russian Imperial House brought sorrow and expressions of sympathy from people all over the world. The first condolences received were from His Holiness, Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia: 
"TELEGRAM TO HER IMPERIAL HIGHNESS, GRAND DUCHESS MARIA WLADIMIROVNA YOUR IMPERIAL HIGHNESS! It was with enormous sorrow that I learned of the death in the Lord of Her Imperial Highness, Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna. She lived a full, long, and complex life. She confronted suffering in her life many times, and time has taken its toll, but through it all, she maintained a passionate love for Russia and for the traditions of Holy Orthodoxy. We are grateful for her involvement in the life of the Church, both at home and abroad, and for her significant contributions to the reestablishment of the unity in the Church. Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna maintained an active interest in affairs in Russia, and sincerely empathized with our sorrows and rejoiced in our successes. I will always remember the times I met her, especially the first meeting, which took place in 1992 during the historic visit of the grand-ducal couple to St. Petersburg. I well remember also my last meeting with her, in Smolensk. Please accept my heartfelt condolences on this loss that has befallen you and your family. May the Lord grant rest to his servant in the abodes of the righteous, and grant us all His all-mighty help in the service of the fatherland and its people. With respect, +KIRILL, PATRIARCH OF MOSCOW AND ALL RUSSIA" 
In the days after the death of the dowager grand duchess, condolences were received also from the Chair of the Office of External Church Relations, Metropolitan Hilarion of Volokolamsk; the First Hierarch of the Russia Orthodox Church Abroad, Metropolitan Hilarion of Eastern America and New York; Metropolitan Kornilii of Talliinn and All Estonia; Archbishop Vikentii of Ekaterinburg and Verkhoturia; Archbishop Aleksei of Kostroma and Galitsa, Archbishop Kirill of San Francisco and Western America; Archbishop Ionafan of Tulchyn and Bratslav; Archbishop Innokentii of Korsun; Metropolitan Polikarp of Spain and Portugal and Exarch of the Mediterranean; from King Juan-Carlos I of Spain and Queen Sofia; Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain and North Ireland; King Albert II of the Belgians and Queen Paola; King Carl XVI Gustav of Sweden and Queen Silvia; Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands; Tsar Simeon II of Bulgaria and Tsaritsa Margarita; King Constantine II of Greece and Queen Anna-Maria; King Leka of Albania; the Head of the Yugoslavian Royal House Crown Prince Alexander Karageorgievich and Princess Catherine; the Head of the Austrian Imperial House, Archduke Otto; the Head of the German Imperial and Prussian Royal House, Prince Georg-Freidrich; the Head of the Bavarian Royal House, Duke Franz; the Head of the Portuguese Royal House, Dom Duarte, Duke of Braganza; the Head of the Georgian Royal House, Tsarevich David Georgievich; the Head of the Italian Royal House, Prince Victor-Emmanuel of Savoy; from the vice-chair of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation, L. K. Sliska; the Chairman of the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation, V. D. Zor’kin; the Chair of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation, V. M Lebedev; the Chairman of the Central Elections Commission, V. E. Churov; the governor of Tula District, V. D. Dudkin; the governor of Kemerovo District, A. I. Tuleev; the general director of the judicial department of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation, A. V. Gusev; the vice-chair of the State Duma Committee for Transport, S. A. Gavrilov; from the President of the Transdnistria Moldovan Republic, I. N. Smirnov; the Minister of Culture of France, F. Mitterrand; from the great-great-grandson of Emperor Alexander III, P. E. Kulikovskii and his wife; from government and civic figures; representatives of the clergy; academic and cultural groups; from members of the Russian and European nobility; and from many countrymen, who have expressed their sincere feelings of support for the Imperial family at this difficult time of sorrow and loss.
Princess Leonida Georgievna Bagration-Mukhransky
Princess Leonida Georgievna Bagration-Mukhransky was born on 6 October 1914 at Tbilisi, Georgia. She descended from the oldest Christian royal family in the world: the Bagrationi of Georgia. Leonida's parents were Prince George Alexandrovich (1884-1957) and Princess Elena Sigismundovna (1886–1979; née Złotnicka-Nowina).
Sumner Moore Kirby
After the Russian Revolution, the family eventually made its way to France. It was there that Leonida met her first husband, American Woolsworth heir Sumner Moore Kirby (1895–1945). The couple were married at Nice on 6 November 1934. Leonida and Sumner had one daughter, Hélène Louise Kirby (b.Geneva 26 January 1935); the pair's union ended in divorce on 18 November 1937.
Grand Duke Vladimir and Grand Duchess Leonida of Russia
During World War II, Leonida met Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich of Russia in France at a café. The couple would not see each other again for a few years: their next meeting would take place in Spain during the late 1940s. The relationship between the two parties blossomed into love. On 13 August 1948, Grand Duke Vladimir and Princess Leonida were married at Lausanne. By virtue of her marriage, the bride was henceforth titled as Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna of Russia. 
Grand Duke Vladimir, Grand Duchess Leonida, and their daughter Grand Duchess Maria
After several years of marriage, the grand duke and grand duchess welcomed the arrival of their only child. Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna of Russia was born at Madrid on 23 December 1953. Her godparents were Queen Mother Giovanna of Bulgaria (née Savoy) and her granduncle Grand Duke Andrei Vladimirovich of Russia. 
For the rest of her long life, Grand Duchess Leonida dedicated herself wholeheartedly to her roles as a wife, mother, and grandmother. An iron fist in a velvet glove, the grand duchess did everything in her power to support her husband, Grand Duke Vladimir (1917-1992), her daughter and current Head of the Imperial House, Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna (b.1953), and her only grandchild, Grand Duke George Mikhailovich (b.1981). Her passing was immensely mourned by her family and by all supporters of the Imperial House of Romanov who understood the pivotal part that Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna had played in securing the dynasty's future. 

Thursday, May 21, 2020

The Last Princess of Imperial Russia: Princess Vera Konstantinovna (1906-2001)

HH Princess Vera Konstantinovna of Russia
 
Princess Vera


Her Highness Princess Vera Konstantinovna of Russia was born on 11 April (Old Style) / 24 April (New Style) 1906 at Pavlovsk Palace. Vera was a great-granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia. The princess was named after her paternal aunt Grand Duchess Vera Konstantinovna (1854-1912), the wife of Duke Eugen of Württemberg. Vera's godparents were her brother Prince Konstantin Konstantinovich and the Empress Alexandra Feodorovna (born Princess of Hesse and by Rhine), consort of Emperor Nicholas II of Russia.

Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich
Grand Duchess Elisabeth Mavrikievna


Vera was the youngest of the nine children of Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia (1858-1915) and Grand Duchess Elizaveta Mavrikievna (1865-1927; née Princess Elisabeth of Saxe-Altenburg), who married in 1884.

Grand Duke Konstantin and Grand Duchess Alexandra of Russia
Prince Moritz of Saxe-Altenburg
Princess Augusta of Saxe-Meiningen


Vera's paternal grandparents were Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich (1827-1892) and Grand Duchess Alexandra Iosifovna (1830-1911; née Princess of Saxe-Altenburg). The maternal grandparents of the princess were Prince Moritz of Saxe-Altenburg (1829-1907) and Princess Augusta of Saxe-Meiningen (1843-1919).

The Konstantinovichi Branch of the Russian Imperial House in 1911.(Back row; L to R): Princess Tatiana; Prince Gabriel; Prince Ioann; Grand Duchess Elizabeta and Grand Duke Konstantin
(Front row; L to R): Princess Vera; Prince George; Prince Igor; Prince Oleg and Prince Constantine


Vera's older siblings were Prince Ioann (1886-1918), Prince Gavrill (1887-1955; later titled Grand Duke), Princess Tatiana (1890-1979), Prince Konstantin (1891-1918), Prince Oleg (1892-1914), Prince Igor (1894-1918), Prince George (1903-1938), and Princess Natalia (1905).

Prince George Constantinovich and Princess Vera Constantinovna


Princess Vera was the only surviving member of the Russian Imperial House to have vivid recollections of the family before the Revolution. Vera recalled how the four daughters of Emperor Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra would carry her in their arms when she was small; how the grand duchesses were "very modest" and kind to their little relative; how Vera greatly enjoyed the time she was able to spend with her cousins. Vera did recall that the grand duchesses were easier company than their brother, the Tsarevich Alexei, who could be demanding and rude. The princess remembered how her brother Prince George and she were very fond of their cousins; in addition, Vera had sweet memories of Emperor Nicholas II, who charmed her early on by his kind familial interactions.

The First Fatality amongst the Romanovs: Prince Oleg Konstantinovich


When World War I broke out, Vera was in Altenburg with her parents and brother George visiting her maternal family. Due to the intervention of Empress Auguste Viktoria, the family was able to return to Russia. Vera's five older brothers (Ioann, Gavrill, Konstantin, Oleg, and Igor) joined the Russian military in order to serve their nation. The first fatality was her twenty-one year-old brother Prince Oleg, who died in a battle with the Germans at Vilnius on 12 October 1914. Considered too young for the occasion, Vera was unable to attend her brother's funeral.

Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich lying in state.
The funeral procession of Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia in Saint Petersburg.


On 15 June 1915, Princess Vera was the sole witness to the death of her father, Grand Duke Konstantin. Aged fifty-six, Konstantin suffered an heart attack at Pavlovsk Palace while his nine year-old daughter was in the room. Understandably upset, Vera made her way into a neighbouring room, where she alerted her mother Grand Duchess Elizaveta of Konstantin's condition. When they made their way back to the grand duke's body, it was found that he had already passed away.

Prince Ioann of Russia

 

Prince Konstantin of Russia

 

Prince Igor of Russia


In the aftermath of the Revolution, three of Vera's five surviving brothers were to meet their eternal reward. On 17/18 July 1918, Prince Ioann, Prince Konstantin, and Prince Igor were murdered by the Bolsheviks at Alapaevsk. The princes were joined by Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorvna (widow of Grand Duke Sergei and sister of Empress Alexandra), Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich (brother-in-law of Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna, sister of Emperor Nicholas II), and Prince Vladimir Pavlovich Paley (son of Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich, a first cousin of Emperor Nicholas II).

Queen Victoria of Sweden

 

Grand Duchess Elisabeth and her children Prince George and Princess Vera


Queen Victoria of Sweden provided a lifeline to Grand Duchess Elizaveta Mavrikievna and her children. Through the Swedish ambassador to Russia, the queen invited the family to Sweden. In October 1918, aboard the Swedish vessel Ångermanland, the twelve year-old Princess Vera reached the safe haven of Sweden with her mother and brother in addition to her nephews, Prince Teymuraz Konstantinovich Bagration-Mukhransky and Prince Vsevolod Ivanovich of Russia, and her nieces, Princess Natalia Konstantinovna Bagration-Mukhransky and Princess Catherine Ivanovna of Russia. The Bolsheviks allowed the family to travel to Stockholm unharmed, as they apparently feared a diplomatic incident.

On the sofa: Princess Tatiana with her children Teymuraz and Natalia Bagration-Mukhransky and Grand Duchess Elizaveta Mavrikievna. On the floor: Prince George and Princess Vera. Brussels, 1921.


In 1920, Grand Duchess Elizaveta Mavrikievna and her surviving family relocated to Belgium after an application to King Albert I of the Belgians. The grand duchess had found the cost of living in Sweden to be insupportable. Happily, Albert provided a place for his Romanov relatives to reside in Brussels. Alas, the grand duchess and her children suffered from ill health, and their Belgian respite was brief.

Duke Ernst II of Saxe-Altenburg


In 1922, the grand duchess and her son and daughter relocated to Elizabeta's ancestral lands, where welcomed by Vera's uncle Duke Ernst II of Saxe-Altenburg. Elizaveta Mavrikievna settled at her family's castle, where she found a safe harbour.

Grand Duchess Elizaveta Mavrikievna of Russia


On 24 March 1927, the grand duchess died of cancer at Leipzig; she was sixty-two years-old. Her youngest daughter Vera now had to forge her own way forward. In the 1930s, Prince George relocated from Europe to New York City, where he became an interior designer. The prince died from surgery complications in 1938 at the age of thirty-five.

Vera


Princess Vera remained in Germany during World War II. Vera worked as a translator in a camp for prisoners of war. However, officials of the Third Reich eventually removed the princess from her position because she had tried to help fellow prisoners. At the end of the war, when Vera became aware that Altenburg was to fall under the Soviet sphere of influence, she fled on foot along with her cousin Hereditary Prince Georg Moritz of Saxe-Altenburg (1900-1991) to Hamburg, where she settled in 1946. In 1951, the princess moved to the United States of America, where she established herself very modestly in New York.

Princess Vera Konstantinovna of Russia in front of a picture of her father Grand Duke Konstantin.

 

Princess Vera of Russia in her New York City apartment.


Mindful of her familial connections, Princess Vera was an occasional guest at Romanov family gatherings. In 1938, she attended the wedding of her cousin Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia to Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia. In 1953, the princess participated in the celebrations of the union of Archduke Rudolf of Austria, son of Emperor Karl of Austria-Hungary and Empress Zita, to Countess Xenia Czernichev-Besobrasov, whose father was a Tsarist courtier.

Princess Vera of Russia


The American press caught up with the princess in February 1959. By this time, Vera was living in a small apartment with three other ladies in NYC. Various news outlets contained the following brief profile of the princess:

Every weekday morning, she hops a bus or subway and rides to an office in the basement of the Russian Orthodox church. There she files and answers letters from Russian refugees, packs bundles of food and clothing and tends to other details for the Russian Children's Welfare Society. 
How does she feel about this change of status? 
"I always enjoy life, whatever I do. And remember, I have been living this way most of my life," said the 53-year-old princess in an interview. 
A hearty woman with grey hair, twinkly eyes and a deep voice, she wore a simple, black dress and little jewellery. The family had to sell what jewels they were able to bring out of Russia, she explained. 
In 1918, the Bolsheviks killed three of her six brothers. The next day, Tsar Nicholas was killed. The princess and her mother, and later her sister and brothers, escaped. 
"We were lucky because we had an invitation to visit the Queen of Sweden. The Bolsheviks were afraid of an international incident, so they let us go," she said. 
From Sweden, Princess Vera went to Belgium, Germany, England, and back to Germany. But in 1945, she had to flee again, escaping on foot across the East German border. 
In 1951, she came to the United States "because Europe was a bit too near the Communists."

 

Princess Vera Konstantinovna of Russia

 

On 11 January 2001, HH Princess Vera Konstantinovna of Russia died at the Tolstoy Foundation's elderly care home in Valley Cottage, New York. A stateless person since the fall of the Russian Empire, Vera had traveled under a Nansen passport; she never took foreign citizenship. Xenia Woyevodsky, the Tolstoy Foundation's executive director, shared this memory of Princess Vera: "She had a very difficult life. Her brothers were brutally murdered by the Bolsheviks, thrown into a mine shaft with hand grenades a few days after the execution of the imperial family. We were inundated, mostly after the fall of the Soviet Union, after people realised there was this Romanoff living in the United States that bridged the generations. People would come from all over the world. We finally had to restrict them - she was old, and it was emotional for her. She lived really to help. She worked on boards, helping the elderly, children, orphans refugees. She was very involved. She was a modest, unassuming grand lady. With her death comes an end of era. She closes a chapter to that generation of the Romanoffs."
 
Vera's signature.

 

The grave of Princess Vera of Russia.

Princess Vera once memorably declared: "I didn't leave Russia; Russia left me." The princess was ninety-four years-old when she passed away. On 15 January 2001, she was buried at the Russian Orthodox Monastery of Novo-Diveevo in Nanuet, New York. Vera was laid to rest next to her brother Prince George, who had died over sixty years before her.

Vera of Russia
 
A portrait of Her Highness Princess Vera Konstantinovna of Russia

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

The Tenth Birthday of Lady Cosima Windsor, Granddaughter of the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester

Lady Cosima Windsor
Today, Lady Cosima Windsor celebrates her tenth birthday. She is currently thirtieth in the line of succession to the British throne. Cosima is a great-granddaughter of Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester.
Lady Cosima Rose Alexandra Windsor was born on 20 May 2010 as the only daughter and second child of the Earl and Countess of Ulster. Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster (b.1974), married Dr. Claire Booth (b.1977) on 22 June 2002 at the Queen's Chapel at St James Palace. Cosima has one older brother: Xan, Lord Culloden (b.2007).
Lady Cosima is the paternal granddaughter of the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester. Cosima is the maternal granddaughter of The elder child of Robert Booth (1948–2006) and Barbara (née Hitchin).
Lord and Lady Ulster live a very private life. Cosima's father Alex Windsor has worked as the director of Transnational Crisis Project; furthermore, he served in the British military from 1998-2008. Cosima's mother Claire is a physician and paediatrician.
We wish Lady Cosima many happy returns of the day.

The Tenth Birthday of Lady Cosima Windsor, Granddaughter of the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester

Lady Cosima Windsor
Today, Lady Cosima Windsor celebrates her tenth birthday. She is currently thirtieth in the line of succession to the British throne. Cosima is a great-granddaughter of Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester.
Lady Cosima Rose Alexandra Windsor was born on 20 May 2010 as the only daughter and second child of the Earl and Countess of Ulster. Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster (b.1974), married Dr. Claire Booth (b.1977) on 22 June 2002 at the Queen's Chapel at St James Palace. Cosima has one older brother: Xan, Lord Culloden (b.2007).
Lady Cosima is the paternal granddaughter of the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester. Cosima is the maternal granddaughter of The elder child of Robert Booth (1948–2006) and Barbara (née Hitchin).
Lord and Lady Ulster live a very private life. Cosima's father Alex Windsor has worked as the director of Transnational Crisis Project; furthermore, he served in the British military from 1998-2008. Cosima's mother Claire is a physician and paediatrician.
We wish Lady Cosima many happy returns of the day.

The Tenth Birthday of Lady Cosima Windsor, Granddaughter of the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester

Lady Cosima Windsor
Today, Lady Cosima Windsor celebrates her tenth birthday. She is currently thirtieth in the line of succession to the British throne. Cosima is a great-granddaughter of Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester.
Lady Cosima Rose Alexandra Windsor was born on 20 May 2010 as the only daughter and second child of the Earl and Countess of Ulster. Alexander Windsor, Earl of Ulster (b.1974), married Dr. Claire Booth (b.1977) on 22 June 2002 at the Queen's Chapel at St James Palace. Cosima has one older brother: Xan, Lord Culloden (b.2007).
Lady Cosima is the paternal granddaughter of the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester. Cosima is the maternal granddaughter of The elder child of Robert Booth (1948–2006) and Barbara (née Hitchin).
Lord and Lady Ulster live a very private life. Cosima's father Alex Windsor has worked as the director of Transnational Crisis Project; furthermore, he served in the British military from 1998-2008. Cosima's mother Claire is a physician and paediatrician.
We wish Lady Cosima many happy returns of the day.

Sunday, May 17, 2020

The Count and Countess of Paris en Famille at Dreux

The Count and Countess of Paris with their children Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Last week, Prince Jean and Princess Philomena d'Orléans, the Count and Countess of Paris, released a number of pictures of their family. Like all of the people of France, the Orléans have been sheltering-in-place at their home in Dreux.
The Count of Paris and Prince Gaston. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
The Countess of Paris with her daughters Princess Antoinette and Princess Louise-Marguerite. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Prince Joseph d'Orléans with a chick on his head. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Prince Gaston, the Dauphin of France, with the chickens and roosters. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Princess Jacinthe, the youngest of the children, with the family's Newfoundland Leonora Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Prince Gaston d'Orléans, Dauphin of France, reading atop a wall of firewood. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
The Count and Countess of Paris with their children Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Last week, Prince Jean and Princess Philomena d'Orléans, the Count and Countess of Paris, released a number of pictures of their family. Like all of the people of France, the Orléans have been sheltering-in-place at their home in Dreux.
The Count of Paris and Prince Gaston. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
The Countess of Paris with her daughters Princess Antoinette and Princess Louise-Marguerite. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Prince Joseph d'Orléans with a chick on his head. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Prince Gaston, the Dauphin of France, with the chickens and roosters. Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Princess Jacinthe, the youngest of the children, with the family's Newfoundland Leonora Photograph (c) David Nivière.
Prince Gaston d'Orléans, Dauphin of France, reading atop a wall of firewood. Photograph (c) David Nivière.

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