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Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia, Duchess of Leuchtenberg

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Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna
Duchess of Leuchtenberg
SpouseMaximilian, Duke of Leuchtenberg
Count Grigori Stroganov
IssuePrincess Maria of Leuchtenberg
Nicholas, 4th Duke of Leuchtenberg
Princess Eugenia of Leuchtenberg
Eugen, 5th Duke of Leuchtenberg
Prince Sergei of Leuchtenberg
George, 6th Duke of Leuchtenberg
Countess Elena Grigorievna Stroganova
HouseHouse of Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov
FatherNicholas I of Russia
MotherAlexandra Feodorovna
(Charlotte of Prussia)

Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna of Russia (Russian: Мария Николаевна) (18 August 1819 – 21 February 1876) was a daughter of Emperor Nicholas I of Russia and sister of Alexander II. She was Duchess of Leuchtenberg and President of the Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg.

Duchess of Leuchtenberg

Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna was born on 18 August 1819 in Pavlovsk. She was the second of seven surviving children and the eldest daughter. Her parents, Tsar Nicholas I of Russia and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, born Princess Charlotte of Prussia, were devoted to each other and to their children, providing an excellent education for them.

Unusually for her position and time, she married for love. She met her future husband, Maximilian, Duke of Leuchtenberg, the eldest surviving son of Eugène de Beauharnais and grandson of Empress Josephine, when he came to Saint Petersburg during cavalry maneuvers in 1837. A year later he made a second visit to the city, as noted by the Grand Duchess Olga in her diary: “In four days it has become quite clear that Max and Maria were made for each other."[1]

It was not a desirable match for a daughter of a Russian Emperor. Maximilian was below the rank of royalty, only entitled to the style of Serene Highness as member of a secondary branch of the House of Bavaria. He was also Roman Catholic, not Orthodox, and his own family, his mother Princess Augusta of Bavaria in particular, was against this marriage.

Furthermore the Bonaparte family had been bitter enemies of Russia. Nevertheless the Tsar granted his permission for the marriage on condition that his daughter did not leave Russia to live abroad. Since the Duke of Leuchtenberg was not a member of a reigning family, it was easy for him to take up residence in Saint Petersburg.

The wedding took place on 2 July 1839 in the chapel of the Winter Palace. The Tsar created Maximilian an Imperial Highness. The couple remained in Russia, where their seven children grew up in the circle of the imperial family.

President of the Academy of Arts

Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia.

On her engagement Tsar Nicholas I decided to present Maria with her own palace. He chose a site in the centre of St. Petersburg strategically positioned opposite St. Isaac's cathedral, on the banks of the Moika river.[2] No expense was spared in fitting it out for the young couple, specially commissioned from the architect Andrei Stackensneider and, close enough to the Winter Palace for the Tsar to pay daily visits to his daughter.[3]. The palace was finished by the end of 1844 and was named as the Mariinsky Palace, after Maria Nikolaievna. Up until this point, Maria, her husband and three children had lived in the Vorontzov Palace, waiting for the completion of their own residence.[4].

Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna and her husband had artistic inclinations and were active in charitable and artistic causes. Maria's husband became well-known as a scientist throughout Russia.[5]. In 1843 he was appointed President of the Academy of Arts. The Grand Duchess was an avid art collector, and after the death of her husband in 1852, she replaced him as President of the Academy of Arts. From then on, Maria Nikolaievana devoted herself to her collection even with greater ardor [3].

Second marriage

Maria Nikolaievna made a second marriage in 1854, to Count Grigori Stroganov (16 June 1824 – 13 March 1879). It was a morganatic union and was kept secret while her father lived. Officially the marriage did not take place until 16 November 1856, after Nicholas I's death. Her sister Olga described her as more talented than all her brothers and sisters put together, but lacking a sense of duty.

In 1862, Maria Nikolaievna installed herself in Florence in the Villa Quarto, which had belonged to Jerome Bonaparte, and appointed the painter and collector Karl Liphard as her advisor. They went almost daily to visit museums, private collection and antique dealers.[3]. In Italy, the Grand Duchess was zealous in her purchases of painting, sculptures and furniture for the complete refurbishing of her residence.[6]

Grand Duchess Maria probably suffered either from varicose veins or from some sort of bone disease, and by the end of her life she had become an invalid.[7] She died on 21 February 1876 in Saint Petersburg at age 56.

Art collections

The Grand Duchess' drawing room at the Winter Palace.

On her death in 1876, Maria Nikolaievna's art collections were divided among her surviving children: Prince Nicholas of Leuchtenberg, his brothers Eugene and George, their sisters Princess Maria of Baden and Princess Eugenia of Oldenburg and their half-sister countess Elena Strogonova. In 1884, her son, Nicholas Duke of Leuchtenberg, mounted an exhibition at the St. Petersburg Academy of Fine Arts with the Grand Duchess former collection. In 1913 another exhibitions was organized at the Hermitage Museum entitled the Heritage of Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna. After the revolution the collection was dispersed and now can be enjoyed in museums in Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Vienna and the United States [6]. Three of Maria's sons by the Duke of Leuchtenberg lived in her former residence the Mariinsky Palace until 1884, when it was sold to the treasury to pay for the family's mounting debts [8]. Today the Palace house the Saint Petersburg Legislative Assembly.

Children

Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna had seven children from her marriage to the Duke of Leuchtenberg:

Name Birth Death Notes
Princess Alexandra Romanovskaja 9 April 1840 12 August 1843 died in childhood.
Princess Maria of Leuchtenberg 16 October 1841 16 February 1914 married William of Baden (1829–1897), younger son of Leopold, Grand Duke of Baden
Nicholas, 4th Duke of Leuchtenberg 4 August 1843 6 January 1891
Eugenia, Princess Romanovskaja 1 April 1845 4 May 1925 married Alexander of Oldenburg 1844–1932
Eugen, 5th Duke of Leuchtenberg 8 February 1847 31 August 1901 married 1) Daria Opotchinina 1845–1870, married 2) Zinaida Skobeleva 1856–1899
Prince Sergei of Leuchtenberg 20 December 1849 24 October 1877 Killed in the Russo-Turkish war
George, 6th Duke of Leuchtenberg 29 February 1852 16 May 1912 married 1) Theresa of Oldenburg 30 March 1852 – 19 April 1883 , married 2) Anastasia of Montenegro 1868–1935


Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna had two children in her second marriage:

Name Birth Death Notes
Grigori Grigorievich, Count Stroganov 9 May 1857 1859 died in childhood.
Countess Elena Grigorievna Stroganova 11 February 1861 12 February 1908 married firstly Vladimir Alexeievich Sheremetev and secondly Grigori Nikitich Milashevich (1861–1908)

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ “Great Private Collections of Imperial Russia ”: Neverov, Oleg , p 109
  2. ^ The Romanov Legacy, The Palaces of St Petersburg” : Belyakova, Zoia , p 118
  3. ^ a b c “Great Private Collections of Imperial Russia : Neverov, Oleg , p 110
  4. ^ The Romanov Legacy, The Palaces of St Petersburg” : Belyakova, Zoia , p 136
  5. ^ The Romanov Legacy, The Palaces of St Petersburg” : Belyakova, Zoia , p 130
  6. ^ a b “Great Private Collections of Imperial Russia : Neverov, Oleg , p 114
  7. ^ The Romanov Legacy, The Palaces of St Petersburg”  : Belyakova, Zoia , p 135
  8. ^ The Romanov Legacy, The Palaces of St Petersburg”  : Belyakova, Zoia , p 138

Bibliography

  • Belyakova, Zoia, The Romanov Legacy, The Palaces of St Petersburg, Studio, ISBN 0-670-86339-4
  • Neverov, Oleg, Great Private Collections of Imperial Russia, Vendome Press, ISBN 0-86565-225-2