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Maria Bolkonskaya

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Maria Bolkonskaya
War and Peace character
Created byLeo Tolstoy
Portrayed byAnna Maria Ferrero
Antonina Shuranova
Angela Down
Jessie Buckley
Gelsey Bell
Courtney Bassett
In-universe information
NicknameMarie, Masha, Mary, Marya
GenderFemale
TitlePrincess
FamilyNikolai Bolkonsky I (father)
Andrey Bolkonsky (brother)
Nikolai Bolkonsky II (nephew)
SpouseNikolai Rostov
ChildrenAndrey, Mitya, and Natalia
NationalityRussian

Princess Maria (or Marya, in some translations) Nikolaevna Bolkonskaya (‹See Tfd›Russian: Марья Болконская, Mar'ia Bolkonskaia) is a fictional character in Leo Tolstoy's novel War and Peace.

Princess Maria, the sister of Prince Andrey Bolkonsky, is a deeply religious young woman who has resigned herself to an unmarried life to be with her domineering father, Prince Nikolai Bolkonsky. Princess Maria is a plain woman, whose lack of beauty is offset by her large, caring eyes. Kevin Corrigan sees Maria as an example of how "a face can be ugly and yet transfigured by beautiful eyes".[1] She is overshadowed by her beautiful French companion, Mademoiselle Bourienne. An attempt to marry her off to the profligate Prince Anatole Kuragin fails.

Princess Maria's father dies during the days leading to the battle of Borodino. The peasants on her estate threaten to become violent and Maria is rescued by Nikolai Rostov. They fall in love, but several situations keep them apart and eventually they both forgo any hope of marriage. Maria's brother, Prince Andrei Bolkonsky, is seriously wounded in battle and chances to fall under the care of Natasha Rostova, with whom Princess Maria becomes close friends after witnessing Andrei Bolkonsky's death together. Maria marries the impoverished Nikolai Rostov in the winter of 1813, and eventually the couple have four children. Nikolai Rostov relies on his work and her moral support, not financial, to become a wealthy and content estate owner.

Stephen Vizinczey suggests that Tolstoy created Maria out of his longing for his mother, Princess Maria Nikolayevna Volkonskaya, who died before Tolstoy's second birthday.[2]

References

  1. ^ Corrigan, Kevin (2004). Reading Plotinus: A Practical Introduction to Neoplatonism. Purdue University Press. p. 207. ISBN 9781557532343.
  2. ^ Vizinczey, Stephen (1988). Truth and Lies in Literature: Essays and Reviews. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226858845.

See also