#grand duke alexander mikhailovich
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Grand Duke Alexander with his daughter, Princess Irina Alexandrovna
#Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich#princess irina alexandrovna#Princess Irina Youssoupoff#Romanov#Yusupov#Russian Royalty#Youssoupoff
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Grand Duchess Xenia and husband Grand Duke Alexander in Krasnoye Selo; 1903.
#grand duke alexander mikhailovich#xenia alexandrovna#grand duchess xenia alexandrovna#xenia and sandro#my own#grand duchess#grand duke
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Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich and Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna dressed for the 1903 Imperial Ball.
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Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna and Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich
Xenia was pregnant and they looked happy here. They had been in love since their teens. They had seven children. In the middle of her pregnancy with the seventh he chose to tell her he had a mistress.
He constantly asked her for a divorce to marry this or that woman.There was a wealthy American. There was the wife of a sculptor who was carving his bust. He wanted to run away to Australia with most of them. There was a young nurse, who already married and years after the relationship, nursed him as he was dying. By the time he was a fifty-something, Sandro was in love with and wanted to marry someone younger than his daughter. Irina begged her mother not to give him a divorce so that he would not embarrass himself.
What was Xenía going to do? She took lovers herself (I have only read of two.) Irina hated the first one, Fane. She suffered through her parents’ marital woes.
Close to the end of his life, he wanted to go back to Xenia (there is a letter from him to her stating so- he says the opposite in his book, of course.) She was too tired and said no.
Xenia and Sandro are buried together in the South of France.
#russian history#imperial russia#romanov family#grand duchess xenia alexandrovna#grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich#Princess Irina Alexandrovna
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“The Russian Grand Duke, Alexander Mikhailovich, was truly charming and elegant. I think that's why Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna fell in love with him.” - Text & Image Submitted by cenacevedo15
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A photo of Grand Duke Alexander "Sandro" Mikhailovich Romanov kissing his son, Prince Andrei Alexandrovich, 1898.
#romanov#romanovs#grand duke alexander Mikhailovich#alexander mikhailovich#prince andrei Alexandrovich#andrei Alexandrovich#romanov photos#1898#1890s#late 19th century#cute romanov photos
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I'M CRYINGGGG😭 GEORGE HUGGING XENIA IS SO CUTE!! ❤
Cousins Prince George of Greece and Denmark and Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna with her husband, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich.
Source: 🌸
#prince george of greece and denmark#grand duchess xenia alexandrovna#grand duke alexander mikhailovich#rare photos
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Grand Duke Alexander, Princess Irina and Grand Duchess Xenia
#Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich#Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna#princess irina alexandrovna#Princess Irina Youssoupoff#Romanov#Romanoff#Yusupov#Yussupov#Youssoupoff
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Tsar Nicholas II during a visit to Grand Duchess Xenia and Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich in Ai-Todor, Crimea; 1909.
#tsar nicholas ii#xenia alexandrovna#grand duke alexander mikhailovich#tsar#xenia and sandro#grand duchess#grand duke#my own
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Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich Romanov by Alexander Mikhailovich Leontovsky.
#die romanows#house of romanov#zarenreich#tsardom of russia#grand duke#kontantin konstantinovich romanov#Константи́н Константи́нович#kr#konstantinovichi#alexander mikhailovich leontovsky#leontovsky#pride
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"In St. Petersburg we work, but at Livadia, we live."
Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna
In 1909, Nikolay Krasnov, who was responsible for the Yousupoff Palace in Koreiz, was engaged to design a new imperial palace in Livadia (before that, there had been an imperial residence in Livadia consisting of a large and a small palace used by Alexander II and later by Alexander III, who died at the smaller residence.) When Nicholas II decided to build the new palace, he also demolished the older residence but left the small palace where his father died.
The Tsar's diary indicates that the Imperial Family discussed the design; it was decided that all four façades of the palace should look different. After 17 months of construction, the new palace was inaugurated on 11 September 1911. In November, Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna celebrated her 16th birthday at Livadia.
The family was always the happiest at Livadia.
One of the Tsar's "motors" at Livadia. If you look carefully, you can see the "side of the palace" where the car is parked and the main entrance in both the contemporary colored and black and white photos.
Above is the beautiful Italian Courtyard of the palace as it stands today. If you look at pictures taken when the Romanovs used the palace, the centerpiece of the courtyard was different. Today, there is a fountain at the center. Examining the older pictures (below), you can see that there seemed to be what I can only describe as a "well" at the center of the courtyard. There was a column on each side of the well. In one of the photos below, you can see Grand Duke Dmitry Pavlovich; he had his own rooms at the Livadia Palace.
Nicholas II and his family were so at ease at Livadia that they also conducted some minor official functions in addition to family activities. When the family went to Livadia, they usually went as far as Yalta by sea; it is easy to infer that the official activities they conducted were related to the crew of the Standart. In addition, at the time, it was believed that mountain air and rest could cure tuberculosis, and there were several spas and sanatoria in the mountains in the area. The Empress and the girls visited the sick there (they also participated in other charitable activities.)
The Yousupov family gifted the beautiful door above to Nicholas and Alexandra. The painting next to it is from a beautiful book by Kravnov ("Fiftieth Anniversary of Yalta"), who worked on the palace's design (and on that of the Crimean summer residences of several Grand Dukes.) The window is also featured in the painting.
The "solarium" seems to have been a very popular area. Nicholas and his children preferred the outdoors, and Livadia seemed to provide the Empress with the perfect environment to get sun and fresh air in comfort regardless of her many ailments.
This is the "Moorish" courtyard of the palace. It is small, but notice the exquisite tilework on the walls. And, of course, the little balcony between the windows seemed perfect to Alexis for him to "address" his family.
The palace had a chapel so that the Romanov family could worship in privacy.
A few of the interiors of the palace. The chandelier is Murano Glass (amazing that it survived all these years.) Olga's coming-of-age celebration took place in Livadia in the formal dining room in the photograph above, dancing spilling into the flower-perfumed courtyard. That is a luxury of the type you cannot buy! The girls' rooms are currently being restored. There are pictures of the rooms as they were, but I was not sure they were from Livadia, so I did not include them.
Finally, some photos of the "Tsar's Path" (or Sunny Path), which exists to this day (it goes from Livadia Park to the city of Gaspra.) The family loved to walk this path (regardless of its name, it is not sunny but pleasantly breezy). This path is on one level so that anybody can walk it, regardless of their cardiovascular status. I have read two stories about how it "emerged," and as usual, the truth is probably in the middle. First story: The new Livadia Palace did not exist yet, but the Romanovs used the old palace and always loved coming to Livadia. Alexander III kept gaining weight, and his doctor recommended that he walk but not overdo it...so Alexander had the path leveled. The path's beginning and end differed from what they would be later. Second Story: Sandro had the path from Ay Todor toward Livadia built because Nicholas and Sandro's families always visited each other (they started calling it the Prince's Path.) Nicholas loved the idea and extended the path.
Today, the main path remains, and other routes to other small towns can be hiked from it. Many of the same benches and sculptures are where they were at the time of the Romanovs.
Just one last photo. Here, you can see how close the palace is to the mountains and the sea. A beautiful big house full of fresh air and light with flowers perfuming the air. No wonder Olga liked it so much! (gcl)
#russian history#romanov dynasty#nicholas ii#otma#Empress Alexandra Feodorovna#Emperor Alexander III#Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich#Ay Todor#Nikolay Krasnov#grand duchess olga nicholayevna#Grand Duchess Tatiana Nicholayevna#Grand Duchess Maria Nicholayevna#Grand Duchess Anastasia Nicholayevna#Tsarevich Alexei
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Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia with his eldest daughter, Princess Irina Alexandrovna of Russia
Russian vintage postcard
#alexander mikhailovich#duke#grand#russian#carte postale#irina#sepia#alexandrovna#romanov#alexander#photo#postkarte#tarjeta#princess#ansichtskarte#daughter#postkaart#ephemera#postcard#vintage#mikhailovich#eldest#historic#postal#russia#briefkaart#irina alexandrovna#photography
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Uncle Paul, Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich, was the nicest of the four uncles of the Tsar, although he too possessed an inclination for “mounting the high horse,” which trait he owed to his close friendship with his brother Sergei. He danced well, he was greatly admired by women, and he looked quite attractive in his dark-green-and-silver dolman, raspberry tight breeches and low boots of a Grodno Hussar.
Satisfied with the care-free life of a brilliant officer, he never occupied a position of responsibility. His first wife, a Princess of Greece, died when he was still very young, and he married for the second time the divorced wife of a colonel, thus committing a double breach of the regulations prevailing in the imperial family, no grand duke being permitted to marry a commoner and no divorced woman being received at court.
He had to leave Russia for an indefinite stay in Paris. I believe he benefited considerably by his forced exile through meeting people of intelligence and importance. It changed his character, bringing out human traits formerly hidden under a mask of nonsensical haughtiness. During the World War he commanded for a short time the Guard Corps on the German front but exercised no influence on the affairs of state.
Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich, "We, The Romanovs"
In 1923, Alexander's second son, Prince Feodor Alexandrovich would marry Grand Duke Paul's daughter, Princess Irina Paley. They shared one grandson, Prince Michael Feodorovich, born in 1924.
#imperial russia#romanov#grand duke#paul alexandrovich#alexander mikhailovich#alexandra georgievna#olga paley#sergei alexandrovich
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I love Xenia's smile😭❤
Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna on the lap of her husband Grand Duke Aleksandr Mikhailovich.
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Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich with his eldest son, Andrei.
#romanov#mikhailovichi#alexander mikhailovichi#andrei alexandrovich#source: fragments de vie by ferrand
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A loving photograph of Grand Duke Alexandra Mikhailovich of Russia and Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia in the Mauve Boudoir of Alexander Palace, taken (most likely) by Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, early 1900s. (x)
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