Alexandra Feodorovna (Charlotte of Prussia)
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Alexandra Feodorovna / Charlotte of Prussia | ||
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Empress Consort of Russia | ||
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Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, 1836 | ||
Titles | HIH Grand Duchess Alexandra Feodorovna (1817-1825) HIM The Dowager Empress (1855-1860) |
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Born | 13 July 1798 | |
Charlottenburg, Prussia | ||
Died | 1 November 1860 | |
Tsarskoe Selo, Russia | ||
Consort | December 1, 1825 - March 2, 1855 | |
Consort to | Nicholas I | |
Issue | Alexander Maria Olga Alexandra Konstantin Nicholas Michael |
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Royal House | House of Hohenzollern | |
Father | Frederick William III of Prussia | |
Mother | Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz |
Alexandra Feodorovna, born Charlotte, Princess of Prussia, (July 13, 1798 - November 1, 1860) was Empress consort of Russia. She was the wife of Tsar Nicholas I, and mother of Tsar Alexander II.
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[edit] Princess of Prussia
Alexandra Feodorovna was born on July 13, 1798 in Charlottenburg Palace, as Princess Frederica-Louise-Charlotte-Wilhelmina of Prussia. She was the eldest surviving daughter and fourth child of Frederick William III, King of Prussia, and Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
Princess Charlotte's childhood was marked by the Napoleonic Wars. After the French defeat of the Prussian army, Princess Charlotte and her whole family were forced to flee to East Prussia, where they were given protection from Tsar Alexander I. Soon, Berlin fell under Napoleon’s control, and Princess Charlotte grew up in War torn Memel, Prussia. Her mother died in 1810 shortly after Charlotte’s twelve birthday, and for the rest of her life she treasured her mother’s memory.[1] From her early childhood Princess Charlotte occupied the first female rank in Prussia as the eldest daughter of her widower father. She would remain attached to Prussia and her family all of her life.
In the fall of 1814, Grand Duke Nicholas Pavlovich of Russia, the future Tsar Nicholas I, and his brother Grand Duke Michael, visited Berlin. Arrangements were made between the two royal families for Nicholas to marry Princess Charlotte, and on the second visit the following year, Nicholas fell in love with the then seventeen year old Princess Charlotte. The feeling was mutual, "I like him and am sure of being happy with him." She wrote to her brother, "What we have in common is our inner life; let the world do as it pleases, in our hearts we have a world of our own." Hand in hand they wandered over the Postdam country side, and attended the Berlin Court Opera. By the end of his visit, Grand Duke Nicholas and Princess Charlotte were engaged. The wedding would not take place for another two years.
On June 9, 1817 Princess Charlotte came to Russia with her brother William[2] . After arriving in St. Petersburg she converted to Russian Orthodoxy, and took the Russian name Alexandra Feodorovna. On her birthday, July 13, 1817, she and Nicholas were married in the Chapel of the Winter Palace. "...I felt myself very, very happy when our hands joined..." she would later write about her wedding. "With complete confidence and trust, I gave my life into the hands of my Nicholas, and he never once betrayed it."[3]
[edit] Grand Duchess of Russia
At first, Alexandra Feodorovna had problems adapting to the Russian court, the change of religion affected her and she was overwhelmed by her new sourrondings. She gained the favor of her mother-in-law, Maria Feodorovna, but did not get along well with the Empress Elizabeth Alexeyevna, wife of Tsar Alexander I.
Weeks after the wedding, Alexandra was pregnant. On April 17, 1818 she gave birth to her first son, the future Tsar Alexander II, and the next year she had a daughter, Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna. In 1820 Alexandra produced a stillborn daughter, her third pregnancy in three years, which brought on a deep depression. Her doctors advised a holiday, and in the autumn of 1820 Nicholas took her to see her family in Berlin, where they remained until the summer of 1821, returning again in the summer of 1824. They did not come back to St. Petersburg until March of 1825 when Tsar Alexander I required their presence in Russia.
Alexandra Feodorovna spent her first years in Russia trying to learn the language and customs of her adopted country under the tutelage of the poet Vasily Zhukovsky, whom she characterized as being "too much of a poet to be a good tutor." The Imperial family spoke German and wrote their letters in French, and as a consequence, Alexandra never completely mastered the Russian language.
Nicholas and Alexandra Feodorovna were private people who found great pleasure in each other’s company. She wrote in her memoirs of her first years in Russia, "We both were truly happy only when we found ourselves alone in our apartments with me sitting on his knees while he was loving and tender." For eight years, during the reign of Tsar Alexander I, the couple lived quietly, never once looking forward to the possibility of occupying the Russian throne. Tsar Alexander I had no children and his heir, Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich, renounced his succession rights in 1822, making Nicholas the new Tsarevich.
In 1825 Alexandra received from her brother-in-law, Alexander I, the Palace of Peterhof, where she and Nicholas lived happily at the start of her life in Russia. It would remain her favorite summer residence.

[edit] Personality
Alexandra was tall, slender with a small head of refine features[4]. Her blue eyes were set deep in her head[5]. She had an air of regal majesty. Her quick, light walk was graceful. She was frail, often in poor health. Her voice was hoarse, but she spoke rapidly and with decision.[6]
Alexandra Feodorovna was an avid reader and enjoyed music. She was kind and liked privacy and simplicity. She dressed elegantly, with a decided preference for light colors, and collected beautiful jewels. Neither arrogant nor frivolous, Alexandra was not without intelligence and had an excellent memory; her reading was quite extensive; her judgment of men sure, slightly ironical[7]. However, her interests were mostly shallow. She loved to dance and the fantastic world of the Palaces and court balls filled her horizon[8] . She did not worry about knowing the real problems of the Russian people that demanded from its Empress the energy to take care of the needed and the sick.
For her, Russia was summed up in the person of her beloved husband. By forcing his will on this fragile, irresponsible and delicate creature, Nicholas destroyed Alexandra’s individuality [9]. Her husband gave her no time for reflection, for giving herself a sustained occupation, other than adoring wife and devoted mother.[10]
[edit] Empress of Russia
Alexandra Feodorovna became empress consort upon her husband's accession as Tsar Nicholas I on December, 1825. It was a turbulent period, marked by the bloody repression of the Decembrist revolt.
By 1832 Nicholas and Alexandra had seven children whom they raised with care. Nicholas I never wavered in his love for his wife, whom he nicknamed “Mouffy”. In 1837, when much of the Winter Palace was destroyed by fire, Nicholas reportedly told an aide-de-camp "Let everything else burn up, only just save for me the small case of letters in my study which my wife wrote to me when she was my betrothed."[11]
Only after more than twenty five years of fidelity did Nicholas take a mistress. He turned to Barbara Nelidova, one of Alexandra's ladys-in-waiting, as Doctors had forbidden the Empress from sex due to her poor health and recurring heart-attacks. Nicholas continued to seek refuge from the cares of state in Alexandra’s company. "Happiness, joy, and repose - that is what I seek and find in my old Mouffy." he once wrote.[12]
In 1845 Nicholas wept when Court doctors urged the Empress to visit Palermo for several months due to poor health. "Leave me my wife."[13] he begged her physicians, and when he learned that she had no choice, he made plans to join her, if only for a brief time. Nelidova went with them, and though Alexandra was jealous in the beginning, she soon came to accept the affair, and remained on good terms with her husband's mistress.
The Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, was always frail and in bad health. At forty she looked far older than her years, becoming increasingly thin. For a long time she suffered from a nervous twitching that became a convulsive shaking of her head.
In 1837 the Empress chose the resort in the Crimea for a new residence. There, Nicholas ordered that the Palace of Oreanda be built for her. She was only able to visit the Palace once however, as in 1852 the Crimean War began. Towards the end of 1854 Alexandra Feodorovna became very ill, and she came very close to death[14], though she managed to recover. In 1855 Tsar Nicholas I contracted influenza, and he died on 6/18 February.
[edit] Dowager Empress
Alexandra Feodorovna survived her husband for five more years. She retired to the Alexander Palace at Tsarskoe Selo, and remained in good terms with her husband’s mistress Barbara Nelidova, who she made her personal reader.[15]
The Dowager Empress's health became more and more fragile with the years. Unable to spend the harsh winters in Russia, she was forced to make long sojourns abroad. She wrote in September 1859 "I am homesick for my country and I reproached myself for costing so much money at a time when Russia has need of every ruble. But I cough and my sick lungs cannot go without a southern climate" [16]. In the autumn of 1860, her doctors told her that she would not live through the winter if she did not return once more to the south. Knowing the danger, she preferred to stay in St. Petersburg, so that if death did come it would happen on Russian soil. The night before her death, she was heard to say, "Niki, I am coming to you." [17] She died in her sleep at the age of sixty-two on November 1, 1860 at Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo.
[edit] Children
Nicholas I and Alexandra Feodorovna had ten children:
- Alexander Nicolaievich, the future Tsarevich and then Emperor Alexander II of Russia (1818-1881), married firstly Princess Marie of Hesse-Darmstadt (Maria Alexandrovna) and secondly, morganatically, Princess Catherine Dolgoruki.
- Maria Nicolaievna (1819-1876). Married Maximilian, Duke of Leuchtenberg. She married, second, Count Gregory Alexandrovich Stroganov in 1856.
- Still born daughter (1820)
- Olga Nicolaievna (1822-1892). Married Charles I of Württemberg in 1846 and was childless.
- Still born daughter (1823)
- Alexandra Nicolaievna (1825-1844). Married Landgraf Friedrich of Hesse-Kassel in 1843, but died in childbirth the following year.
- Elizabeth Nicolaievna, born in June 1826. Died in childhood.
- Konstantin Nicolaievich (1827-1892). Married Princess Alexandra of Saxe-Altenburg (Alexandra Iosifovna)and had issue.
- Nicholas Nicolaievich (1831-1891). Married, Princess Alexandra Petrovna of Oldenburg and had issue.
- Michael Nicolaievich (1832 -1909). Married Princess Cecily of Baden (Olga Fedorovna) and had issue.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 138
- ^ Nicholas I Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russias: W.Bruce Lincoln, p. 66
- ^ The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias: W.Bruce Lincoln, p. 414
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 137
- ^ Romanov Autumn,Zaeepvat, Charlotte, p. 8
- ^ Romanov Autumn,Zaeepvat, Charlotte, p. 8 Impressions of Alexandra Feodorovna by Lady Bloomfield, wife of the British representative in St. Petersburg
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 137 Description of Alexandra Feodorovna personality by Meyendorff
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 30
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 137 Impressions of Mandt, Doctor of The Imperial Family
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 137 Impressions of Anna Tiutcheva, Alexandra Feodorovna's maid of honor, taken from Tiutcheva's book: In the Court of Two Tsarinas
- ^ The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias: W.Bruce Lincoln, p. 417
- ^ The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias: W.Bruce Lincoln, p. 418
- ^ The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias: W.Bruce Lincoln, p. 418
- ^ The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias: W.Bruce Lincoln, p. 425
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 289
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 289. Letter from Alexandra Feodorovna to Meyendorff in September, 1859.
- ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 289 quoted from a letter from Meyerdorff to his son
[edit] Bibliography
- Grunwald, Constantin de, Tsar Nicholas I the Life of An Absolute Monarch, Alcuin Press, ASIN B000I824DU.
- Lincoln, W. Bruce, The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias, Anchor, ISBN 0385279086.
- Zaeepvat, Charlotte, Romanov Autumn , Sutton Publishing, ISBN 0750927399
- Lincoln, W. Bruce, Nicholas I, Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias , Northern Illinois University Press, ISBN 0875805485.
[edit] Gallery
Preceded by Louise of Baden |
Royal Consorts of Russia 1825 – 1855 |
Succeeded by Marie of Hesse-Darmstadt |