Alexandra Feodorovna (Charlotte of Prussia)

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Alexandra Feodorovna
Charlottenburg Palace, Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia, Holy Roman Empire
Died1 November 1860(1860-11-01) (aged 62)
Alexander Palace, Tsarskoye Selo, Russian Empire
Burial, Russian Empire
Spouse
(m. 1817; died 1855)
Issue
Names
Calvinism

Alexandra Feodorovna (Russian: Алекса́ндра Фёдоровна, IPA:

Emperor Nicholas I
(r. 1825–1855).

Princess of Prussia

Princess Charlotte (leaning against her mother) with her parents and siblings. Painting by Heinrich Anton Dähling (1806).

Empress Alexandra Feodorovna was born as Princess Friederike Luise Charlotte Wilhelmine of Prussia, at the

Charlottenburg Palace in Berlin on 13 July [O.S. 1 July] 1798.[1] She was the eldest surviving daughter and fourth child of Frederick William III, King of Prussia, and Duchess Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and a sister of Frederick William IV and of William I, German Emperor. She was known as Charlotte, a name popular in the Prussian royal family,[1] and nicknamed Lottchen by her family.[2]

The princess's childhood was marked by the

Tsar Alexander I. "My daughter Charlotte is reserved and concentrated, but like her father, her seemingly cold appearance conceals the beating of her hot compassionate heart", wrote Queen Louise about her daughter.[4] On 27 October 1806, Berlin fell under Napoleon's control and Charlotte grew up in war-torn Memel, Prussia. In December 1809, Queen Louise finally returned to Berlin with her children, but after a few months, became ill and died of typhus at the age of 34, shortly after Charlotte's twelfth birthday.[3] As the eldest daughter, Charlotte was now the most senior lady at the court and had to undertake her mother's duties.[citation needed] For the rest of her life, Charlotte treasured her mother's memory.[5]

Marriage

Princess Charlotte of Prussia with her groom, Grand Duke Nicholas Pavlovich of Russia, during their wedding, 1817

In February 1814, Grand Duke Nicholas Pavlovich, future Tsar of Russia, and his brother Grand Duke Michael Pavlovich, visited Berlin.[4][6] Arrangements were made between the two dynasties for Nicholas to marry Charlotte, then fifteen years old, to strengthen the alliance between Russia and Prussia.[7]

Nicholas was only second in line to the throne, as the heir was his brother

Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich who, like Tsar Alexander I, was childless. On a second visit the following year, Nicholas fell in love with the then-seventeen-year-old Princess Charlotte. Nicholas was tall and handsome with classical features.[6] 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 Potsdam countryside, and attended the Berlin Court Opera. By the end of his visit, in October 1816, Nicholas and Charlotte were engaged.[8] They were third cousins as great-great-grandchildren of Frederick William I of Prussia
.

On 9 June 1817 (O.S.) Princess Charlotte came to Russia with her brother

St. Petersburg she converted to Russian Orthodoxy, and took the Russian name "Alexandra Feodorovna".[10] On her nineteenth birthday, 13 July [O.S. 1 July] 1817, she and Nicholas were married in the Grand Church of the Winter Palace.[8] "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".[11]

Grand Duchess

Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna
, c. 1820

At first, Alexandra Feodorovna had problems adapting to the Russian court, the change of religion affected her and she was overwhelmed by her new surroundings. She gained the favor of her mother-in-law, Maria Feodorovna, but did not get along well with the Empress Elizabeth Alexeievna, consort of her brother-in-law. "I was very weak, very pale and (they claimed) very interesting-looking", she recalled later.[12]

Pregnant with her first child, Alexandra traveled to

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, which was widely spoken at the Russian court, and as a consequence, Alexandra never completely mastered the Russian language.[14]

Alexandra Feodorovna 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". Nicholas nicknamed his wife "Mouffy".[15] For eight years, during the reign of Tsar Alexander I, the couple lived quietly. Tsar Alexander I had no surviving children and his heir, Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich, renounced his succession rights in 1822, making Nicholas heir to the throne.

In 1825 the Tsar gave Alexandra the Peterhof Palace, where she and Nicholas lived. It would remain her favorite summer residence.[16]

Personality

Alexandra was tall, thin, had a small head, and a pronounced brow.

hoarse, but she spoke rapidly and with decision.[20]

Alexandra Feodorovna was an avid reader and enjoyed music. Her favorite Russian writer was

Lermontov.[21] She was kind and liked privacy and simplicity. She dressed elegantly, with a decided preference for light colors, and collected beautiful jewels.[18] Alexandra loved dancing and was particularly skillful at the mazurka, enjoying court balls until dawn.[22] 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.[23] However, she took no active interest in politics and fulfilled the role of being an empress consort, rather than being active in the public sphere.[5]
She loved her family very dearly and even developed facial tics whilst fearing the Decembrist Uprising and its plans to kill her family. The facial tics were a trait that ran in the royal German-Russian-British family in many branches.

Empress of Russia

Alexandra Fedorovna by C. Robertson 1840s, Hermitage

Alexandra Feodorovna became Empress consort upon her husband's accession as

Assumption Cathedral in the Kremlin
on 3 September 1826.

Alexandra enjoyed her husband's confidence in affairs of state, but she had no interest in politics other than her personal attachment to Prussia, her native country. She was the obedient and admiring supporter of her husband's views.[18]

As empress, Alexandra Feodorovna had no interest in charity work. Her chief interests were in family affairs, balls and jewels.[18]

By 1832 Nicholas and Alexandra had seven children whom they raised with care. 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".[24]

Reportedly, after more than twenty-five years of fidelity, Nicholas took a mistress, Varvara Nelidova, one of Alexandra's ladies-in-waiting, after the doctors had forbidden the Empress from sexual activity due to her poor health and recurring heart-attacks. In actuality, Nicholas has at least three known illegitimate children born prior to 1842. 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.[15] In 1845, Nicholas wept when court doctors urged the Empress to visit Palermo for several months due to poor health. "Leave me my wife",[15] he begged her physicians, and when he learned that she had no choice, he made plans to join her briefly. 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.

Alexandra Feodorovna was always frail and in poor 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, she chose a 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; the Crimean War began in 1852. Towards the end of 1854, Alexandra Feodorovna fell ill and came close to death,[25]
though she managed to recover. In 1855, Tsar Nicholas I contracted influenza, and he died on 6/18 February.

Dowager Empress
Alexandra Feodorovna in 1860, the year of her death

Dowager Empress and remaining years

Portrait by Franz Xaver Winterhalter in 1856. Currently at the Hermitage Museum.

Alexandra Feodorovna survived her husband by five years. She retired to the

Tsarskoe Selo, and remained on good terms with her late husband's mistress Varvara Nelidova, whom she appointed as her personal reader.[26]

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 in Switzerland, Nice and Rome. 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".[27]

After returning from a trip abroad in July 1860, she did not cease to be ill. In the autumn of 1860, her doctors told her that she would not live through the winter if she did not travel once more to the south. Knowing the danger, she preferred to stay in St. Petersburg so that she might die on Russian soil. The night before her death, she was heard to say, "Niki, I am coming to you."[28] She died in her sleep at the age of sixty-two on 1 November 1860 at the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo.

Honours

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
Emperor Alexander II 29 April 1818 13 March 1881 married 1841,
Princess Marie of Hesse
; had issue
Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna
18 August 1819 21 February 1876 married 1839,
Maximilian de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg
; had issue
Stillborn Daughter 1820 1820
Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna 11 September 1822 30 October 1892 married 1846,
Charles, King of Württemberg
; had no issue
Grand Duchess Alexandra Nikolaevna 24 June 1825 10 August 1844 married 1844,
Prince Frederick William of Hesse-Kassel
; had issue (died in infancy)
Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolaevich 21 September 1827 25 January 1892 married 1848,
Princess Alexandra of Saxe-Altenburg
; had issue
Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich 8 August 1831 25 April 1891 married 1856,
Duchess Alexandra of Oldenburg
; had issue
Grand Duke Michael Nikolaevich 25 October 1832 18 December 1909 married 1857,
Princess Cecilie of Baden
; had issue

Ancestry

References

  1. ^ a b c Barkovets & Vernovava, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, p. 8
  2. ^ Barkovets & Vernovava, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, p. 12
  3. ^ a b Barkovets & Vernovava, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, p. 15
  4. ^ a b Barkovets & Vernovava, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, p. 18
  5. ^ a b Grunwald, Tsar Nicholas I, p. 138
  6. ^ a b Soroka & Ruud, Becoming a Romanov , p. 32
  7. ^ Soroka, Marina; Ruud, Charles A. (2015). Becoming a Romanov. Grand Duchess Elena of Russia and her World (1807–1873). London: Routledge (published 2016). p. 32. . Retrieved 9 May 2019. Passing through Berlin in 1814, Nicholas met the fifteen-year-old Prussian princess Charlotte that his mother and brother had picked for him as a bride [...].
  8. ^ a b Montefiore, The Romanovs , p. 328
  9. ^ Lincoln, Nicholas I Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russias, p. 66
  10. Feodorovna as a Romanov patronymic
  11. ^ Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 414
  12. ^ a b Montefiore, The Romanovs , p. 329
  13. ^ Montefiore, The Romanovs , p. 330
  14. ^ Soroka & Ruud, Becoming a Romanov , p. 33
  15. ^ a b c Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 418
  16. Russia Beyond the Headlines
    . 8 August 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
  17. ^ "Stack's Bowers Galleries Rare Coin and Banknote Auctioneers". Stack's Bowers. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
  18. ^ a b c d Grunwald, Tsar Nicholas I, p. 137
  19. ^ Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 8
  20. ^ Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 10. Impressions of Alexandra Feodorovna by Lady Bloomfield, wife of the British representative in St. Petersburg
  21. YouTube, Channel one
  22. ^ Cowles, The Romanovs, p. 167
  23. ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 137 Description of Alexandra Feodorovna personality by Meyendorff
  24. ^ Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 417
  25. ^ Lincoln, The Romanovs, p. 425
  26. ^ Grunwald, Tsar Nicholas I, p. 289.
  27. ^ Letter from Alexandra Feodorovna to Meyendorff in September 1859. Grunwald, Tsar Nicholas I, p. 289.
  28. ^ Tsar Nicholas I The Life of an absolute monarch: Constantin de Grunwald, p. 289 quoted from a letter from Meyerdorff to his son
  29. ^ Decker, ed. (1821). Handbuch über den Königlich Preußischen Hof und Staat. Berlin. p. 72.
  30. ^ Bragança, Jose Vicente de; Estrela, Paulo Jorge (2017). "Troca de Decorações entre os Reis de Portugal e os Imperadores da Rússia" [Exchange of Decorations between the Kings of Portugal and the Emperors of Russia]. Pro Phalaris (in Portuguese). 16: 9. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  31. ^ Almanach de la cour: pour l'année ... 1817. l'Académie Imp. des Sciences. 1817. p. 70.
  32. ^ Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orła Białego 1705–2008 (2008), p. 289
  33. ^ "Real orden de Damas Nobles de la Reina Maria Luisa". Guía de forasteros en Madrid para el año de 1835 (in Spanish). En la Imprenta Nacional. 1835. p. 84.

Bibliography

External links

Media related to Alexandra Feodorovna (Charlotte of Prussia) at Wikimedia Commons

Alexandra Feodorovna (Charlotte of Prussia)
Born: 12 July 1798 Died: 1 November 1860
Russian royalty
Preceded by
Empress consort of Russia

1825–1855
Succeeded by
Maria Alexandrovna
(Marie of Hesse and by Rhine)