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Maria Fedorovna Romanov

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Maria Fedorovna Romanov Famous memorial

Birth
Copenhagen, Kobenhavns Kommune, Hovedstaden, Denmark
Death
13 Oct 1928 (aged 80)
Klampenborg, Gentofte Kommune, Hovedstaden, Denmark
Burial
Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Federal City, Russia Add to Map
Plot
Next to her husband, Alexander III
Memorial ID
View Source
Russian Empress. Born Princess Marie Sophie Frederikke Dagmar of Denmark, she was the second daughter of King Christian IX. In 1866 she married the Russian heir to the throne, later Alexander III. Upon her marriage she converted to the Russian Orthodox faith and changed her name to Maria Fedorovna. She had 6 children, one of them Tsar Nicholas II. Throughout her life she took part in charity and contributed to improve the Russian education system. During the First World War she made a great effort as chairman of the Russian Red Cross. She spent more than 50 years in Russia, surviving the revolution, which caused the deaths of two of her sons and five grandchildren. In 1919 she left Russia on board a British warship "Marlborough" and, for a while, stayed with her sister, Queen Dowager Alexandra, in England. She later moved to Denmark. When she died, the funeral service was held in the Church of Alexander Nevsky in Copenhagen. Afterwards the sarcophagus of Empress Maria Fedorovna was placed in Roskilde Cathedral. In 2005, the governments of Denmark and Russia agreed to fulfill her will to be buried next to her husband. Her remains were interred in Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral 78 years after her death.Former Burial is here.
Russian Empress. Born Princess Marie Sophie Frederikke Dagmar of Denmark, she was the second daughter of King Christian IX. In 1866 she married the Russian heir to the throne, later Alexander III. Upon her marriage she converted to the Russian Orthodox faith and changed her name to Maria Fedorovna. She had 6 children, one of them Tsar Nicholas II. Throughout her life she took part in charity and contributed to improve the Russian education system. During the First World War she made a great effort as chairman of the Russian Red Cross. She spent more than 50 years in Russia, surviving the revolution, which caused the deaths of two of her sons and five grandchildren. In 1919 she left Russia on board a British warship "Marlborough" and, for a while, stayed with her sister, Queen Dowager Alexandra, in England. She later moved to Denmark. When she died, the funeral service was held in the Church of Alexander Nevsky in Copenhagen. Afterwards the sarcophagus of Empress Maria Fedorovna was placed in Roskilde Cathedral. In 2005, the governments of Denmark and Russia agreed to fulfill her will to be buried next to her husband. Her remains were interred in Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral 78 years after her death.Former Burial is here.

Bio by: julia&keld



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: julia&keld
  • Added: Sep 28, 2006
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/15919288/maria_fedorovna-romanov: accessed ), memorial page for Maria Fedorovna Romanov (26 Nov 1847–13 Oct 1928), Find a Grave Memorial ID 15919288, citing Saint Peter and Paul Fortress, Saint Petersburg, Saint Petersburg Federal City, Russia; Maintained by Find a Grave.