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I'm
Rob Salzman of
4130 SW 117th Ave # 415 Beaverton, OR,
97005 USA.
Welcome to e-familytree.net. E-familytree.net is my personal genealogy hobby site.
The data contained here has been gathered through 20 years of genealogy. Some small
part of it is my original research, but most of it has been shared with me.
It is important to understand:
This is SPECULATIVE DATA. Most of it is unverified. Use it for hints and pointers, but DO
YOUR OWN RESEARCH!
You can leave a comment on each page here. If you want to be notified
when this site changes, you can leave contact information here. I can
always be reached at the mailing address above, or by email at genealogy at e-familytree dot net.
This website built on November 02, 2009.
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Family Sheet
HUSBAND
Name: Tsar Aleksandr Iv (ii) Nicholoevich Romanov Of RussiaMale [1] Note
Born: 29 Apr 1818 1818-4-29 at Moscow, Moscow, Russia Moscow, Moscow, Russia [2]
Married: 6 Jul 1880 1880-7-6 at Children Born Out Of Wedlock Children Born Out Of Wedlock
Died: 13 Mar 1881 1881-3-13 at St Petersburg, St Petersburg, Russia St Petersburg, St Petersburg, Russia [4]
Other Spouses: Czarine Mariya Maximiliane Wilhelmine Hesse Darmstadt Of Russia
Father: Viceroy Nikolai I Romanov Of The Crimea
Mother: Tsarine Charlotte Hohenzollern Of Russia
WIFE
Name: Yekaterina Mikhailovna Princess [5] Note
Born: 1847 at Russia [6]
Died: 1922 [7]
CHILDREN
Born: 1872
Died: 1913
Wife: Alexandra Zarnekau Countess
Born: 1874
Died: 1925
Born: 1878
Died: 1959
Husband: Alexander V. Bariatinsky Prince
SOURCES
1). royalfam.ged
2). royalfam.ged
4). royalfam.ged
5). June Ferguson s Royalty GED
6). royalfam.ged
7). royalfam.ged
NOTES
1). royalty.ged NAME Aleksandr II, Czar of Russia. BURI PLAC St Peter & Paul Cathedral, St Petersburg, St Petersburg, Russia MARR PLAC Tsarskoe Selo Military Chapel, Tsarskoe Selo, St. Petersburg, Russia. 81. The Augustan. Aleksandr IV IINikolaievich 1855 1881 . Called The Liberator . The disaster of the Crimean War was attributed by Aleksandr to internal weakness, which was due to the inefficient agricultural system. This he blamed on serfdom. In 1861 he freed the serfs, providing them with land allotments for which they would pay over a period of 49 years. The program of land redistribution was hamstrung by the nobility however, and was never satisfactorily carried out. In many respects, serfdom continued under different guises. Aleksandr IV was a reforming Tsar, and in many ways a liberal one. His attempts to rationalize the jEmpire were not always successful, however, and a policy of reconciliation with the Poles was rewarded with a new uprising. In Asia, a very aggressive policy was followed. The Treaty of Nerchinsk was violated and China was forced to yield large portions of Manchuria Amuria and Ussuria . Most of Russian Central Asia or Russian Turkestan was conquered during this period. Aleksandr s reign was characterized by a great increase in radical political activity, pressure for a constitutional regime, revolutionary sentiment, the Narodnik to the people movement on the left, the Panslav movement on the right, and anarchism. The anarchists took to a futile and useless policy of terrorism. Ultimately, this faction was successful in assassinating the Tsar. The Augustan, Vol. XIV, No.s 5 & 6. Reign 1855 1881 On March 3, 1861, over the strong objections of the landowning nobility, Alexander II freed the serfs and began a program of dramatic reform. He abolished corporal punishment, restructured the judiciary and the educationoal system and denied many of the privileges the nobility had enjoyed. In fact, the emancipation of the serfs brought financial hardship to many landowning families. Tsar Alexander II could not admit that reform had failed and that his regime was ingrained with terror, choking in bureaucracy, drowning in ignorance and greed. He grew more rigid, more craniy, more repressive and now the deadly spiral spun faster and faster. More young men and women arrested more violence against the state more attempts at assassination more assassinations more arrests more executions. Tsar Alexander II was assassinated by revolutionaries. NotesHarrison E. Salisbury American Historian
2). royalty.ged Princess Catherine Yourievska?
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