Juliane of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld

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Juliane Henriette Ulrike, Princess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Duchess in Saxony (b. Coburg, 23 September 1781 - d. Elfenau, near Berne, Switzerland, 15 August 1860), was a German princess of the ducal house of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (after 1826, the house of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha).

She was the third daughter of Franz Frederick Anton, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld and Countess Augusta Reuss of Ebersdorf und Lobenstein.

The Empress Catherine II of Russia chose her to be the bride of her second grandson, the Grand Duke Constantine. Juliane, who was not yet fifteen years of age, took the name of Anna Feodorovna in a Russian Orthodox baptismal ceremony and married Constantine (who was only seventeen years old at the time) in St.Petersburg on 26 February 1796. The Empress died nine months later, on 6 November.

The marriage was totally unhappy. Constantine, a raw and immature boy, made his young wife intensely miserable. After three years, in 1799, Anna left her husband and returned to Coburg. Shortly thereafter, however, she returned to Russia in an unsuccessful attempt to reconcile. In 1801, Anna, who had become involved in several frivolous intrigues, was sent home permanently to Coburg.

On 28 October 1808 Anna gave birth to an illegitimate son, named Eduard Edgar Schmidt-Löwe. The father of this child possibly was Jules Gabriel Emile de Seigneux, a minor French nobleman. Eduard was enobled by his mother's younger brother, Duke Ernst I, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and assumed the surname von Löwenfels by decree on 10 January 1818.

Later, Anna moved to Berne, Switzerland, and gave birth to a second illegitimate child in 1812, a daughter, named Louise Hilda Agnes. Her father was Rodolphe Abraham de Schiferli, a Swiss surgeon and professor.

Two years later, in 1814, Constantine tried to get her to return to him but her firm opposition prevented this attempt from succeeding. That year, Anna acquired an estate to the banks of Aare River and gave it the name of Elfenau. She spent the rest of her life there.

Finally, on 20 March 1820, after almost twenty years of separation, her marriage with the Grand Duke Constantine was formally annulled. He remarried and died on 27 June 1831. Anna survived her former husband for twenty-nine years.

Later, her son Eduard married his cousin Bertha von Schauenstein, an illegitimate daughter of the duke Ernst I, and had descendants who still alive. Her daughter Louise married Jean Samuel Edouard Dapples in 1834 and died three years later in 1837 at the tender age of twenty-five.

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