Grand Duke Peter Nikolaevich of Russia
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Grand Duke Peter (Pyotr) Nikolaevich of Russia (January 10, 1864 – January 17, 1931) was the second son of Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (1831-1891) and Princess Alexandra of Oldenburg (1838-1900).
On July 26, 1889, he married Princess Milica of Montenegro (1866-1951), daughter of King Nicholas I of Montenegro. The Grand Duke and Duchess had four children:
- Princess Marina Petrovna of Russia (1892-1981)
- Prince Roman Petrovich of Russia (1896-1978)
- Princess Nadejda Petrovna of Russia (1898-1988)
- Princess Sofia Petrovna of Russia (1898-1898)
As was the custom for Russian Grand Dukes (the title applied to all sons and grandsons of a Russian Emperor), the Grand Duke Peter served in the Russian army as a Lt.-General and Adjutant-General.
Grand Duchess Militza with her sister Grand Duchess Anastasia (known as Stana - the wife of Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich.) were socially very influential at the Russian imperial court in the early 20th century. Nicknamed joined "the black peril", a group interested in the occult. They are credited with introducing first a charlatan mystic named merely Philippe, and then, with graver consequences, Grigori Rasputin to the Imperial family. Felix Yusupov — who was their neighbour in Koreiz — once described Znamenka, the Grand Duke and Duchesses palace as "the central point of the powers of evil". This was later to be a widely held belief within the higher echelons of the divided Russian court. The Dowager Empress Marie firmly believed that the couple plotted with Rasputin and others to gain influence and favours through the neurotic Empress Alexandra. However, by 1914, Alexandra herself referred to them as "the black family" and felt herself to be manipulated by them.
The couple escaped the Russian Revolution to the south of France. Here Grand Duke Peter Nicholaievich died at Cap d'Antibes, near Antibes on 17 June 1931. His wife died in Alexandria, Egypt in September 1951.