Maria Feodorovna (Dagmar of Denmark)

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Dagmar of Denmark
Empress Consort of Russia
Empress Maria Fyodorovna
Titles HIM The Dowager Empress of Russia (1894-1928)
HIM The Empress of Russia (1881-1894)
HIH Grand Duchess Marie Feodorovna (1866-1881)
HRH Princess Dagmar of Denmark (1858-1866)
HH Princess Dagmar of Denmark (1853-1858)
HSH Princess Dagmar of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (1847-1853)
Born November 26, 1847
Yellow Palace, Copenhagen
Died October 13, 1928
Hvidore, near Klampenborg
Consort March 14, 1881 - November 1, 1894
Consort to Alexander III
Issue Nicholas II, Alexander Alexandrovich, George Alexandrovich, Xenia Alexandrovna, Michael Alexandrovich, Olga Alexandrovna
Royal House House of Oldenburg
Father Christian IX of Denmark
Mother Louise of Hesse-Kassel

Maria Feodorovna, born Princess Dagmar of Denmark (November 26, 1847October 13, 1928) was Empress Consort of Russia.

She was the second daughter of Christian IX of Denmark and Louise of Hesse. After her marriage to Alexander III of Russia, she became the Empress Consort of Russia as Maria Feodorovna (Cyrillic: Mapия Фёдopoвна). Among her children was the last Russian monarch, the Emperor Nicholas II, whom she outlived by ten years.

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[edit] Family

Princess Marie Sophie Frederikke Dagmar of Denmark was named after her kinswoman Marie Sophie Friederike of Hesse-Kassel (17671852), Queen Dowager of Denmark. Dagmar's father soon became an heir to the throne of Denmark, largely due to his wife's succession rights as niece of King Christian VIII. Born as a daughter of a relatively impoverished princely cadet line, she was baptized into the Lutheran faith. Her father became King of Denmark in 1863. Due to the brilliant alliances of his children, he became known as the "Father-in-law of Europe."

Most of her life, she was known as Maria Fyodorovna (in Russian Мария Фёдоровна), the name which she took when converting to Orthodoxy immediately before her 1866 marriage to the future Tsar Alexander III. She was known within her family as Minnie.

Maria Fyodorovna was the younger sister of Alexandra, Queen Consort of King Edward VII and mother of George V of the United Kingdom, which helps to explain the striking resemblance between Nicholas II and George V. Her brother was King George I of Greece.

[edit] Twice a Fiancée, Ultimately a Bride

The rise of Slavophile ideology in the Russian Empire led Alexander II of Russia to search for a bride for the heir apparent, Grand Duke Nicholas Alexandrovich of Russia, in countries other than the German states that had traditionally provided consorts for the tsars. In 1864, Nicholas went to Denmark, where he was betrothed to Dagmar. On 22 April 1865 he died from tuberculosis. His last wish was that Dagmar would marry his younger brother, the future Alexander III.

Dagmar left Copenhagen on 1 September 1866. Hans Christian Andersen was among the crowd which flocked to the quay in order to see her off. The writer remarked in his diary: "Yesterday, at the quay, while passing me by, she stopped and took me by the hand. My eyes were full of tears. What a poor child! Oh Lord, be kind and merciful to her! They say that there is a brilliant court in St. Petersburg and the tsar's family is nice; still, she heads for an unfamiliar country, where people are different and religion is different and where she will have none of her former acquaintances by her side".

Dagmar was warmly welcomed in Kronstadt by Alexander II of Russia and all his family. The wedding took place on 9 November [O.S. 28 October] 1866.

The Dowager Empress Maria Fydorovna (right) with her sister, Queen Alexandra (center), and her niece, Queen Alexandra's daughter Princess Victoria (left). London, 1905
The Dowager Empress Maria Fydorovna (right) with her sister, Queen Alexandra (center), and her niece, Queen Alexandra's daughter Princess Victoria (left). London, 1905

Tsar Alexander III and Maria Feodorovna had four sons and two daughters:

[edit] Adult life

Maria Fyodorovna was pretty and popular. She rarely interfered with politics, preferring to devote her time and energies to her family, charities and the more social side of her position. Her one exception was her militant dislike of Germany due to the annexation of Danish territories by the newly created German Empire.

Portrait by Vladimir Makovsky of Empress Maria Fyodorovna. Gatchina Palace, 1885
Portrait by Vladimir Makovsky of Empress Maria Fyodorovna. Gatchina Palace, 1885

Dagmar's grandson-in-law, Prince Felix Yusupov, noted that she had great influence in the Romanov family. Sergei Witte praised her tact and diplomatic skill. Nevertheless, she did not get along well with her daughter-in-law, Alexandra Feodorovna, probably holding her responsible for many of the woes that beset the family of her son Nicholas.

Despite the overthrow of the monarchy (1917), the Empress Maria at first refused to leave Russia. Only in 1919, at the urging of her sister Alexandra, did she grudgingly depart, fleeing via Crimea over the Black Sea to London. King George V sent the warship HMS Marlborough to retrieve his aunt. After a brief stay in the British base in Malta and later London, she returned to her native Denmark, choosing her former holiday villa Hvidøre near Copenhagen as her new home. Although Queen Alexandra never treated her sister badly and they spent holidays together in a shared cottage in Great Britain, Maria felt that she was now "number two".

Maria's later years were clouded by the deaths of many immediate family members even though she would not acknowledge the massacre of her son's family or permit any memorial rites to be held in her residence. Her letters to them have since almost all been lost; but in one that survives, she had written to her son: "You know that my thoughts and prayers never leave you. I think of you day and night and sometimes feel so sick at heart that I believe I cannot bear it any longer. But God is merciful. He will give us strength for this terrible ordeal."

Empress Maria Fyodorovna and her husband Tsar Alexander III vacationing in Copenhagen in 1893.
Empress Maria Fyodorovna and her husband Tsar Alexander III vacationing in Copenhagen in 1893.

[edit] After death

Maria Feodorovna died on 13 October 1928 at Hvidøre near Copenhagen, in a house she shared with her sister Queen Alexandra. Maria Feodorovna never met Anna Anderson, the woman who claimed to be her granddaughter Anastasia. The film The Mystery of Anna depicted Anderson on her way to see the Empress, but Anderson was in the U.S. at the time of Maria's death. The Empress has been portrayed in many dramatizations. The character was voiced by Angela Lansbury in the Fox Animation Studios feature film Anastasia. She was portrayed by Helen Hayes in the London production of the play "Anastasia" and in the 1956 film Anastasia based on the play, and by Irene Worth in the 1971 film Nicholas and Alexandra.

Following services in Copenhagen's Russian Orthodox Alexander Nevsky Church, the Empress was interred at Roskilde Cathedral. In 2005, the governments of Denmark and Russia agreed that the Empress's remains should be returned to Saint Petersburg in accordance with her wish to be interred next to her husband. A number of ceremonies took place from 23 to 28 September 2006. The funeral service, attended by high dignitaries, did not pass without some turbulence. The crowd around the coffin was so great that a young Danish diplomat actually fell into the grave[1]. On 26 September, a statue of Maria Feodorovna was unveiled near her favourite Cottage Palace in Peterhof. Following a service at Saint Isaac's Cathedral, she was interred next to Alexander III in the Peter and Paul Cathedral on 28 September 2006, 140 years after her first arrival to Russia and almost 78 years after her death.

[edit] Other pictures

[edit] Styles

  • Her Serene Highness Princess Dagmar of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (18471853)
  • Her Highness Princess Dagmar of Denmark (18531858)
  • Her Royal Highness Princess Dagmar of Denmark (18581866)
  • Her Imperial Highness Grand Duchess Marie Feodorovna, Tsesarevna of Russia (18661881)
  • Her Imperial Majesty The Empress of Russia (18811894)
  • Her Imperial Majesty The Dowager Empress Marie Feodorovna of Russia (18941928)

[edit] Further reading

Little Mother of Russia: A Biography of Empress Marie Fedorovna, by Coryne Hall ISBN 978-0841914216 - a standard biographical account of Empress Maria Federovna

The Court of the Last Tsar, by Gregory King 978-0471727637 - gives a good account of the role of the Empress Dowager in the court of her son, Nicholas II, and her dislike and mistrust for Alexandra.

[edit] External links

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Preceded by
Marie of Hesse-Darmstadt
Royal Consorts of Russia
March 14, 1881November 1, 1894
Succeeded by
Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt