Grand Duchess Vera Constantinovna of Russia
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Grand Duchess Vera Constantinovna of Russia | |
Born | February 16, 1854 St. Petersburg |
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Died | April 11, 1912 (aged 58) Stuttgart |
Spouse | Duke Eugen of Württemberg (b. 20 August 1846 - 27 January 1877) |
Parents | Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolaevich and Princess Alexandra of Saxe-Altenburg |
Grand Duchess Vera Constantinovna of Russia (February 16, 1854 – April 11, 1912, Russian: великая княгиня Вера Константиновна) was a daughter of Grand Duke Konstantine Nicholaievich of Russia. She was a granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas I and first cousin of Tsar Alexander III of Russia.
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[edit] Early life
Grand Duchess Vera Constantinovna of Russia was born in St. Petersburg on February 16, 1854, the fourth child and second daughter of the six children of Grand Duke Constantine Nicholaievich of Russia and his wife Grand Duchess Alexandra Iosifovna (born Princess Alexandra of Saxe-Altenberg).
Grand Duchess Vera spent her early years in St Petersburg and in 1861, the family moved to Warsaw when her father was appointed Viceroy of Poland. Vera was a troubled child, prone to violent fits of anger, and suffered what was officially described as a “nervous condition”. [1] She became so unmanageable that her parents decided to send her to her aunt, Grand Duchess Olga, Queen of Württemberg, who agreed to take care of her. On December 7, 1863, Grand Duke Constantin and his wife arrived with nine-year-old Vera in Stuttgart, entrusting her care to the childless King Karl of Württemberg and Queen Olga. Officially this was ascribed to the more advanced medical treatment the child would receive in Germany, but it was also a way for Vera’s parents to hide her embarrassing illness from the Russian court. [2] Queen Olga was happy to take care of her niece in spite of the difficulties, and for Vera, her aunt eventually took the place of her mother. [3]
Queen Olga and her husband were devoted foster parents, but in the beginning, they had little success in improving the girl’s condition. Vera was homesick and continued to be extremely difficult, to the point of being physically violent towards them. Periodically, Vera had to be brought under control by an army officer, and on more than one occasion she was locked up. [4] Karl went for long walks with Vera and read passages from the Bible to her in the evening. By 1866, there was still little improvement in Vera’s condition, but Queen Olga persevered and with time, Grand Duchess Vera eventually outgrew her disruptive behavior.
As a young woman, she was introspective, shy, but clever with an intellectual bent. She disliked ceremony. Her physical appearance, like her personality, was rather peculiar. She had thick, curly blonde hair, but was short, stumpy and extremely plain. [5]
[edit] Marriage
King Karl and Queen Olga legally adopted Grand Duchess Vera in 1871. They arranged her marriage to a member of the Silesian branch of their family, Duke Eugen of Württemberg (b. 20 August 1846 - 27 January 1877), as in this way she would not have to leave the country after her marriage.
The engagement took place in January 1874, pleasing both families. Grand Duke Konstantine wrote to the King and Queen profusely thanking them for the help they had given to his daughter. Queen Olga wrote “My problem child is now a happy bride, loving and beloved. I never dreamed that such happiness could exist. Eugen is already like a son to the King”. [6]
Vera was nineteen and Eugen twenty-eight. The wedding was celebrated with great pomp in Stuttgart on May 4, 1874 in the presence of Vera's uncle, Tsar Alexander II, who, noticing the unattractiveness of his niece, remarked ungallantly, “I confess that I do not envy the young husband” [7]. He did, however, settle a million rubles on Vera as a dowry.
The couple settled in a large house, the “Akademie” in Stuttgart. The following year, Vera gave birth to a son, Karl Eugen, who died only seven months later. In 1876, Vera had twin daughters, Elsa and Olga.
However, the Grand Duchess' married life was to be short-lived. Her husband, an officer in the Württemberg army, took charge of a command in Düsseldorf, where he died unexpectedly on January 27, 1877. The cause of death was officially given as, alternately, a fall from a horse, and a respiratory illness. However, the adventuresome Duke was actually killed in a duel, which was hushed up. The marriage had lasted three years. Only twenty-three years old, Vera never married again.
Rather than returning to her native country, the young widow decided to stay in Württemberg, the country she felt to be her own, where she had the protection of the King. However, she traveled frequently to visit her relatives in Russia as well as her only sister, Queen Olga of the Hellenes, in Greece.
At the death of King Karl in 1891, Vera inherited a considerable fortune, and when Queen Olga died a year later, she received Villa Berg in Stuttgart, where she lived in considerable style. She also wrote poetry, and her home was the scene of many cultural as well as family gatherings
Bright and talkative, Grand Duchess Vera was popular in Württemberg, where she dedicated herself to charitable work. Refuges for fallen women, called "Vera’s Homes"; the Benevolent Institution; the Olga Clinic in Stuttgart; the Nicholas nursing station for the blind, the Mariaberg Institute near Reutlingen, the dragoon regiment of her late husband, and a Russian regiment, were among the more than thirty institutions and organizations under her patronage. She was also involved in the construction of the Orthodox Church of St Nicholas in Stuttgart. [8]
[edit] Last Years
Grand Duchess Vera visited Russia often and was present with her daughters in May 1896 during the coronation ceremonies of Tsar Nicholas II. The elder of the twins, Elsa, was first engaged in January 1895 to Hereditary Prince Alfred of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, a grandson of Queen Victoria. The engagement was quickly broken off, and Elsa married a distant cousin, Prince Albert of Schaumburg-Lippe, brother of Queen Charlotte of Württemberg. The following year, Vera’s other daughter, Olga, married her brother-in-law's younger brother, Prince Maximilian of Schaumburg-Lippe. Olga’s fate was similar to Vera’s; she had three children and within a few years of her marriage, she lost a child and her husband, becoming a widow at an early age and never marrying again.
Aged beyond her years, Grand Duchess Vera was now in poor health. Some authorities now speculate that she suffered from Sydenham’s chorea or Saint Vitus Dance, a neurological movement disorder characterized by abrupt, involuntary movements. [9] In Stuttgart Vera was assigned an officer to follow her about, to make sure that if she had an attack she would not fall an injured herself. [10]
By the turn of the century, Vera Constantinova appeared small and dumpy with a fat, round face. [11] She wore her hair very short, which gave her a masculine look. [12] Extremely nearsighted, she wore a pince-nez. She was considered rather eccentric, but she had a good sense of humor and her funny remarks were remembered by her nephews and nieces. She was well-liked by her family.
After living in Württemberg for so long, she was at odds politically and religiously with her Russian relatives. Her political sympathies lay with Germany and she did not share the increasingly anti-German view of the Romanovs. Vera Konstantinovna was very religious, but had never understood the Orthodox faith and eventually abandoned it to convert to Lutheranism in 1909, to the consternation of the Romanov family. She then commissioned the building of a Protestant church on the grounds of Villa Berg.
In 1903, during the wedding dinner for Princess Alice of Battenberg to her nephew Prince Andrew of Greece in Darmstadt, Prince Christopher recalled "My brother George sat next to her, and at a pause in the proceedings, snatched off her tiara and put it on his own head. Everybody laughed, Aunt Vera included, although she vowed vengeance on the culprit. Her turn came, as she thought, a little later, when the bride and bridegroom started on their honeymoon. We were all gathered at the door, throwing rice at them, when someone knocked off poor Aunt Vera’s glasses, which were smashed to atoms on the stone steps." [13] An unfortunate man who happened to be standing next to the Grand Duchess, then became the object of her wrath. She knocked the man’s hat off and began to hit him over the head with it.
Grand Duchess Vera Constantinovna suffered a stroke in October 1911 and she died in Stuttgart on April 11, 1912, aged fifty-eight. [14]
[edit] Children
Grand Duchess Vera and her husband Duke Eugene of Württemberg had three children:
- Charles-Eugen of Württemberg (April 8, 1875- 11 November 1875).
- Elsa of Württemberg (March 1, 1876- May 27, 1936) m. 1897 Albrecht of Schaumburg-Lippe (24 October 1869-25 December 1942).
- Maximilian of Schaumburg-Lippe (28 March 1898 - 4 February 1974)
- Franz Josef of Schaumburg-Lippe (1 September 1899 - 6 July 1963)
- Alexander of Schaumburg-Lippe (20 January 1901 - 26 November 1923)
- Bathildis of Schaumburg-Lippe (11 November 1903 - 29 June 1983)
- Olga of Württemberg (March 1, 1876 - October 21, 1932) m. 1898 Maximilian of Schaumburg-Lippe (13 March 1871 - 1 April 1904).
- Eugen of Schaumburg-Lippe (8 August 1899 - 9 November 1929)
- Albrecht of Schaumburg-Lippe (17 October 1900 - 20 May 1984)
- Bernhard of Schaumburg-Lippe (8 December 1902 - 24 June 1903)
[edit] Ancestors
[edit] Notes
- ^ “Gilded Prism”: Greg King & Penny Wilson, p.37
- ^ “Gilded Prism”: Greg King & Penny Wilson, p.37
- ^ “Gilded Prism”: Greg King & Penny Wilson, p.37
- ^ The Grand Duchesses, Beeche, Arturo , p. 69.
- ^ A Romanov Diary, George, Grand Duchess of Russia, p.55.
- ^ The Grand Duchesses, Beeche, Arturo , p. 70.
- ^ “Gilded Prism”: Greg King & Penny Wilson, p.38
- ^ The Grand Duchesses, Beeche, Arturo , p. 70.
- ^ The Grand Duchesses, Beeche, Arturo , p. 70.
- ^ The Grand Duchesses, Beeche, Arturo , p. 70.
- ^ “Gilded Prism”: Greg King & Penny Wilson, p.105
- ^ The Grand Duchesses, Beeche, Arturo , p. 71.
- ^ “Gilded Prism”: Greg King & Penny Wilson, p.105
- ^ “Gilded Prism”: Greg King & Penny Wilson, p.105
- ^ Lundy, Darryl, thePeerage, <http://www.thepeerage.com/p10194.htm#i101937>. Retrieved on 23 October 2007
- ^ a b Lundy, Darryl, thePeerage, <http://www.thepeerage.com/p10585.htm#i105848>. Retrieved on 23 October 2007
- ^ Lundy, Daryl, thePeerage, <http://www.thepeerage.com/p10173.htm#i101727>. Retrieved on 23 October 2007
- ^ a b c Lundy, Darryl, thePeerage, <http://www.thepeerage.com/p11056.htm#i110553>. Retrieved on 23 October 2007
- ^ a b c Lundy, Darryl, thePeerage, <http://www.thepeerage.com/p10101.htm#i101003>. Retrieved on 23 October 2007
- ^ a b Lundy, Darryl, thePeerage, <http://www.thepeerage.com/p10114.htm#i101131>. Retrieved on 23 October 2007
- ^ a b Lundy, Darryl, thePeerage, <http://www.thepeerage.com/p11054.htm#i110537>. Retrieved on 23 October 2007
[edit] Bibliography
- Beeche, Arturo. The Grand Duchesses, Eurohistory, 2004. ISBN 0977196119
- Grand Duchess George of Russia. “A Romanov Diary”, Atlantic International Publications, 1988. ISBN 938311093
- King Greg, and Penny Marshall. “Gilded Prism”, Eurohistory, 2006. ISBN 0-9771691-4-3
- Thomsen, Sabine. Die Württembergischen Koeniginnen. Tübigen, Silberburg Verlag GmbH, 2006. ISBN 10-3-87407-714-4.