Line of succession to the former Russian throne

The Monarchy of Russia was abolished in 1917 following the February Revolution, which forced Emperor Nicholas II to abdicate. The issue of who is the current Pretender is open to debate.

Contents

Line of succession in March 1917

The numbers following the names indicate descent and genealogical seniority from Nicholas I of Russia. For instance, Alexei Nikolaevich, 1.2.1.1, as follows from Nicholas I:

Nicholas I → Alexander II (1st son) → Alexander III (2nd son) → Nicholas II (1st son) → Alexei Nikolaevich (1st and only son)

  1. Grand Duke and Tsesarevich Alexei Nikolaevich (1904–1918, 1.2.1.1)
  2. Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich (1878–1918, 1.2.2)
  3. Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich (1876–1938, 1.3.1)
  4. Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich (1877–1943, 1.3.2)
  5. Grand Duke Andrew Vladimirovich (1879–1956, 1.3.3)
  6. Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich (1860–1919, 1.4)
  7. Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich (1891–1941, 1.4.1)
  8. Prince Ioann Konstantinovich (1886–1918, 2.1.1)
  9. Prince Vsevolod Ivanovich (1914–1973, 2.1.1.1)
  10. Prince Gavriil Konstantinovich (1887–1955, 2.1.2)
  11. Prince Konstantine Konstantinovich (1891–1918, 2.1.3)
  12. Prince Igor Konstantinovich (1894–1918, 2.1.4)
  13. Prince George Konstantinovich (1903–1938, 2.1.5)
  14. Grand Duke Dmitri Konstantinovich (1860–1919, 2.2.1)
  15. Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich (1856–1929, 3.1)
  16. Grand Duke Peter Nikolaevich (1864–1931, 3.2)
  17. Prince Roman Petrovich (1896–1978, 3.2.1)
  18. Grand Duke Nicholas Mikhailovich (1859–1919, 4.1)
  19. Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich (1861–1929, 4.2)
  20. Grand Duke George Mikhailovich (1863–1919, 4.3)
  21. Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich (1866–1933, 4.4)
  22. Prince Andrei Alexandrovich (1897–1981, 4.4.1)
  23. Prince Feodor Alexandrovich (1898–1968, 4.4.2)
  24. Prince Nikita Alexandrovich (1900–1974, 4.4.3)
  25. Prince Dmitri Alexandrovich (1901–1980, 4.4.4)
  26. Prince Rostislav Alexandrovich (1902–1978, 4.4.5)
  27. Prince Vasili Alexandrovich (1907–1989, 4.4.6)
  28. Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich (1869–1918, 4.5)

Many of the individuals on this list died childless; some were killed during the Russian Revolution.

Claimants

Cyril Vladimirovich (1924-1938)

At first, many members of the Imperial House either did not believe or were wary of acting on news of the demise of the immediate imperial family. However, camps started to be formed in the monarchist movement, where Paris was a focal location. Several monarchists grouped around Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich, who was first in the line of succession after the execution of Alexei Nikolaevich and Michael Alexandrovich. Many of Cyril's opponents grouped around a young grand duke, Dmitri Pavlovich, who was next in the line of succession if Cyril and his brothers, the Vladimirovichi, were ineligible (Paul Alexandrovich, who had been ahead of Dmitri, had been killed in 1919). Several grouped around the old Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich, appreciating his career as general and former commander-in-chief, and/or his position as the oldest member of the imperial dynasty.

Nicholas and Dmitri actually never publicly proclaimed themselves pretenders, but Cyril Vladimirovich assumed on 8 August 1922 the position of curator of the throne. On 31 August 1924 he proclaimed himself Cyril I, Emperor of all the Russias. With the assumption of the Imperial title he elevated his children to the titles Grand Duke and Grand Duchesses of Russia, though they were not grandchildren of a reigning Emperor and were by birth Prince and Princesses of Russia.[1] Nicholas, the more serious of the other monarchist alternatives, died in 1929. Cyril held his court-in-exile in France and erected a functioning machinery for the monarchist movement.

Vladimir Cyrillovich (1938-1992)

In 1938 Cyril died, and was succeeded as pretender by his only son Vladimir Cyrillovich, who did not publicly assume the imperial title, and was known as "Grand Duke".

Vladimir elevated his father's second cousin and their loyal supporter Prince Gavriil Konstantinovich to Grand Duke of Russia in 1939. Gavriil was the only Romanov prince to be granted a grand ducal title ad personam after Empress Elizabeth awarded the title to her nephew, the future Peter III in the 18th century.

The Vladimirovichi supporters claim that Grand Duke Vladimir Cyrillovich, was the sole male dynast of the Imperial House to enter into an equal marriage after 1917. Opponents refute the equality of this marriage. On August 13, 1948, he married Her Illustrious Highness Princess Leonida Bagration-Moukransky. The Grand Duke's marriage to Princess Leonida is controversial; some consider it to be morganatic (though the princess descended from a dynasty that had ruled as kings in Armenia and Georgia since the early Middle Ages, it had been reduced to the status of Russian nobility for over a century prior to the Russian Revolution — Leonida's branch had not been regnant in the male line as Kings of Georgia since 1505.[2] Because of this, the Romanov Family Association considers Maria to be unentitled to claim the throne. However, since Grand Duke Vladimir was at the time the Head he declared his marriage to be equal, legally his marriage would be considered equal . Princess Leonida, despite these arguments, continues to use as her title of pretension the title of Grand Duchess of Russia and the style of Her Imperial Highness.

In 1969 Vladimir, foreseeing in his opinion an almost inevitable extinction of the male dynastic line he proclaimed his daughter Maria Vladimirovna the future curatrix of the throne, implying that she would ultimately succeed. That act angered yet more of those already rebellious other dynasts and groups in monarchist circles. After this proclamation Princes Vsevold, Andrei and Roman wrote to Vladimir and addressing him as a Prince not Grand Duke, said that he had married unequally and that his wife was of no higher status than the wives of the other Romanov princes. They also said that they did not recognise Maria Vladimirovna as a Grand Duchess and that his proclamation was illegal.[3]

In 1989, when Prince Vasili Alexandrovich of Russia (who also was the President of the Romanov Family Association, see discussion of succession controversy below), died, Vladimir immediately proclaimed his daughter as the dynasty's heiress as Prince Vasili was the last male Vladimir recognized as a dynast.

Maria Vladimirovna (1992-present)

When Vladimir died in 1992, Maria Vladimirovna had herself proclaimed the new Head of the Imperial House, assuming the position of curatrix and proclaiming her son George Mikhailovich the heir-apparent. Her son, who was born in 1982, was given the patronymic "Mikhailovich" because from 1976 until her divorce in 1985, Maria was married to His Royal Highness Prince Franz Wilhelm of Prussia, who was granted the title "His Imperial Highness Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich of Russia" by Vladimir. Maria styles herself "Her Imperial Highness Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna of Russia" as her title of pretension, and her son styles himself "His Imperial Highness Grand Duke Georgi Mikhailovich of Russia" as his title of pretension.

Nicholas Romanov (1992-present)

In 1979, seven undisputed male and female dynasts founded the Romanov Family Association (or RFA), which by the end of the same year had admitted more than half of the surviving undisputed dynasts into its membership, as well as a fair number of those male-line descendants Vladimir did not recognize as dynasts because of morganatic birth. Vladimir Cyrillovich never joined the association and neither has his daughter Maria.

The RFA, which yet numbered two elderly female recognized dynasts among its membership, chose Prince Nicholas Romanov, as its president in 1989 following the death of Prince Vasili Alexandrovich of Russia. The RFA's official position is that the Russian nation should determine which sort of government it desires, and if the choice is monarchy, who should be monarch.

However, some assert that Nicholas, who has taken "H.H. Prince of Russia" as his title of pretension, is, in addition, the head of the Imperial House of Romanov, a position Prince Nicholas has himself claimed since the death of Vladimir Cyrillovich in April, 1992.[4][5][6] With the exception of Maria Vladimirovna, Prince Nicholas is recognised by the rest of the family as head of the imperial house.[7]

Succession controversy

Several individuals may claim dynastic headship, depending on application of Romanov House Law. First, one must determine who was the last surviving male dynast. This may have been Vladimir Cyrillovich, or, depending on one's view of the validity of his father's or grandfather's marriage, Nicholas Romanovich. If there is a surviving male dynast, he is the legitimate claimant under Romanov House Law. If not, semi-salic succession takes over, and the title passes to the last surviving male dynast's closest female relative. This may be Maria Vladimirovna, or, depending on one's view of her father's marriage, Nicholas Romanovich; semi-salic succession may instead pivot from, for instance, Nicholas II, or Vladimir Cyrillovich's cousin, Prince Rostislav.

Line of Maria Vladimirovna

If one accepts Vladimir Cyrillovich's marriage to Leonida Georgievna Bagration-Moukhranskaya as non-morganatic and he was succeeded by his daughter Maria Vladimirovna then the line of succession is:

  1. George Mikhailovich (born 1981), who has been styled Grand Duke of Russia since birth, also a Prince of Prussia (a title which he does not generally use)

After George, the male line of Grand Duchess Maria is extinct. If both died without further male heirs, the succession would then follow semi-Salic law and the right to the Imperial Crown will presumably pass either to Karl Emich, Hereditary Prince of Leiningen , as nearest male relation to Maria and her son, or to the nearest male Orthodox relative, be it Prince Karl Wladimir of Yugoslavia (born 1964, son of the late Princess Kira Melita of Leiningen), or Prince Alexander of Yugoslavia .

Line of Nicholas Romanov

The line of succession to Prince Nicholas Romanov based on descent from Emperor Nicholas I of Russia is:

  1. Prince Dimitri Romanovich (born 1926)
  2. Prince Andrew Andreevich (born 1923)
  3. Prince Alexis Andreevich (born 1953)
  4. Prince Peter Andreevich (born 1961)
  5. Prince Andrew Andreevich (born 1963)
  6. Prince Rostislav Rostislavovich (born 1985)
  7. Prince Nikita Rostislavovich (born 1987)
  8. Prince Nicholas Christopher Nikolaievich (born 1968)
  9. Prince Daniel Joseph Nikolaievich (born 1972)
  10. Prince Jackson Daniel Danilovich (born 2009)

Arguments

Did Vladimir Cyrillovich's marriage violate House Laws?

Did Cyril Vladimirovich's marriage violate House Laws?

Did Cyril Vladimirovich's father's marriage violate House Laws?

Did Nicholas Romanov's father's marriage violate House Laws?

Other arguments

Support

It seems that Maria Vladimirovna has, among others, her court, most of the Russian Orthodox church, and most societies of Russian Nobility, including the most influential, the Russian Nobility Association, behind her; whereas the Romanov Family Association has most of the active descendants of the dynasty, some monarchist organizations, the editors of the new, albeit less respected,[11] Almanach de Gotha in London,[12] and best influence to recent Russian governments behind it . As displays of the good score in the visibility contest, RFA presents its achievement to have its president as foremost family representative when Nicholas II and his family's remains were interred in St Petersburg, as well as in several other burials and governmental event; whereas Maria Vladimirovna has in those same issues, generally been in foremost position in church-organized solemnizings, such as masses in honor of relic-translation and such.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Almanach de Gotha (182nd ed.). Almanach de Gotha. 1998. p. 214. ISBN 0953214206. 
  2. ^ Cyril Toumanoff, "The Fifteenth-Century Bagratides and the Institution of Collegial Sovereignty in Georgia". Traditio. Volume VII, Fordham University Press, New York 1949-1951, pp. 169-221.
  3. ^ Massie, p 269
  4. ^ "Nikolai Romanov Prince of Russia Presentation". nikolairomanov.com. 2002-09-26. http://www.nikolairomanov.com/presentation/index.html. Retrieved 2008-08-19. 
  5. ^ a b c Horan, Brien Purcell (September 1998). "The Russian Imperial Succession". http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/russuclw.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-19. 
  6. ^ Looijen, Sytske (1992-06-25). "European Topics". International Herald Tribune. http://www.iht.com/articles/1992/06/25/etop.php. Retrieved 2008-08-19. 
  7. ^ Massie p. 274
  8. ^ Maria Vladimirovna's website
  9. ^ Almanach de Gotha, Russie, (Gotha: Justus Perthes, 1944), page 107.
  10. ^ "Almanach de Gotha", Russie, (Gotha: Justus Perthes, 1944), page 107, (French) "en mariage non conforme aux lois de la maison".
  11. ^ "Kennedy" Almanach de Gotha
  12. ^ Almanach de Gotha

Bibliography