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Later, Anna moved to [[Bern]], [[Switzerland]], and gave birth to a second illegitimate child in 1812, a daughter, named '''''Louise Hilda Agnes d'Aubert'''''. The father was Rodolphe Abraham de Schiferli, a Swiss surgeon, professor and chamberlain (French:''Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur'', German:''Oberhofmeister'') of Anna's household from 1812 to 1837. In order to cover another scandal in Anna's life, the baby was adopted by Jean François Joseph d'Aubert, a French refugee. After the affair ended, Schiferli maintain a tender and close friendship with the Grand Duchess until his death.<ref>Ivan Grezin: ''Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna: in search of simple happiness in the middle of the big policy''[http://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=es&ie=UTF8&prev=_t&rurl=translate.google.com.pe&sl=ru&tl=en&u=http://www.nashagazeta.ch/news/11890&usg=ALkJrhiFWDE9ohE8QkXEdBru3JoU69LZrA] On-line traduction to English (retrieved 10 September 2012</ref>
Later, Anna moved to [[Bern]], [[Switzerland]], and gave birth to a second illegitimate child in 1812, a daughter, named '''''Louise Hilda Agnes d'Aubert'''''. The father was Rodolphe Abraham de Schiferli, a Swiss surgeon, professor and chamberlain (French:''Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur'', German:''Oberhofmeister'') of Anna's household from 1812 to 1837. In order to cover another scandal in Anna's life, the baby was adopted by Jean François Joseph d'Aubert, a French refugee. After the affair ended, Schiferli maintain a tender and close friendship with the Grand Duchess until his death.<ref>Ivan Grezin: ''Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna: in search of simple happiness in the middle of the big policy''[http://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=es&ie=UTF8&prev=_t&rurl=translate.google.com.pe&sl=ru&tl=en&u=http://www.nashagazeta.ch/news/11890&usg=ALkJrhiFWDE9ohE8QkXEdBru3JoU69LZrA] On-line traduction to English (retrieved 10 September 2012</ref>


Two years later, in 1814, Constantine, accompanied by her brother [[Leopold I of Belgium|Leopold]], tried to get Anna to return to him but her firm opposition prevented this attempt from succeeding. That year, Anna acquired an estate on the banks of [[Aare|Aare River]] and gave it the name of ''Elfenau''.<ref>Karl Viktor von Bonstetten, Doris Walser-Wilhelm, Antje Kolde: ''Bonstettiana, Band 10; Band 1805-1811, Wallstein Verlag, 2003,'' p. 629.</ref> She spent the rest of her life there, and, as a lover of music, made her home not only a center for domestic and foreign musical society of the era but also the point of reunion of diplomats from different countries who were in Bern.
Two years later, in 1814, during the invasion of France by Russian troops, Emperor Alexander I expressed his desire of a reconciliation between his brother and Anna. Grand Duke Constantine, accompanied by Anna's brother [[Leopold I of Belgium|Leopold]], tried to convinced her to return with him, but the Grand Duchess categorically refused. That year, Anna acquired an estate on the banks of [[Aare|Aare River]] and gave it the name of ''Elfenau''.<ref>Karl Viktor von Bonstetten, Doris Walser-Wilhelm, Antje Kolde: ''Bonstettiana, Band 10; Band 1805-1811, Wallstein Verlag, 2003,'' p. 629.</ref> She spent the rest of her life there, and, as a lover of music, made her home not only a center for domestic and foreign musical society of the era but also the point of reunion of diplomats from different countries who were in Bern.


Finally, on 20 March 1820, after nineteen years of separation, her marriage with the Grand Duke Constantine was formally annulled. He remarried two months later and died on 27 June 1831. Anna survived her former husband by twenty-nine years.
Finally, on 20 March 1820, after nineteen years of separation, her marriage was officially dissolved by a manifesto of Emperor Alexander I of Russia. Grand Duke Constantine remarried two months later morganatically with his mistress [[Joanna Grudzińska]] and died on 27 June 1831. Anna survived her former husband by twenty-nine years.


Later, her son Eduard married his cousin Bertha von Schauenstein, an illegitimate daughter of the Duke [[Ernst I, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|Ernst I]], and descendants of that marriage are still alive today. Her daughter Louise married [[Edouard Dapples|Jean Samuel Edouard Dapples]] in 1834, but died three years later in 1837 at the age of twenty-five.
In 1835 her son Eduard married his cousin Bertha von Schauenstein, an illegitimate daughter of the Duke [[Ernst I, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|Ernst I]]; this was one of the few happy events in Anna's life - she soon lost almost all the people who love: her parents, her sisters Sophie and Antoinette, her own daughter Louise (who, married [[Edouard Dapples|Jean Samuel Edouard Dapples]] in 1834 died three years later in 1837 at the age of twenty-five), her fromer lover and now good friend Rodolphe de Schiferli (just a few weeks after their daughter's demise), her protector Emperor Alexander I, her childhood friend Empress Elizabeth...at that point the Grand Duchess wrote that Elfenau became in the "''House of Mourning''".

Anna Feodorovna died in her Elfenau state in 1860, aged seventy-nine. In her grave was placed a simple marble slab with the inscription, "Julia-Anna" and the dates of her birth and death (1781-1860); nothing more would indicate the origin of the once Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Grand Duchess of Russia.

[[Alexandrine of Baden]], wife of her nephew [[Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha]] wrote:

:''Condolences must be universal, because Aunt was extremely loved and respected, because it is much involved in charity work and in favor of the poor and underprivileged.''


==Ancestry==
==Ancestry==

Revision as of 04:26, 11 September 2012

Princess Juliane
Tsesarevna of Russia
Grand Duchess Anna Fyodorovna of Russia
La Grande Duchesse Anna Feodorovna", Portrait by Élisabeth-Louise Vigée-Le Brun, painted shortly after her wedding (ca.1795-1796). This portrait was destroyed by bombs during World War II
Born(1781-07-23)23 July 1781
Coburg
Died15 August 1860(1860-08-15) (aged 79)
Elfenau, near Bern, Switzerland
SpouseGrand Duke Constantine Pavlovich of Russia
(m. 1796 - sep. 1801 / div. 1820)
IssueEduard Edgar Schmidt-Löwe (illegitimate)
Louise Hilda Agnes d'Aubert (illegitimate)
HouseHouse of Wettin
(by birth)
House of Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov
(by marriage)
FatherFrancis, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
MotherCountess Augusta of Reuss-Ebersdorf

Princess Juliane Henriette Ulrike of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (Coburg, 23 September 1781 – Elfenau, near Bern, Switzerland, 15 August 1860), also known as Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna of Russia, was a German princess of the ducal house of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (after 1826, the house of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha) who became the wife of Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich of Russia of Russia.

Family

She was the third daughter of Franz Frederick Anton, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld and Countess Augusta Caroline Reuss of Ebersdorf. King Leopold I of the Belgians was her younger brother, while Queen Victoria of United Kingdom was her niece and King Ferdinand II of Portugal was her nephew.

Grand Duchess of Russia

Marriage Plans

After the marriage of his eldest grandson, Grand Duke Alexander, with Louise of Baden in 1793, Empress Catherine II of Russia began to search a suitable wife for his second grandson, Grand Duke Constantine. The Empress spoke of pride about the young Grand Duke as an enviable match for many brides in Europe, as he was the second in line to succession to the Russian Empire. Soon arrived from the court of Naples a marriage offer: King Ferdinand I and Queen Maria Carolina expressed the idea of arranged the union between the Grand Duke and one of his many daughters. The Empress rejected the proposal inmediately.

In 1795 General Andrei Budberg was sent in a secret mission to the ruling European courts: find a bride for Constantine. He had a huge list of candidates, but during his trip became ill and was forced to stay in Coburg, where was attended by the Ducal court doctor, Baron Stockmar, who, once knew the real intention of his trip, drew the General's atention to the daughters of Duke Franz. Budberg didn't go to any other court and wrote to Saint Petersburg that he found the perfect candidates.

After a little consideration, Empress Catherine II consented. Duchess Augusta, once she knew that one of her daughters would be a Grand Duchess of Russia, was delighted with the idea: a marriage with the Imperial Russian dynasty could bring huge benefits for the relative small German Duchy of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. However, in Europe were another views; for example, Charles-François-Philibert Masson, in his Secrets Memoirs of the court of Saint-Petersburg wrote about the unenviable role of German brides in the Russian court:

Young touching victim, which Germany sends as a tribute to Russia, as did Greece who sent their maids to the Minotaur...

Life in Russia

Juliane, along with her mother and two elder sisters, Sophie and Antoinette, traveled to Saint Petersburg at the request of Empress Catherine II of Russia. After the first meeting, the Empress wrote: "The Duchess of Saxe-Coburg was beautiful and worthy of respect among woman, and her daughters are pretty. It's a pity that our groom must choose only one, would be good to keep all three. But it seems that our Paris give the apple to the younger one, you'll see that he would prefer Julia among the sisters...she's really the best choice". However, Prince Adam Czartoryski, in his Memoirs, wrote:

He was given an order by the Empress to marry one of the princesses, and he was given a choice of his future wife.

This point of view was confirmed by Countess Varvara Golovina, who also wrote:

After three weeks, the Grand Duke Constantine forced to make a choice. I think that he did not want to marry.

After the young Grand Duke chose Juliane,[1] she began her training as a consort. On 2 February 1796 the not yet fifteen years old German princess took the name of Anna Feodorovna in a Russian Orthodox baptismal ceremony and twenty days later, on 26 February, she and Constantine were married. The Empress died nine months later, on 6 November. By virtue of her wedding, she was awarded with the Grand Cross of the Imperial Order of Saint Catherine and the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem.[2]

This union, in connection with the wedding of her brother Leopold with Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales, made the little Duchy of Saxe-Coburg the dynastic heart of Europe. In addition, thanks to relations with the Russian Empire, Saxe-Coburg was relatively safe during the Napoleonic Wars. However, in a personal level, the marriage was deeply unhappy. Constantine, known to be a violent boy[3] and fully dedicated to his military career, made his young wife intensely miserable.[4] Anna was forced to accept the rude and insulting behavior of her husband; in one ocasion, he put her in one of the huge vases in the Marble Palace and started to shoot him. She couldn't count with the support of her father-in-law, Emperor Paul I, who hated her because she was chosen by the late Empress as wife of his son.

In the meanwhile, the young Grand Duchess began to grown up and became more and more attractive to the Russian court, who nicknamed her the "Rising Star". This caused that Constantine became extremely jealous, even from his own brother Alexander. He forbade Anna to leave her room, and when she had the opportunity to came out, Constantine take her away. Countes Golovina recalled: The marriage life of Anna Fedorovna was hard and impossible to maintain [...] in her modesty, she needed the friendship of Elizabeth Alexeievna (Louise of Baden, wife of her brother-in-law Alexander), who was able to smooth out between the frequent quarrelled spouses...". During the difficult years in the Russian court, Anna became close to Grand Duchess Elizabeth, who has similiar to her in age and

Three years, in 1799, Anna left Russia for a medical threatment and didn't want to return. She came with her family in Coburg; however, they didn't support her, feared about the reputation of the Ducal family and their finances. Anna leave Coburg to a water cure; but at the same time, the Saint Petersburg's court made their own plans. Under the pressure of the Imperial family and her own relatives, the Grand Duchess was forced to return to Russia. In October 1799 were celebrated the weddings of Grand Duchesses Alexandra and Elena. Anna was forced to attend.

The assassination of Emperor Paul I on 23 March 1801 give Anna an opportunity to carry out her plan to escape. By August of that year, was informed that the Grand Duchess was seriously ill. Once informed about her daughter's health, Duchess Augusta came to visit her. In order to had a better threatment she take Anna to Coburg, with the consent of both the new Emperor Alexander I and Grand Duke Constantine. Once she arrived to her homeland, Anna refused to come back. She never return to Russia.

Life after separation

Almost inmediately after her return to Coburg, Anna began the negociations for a divorce from her husband. Grand Duke Constantine wrote in response to her letter:

You write to me that I allowed to go into foreign lands because were are incompatibles and because I can give you the love who you needed. But humbly I ask you to calm yourself in consideration to our lives together, besides all these facts confirm in writing, and that in addition to this other reason you don't have.

By 1803 the divorce was still refused, because Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna feared that her son Constantine could contracted a second morganatic marriage, and the official separation would damage the reputation of the Grand Duchess.

At first, the Grand Duchess feared a unfavorable opinion about her conduct among the European courts; however, they showed their symphaty. Unable to remarried with someone who like her because she was still legally married, Anna, eager to have a family, found solace in clandestine affairs.

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

Later, Anna moved to Bern, Switzerland, and gave birth to a second illegitimate child in 1812, a daughter, named Louise Hilda Agnes d'Aubert. The father was Rodolphe Abraham de Schiferli, a Swiss surgeon, professor and chamberlain (French:Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur, German:Oberhofmeister) of Anna's household from 1812 to 1837. In order to cover another scandal in Anna's life, the baby was adopted by Jean François Joseph d'Aubert, a French refugee. After the affair ended, Schiferli maintain a tender and close friendship with the Grand Duchess until his death.[5]

Two years later, in 1814, during the invasion of France by Russian troops, Emperor Alexander I expressed his desire of a reconciliation between his brother and Anna. Grand Duke Constantine, accompanied by Anna's brother Leopold, tried to convinced her to return with him, but the Grand Duchess categorically refused. That year, Anna acquired an estate on the banks of Aare River and gave it the name of Elfenau.[6] She spent the rest of her life there, and, as a lover of music, made her home not only a center for domestic and foreign musical society of the era but also the point of reunion of diplomats from different countries who were in Bern.

Finally, on 20 March 1820, after nineteen years of separation, her marriage was officially dissolved by a manifesto of Emperor Alexander I of Russia. Grand Duke Constantine remarried two months later morganatically with his mistress Joanna Grudzińska and died on 27 June 1831. Anna survived her former husband by twenty-nine years.

In 1835 her son Eduard married his cousin Bertha von Schauenstein, an illegitimate daughter of the Duke Ernst I; this was one of the few happy events in Anna's life - she soon lost almost all the people who love: her parents, her sisters Sophie and Antoinette, her own daughter Louise (who, married Jean Samuel Edouard Dapples in 1834 died three years later in 1837 at the age of twenty-five), her fromer lover and now good friend Rodolphe de Schiferli (just a few weeks after their daughter's demise), her protector Emperor Alexander I, her childhood friend Empress Elizabeth...at that point the Grand Duchess wrote that Elfenau became in the "House of Mourning".

Anna Feodorovna died in her Elfenau state in 1860, aged seventy-nine. In her grave was placed a simple marble slab with the inscription, "Julia-Anna" and the dates of her birth and death (1781-1860); nothing more would indicate the origin of the once Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Grand Duchess of Russia.

Alexandrine of Baden, wife of her nephew Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha wrote:

Condolences must be universal, because Aunt was extremely loved and respected, because it is much involved in charity work and in favor of the poor and underprivileged.

Ancestry

Family of Princess Juliane of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
16. John Ernest IV, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
8. Francis Josias, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
17. Charlotte Johanna of Waldeck-Wildungen
4. Ernest Frederick, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
18. Louis Frederick I, Prince of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt
9. Princess Anna Sophie of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt
19. Anna Sophie of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg
2. Francis, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
20. Ferdinand Albert I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
10. Ferdinand Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
21. Christine of Hesse-Eschwege
5. Duchess Sophia Antonia of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
22. Louis Rudolph, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
11. Antonietta Amalie of Brunswick-Blankenburg
23. Princess Christine Louise of Oettingen-Oettingen
1. Princess Juliane of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
24. Heinrich X, Count of Reuss-Lobenstein
12. Heinrich XXIX, Count of Reuss-Ebersdorf
25. Countess Erdmuthe Benigna of Solms-Laubach
6. Heinrich XXIV, Count of Reuss-Ebersdorf
26. Wolfgang Dietrich, Count of Castell-Castell
13. Sophie Theodora of Castell-Remlingen
27. Countess Dorothea Renata of Zinzendorf
3. Princess Augusta Reuss of Ebersdorf
28. Georg Albrecht II, Count of Erbach-Fürstenau
14. Georg August, Count of Erbach-Schönberg
29. Countess Anna Dorothea Christine of Hohenlohe-Waldenburg
7. Karoline Ernestine of Erbach-Schönberg
30. Ludwig Christian, Count of Stolberg-Gedern
15. Ferdinande Henriette, Countess of Stolbert-Gedern
31. Duchess Christine of Mecklenburg-Güstrow

Bibliography

  • Alville (Alix von Wattenwyl), Elfenau. Die Geschichte eines bernischen Landsitzes und seiner Be­wohner, Bern 1959.
  • Alville, Des cours princières aux demeures helvétiques, Lausanne 1962
  • Erika Bestenreiner,Die Frauen aus dem Hause Coburg. Munich: Piper 2008, ISBN 3-492-04905-2

References

  1. ^ Alexander Jordis-Lohausen: Mitteleuropa 1658-2008- die Chronik einer Familie, GRIN Verlag, 2009, p. 58.
  2. ^ AdreßHandbuch des Herzogthums Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha, Meusel, 1854, p. 13.
  3. ^ [1]
  4. ^ Neuer Plutarch: oder, Bildnisse und Biographien der berühmtesten Männer und Frauen aller Nationen und Stände; von den ältern bis auf unsere Zeiten. According to reliable sources, edited by a scholar societies, CA Hartleben, 1853, vol. V, p. 128.
  5. ^ Ivan Grezin: Grand Duchess Anna Feodorovna: in search of simple happiness in the middle of the big policy[2] On-line traduction to English (retrieved 10 September 2012
  6. ^ Karl Viktor von Bonstetten, Doris Walser-Wilhelm, Antje Kolde: Bonstettiana, Band 10; Band 1805-1811, Wallstein Verlag, 2003, p. 629.

External links

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