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Princess Catherine Ivanovna of Russia (12 July 1915 - 14 July 2007), was a great-great-granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia and a niece of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia. She was the last member of the Imperial Family to be born before the fall of the dynasty, and was ultimately to become the last surviving uncontested dynast of the Imperial House of Russia.

Life

Born in Pavlovsk, Saint Petersburg, she was the second child of Prince Ivan Constantinovich of Russia and Princess Helen of Serbia. After the Revolution, her father was arrested and deported from the capital and her mother followed her husband into exile. Catherine and her brother Vsevolod remained in the care of her grandmother, the Grand Duchess Elisabeth Mavriekievna. On 18 July 1918 Prince John was killed, and Princess Helen was arrested and spent several months in Soviet prisons. Grand Duchess Elisabeth was able to take the Catherine and her brother Vsevolod to Norway. Only some time later they rejoined with their mother.

The family lived in Serbia, then moved to England. There, Catherine received an excellent education, although she never learned the Russian language because her mother, devastated by her husband's death, didn't want that her children talked that language in front of her.

From 1937 to 1945, Princess Catherine Ivanovna lived in Italy. During her stay there, she married the italian diplomat Ruggero Farace, Marchese Farace di Villaforesta (b. 4 August 1909 - d. 14 September 1970) in Rome on 15 September 1937. They had three children:[1][2]

  • Nicoletta Farace (b. Rome, 23 July 1938), married on 25 March 1966 to Alberto Grundland. They had two children:
    • Eduardo Alberto Grundland (b. 15 January 1967), married on 15 November 1999 to Maria Ester Pita Blanco and had one son: ***Federico Grundland Pita1 (b. 15 Mar 2005).
    • Alexandra Gabriella Grundland (b. 17 September 1971), married on 24 March 2001 to Roberto Castro Padula and had one son: ***Santiago Castro Grundland1 (b. 15 October 2006).
  • Fiammetta Farace (b. Budapest, Hungary, 19 February 1940), married firstly on 16 September 1969 to Victor Carlos Arcelus (divorced in 1980) and secondly in 1981 to Nelson Zanelli. She had three children:
    • Victor John Arcelus (b. 24 November 1973).
    • Sebastian Carlos Arcelus (b. 5 November 1976), married on 16 October 2007 to Stephanie Janette Block.
    • Alessandro Zanelli (b. 31 July 1984)
  • Giovanni Farace, Marchese Farace di Villaforesta (b. Rome, 20 October 1943), married on 14 February 1968 to Marie Claude Tillier Debesse and had two sons:
    • Alessandro Farace (b. 29 August 1971).
    • Yann Farace (b. 4 October 1974), married on 4 October 2009 to Anne-Sophie Laignel and had one son:
      • Tancredi Farace (b. 20 November 2010).

In 1945, after the end of the World War II, Princess Catherine separated from her husband (although they never legally divorce) and moved with her children to South America. In later years, she lived in Montevideo, Uruguay, where she died two days after her 92 birthday.[3]

Notes

Bibliography

  • Grigoryan VG Biographical Directory. M .: AST: Astrel: Guardian 2007.
  • Dumin SV Romanova. Ivperatorsky home in exile. M. Zakharov-ACT, 1998.
  • Pchelov EV Romanovs. History dinastii.- Moscow: Olma-Press, 2004
  • Gabriel K., Vel.kn. In the Marble Palace. St. Petersburg, 1993.