Princess Anastasia of Montenegro

(m. 1889; div. 1906)
Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia
(m. 1907; died 1929)
Issue
Names
Anastasia Petrović-Njegoš
HousePetrović-NjegošFatherNicholas I of MontenegroMotherMilena Vukotić

Princess Anastasia Petrović-Njegoš of Montenegro (4 January [O.S. 23 December 1867] 1868 – 25 November 1935) was the daughter of King Nikola I Petrović-Njegoš of Montenegro (1841–1921) and his wife, Queen Milena (1847–1923). Through her second marriage, she became Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova of Russia. She and her sister "Militza" (Princess Milica), having married Russian royal brothers, were known colloquially as the "Montenegrin princesses" during the last days of Imperial Russia, and may have contributed to its downfall by the introduction of Grigori Rasputin to the Empress Alexandra.

Life

Early life

Princess Anastasia was born in Cetinje, Montenegro, on 4 January 1868, the third child and third daughter of her parents. Although named Anastasia at birth, after her paternal grandmother, she was often known Princess Stana Petrovich Njegosh of Montenegro. As of the date of her father's assumption of the title and style of Royal Highness in 1900, she became known as Her Royal Highness Princess Stana Petrovich Njegosh of Montenegro.[citation needed] She retained her childhood nickname of "Stana" to close relations.

Anastasia was educated at the Smolny Institute with her older sister, Princess Milica.[1]

First marriage

On 28 August n.s., 1889, at the Imperial Russian Palace of Peterhof, Stana married Prince George Maximilianovich of Leuchtenberg (later the Duke of Leuchtenberg.) The Duke had previously been married and widowed, with one son, Alexander Georgievich, from his prior marriage to Princess Therese of Oldenburg. The couple had two children:

Second marriage

On 29 April 1907, at the age of 39, Anastasia was married to Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (1856–1929). The marriage was childless. Both her husbands were descendants of Emperor Nicholas I of Russia (1796–1855): the first one was his grandson through a maternal line, and the second one was his grandson through a direct male line.[citation needed]

Both Anastasia and her second husband Nicholas were religious Eastern Orthodox Christians, with a tendency to and interest in Persian mysticism. Since the Montenegrins were a fiercely Slavic, anti-Turkish people from the Balkans, Anastasia reinforced the Pan Slav tendencies of Nicholas. Her sister, Princess Milica (Cetinje, Montenegro, 26 July 1866 – Alexandria, Egypt, 5 September 1951) was married to Grand Duke Peter Nicolaievich Romanov of Russia, brother of Grand Duke Nicholas Nicolaevich. The two Montenegrin princesses were thus also sisters-in-law, as their husbands were brothers.[citation needed]

Anastasia and her sister were intrigued by the more mystical side of the Eastern Orthodox religion; they were early supporters of the French seer "Dr." Philippe Vachot[2] and of the starets Rasputin, and introduced both in turn[1] to the Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, the last Tsarina of Russia.[1] According to popular Russian belief, the influence of Rasputin was instrumental in the downfall of the Romanov family.

Anastasia's husband, Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (1856–1929), was Commander in Chief of the Russian Army during the first year of World War I, carrying out campaigns on the Austro-German front and in the Caucasus. His Supreme Commandership was terminated by Tsar Nicholas on 21 August 1915.[citation needed]

Post-revolution

In March 1917, the last Tsar was overthrown and the ruling Romanov family removed from power by the Bolsheviks. Anastasia and her husband lived from 1917 to 1919 first in the Caucasus, then in the Crimea. From Yalta in the Crimea, Anastasia and her husband escaped Russia in 1919 aboard a British battleship, HMS Marlborough. They settled briefly in Italy, living with her sister Elena, Queen of Italy and later in France, spending winters on the Riviera.

She died in Cap d'Antibes on 15 November 1935, having outlived her husband by six years. Grand Duchess Anastasia and her husband died in exile and were originally buried in the church of St. Archangel Michael in Cannes, France. Requests to transfer their remains came from Nicholas Romanov, Prince of Russia, who died in 2014 and Prince Dimitri Romanov (who died in 2016), and were made in 2014. Their remains were re-buried in Moscow, at the Bratsky military cemetery in May 2015.

References

  1. ^ a b c The Memoirs of Count Witte
  2. ^ Rasputin: The Saint Who Sinned

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Princess Anastasia of Montenegro.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Generations are numbered from Claude de Beauharnais, seigneur de Beaumont.
1st generation
2nd generation3rd generation4th generation5th generation6th generation8th generation
* also a Prince or Princess des Francais
** also a Prince or Princess of Leuchtenberg and Eichstädt
^also a Prince Romanovsky or Princess Romanovskaja
  • v
  • t
  • e
1st generation
2nd generation
3rd generation
  • Natalia Alexeievna (Wilhelmina of Hesse-Darmstadt)
  • Maria Feodorovna (Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg)
4th generation
5th generation
6th generation
7th generation
8th generation
  • * never converted to Orthodoxy
  • ** also a Grand Duchess of Russia by birth
  • *** title granted by Grand Duke Vladimir Cyrillovich
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
National
  • Germany