ID: I13829
Name: Alexander I Pavlovich Romanov TSAR OF RUSSIA
Sex: M
Change Date: 30 MAR 2008
Event:
Biography
Note: His parents were Paul, son of Catherine the Great and Maria Fyodorovna, the former Princess of Wurttemburg. At his birth he was taken to be raised by his Grandmother Catherine the Great. Alexander was a blond, handsome and intelligent boy. His childhood was troubled by the divisons in the family. Both sides tried to use him for their own purposes and he was torn emotionally between his grandmother and his father, the Heir to the throne. This taught Alexander, very early on, how to manipulate those who loved him and he came a natural chameleon, changing his views and personality depending on who he was with at the time.
He was tutored by the Swiss republican philosopher, La Harpe, who was personally chosen by Catherine to mold Alexander's personally and give him a broad education. The Empress had no fear of having a future Tsar's education in the hands of a republican, for she knew the strength of the autocracy and the underdeveloped political awareness of Russia at the time. Catherine expected that a liberal education would help Alexander to reign wisely for the benefit of the country. Under La Harpe's tutelage Alexander was well versed in European culture, history and political principals - the young prince became an idealist in the tradition of the Enlightenment - however, La Harpe's focus on theoretical, abstract principals left Alexander without the strength of character and resolve to be a truly effective leader.
Alexander was 17 in 1793 when he married the lovely Elizabeth of Baden, a pretty princess who was only fourteen years old. They were very happy together in the first years of their marriage. Elizabeth looked upon Alexander as her handsome 'prince charming' and he loved her in return. As a wedding present, Catherine gave Alexander the Alexander Palace, showing her preference for his grandson over her son, Paul, by granting Alexander a larger court than his father's. This further poisoned the atmosphere in the family.
Catherine died on November 6, 1796 and her son Paul assumed the throne. He quickly instituted a number of new laws to undermine those aspects of his mother's reign he disagreed with. Paul's actions went much too far, he infuriated the country and especially the nobility. Aristocratic plots were hatched against Paul's life. With the tacit approval of Alexander, the Tsar was murdered at the Mikhailovski Castle in St. Petersburg during the night of March 11, 1801.
Alexander was crowned Tsar to succeed his father. His mother, Maria, refused to speak to her son for a long while, she never entirely forgave him for his complicity in his father's murder. In his first years on the Russian throne, Alexander tried to rule in an enlightened way. The country was very excited at the prospects of Alexander's reign; there were great hopes for the future of Russia and an anticipation of a more liberal form of government and increased freedom. Some went so far as to hope for an end to the institution of serfdom, which sapped the nation of it's energy. At first the Tsar did little to discourage these aspirations. Slowly, for a number of reasons, Alexander turned away from his childhood dreams and principals. Increasingly he found it easier to get results by using the power of autocracy. Once he began using autocratic power, administered through men who served at his will, it corrupted him. The longer he used this method of ruling Russia, the more difficult he bagan for him to return to the principals of good government and the role of the monarch he had learned in his youth.
The war with Napoleon, which ravaged Russia taking hundreds of thousands of lives and destroyed some of the Empire's finest cities, took it's own, personal toll on Alexander. He was troubled by the loss of life and the war itself, which he saw as a not only a battle between nations, but also a spiritual battle between the forces of good and evil. After many battles and setbacks, the victory of the Allies over Napoleon was crowned by a triumphal entry of the triumpant generals into Paris. Alexander rode at their head. He was the apogee of his reign. Instead of resting on his laurels and enjoying the hero status he enjoyed across Europe, Alexander was more and more troubled spiritually. While in western Europe with the Russian Army he sought out and came under the influence of spiritual advisors from foreign countries. He toyed with some of their concepts and ideas, eventually discarding them for the Orthodox faith of his own country. His last years were filled with an obsession with God and Christianity. At the end of his reign he left his Polish mistress of 13 years, Maria Naryshkina, and returned to his wife, Elizabeth, who had suffered from his infidelity and neglect for years. He was a troubled and broken man. One fall he and Elizabeth travelled to the south of Russia. There, on November 19, 1825 in the town of Taganrog, it is claimed to have faked his own death, disappearing to become a monk named Kuzmich, wandering the forests of Siberia for years afterward. The Soviet Government fanned the flames of these rumours when it announced his coffin had been opened in the 1920's and was found to be empty.
1
Birth: 23 DEC 1777
Death: 01 DEC 1825 2
Occupation: Reigned BET 1801 AND 1825
Event:
Milit_Serv 19 OCT 1813 Battle of Nations
Note: The Battle of Nations at Leipzig pitched 320,000 soldiers from Russia, Prussia, Austria and Sweden, with financial backing from the British, against 170,000 French troops. Napoleon's military brilliance brought him many victories against similar odds (if not similar numbers) in the past, but after the debacle of the invasion of Russia, the French had to rely on an inexperienced army of new recruits against a well-equipped four-nation alliance. Napoleon was heavily defeated, losing more than a third of his army.
Event:
Note 30 MAR 1814
Note: Paris surrendered to the Coalition armies fighting Napoleon. The French army had inflicted a number of defeats on the Coalition since the Battle of Nations at Leipzig in 1813, but each one had taken its toll and the French were ill equipped to stem the Coalition's advance. Napoleon's plan was to retreat with his remaining forces to eastern France in order to rebuild his army, leaving the defence of Paris to its garrison. With just 20,000 men and ill-motivated leaders, however, the city was no match for the forces ranged against it. Defeat at Montmartre led to the surrender of Paris, and the next day Alexander I of Russia and Frederick William III of Prussia entered in triumph.
Event:
Note 14 SEP 1812
Note: The Russians set fire to Moscow on September 14, 1812 in the face of an invasion by Napoleon Bonaparte's troops.
Event:
Note 19 OCT 1812
Note: French forces under Napoleon Bonaparte began their retreat from Moscow on October 19, 1812.
Event:
Note DEC 1808
Note: Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 in C Minor and Symphony No. 6 in F Major had their world premieres in Vienna, Austria in December 1808.
Event:
Note 26 FEB 1815
Note: Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from exile on the Island of Elba on February 26, 1815 to begin his second conquest of France.
Event:
Note MAY 1810
Note: Argentina began its revolt against Spanish rule in May 1810.
Event:
Note 18 JUN 1815
Note: The Duke of Wellington defeated Napolean on June 18, 1815 at the Battle of Waterloo in (modern) Belgium, causing the latter to abdicate (for the second time) four days later and be exiled to Saint Helena.
Event:
Note 05 JUL 1811
Note: Venezuela became the first South American country to declare independence from Spain on July 5, 1811.
Event:
Note 06 AUG 1806
Note: Holy Roman Emperor Franz II dissolved the Empire and abdicated the throne on August 6, 1806, thus ending the loose confederation of states and city-states that had endured for over 1,000 years.
Event:
Note 05 SEP 1793
Note: The Reign of Terror began during the French Revolution as the National Convention on September 5, 1793 instituted harsh measures to repress counter-revolutionary activities.
Event:
Note 1816
Note: Serfdom was abolished in 1816 in the province of Estonia.
3
Event:
Note 1819
Note: Serfdom was abolished in 1819 in the province of Livonia.
3
Father: Paul Petrovich Romanov TSAR OF RUSSIA b: 01 OCT 1754 in St. Petersburg, Russia
Mother: Sophia Dorothea Auguste VON WÜRTTEMBERG b: 25 OCT 1759 in Stettin, Zachodniopomorskie, Poland
Marriage 1
Luise VON BADEN b: 24 JAN 1779
- Married:
28 SEP 1793
in Saint Petersburg, Russia 4 5
Children
Mariya Alexandrovna ROMANOVNA b: 29 MAY 1799 in Pavlovsk, Leningrad Oblast, Russia Elisabeth Alexandrovna ROMANOVNA b: 15 NOV 1806 in Saint Petersburg, Russia Sources:
- Title: Alexander Palace Time Machine, Url: http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/index.html
Abbrev: Alexander Palace Time Machine
- Title: Genealogy.EU, Url: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html
Abbrev: Genealogy.EU Author: miramarek@centrum.cz, Compiler: Miroslav Marek
- Title: Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia, Url: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
Abbrev: Wikipedia Free Encyclopedia
- Title: The Royal House of Stuart
Abbrev: The Royal House of Stuart Author: A.C. Addington Publication: London, 1969, 1971, 1976 Page: The Royal House of Stuart, London, 1969, 1971, 1976 , Addington, A. C., Reference: vol III page 75.
- Title: Leo van de Pas: Leo's Genealogics Website, Address: Canberra, Australia, Url: http://www.genealogics.org/index.php
Abbrev: Leo van de Pas Author: leovdpas@netspeed.com.au, Compiler: Leo van de Pas Note: A contributor to soc.genealogy.medieval
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