- Charlotte Christine of Brunswick-Lüneburg
-
Duchess Charlotte Christine of Brunswick-Lüneburg Grand Duchess Charlotte of Russia Charlotte Christine of Brunswick-Lüneburg Spouse Tsarevich Alexei Petrovich of Russia Issue Grand Duchess Natalia Alexeievna
Peter II of RussiaHouse House of Romanov
House of WelfFather Louis Rudolph of Brunswick-Lüneburg Mother Christine Louise of Oettingen-Oettingen Born 28 August 1694
Wolfenbüttel, GermanyDied 2 November 1715 (aged 21)
Saint Petersburg, RussiaReligion Lutheranism Charlotte Christine Sophie also known as Sophie Charlotte or simply Charlotte (28 August 1694, Wolfenbüttel – 2 November 1715, Saint Petersburg), was the wife of Tsarevich Alexei Petrovich of Russia. She was the daughter of Louis Rudolph, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and Christine Louise of Oettingen-Oettingen. She was also the great aunt of Marie Antoinette.
Contents
Biography
Charlotte Christine was brought up at the court of the Polish King August II, whose consort Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth was her distant kinswoman and also her godmother. She received a good education for that time period. In late 1709, Tsar Peter I of Russia sent his son Alexei to Dresden to finish his education. There, he met Charlotte for the first time. She seemed a good match to Tsar Peter for his son because her elder sister Elizabeth Christine was married to the Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI, and the support of Austria in the upcoming fight with the Turks was appreciated by Russian diplomats.
On 25 October 1711 at Torgau, Charlotte Christine married Tsarevich Alexei, eldest son and heir of Peter I of Russia by his first wife Eudoxia Lopukhina. She was allowed to keep her Lutheran faith, but any children would be raised as Russian Orthodox. This marriage was the first to break the old tradition of the Russian imperial family of only marrying women from the Russian nobility. Thus Charlotte was the first member of the Russian imperial family who came from a foreign European dynasty since Zoe Palaiologina. In 1713, Charlotte received from the Russian Emperor the title of Crown Princess of Russia. In the same year, she arrived in Russia.
Charlotte enjoyed the favour of Tsar Peter the Great, but lived an isolated life with her own court, which was composed almost entirely by foreigners. In the beginning her marriage to Alexei was happy, but his drunkenness soon began to strain their relationship. He also had an open affair with Yefrosinya Fedorov which started during Charlotte's lifetime and continued after her death. Charlotte found some consolation in the birth of a daughter, Natalia, and a son, later Peter II of Russia. She died a few days after the birth of her son. Both her daughter and son died without issue.
Fiction
Some fifty years after her death, a legend developed, according to which Charlotte did not die in 1715 and, instead of her corpse, a wooden doll was put in her coffin. According to this, she fled to Louisiana, where she married a French officer named d'Auban, with whom she later moved to Paris, France. Later they moved to the island of Bourbon, and when d'Auban died, Charlotte returned to Europe, living in Paris and Brussels, Belgium, with a pension from her niece, Empress Maria Theresa of Austria. Heinrich Zschokke developed this legend into a novella, titled "Die Prinzessin von Wolfenbüttel"; Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer wrote a libretto about it and Duke Ernest of Saxe-Coburg wrote an opera, "Santa Chiara", on the subject.
Ancestry
Augustus the Younger, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel Anthony Ulrich, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel Dorothea of Anhalt-Zerbst Louis Rudolph, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel Friedrich of Holstein-Norburg Elisabeth Juliane of Holstein-Norburg Eleonore of Anhalt-Zerbst Charlotte Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel Joachim Ernst, Prince Oettingen-Oettingen Albert Ernest I, Prince of Oettingen-Oettingen Anna Dorothea of Hohenlohe-Neuenstein Christine Louise of Oettingen-Oettingen Eberhard III, Duke of Württemberg Christine Friederike of Württemberg Anna Katharina of Salm-Kyrburg Sources
- This page is a translation of its Russian equivalent.
Grand Duchesses of Russia by marriage 1st generation - Charlotte Christine of Brunswick-Lüneburg*
2nd generation - none
3rd generation 4th generation 5th generation - Elizabeth Alexeievna of Baden
- Anna Feodorovna of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
- Alexandra Feodorovna of Prussia
- Elena Pavlovna of Württemberg
6th generation - Maria Alexandrovna of Hesse-Darmstadt
- Alexandra Iosifovna of Saxe-Altenburg
- Alexandra Petrovna of Oldenburg
- Olga Feodorovna of Baden
7th generation - Maria Feodorovna (Dagmar of Denmark)
- Maria Pavlovna of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
- Anastasia Nikolaevna of Montenegro
- Elizabeth Feodorovna of Hesse and by Rhine
- Elizaveta Mavrikievna of Saxe-Altenburg
- Alexandra Georgievna of Greece and Denmark
- Maria Georgievna of Greece and Denmark
- Militza Nikolaevna of Montenegro
- Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia**
8th generation 9th generation - Leonida Georgievna Bagration of Mukhrani***
- *never converted to Orthodoxy
- **also a Grand Duchess of Russia by birth
- ***title granted by Grand Duke Vladimir Cyrillovich
Categories:- 1694 births
- 1715 deaths
- Deaths in childbirth
- House of Welf
- House of Romanov
- Duchesses of Brunswick-Lüneburg
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.