George Maximilianovich, 6th Duke of Leuchtenberg

{{Infobox royalty

| name = George Maximilianovich de Beauharnais

| title = Prince Romanovsky

| image = George, Duke of Leuchtenberg by C.Bergamasco (c. 1880).jpg

| caption =

| succession = Duke of Leuchtenberg

| reign = 31 August 1901 – 16 May 1912

| predecessor = Eugen Maximilianovich, 5th Duke of Leuchtenberg

| successor = Alexander Georgievich

| spouse = {{plainlist|

}}

| issue = Alexander Georgievich, 7th Duke of Leuchtenberg
Sergei Georgievich, 8th Duke of Leuchtenberg
Princess Elena Georgievna, Countess Tyszkiewicz

| full name =

| house = Beauharnais

| father = Maximilian de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg

| mother = Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia

| birth_date = {{birth date|1852|2|29|df=y}}

| birth_place = St. Petersburg, Russian Empire

| death_date = {{death date and age|1912|5|16|1852|2|29|df=y}}

| death_place = Paris, France

| burial_place = Grand Ducal Mausoleum, Peter and Paul Fortress

}}

Prince George Maximilianovich Romanowsky, 6th Duke of Leuchtenberg (29 February 1852 – 16 May 1912), also known as Prince Georgii Romanovsky or Georges de Beauharnais, was the youngest son of Maximilian de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg and his wife, Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia.{{Cite web

| last = Lundy

| first = Darryl

| title = The Peerage: Georgi Maksimilianovich von Leuchtenberg, 6th Duc de Leuchtenberg

| url=http://thepeerage.com/p11051.htm#i110501

| access-date = 20 November 2010 }}

Family and early life

George's father Maximilian de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg had traveled to St. Petersburg, eventually winning the hand of Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna, Nicholas I's eldest daughter in 1839. Maximilian was subsequently bestowed with the style Imperial Highness.{{Citation

| title = The Czar's New Brother-In-Law

| newspaper = The Washington Post

| date = 6 April 1901

| access-date = }} As the son of a Russian grand duchess and an ennobled Russian prince Romanowsky, George and his siblings were treated as princes and princesses of the blood, bearing the styles Imperial Highness.{{cite book|first=Catherine|last=Radziwill|title=Memories of Forty Years|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls Company|location=London|year=1915|url=https://archive.org/details/memoriesfortyye00radzgoog |page=[https://archive.org/details/memoriesfortyye00radzgoog/page/n16 235]}}

After their father's death in 1852, Grand Duchess Maria morganatically remarried to Count Grigori Stroganov two years later.{{cite book|first=Edvard|last=Radzinsky|title=Alexander II, The Last Great Tsar|publisher=Free Press|location=New York|year=2005|isbn=978-0-7432-7332-9|page=[https://archive.org/details/alexanderiilastg00radz/page/177 177]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/alexanderiilastg00radz/page/177}} As this union was kept secret from her father Emperor Nicholas I (and her brother Emperor Alexander II could not permit the union, preferring instead to feign ignorance), Maria was forced into exile abroad. Alexander felt sympathy for his sister, however, and paid special attention to her children from her first marriage, who lived in St. Petersburg without their mother.

Marriage

=Marriage to Therese=

On 12 May 1879, George married Duchess Therese Petrovna of Oldenburg, a daughter of Duke Peter Georgievich of Oldenburg and Princess Therese of Nassau-Weilburg. Therese's elder brother Duke Alexander Petrovich had been married to George's sister Princess Eugenia Maximilianovna since 1868. Therese's grandfather had married Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna, daughter of Paul I of Russia, and their descendants had been raised in Russia ever since and become completely "Russianized", much like George's own family.{{Citation

| title = Russia and Bulgaria

| newspaper = The Manchester Guardian

| date = 7 September 1886

| access-date = }} Thus, despite her German title, Duchess Therese, like her father before her, had grown up entirely in Russia.{{Citation

| title = Princess A Philanthropist

| newspaper = The Washington Post

| date = 13 February 1907

| access-date = }} She was always considered a part of the Russian imperial family.{{Citation

| title = Duke Victim of Auto Wreck

| newspaper = The Washington Post

| date = 9 July 1914

| access-date = }}

George and Theresa had one son:

In July 1881, the British Reserve Squadron held entertainments on board {{HMS|Hercules|1868|6}}, which was stationed in Cronstadt. The luncheon was attended by Therese and her husband, as well as the Emperor and Empress and other important royal Russian and German figures.{{Citation

| title = The Reserve Squadron

| newspaper = The Observer

| location = Cronstadt

| date = 9 July 1881

| access-date = }} Two years later, on 19 April 1883, tragedy struck the couple when Duchess Therese died in St. Petersburg.

=Marriage to Anastasia=

File:Anasztaszija Nyikolajevna of Montenegro.jpg.]]

Two Montenegrin princesses, Milica and Anastasia, were educated at the Smolny Institute in St. Petersburg under the immediate protection of Empress Maria Feodorovna.{{cite book|title=The Near East from within|publisher=E.P. Dutton & Company|location=New York|year=1918|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LR8IAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA120 |page=209}} They remained at the convent for a year after their educations were complete, and made themselves extremely popular by enjoying themselves in society. Both girls soon caught the eye of two members of the Russian imperial family: Grand Duke Peter Nikolaevich, and George himself.

On 16 April 1889 at Sergeyevsko Estate, George married Princess Anastasia of Montenegro, six years after Therese's death. Emperor Alexander III gave Anastasia a grand trousseau, as well as a considerable dowry.

They had two children:

The family owned a small estate near the Black Sea, where they spent the winter.{{cite web

|url=http://www.alexanderpalace.org/2006pierre/chapter_I.html

|title=Thirteen Years at the Russian Court

|author=Gilliard, Pierre

|publisher=Alexander palace.org

|access-date=20 November 2010}} While staying there in 1905, they witnessed the battleship Potemkin revolt. In the spring, the family stayed at their Peterhof residence the Villa Sergievskaia Datcha for the entire following summer.

When still married to his second wife, George moved in with his French mistress, to the great anger of the morally rigid Emperor Alexander III.{{cite book|author1=Perry, John Curtis |author2=Constantine V. Pleshakov |title=The flight of the Romanovs: a family saga|publisher=Basic Books|location=New York|year=1999|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QbGLZYKFVXgC&pg=PA204 |page=32|isbn=9780823221806}} When told that George was spending his vacations at the coastal town of Biarritz in south-western France, Alexander declared "So the prince is washing his filthy body in the waves of the ocean".

Their marriage was considered "tempestuous and stormy," with George reportedly "insult[ing] and outrag[ing] her from the very first day of their marriage".{{cite book|first=Catherine|last=Radziwill|title=Confessions of the Czarina|publisher=Harper & Brothers|location=New York|year=1918|url=https://archive.org/details/confessionsczar00radzgoog |page=[https://archive.org/details/confessionsczar00radzgoog/page/n111 82]}} Anastasia was able to obtain a divorce from him several years into their marriage, on 15 November 1906.{{cite book|first=Catherine|last=Radziwill |title=The Royal Marriage Market of Europe|publisher=Funk & Wagnalls Co.|location=New York|year=1915|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NuADAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA209 |page=120}} Various sources attribute George to have been good-looking but a "stupid and rather sorry individual", although these reports were most often in connection with his second wife, who, when arranging her divorce from George, was widely reported to want to do so because she could no longer live with a man of "intolerable stupidity".{{Citation

| title = Prince Alexander and Miss Gould

| newspaper = The Washington Post

| date = 13 October 1909

| access-date = }}{{Citation

| title = Russian Grand Dukes Enjoy Liberty At Crimean Homes

| newspaper = The Washington Post

| date = 25 August 1917

| access-date = }} Anastasia later remarried to Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia, a grandson of Nicholas I of RussiaPerry and Pleshakov, p. 107. (and on his mother's side a nephew of George's first wife Theresa). She and her sister became famous in Russian society as the "black peril" so called because of their home country of Montenegro, their dark complexions and their interest in the occult.

Later years

In 1901, through either the deaths or morganatic marriages of his elder brothers, George became the head of the Russian branch of the House of Beauharnais. At the turn of the twentieth century, when still married to Princess Anastasia of Montenegro, George was considered as a possible successor to the childless Alexander I of Serbia.{{cite book|first=Herbert|last=Vivian|title=The Servian tragedy: with some impressions of Macedonia|publisher=Grant Richards|location=London|year=1904|url=https://archive.org/details/serviantragedyw00vivigoog|quote=Leuchtenberg duke george.|pages=[https://archive.org/details/serviantragedyw00vivigoog/page/n97 73]–4}} Alexander was overthrown and murdered in a military coup, and succeeded by Peter I of Serbia.

George inherited a large collection of paintings, sculptures, and other works of art from his father, who had brought them with him when he moved from Munich to St. Petersburg to marry Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia.{{cite book|author1=Jaffe, Irma B |author2=Gernando Colombardo |title=Shining eyes, cruel fortune: the lives and loves of Italian Renaissance women poets|year=2002|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QbGLZYKFVXgC&q=Leuchtenberg+duke+george&pg=PA204|page=204|publisher=Fordham Univ Press |isbn=9780823221806}} He was buried in tomb #29 of the Grand Ducal Mausoleum in the Peter and Paul Fortress in St. Petersburg.

=Legacy=

George was the only one of his brothers to make a legitimate dynastic union. As both of his sons failed to produce legitimate issue, the Bavarian title Duke of Leuchtenberg went extinct in 1974.

George appears as a character in The White Night of St. Petersburg, written by a relative, Prince Michael of Greece and Denmark.

Honours

File:CoA of the dukes of Leuchtenberg, princes Romanovsky (1852-1974).svg of the Dukes of Leuchtenberg]]

He received the following decorations and awards:[http://regiment.ru/bio/L/7.htm Russian Imperial Army - George Maximilianovich, 6th Duke of Leuchtenberg, Prince Romanovsky] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180421031624/http://regiment.ru/bio/L/7.htm |date=2018-04-21 }} (In Russian)

;Russian orders and decorations

;Foreign orders and decorations

Ancestry

{{ahnentafel

|collapsed=yes |align=center

|boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc;

|boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9;

|boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc;

|boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc;

|1= 1. George Maximilianovich, 6th Duke of Leuchtenberg

|2= 2. Maximilian de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg

|3= 3. Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia

|4= 4. Eugène de Beauharnais, 1st Duke of Leuchtenberg

|5= 5. Princess Amalia Augusta of Bavaria

|6= 6. Nicholas I of Russia

|7= 7. Princess Charlotte of Prussia

|8= 8. Alexandre, vicomte de Beauharnais

|9= 9. Joséphine Tascher de La Pagerie

|10= 10. Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria

|11= 11. Princess Augusta Wilhelmine of Hesse-Darmstadt

|12= 12. Paul I of Russia

|13= 13. Duchess Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg

|14= 14. Frederick William III of Prussia

|15= 15. Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz

}}

References

{{Commons category|Georgiy Maximilianovich, 6th Duke of Leuchtenberg}}

{{Reflist|2}}

{{S-start}}

{{S-hou|House of Beauharnais|29 February|1852|16 May|1912}}

{{s-reg|de}}

{{S-bef|before=Eugen Maximilianovich}}

{{S-ttl|title=Duke of Leuchtenberg|years=31 August 1901 – 16 May 1912}}

{{S-aft|after=Alexander Georgievich}}

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{{s-end}}

{{House of Beauharnais}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Leuchtenberg, George Maximilianovich, 6th Duke Of}}

Category:1852 births

Category:1912 deaths

George

6

Category:Russian people of German descent

Category:Russian people of French descent

Category:Emigrants from the Russian Empire to France

Category:Recipients of the Order of the White Eagle (Russia)

Category:Recipients of the Order of St. Anna, 1st class

Category:Recipients of the Order of St. Vladimir, 3rd class

Category:Burials at Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral, Saint Petersburg