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Portrait of Grand Duke Nicholas Pavlovich (c. 1808), by anonymous painter after Johann Friedrich August Tischbein, located in the Russian Museum, Saint PetersburgNicholas was born at Gatchina Palace in Gatchina, the ninth child of Grand Duke Paul, heir to the Russian throne, and Grand Duchess Maria Feodorovna of Russia (née Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg).
Nicholas I (reigned 1825–55) made Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality the main Imperialist doctrine of his reign. Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality (Russian: Правосла́вие, самодержа́вие, наро́дность; transliterated: Pravoslávie, samoderzhávie, naródnost'), also known as Official Nationalism, [1] [2] was the dominant Imperial ideological doctrine ...
Cultural depictions of Nicholas I of Russia (24 P) D. ... Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality; P. Pickelhaube; Protocol of St. Petersburg (1826) R. Russian ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tsar_Nicholas_I_of_Russia&oldid=951889196"
Nikolay Gerasimovich Ustryalov (Russian: Никола́й Гера́симович Устря́лов; 4 May (N.S. 16 May) 1805 in Bogorodickoye, Oryol Governorate, Russian Empire – 8 June (N.S. 20 June) 1870 in Tsarskoye Selo, Russian Empire) was a Russian Imperial historian who elaborated the Official Nationality Theory. His outline of ...
Count Sergey Semionovich Uvarov (Russian: Сергей Семёнович Уваров; 5 September [O.S. 25 August] 1786 – 16 September [O.S. 4 September] 1855) was a Russian classical scholar and politician who is best remembered as an influential statesman under Nicholas I of Russia.
By law, foreign persons who adopt Russian citizenship are allowed to have no patronymic. [9] Some adopt non-Slavonic patronymics as well. For example, the Russian politician Irina Hakamada's patronym is Муцуовна (Mutsuovna) because her Japanese father's given name was Mutsuo. The ethnicity of origin generally remains recognizable in ...
Death mask of Alexander I.Alexander's death launched a sequence of events that culminated in the Decembrist revolt and the accession of Nicholas I.. The Russian interregnum of 1825 began December 1 [O.S. November 19] with the death of Alexander I in Taganrog and lasted until the accession of Nicholas I and the suppression of the Decembrist revolt on December 26 [O.S. December 14].