Ad
related to: olga queen of greece and athens of italy
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Olga Constantinovna of Russia (Greek: Όλγα; 3 September [O.S. 22 August] 1851 – 18 June 1926) was Queen of Greece as the wife of King George I. She was briefly the regent of Greece in 1920. A member of the Romanov dynasty , Olga was the oldest daughter of Grand Duke Constantine Nikolaievich and his wife, Princess Alexandra of Saxe-Altenburg .
Princess Olga was born on 11 November 1971 in Athens, Greece. She is the younger sister of Princess Alexandra and grew up in Paris and New York, spending summers at the family's island retreat at Patmos, Greece. [1] She chose to attend boarding school in England, studied history in Rome, and is a graduate of Princeton University. [2]
Princess Olga, left, with her sisters Princess Elizabeth, centre, and Princess Marina, right; 1912. A granddaughter of King George I of Greece, Princess Olga was born at Tatoi Palace, the second home of the Greek royal family, in 1903 to Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark (1872–1938) and his wife Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna of Russia (1882–1957). [1]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Special pages
Sophia begged the government to allow her entry in the country for what would likely be a last visit with her son. Aware that only her mother-in-law still found favor with Venizelists, she eventually asked Dowager Queen Olga to go to Athens to take care of Alexander. After several days of negotiations, Olga obtained permission to return to Greece.
Olga of Greece may refer to: Olga Constantinovna of Russia (1851–1926), queen of Greece from 1867 until 1913; Princess Olga of Greece and Denmark (1903–1997), Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark's daughter; Prince Paul of Yugoslavia's wife; Princess Olga, Duchess of Aosta (b. 1971), daughter of Prince Michael of Greece and Denmark
Vasilissa Olga (Greek: ΒΠ Βασίλισσα Όλγα) (Queen Olga) was the second and last destroyer of her class built for the Royal Hellenic Navy in Great Britain before the Second World War. She participated in the Greco-Italian War in 1940–1941, escorting convoys and unsuccessfully attacking Italian shipping in the Adriatic Sea.
In 1936, she participated in the official ceremonies which marked the reburial in Tatoi of the remains of King Constantine I, Queen Sophia, and Dowager Queen Olga; all three died in exile in Italy. Two years later, in 1938, she was invited to the wedding of her uncle, Crown Prince Paul, with Princess Frederica of Hanover. [31]