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Maria was born on 6 January 1900, at Friedenstein Palace in Gotha, a town in Thuringia, in the German Empire. [3] She was named after her maternal grandmother, Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna of Russia, and was known as Mignon in the family to distinguish her from her mother.
Alexandra (Greek: Αλεξάνδρα, romanized: Alexándra, Serbo-Croatian: Александра / Aleksandra, in 1922 retroactively recognised as Princess Alexandra of Greece and Denmark; 25 March 1921 – 30 January 1993) was the last Queen of Yugoslavia as the wife of King Peter II.
husband's death: Đurađ I Balšić: Comita Muzaka: Andrea II Muzaka 1372 1378 1385 husband's death: 1396 Balša II: Jelena Lazarević: Lazar of Serbia 1365/66 1386/87 1403 husband's death: 1443 Đurađ II Balšić: Mara Thopia: Niketa Thopia 1407 1412 divorce: Balša III: Boglia Zaharia: Koja Zaharia 1412/13 1421 husband's death
Marie (born Princess Marie Alexandra Victoria of Edinburgh; 29 October 1875 – 18 July 1938) [note 1] was the last queen of Romania from 10 October 1914 to 20 July 1927 as the wife of King Ferdinand I.
The Vlastimirović dynasty was the first royal dynasty of the Serb people. Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (r. 913–959) mentions that the Serbian throne is inherited by the son, i.e. the first-born, [1] though in his enumeration of Serbian monarchs, on one occasion there was a triumvirate. [2]
Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia (Serbian: Jelisaveta Karađorđević / Јелисавета Карађорђевић; born 7 April 1936) is a member of the royal House of Karađorđević, a human rights activist and a former presidential candidate for Serbia. Yugoslavia abolished its monarchy in 1945 and decades later broke up into several ...
To many, it appeared that Yugoslavia was sliding into the civil war that Alexander's "self-coup" of January 1929 was supposed to prevent. [56] King Alexander I of Yugoslavia and Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first President of the Republic of Turkey, in 1933. Starting in 1933, Alexander had become worried about Nazi Germany.
On May 4th, 1980, at 15:05 in Ljubljana, the great heart of the President of our Socialist Yugoslavia, the President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia, the President of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, Marshal of Yugoslavia, and the Commander-in-chief of the Yugoslav armed forces, Josip Broz Tito, has stopped beating.