Princess Catherine Ivanovna of Russia
Princess Catherine Ivanovna of Russia (Russian: Княжна Екатери́на Ива́нновна; 12 July 1915 (O.S.) – 13 March 2007[1]) was a great-great-granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia and a niece of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia. She was the last member of the Imperial Family to be born before the fall of the dynasty. She was also a second cousin of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, as Catherine's grandfather Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia was the younger brother of Prince Philip's grandmother Olga, Queen of Greece. Her relation to Prince Philip makes her a second cousin, once removed of King Charles III of the United Kingdom. She is also the grandmother of actor Sebastian Arcelus. LifeBorn in Pavlovsk Palace, she was the second child of Prince John Konstantinovich of Russia and Princess Helen of Serbia. After the Revolution, her father was arrested and deported from the capital and her mother followed her husband into exile. Catherine and her brother, Vsevolod, remained in the care of her grandmother, the Grand Duchess Elizaveta Mavriekievna of Russia. On 18 July 1918, their father, Prince John, was killed, and their mother, Princess Jelena, was arrested and spent several months in Soviet prisons. Grand Duchess Elizabeth was able to take Catherine and her brother to Sweden. Sometime later, they were reunited with their mother. The family lived in Yugoslavia, then moved to Nice, France (where her mother stayed) and later to England. There, Catherine received an excellent education, although she never learned the Russian language because her mother, devastated by her husband's death, did not want her children speaking that language in front of her. MarriageFrom 1937 to 1945, Princess Catherine Ivanovna lived in Italy, with her great-aunt Queen Elena. During her stay she married an Italian diplomat Ruggero Farace, Marchese di Villaforesta (4 August 1909 - 14 September 1970), in Rome on 15 September 1937; on the occasion of her wedding, she renounced her succession rights to the Russian throne.[citation needed] Farace di Villaforesta familyMarchese Ruggero Farace Farace di Villaforesta (1909–1970) was the son of Alfredo, Marchese Farace di Villaforesta (1860–1949), member of an old Sicilian noble family and his wife, Caterina Fachiri (1882–1968), a Greek aristocrat who was a descendant of some of the most prominent Phanariote families of Constantinople, such as Rallis, Vlastos, Mavrocordato and Rodocanachi.[2] This made her also related to the former ruling families of Wallachia & Moldavia.[3] Through mutual descent from the Princes of Mavrocordato Ruggero was distantly related to Queen Natalia of Serbia (1859–1941), Princess Aspasia of Greece and Denmark (1896–1972) and her daughter Queen Alexandra of Yugoslavia (1921–1993), who was married to his wife's first cousin, King Peter II of Yugoslavia (1922–1970). Ruggero had one younger brother, Don Alessandro Alfredo dei Marchesi Farace di Villaforesta (1911–1998), and one younger sister, Donna Lydia dei Marchesi Farace di Villaforesta (1921–1988). Donna Lydia married a writer, Count Giovanni Turgi Prosperi de' Serconforti (1906–1988),[4][5] who published an autobiographical novel, Una bellissima mamà (1983).[6] ChildrenThey had three children:[7]
Later lifeIn 1945, after the end of World War II, Princess Catherine separated from her husband (although they never legally divorced) and moved with her children to South America. In later years, she lived in Montevideo, capital city of Uruguay. DeathShe died on 13 March 2007 in Montevideo, Uruguay.[citation needed] Honours
Ancestry
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