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STOP SCAMMERS!
English-Russian love dictionary
Russan holidays
Advice on Russian women
Tips for writing
Russian customs and traditions
St-Petersburg as famous Russian city
  Accomodation in St-Petersburg
  Alcoholic bevarages in Russia
  Arriving to St-Petersburg
  Cafes and restaurants in St-Petersburg
  Communications with the outside world
  Russian culture
  Farther out
  Food and drink in St-Petersburg
  Holidays
  Russian hospitality
  Language barrier
  Medical problems in Russia
  Money
  Museums in St-Petersburg
  Nightlife in St-Petersburg
  Other things to see and do in St.Petersburg
  Parks
  Safety in St-Petersburg
  Shopping
  Sights
  Street food and snacks
  Transport
  Travel tips
  Weather in St-Petersburg
  History
  A Capital Shake-up
  Catherine the Great
  The Decembrists' Uprising
  Democracy in Petersburg
  The Great Patriotic War
  Lesson One: Be Nice to Your Wife
  Lesson Two: Be Nice to Your Son
  Post-war Letdown
  How One Little Frenchman can Ruin Your Day
  No More Monarchy. Nice Guy
  The First Russian Revolution
  Serf's Up
  World War and Revolution
  Petersburg after Peter
  He Built it on a Swamp
  A Few Intrigues
Etiquette in Russia
Famous Russian women
Remarkable St-Petersburgers
Russian Language
Well-known events
Who knows why he's winking?!

A Few Intrigues

For seventy-one years after Peter the Great's death Russia was ruled almost exclusively by women. Having had his first son imprisoned and killed (some say with his own hands) and losing his second son to a premature natural death, Peter, left without a male heir, decreed that the emperor could name his successor as he pleased without regard to hereditary concerns, and thus did his second wife, Catherine I, succeed him to the throne. She ruled from 1725 until 1727, followed by Peter the Great's grandson Peter II who died of smallpox in 1730 at the age of seventeen. The throne then passed to Anna, the corpulent daughter of Peter the Great's half-brother Ivan. She ruled until 1740, nominating her older sister's grandson, the two-month old Ivan VI, to succeed her. At first the Empress Anna's favorite, Ernst Bìren, was named regent but he was deposed within three weeks and Ivan VI's mother (who was also called Anna) was given the regency. After a year the Grand Duchess Elizabeth, Peter the Great's last surviving child, seized power and had the one-year old Ivan VI locked up in the Schlìsselburg Fortress with instructions to kill him if he tried to escape. Which just goes to show that a royal birth does not necessarily entitle one to a life of ballroom dancing, military parades, and a quiet retirement in Monte Carlo.*

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