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  1. Oct 4, 2022 · Born on February 7, 1693, Anna Ioannovna or Ivanovna was never meant for the crown. The fourth daughter of Ivan V, Anna, at 17, was married off to a lowly, backwater duke, and was largely ...

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  3. Sep 9, 2021 · Description: Russian Empress Anna Ivanovna ushered in a Russian dark age during her decade as Empress regnant. She even built an ice palace to imprison one unlucky courtier.

    • A Widowed Queen
    • From Prince to Fool
    • Anna’s Ice Palace
    • The Pearl Necklace

    Anna Ivanovna, born in 1693 to Czar Ivan V, had a complicated love life. Like most young girls, especially young girls of royalty, she was beyond excited when her family married her off to Frederick William, the Duke of Courland. At the tender age of seventeen, she wrote the Duke that “nothing could delight me more than to hear your declaration of ...

    After Anna cancelled Mikhail’s wedding, the Italian woman was either exiled or deported. Although Mikhail was devastated, the czarina did not take pity on him. Upon his return to Petersburg, she stripped him of his land and title and made him her new fool. From here on out, Mikhail was to be referred to by his first name and his first name only. Ev...

    This palace was, as you might have guessed, made entirely of ice. It was a record-breakingly cold winter in Russia that year, and the mighty Neva River had completely frozen over. On Anna’s orders, military personnel spent days hauling blocks of ice from the riverbank. These were then used to build the castle. The end result of this seemingly impos...

    With little to no narrative tinkering involved, the story of the ice palace and the jealous queen who built it seems to unfold much like something from a fairy tale. Fortunately, like any fairy tale, it too has a happy ending. As night settled over Petersburg, it did not take long for the imprisoned Mikhail to fall ill. His clown clothes might have...

  4. Nov 13, 2015 · So in 1739 she ordered the construction of a massive ice palace 80 feet long and 33 feet high, where all the blocks were “glued” together with water. Inside was a furnished bridal suite.

  5. Mar 28, 2023 · Empress Anna Ioannovna. “Through the fool’s wedding and the ice palace, the Tsarina Anna was successful in presenting herself as a powerful and enlightened monarch who did not need to shy away from comparison with other European rulers,” wrote art historian and professor Julia Herzberg.

  6. To celebrate the wedding, the Empress had an ice palace measuring thirty-three feet high and eighty feet long built together with icy beds, steps, chairs, windows and even logs of ice in a fireplace of ice.

  7. The Ice House (Russian: Ледяной дом) was an palace built of ice in the winter of 1739–40 in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The palace and the surrounding festivities were part of the celebration of Russia's victory over the Ottoman Empire.

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