Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich of Russia

This article is about the former claimant to the Russian imperial throne. For his namesake grandfather, see Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia. For the first baptized ruler of Russians, see St Vladimir, Grand Duke of Rus.
Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich Romanov
Head of the House of Romanov
Tenure 12 October 1938 – 21 April 1992
Predecessor Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich
Successor Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna
Born 30 August [O.S. 17 August] 1917
Porvoo, Finland
Died 21 April 1992(1992-04-21) (aged 74)
Miami, Florida, United States
Burial Grand Ducal Mausoleum, Peter and Paul Fortress, St. Petersburg, Russia
Spouse Princess Leonida Bagration of Mukhrani
Issue Maria Vladimirovna, Grand Duchess of Russia
Full name
Vladimir Cyrillovich Romanov
House House of Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov
Father Cyril Vladimirovich, Grand Duke of Russia
Mother Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

Vladimir Kirillovich, Grand Duke of Russia (Cyrillic: Влади́мир Кири́ллович Рома́нов; 30 August [O.S. 17 August] 1917  21 April 1992) was the Head of the Imperial Family of Russia, a title which he claimed from 1938 to his death.

Early life

Vladimir was born Prince Vladimir Kirillovich of Russia at Porvoo in the Grand Duchy of Finland, the only son of Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich and Grand Duchess Viktoria Feodorovna (née Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha). Vladimir's paternal grandparents were Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia and Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna (née Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin). His maternal grandparents were Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and Grand Duchess Marie Alexandrovna of Russia.

Vladimir's family had fled to Finland after the Russian Revolution of 1917. His family left Finland in 1920,[1] moving to Coburg, Germany. On 8 August 1922 Vladimir's father declared himself Curator of the Russian throne. Two years later on 31 August 1924 his father went a step further and assumed the title Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russias.[2] With his father's assumption of the Imperial title Vladimir was granted the title of Tsesarevich (heir apparent) and Grand Duke with the style of Imperial Highness. In 1930 his family left Germany for Saint-Briac, France where his father set up his court.[3]

In the 1930s Vladimir lived for a period in England studying at the University of London[3] and working at the Blackstone agricultural equipment factory in Lincolnshire. He later returned to France moving to Brittany where he became a landowner.[4]

Russian heir and World War II

Vladimir Cyrillovich (second from the right) with his parents and sister Kira

On the death of his father on 12 October 1938, Vladimir assumed the Headship of the Imperial Family of Russia.[2] In 1938 there were suggestions that he would be made regent of Ukraine but he rebuffed the idea, saying he would not help dissolve Russia.[4]

During World War II, Vladimir was living in Saint-Briac-sur-Mer in Brittany. In 1942, Vladimir and his entourage were placed in a concentration camp at Compiègne after he refused to issue a manifesto calling on Russian émigrés to support Nazi Germany's war against the Soviet Union.[4] But in June 26, 1941, he issued this statement: "In this grave hour, when Germany and almost all the nations of Europe have declared a crusade against Communism and Bolshevism, which has enslaved and oppressed the people of Russia for twenty-four years, I turn to all the faithful and loyal sons of our Homeland with this appeal: Do what you can, to the best of your ability, to bring down the Bolshevik regime and to liberate our Homeland from the terrible yoke of Communism."

In 1944 the German army moved the family inland out of fear of an invasion from the coast. The Germans were taking them to Paris when an order to drive to Vittel was given. Even Vittel proved to be unsafe, so they were moved to Germany. Vladimir lived in a castle belonging to the husband of his elder sister Maria Kirillovna in Amorbach, Bavaria until 1945. After Germany's defeat, Vladimir's fear of being captured by the Soviets prompted relocation to Austria and next to the border of Liechtenstein. He tried to move with General Boris Smyslovsky's army and cross the border, but neither Liechtenstein nor Switzerland would issue him an exit visa, so he stayed in Austria where he lived in the American occupation zone.

Vladimir's maternal aunt, Infanta Beatrice of Orléans-Borbon, secured for him a Spanish visa. He subsequently lived with her in Sanlúcar de Barrameda.

Post war and marriage

After the war he spent most of his time in Madrid, with frequent stays at his property in Brittany, as well as in Paris.

Vladimir married Princess Leonida Georgievna Bagration-Moukhransky on 13 August 1948 in Lausanne.[5][6] Pre-revolutionary Romanov house law dictated that only those born of an "equal marriage" between a Romanov dynast and a member of a "ruling or royal family", were included in the Imperial line of succession to the Russian throne; children of morganatic marriages were ineligible to inherit the throne or dynastic status. The family to which Princess Leonida belonged, the Bagrationi dynasty, had been kings in Georgia from the medieval era until the early 19th century, but no male line ancestor of hers had reigned as a king in Georgia since 1505 and her branch of the Bagrations, the House of Mukhrani, had been naturalised among the non-ruling nobility of Russia after Georgia was annexed to the Russian empire in 1801.[7] Yet the royal status of the House of Bagration had been recognized by Russia in the 1783 Treaty of Georgievsk and was confirmed by Vladimir Kirillovich on 5 December 1946 as claimed head of the Russian imperial house.[8] Some controversy therefore arises as to whether Vladimir's marriage to Leonida was equal or morganatic, and whether his claim to the Imperial throne validly passed to his daughter Maria, to some other dynast, or to no one upon his death.[8]

Following Vlaidimir's public designation of his daughter as "curatrix of the throne", in anticipation that she would eventually succeed him as head of the dynasty in exile, the heads of three of the other branches of the imperial family—the Princes Vsevolod Ioannovich (Konstantinovichi), Roman Petrovich (Nikolaevichi) and Andrei Alexandrovich (Mihailovichi) -- wrote to Vladimir in 1969, asserting that the dynastic status of his daughter was no different from that of their own children (Vsevolod Ioannovich was childless, but Roman Petrovich had two sons by Countess Prascovia Sheremetyev, while Andrei Alexandrovich had two sons by Donna Elisabeth Ruffo of a Russian branch of the Princes di San Sant' Antimo) and that his wife was of no higher status than the wives of the other Romanov princes.[9]

In 1952 he called on the Western powers to wage war against the Soviet Union. On 23 December 1969 Vladimir issued a controversial decree whereby in the event he predeceased the living male Romanovs that he recognised as dynasts then his daughter Maria would become the "Curatrix of the Imperial Throne".[10] This has been viewed as an attempt by Vladimir to ensure the succession remained in his branch of the imperial family,[11] while the heads of the other branches declared that Vladimir's actions were illegal.[9]

Vladimir was able to visit Russia in November 1991 when he was invited to visit St Petersburg by its Mayor Anatoly Sobchak.[4]

Death and succession dispute

Grand Duke Vladimir died of an apparent heart attack while addressing a gathering of Spanish-speaking bankers and investors in Miami in the United States on 21 April 1992. His body was returned to Russia and he was buried with full pomp and splendour in the Peter and Paul Fortress in St. Petersburg, the first Romanov to be honoured in this way since before the revolution. The press noted that the funeral "was regarded by civic and Russian authorities as an obligation to the Romanov family rather than a step toward restoration of the monarchy." According to a government spokesman, it was a way of "cleansing our guilt". As he was only a great-grandson of a recognized Russian emperor, his claimed title of "Grand Duke of Russia" caused problems as to what to put on his tombstone.[12]

After his death, his daughter Maria Vladimirovna, assumed the headship of the Imperial Family of Russia according to his branch's interpretation of the Russian house laws. This was disputed by Nicholas Romanov, Prince of Russia who had been chosen president of the Romanov Family Association prior to the death of Grand Duke Vladimir.[13][14]

Nicholas asserted that he was the most senior male dynast after the death of Vladimir, as he believed the children of Romanov grand dukes (sons and grandsons of Russia's tsars) who had not married equally were not Russian dynasts, whereas Princes of Russia (being male-line great-grandchildren, or more remote descendants, of Russia's tsars) were not unequivocally subject to the equal marriage restriction, and deemed their children to be dynasts.[15] "The position of the Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna as Head of the Imperial House is acknowledged by most serious Russian Monarchist organizations and by most of those Heads of Royal Houses which continue to maintain relations with the Imperial House," according to scholar Guy Stair Sainty.[16] The Romanov Family Association did not recognize Vladimir or his daughter to be rightful claimants to the Russian throne, nor has it acknowledged any other Romanov descendant as such, since its by-laws expressly forbid it to recognize anyone's claim to the throne.

Titles, styles and honours

Titles

Honours

National dynastic honours

Foreign honours

Ancestry

References

  1. "Soviet Turmoil; Dust Off the Throne? Shine Up the Crown? A Romanov Muses". New York Times. 30 August 1991. Retrieved 1 August 2008.
  2. 1 2 Almanach de Gotha (182nd ed.). Almanach de Gotha. 1998. p. 214.
  3. 1 2 "Grand Duke Cyril Dies In Paris Exile". New York Times. 13 October 1938. p. 23.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Hevesi, Dennis (22 April 1992). "Grand Duke Vladimir Dies at 74; Pretender to the Throne of Russia". New York Times. Retrieved 1 August 2008.
  5. http://www.imperialhouse.ru/eng/allnews/articles/812.html
  6. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/royalty-obituaries/7779624/Grand-Duchess-Leonida-of-Russia.html
  7. Massie, p 268
  8. 1 2 Eilers, Marlene. Queen Victoria's Descendants. Rosvall Royal Books, Falkoping, Sweden, 1997. pp.82–83. ISBN 91-630-5964-9
  9. 1 2 Massie p 269
  10. "Maria I Wladimirovna". imperialhouse.ru. Retrieved 11 August 2008.
  11. Massie p 263
  12. Schmemann, Serge (30 April 1992). "With Old-World Pageantry, Russians Bury a Romanov". New York Times. Retrieved 1 August 2008.
  13. "Nikolai Romanov Prince of Russia Presentation". nikolairomanov.com. 26 September 2002. Retrieved 1 August 2008.
  14. "Letter: A Romanoff perspective on Russian pretenders". The Independent. 13 October 1994. Retrieved 1 August 2008.
  15. Horan, Brien Purcell (September 1998). "The Russian Imperial Succession". Retrieved 1 August 2008.
  16. The Russian Succession
  17. 1 2 3 http://www.angelfire.com/pa/ImperialRussian/royalty/russia/vladimirkirillovich.html
  18. http://www.bibelotslondon.co.uk/communities/2/004/012/825/802/images/4622793204.jpg
  19. http://www.imperialhouse.ru/eng/dynastyhistory/honoursaward/3434.html
  20. http://www.tumblr.com/search/Kira%20Kirillovna
  21. http://www.constantinian.org.uk/the-cross-of-constantine/

Bibliography

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vladimir Cyrillovich, Grand Duke of Russia.
Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich of Russia
Cadet branch of the House of Oldenburg
Born: 30 August 1917 Died: 21 April 1992
Titles in pretence
Preceded by
Cyril Vladimirovich
 TITULAR 
Emperor of Russia
12 October 1938 – 21 April 1992
Reason for succession failure:
Empire abolished in 1917
Succeeded by
Disputed
Maria Vladimirovna or Nicholas Romanovich
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