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94:, whose aide-de-camp he was appointed in 1784. Alexander did possibly have a twin brother, who, however, died shortly after birth due to mishandling in pregnancy. Two years later, Potemkin introduced the young man to the empress, hoping that he would "care for" the sovereign during his frequent absences from the capital. Catherine was charmed by Mamonov's good looks and manners and lavished expensive gifts on him, his relatives and friends. In a letter to
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Catherine's personal secretary recorded in his diary that he saw
Mamonov and his fiancee on their knees asking and obtaining forgiveness of the sovereign. Having received a wedding present of 100,000 roubles and 2,250 serfs, the newlyweds were commanded to leave the capital. They settled in Moscow. A
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Although he never received an answer, the
Empress seems to have regarded him kindly until her death. There is no truth in the gossip that "Catherine revenged herself on the loose-tongued Shcherbatova by secretly sending policemen disguised as women to whip her in her husband's presence." She did,
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In a letter to
Potemkin, Catherine commented: "There are signs that he had a desire to stay with his wife at court as before, finally a thousand contradictions and irrational behaviour, such that his closest friends do not justify
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98:, she praised his command of French, thus encouraging his literary pursuits. Within one year, he was promoted colonel, major general, and chamberlain. A suite of apartments was assigned to him in the
113:, who gave him the title of Reichsgraf. After two years spent with the Empress, Dmitriev-Mamonov started to lose interest in her. At the time of her sixtieth birthday, his mood was described as
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year later, Mamonov started to regret the missed opportunities and wrote repentant letters to the
Empress, claiming that their rupture "constantly tortures his soul."
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however, prevent Maria
Shkurina, a maid of honor who she suspected of acting as a matchmaker for Shcherbatova, from rejoining the Mamonovs in Moscow.
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In 1787, the
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They were distant relatives. During the pinnacle of his power, Mamonov presented
Potemkin with a gold teapot with the inscription:
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When she at last allowed
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and at loggerheads with
Catherine's intimate confidante,
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16:For the military commander and battle painter, see
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189:Mamonov was not on speaking terms with
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86:family descending from the princes of
56:Alexander Matveyevich Dmitriev-Mamonov
169:plus unis par le cœur que par le sang
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261:Catherine the Great: Life and Legend
64:Александр Матвеевич Дмитриев-Мамонов
50:Dmitriev-Mamonov Alexandr Matveevich
18:Alexander Ivanovich Dmitriev-Mamonov
96:Friedrich Melchior, Baron von Grimm
180:This was her pet name for Mamonov.
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266:Russian Biographical Dictionary (
263:. Oxford University Press, 1989.
482:Rostislavichi family (Smolensk)
135:Count Dmitriev-Mamonov in 1802.
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502:Lovers of Catherine the Great
25:Eastern Slavic naming customs
497:People with hypochondriasis
151:was his only son and heir.
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405:Alexander Dmitriev-Mamonov
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23:In this name that follows
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451:Alexandra S. Albedinskaya
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149:Matvey Dmitriev-Mamonov
107:Stanislaus II of Poland
334:Ernst Johann von Biron
208:Alexander Khrapovitsky
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72:Catherine II of Russia
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461:Mathilde Kschessinska
456:Catherine Dolgorukova
370:Alexander Vasilchikov
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126:Dubrovitsy
29:patronymic
419:1796–1917
358:1762–1796
319:Anna Mons
312:1700–1762
212:Derzhavin
78:Biography
88:Smolensk
84:Rurikid
60:Russian
147:Count
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27:, the
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155:Notes
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