من تزوج Catherine Pavlovna de Russie؟
Duke George of Oldenburg تزوج Catherine Pavlovna de Russie . إيكاترينا بافلوفنا كان عمره 21 عامًا في يوم الزفاف (21 سنة و 2 شهر و 2 يوم). Duke George of Oldenburg كان عمره 25 عامًا في يوم الزفاف (25 سنة و 2 شهر و 25 يوم). كان الفارق العمري 4 سنة و 0 شهر و 23 يوم أيام..
استمر الزواج 3 سنة و 5 شهر و 5 يوم (1254 يوم). انتهى الزواج.
Wilhelm I of Württemberg تزوج Catherine Pavlovna de Russie . إيكاترينا بافلوفنا كان عمره 27 عامًا في يوم الزفاف (27 سنة و 7 شهر و 23 يوم). Wilhelm I of Württemberg كان عمره 34 عامًا في يوم الزفاف (34 سنة و 3 شهر و 28 يوم). كان الفارق العمري 6 سنة و 8 شهر و 5 يوم أيام..
استمر الزواج 2 سنة و 11 شهر و 16 يوم (1081 يوم). انتهى الزواج.
Catherine Pavlovna de Russie
Catherine Pavlovna Romanova (en russe : Екатерина Павловна), grande-duchesse de Russie, est née le à Tsarskoïe Selo, et est morte le à Stuttgart.
Sœur cadette d'Alexandre Ier de Russie, elle est par mariages, duchesse d'Oldenbourg puis reine de Wurtemberg.
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Duke George of Oldenburg
Duke Peter Frederick George of Oldenburg (German: Herzog Peter Friedrich Georg von Oldenburg; 9 May 1784 – 27 December 1812) was a younger son of Peter I, Grand Duke of Oldenburg and his wife Duchess Frederica of Württemberg. He was a son-in-law of Paul I of Russia through marriage to his daughter Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia. He was referred to as a prince in Russia, Prince Georgy Petrovich Oldenburgsky.
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Catherine Pavlovna de Russie

Wilhelm I of Württemberg
William I (German: Friedrich Wilhelm Karl; 27 September 1781 – 25 June 1864) was King of Württemberg from 30 October 1816 until his death.
Upon William's accession, Württemberg was suffering crop failures and famine in the "Year Without a Summer", in 1816. After taking office, he initiated sweeping reforms, resulting in the approval of the Estates of Württemberg to a constitution on 25 September 1819. In his 47-year reign, the kingdom moved from one that was created from different denominational principalities and a heterogeneous agricultural country, into a constitutional state with a common identity and a well-organised management.
In addition to his successful domestic policy, he pursued throughout his reign an ambition focused on German and European foreign policy. Alongside the great powers of Prussia and Austria, he imagined a third major German power in the form of Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover and Württemberg. Although this plan never succeeded, it ensured a consistent, coherent and targeted policy during his reign.
William was the only German monarch who was forced to recognise the Frankfurt Constitution of 1848. After the failure of the March Revolution of 1848, he pursued reactionary policies that counteracted his liberal image from before the revolution. He died in 1864 at Rosenstein Castle in Bad Cannstatt and is buried in the Württemberg Mausoleum.
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