@SergeiPilipenko Hi there...I don´t know what you are up to? Potemkin was an polish nobleman at first...then he did a splendid career caused of his love-affair with Catherine II of Russia. If he had been a REAL Prince of Russia the could have been married...in public. There is not complete sure that they was (secretly) married...but it doesn´t matter, theirs children should not have been recognized as new Tsares because he was just an ordinary nobleman, not of royalty blood. Privjet!
Potemkin wasn’t a Polish nobleman. He was a Russian prince. He and Catherine the Second were secretly married. Potemkin deserved the title of the Bright Prince (светлейший князь). It is between Prince and Grand Duke. For example, the second, unmorganatic wife of Alexander the Second was Bright Princess, too. And any of her children from Alexander could not become a new czar, too. Nobody insists that any child of Potemkin must be recognized as a new czar.
Hi there...I´m sorry but I could not understand what you write, you must write in english. I can tell you that I have a russian aftername...Savitski..."Sawert"...
Potemkin was no Polish nobleman, he was a Russian prince.
He was not in «friendship»; he was the husband of Catherine the Great.
The Wild Step is no «southern Ukraine», it is Novorossia.
The Tavrichesky Palace is situated in Sankt-Petersburg, not in the «Ukraine».
Potemkin of Taurida founded Ekaterinoslav, not «Dnepropetrovsk».
SergeiPilipenko 1 year ago
@SergeiPilipenko Hi there...I don´t know what you are up to? Potemkin was an polish nobleman at first...then he did a splendid career caused of his love-affair with Catherine II of Russia. If he had been a REAL Prince of Russia the could have been married...in public. There is not complete sure that they was (secretly) married...but it doesn´t matter, theirs children should not have been recognized as new Tsares because he was just an ordinary nobleman, not of royalty blood. Privjet!
Ulf
Caecarulf 1 year ago
@Caecarulf
Potemkin wasn’t a Polish nobleman. He was a Russian prince. He and Catherine the Second were secretly married. Potemkin deserved the title of the Bright Prince (светлейший князь). It is between Prince and Grand Duke. For example, the second, unmorganatic wife of Alexander the Second was Bright Princess, too. And any of her children from Alexander could not become a new czar, too. Nobody insists that any child of Potemkin must be recognized as a new czar.
SergeiPilipenko 1 year ago
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Kalinka my friend! Lasse Von Krusenstjerna. ;o)
StevenDavidPlissken 2 years ago
Kalinka my friend! Lasse Von Krusenstjerna. ;o)
StevenDavidPlissken 2 years ago
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ilSokolan 3 years ago 9
Hi there...I´m sorry but I could not understand what you write, you must write in english. I can tell you that I have a russian aftername...Savitski..."Sawert"...
Ulf
Caecarulf 3 years ago