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  1. Colonel Kulikovsky died there in 1958. Two years later, as her health deteriorated, Olga moved with friends to a small apartment in East Toronto. She died aged 78, seven months after her older sister, Xenia. At the end of her life and afterwards, Olga was widely labelled the last Grand Duchess of Imperial Russia.

  2. Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky [2] (5 November 1881 – 11 August 1958) was the second husband of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia, the sister of Tsar Nicholas II and daughter of Tsar Alexander III . He was born into a military landowning family from the south of the Russian Empire, and followed the family tradition by ...

  3. 25 de nov. de 2012 · November 25, 2012 by CarolynHarris. Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna at home in Cooksville in 1959. In June, 1959, the widowed seventy-seven year old Mrs. Nikolai Kulikovsky of 2130 Camilla Road in Cooksville, Ontario, [now part of Missisauga] received a royal invitation.

  4. Portrait of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna. Introduction to Nikolai Kulikovsky, 1903. In April, 1903, the Grand Duchess Olga was introduced by her brother Michael to a Blue Cuirassier Guards officer, Nikolai Alexandrovich Kulikovsky, during a royal military review at Pavlovsk Palace.

  5. 2 de jul. de 2021 · Olga left St. Petersburg for the Eastern Front and trained as a nurse. She worked in military hospitals near the front lines in Rovno, then Kiev, and received the Order of St. George after coming under enemy fire. On 16 November 1916, she married Colonel Nikolai Kulikovsky (1881–1958) in Kiev.

  6. Olga married commoner Nikolai Kulikovsky, whom she had loved from 1903. After the Romanov family were destroyed in the Russian Revolution of 1917 , she ran away to the Crimea with her mother, husband, and children, where they lived in great danger.

  7. 16 de oct. de 2017 · Olga and Nikolai were lucky at first. Olga, who had been working as a Red Cross nurse since the outbreak of the First World War, was stationed in Kiev. The two attempted to flee south by train, but were intercepted between Yalta and Sevastopol in Crimea. “We were actually saved by a technicality,” Olga recalled.