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Maria Miloslavskaya

Maria Miloslavskaya
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Tsaritsa consort of All Russia
Tenure 16 January 1648–18 August 1669
Born c. 1625
Moscow
Died 18 August 1669 (aged 43–44)
Moscow
Burial Ascension Convent, Kolomenskoye
Archangel Cathedral, Kremlin (1929)
Spouse Alexis Mikhailovich
Issue
among others...
Tsarevna Sofia Alexeevna
Fyodor III
Ivan V
Full name
Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya
House Romanov (by marriage)
Father Ilya Danilovich Miloslavsky
Mother Ekaterina Feodorovna Narbekova
Religion Eastern Orthodox
Full name
Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya

Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (Russian: Мария Ильинична Милославская, 1625–1669) was a Russian tsaritsa as the first spouse of tsar Alexis of Russia. She was the mother of tsar Feodor III of Russia, tsar Ivan V of Russia, and the princess regent Sophia Alekseyevna.

Maria Ilyinichna was a younger daughter of the noble Ilya Danilovich Miloslavsky (d. 1668) and Ekaterina Fedorovna Miloslavskaya (Narbekova). Her father was a relative and supporter of Boris Morozov, the influential tutor and favorite of the tsar.

In 1647, tsar Alexis I of Russia reached the age required for marriage. The tsar was to choose his bride from a Bride-show of hundreds of daughters of the nobility, who were summoned to the imperial court for selection. This method to select a bride for the tsar reportedly originated from the reign of Ivan III, whose spouse Sophia Palaiologina came from the Byzantine empire, were this method had once been used to chose a bride for the Byzantine emperor.

The bridal selection of Alexis I was managed by Boris Morozov, and gathered to almost two hundred daughters of the nobility, among them Maria Miloslavskaya. She had the support of Boris Morozov, who intended to marry her sister Anna Miloslavskaya, and hoped that Alexis I would chose Maria, which would make him the brother-in-law of the tsar. During the selection ceremony, however, the tsar chose Euphemia F. Vsevolozhskaya, by presenting her with a handkerchief and a ring as a symbol of their engagement. Boris Morozov then bribed a courtier to make Vsevolozhskaya faint; he then bribed a court physician to diagnose her with epilepsy. This disqualified Vsevolozhskaya as tsaritsa and resulted in both her and her father to be exiled accused of attempting to hide her illness for the tsar, and thus the first choice of the tsar was annulled.


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