Aurora Pavlovna Demidova

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Aurora Pavlovna Demidova
Born2/3 November 1873
Kiev, Russian Empire (now Ukraine)
DiedJune 28, 1904(1904-06-28) (aged 30)
Turin, Kingdom of Italy
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1892; div. 1896)
Count Nicola Giovanni di Noghera
(m. 1897)
IssuePrince Paul of Yugoslavia
Nikolai, Sergei
Helena Aurora, Alberto, Giovanni and Amedeo di Noghera
HouseDemidov (by birth)
Karadjordjevic (by marriage)
di Noghera (by marriage)
FatherPavel Pavlovich Demidov, 2nd Prince of San Donato
MotherPrincess Elena Petrovna Trubetzkaya

Princess Aurora Pavlovna Demidova di San Donato (2/3 November 1873 in Kiev – 28 June (OS: 16 June) 1904 in Turin) was a Russian noblewoman and by birth a member of the House of Demidov.

Early life[edit]

Aurora was born as the eldest daughter of Pavel Pavlovich Demidov, 2nd Prince of San Donato, and his second wife, Princess Elena Petrovna Trubetskoy (1853–1917). Her father was the son of the Finnish-Swede philanthropist Aurora Stjernvall von Waleen and her Russian husband, Pavel Nikolaievich Demidov. Her mother was a daughter of Prince Peter Nikitich Trubetskoy (1826–1880) and Princess Elizabeth Belosselsky-Belozersky.

First marriage[edit]

She married Prince Arsen of Serbia, youngest son of Alexander Karađorđević, Prince of Serbia and his wife Princess Persida, in Helsingfors (where her grandmother Aurora lived) at Uspenski Cathedral on 1 May 1892. They had a son, Prince Paul of Yugoslavia, who later became the Regent of Yugoslavia. She and Arsen divorced in 1896 because of an adventure of Aurora with a young Count Ernst Andreas von Manteuffel (1873–1953), elder son of Count Ernst Gotthard II von Manteuffel (1844-1922) and his wife, Marie Dorothea von Weiss (1847-1938).[1] The fruit of this "adventure" was the birth of twins, Nikolai (1895–1933) and Sergei (1895–1912). Nikolai is also buried next to his mother in the Russian cemetery (Caucade) of Nice.

Second marriage[edit]

She remarried an Italian Count Palatine Nicola Giovanni Maria di Noghera (Eboli, 15 June 1875 – Genoa, 1 April 1944) on 4 November 1897, with whom she had four children: Helena Aurora, Alberto, Giovanni, and Amedeo di Noghera.

Death[edit]

She died on 16 June 1904 in Turin and was buried in the Russian Orthodox Cemetery, Nice, (France).

References[edit]

  1. ^ С. С. Щульц. Аврора. — СПб.: Из-во ДЕАН, 2004. — 208 с.; S.S. Schultz, Aurora, Saint Petersburg, ed. DEAN, 2004, 208 pages

External links[edit]