Irina Mikhailovna Raievskya


Irina Mikhailovna Raievskya, was a Russian and German noble. She was Duchess of Mecklenburg by her marriage to her second husband, George, Duke of Mecklenburg, who was the head of the House of Mecklenburg-Strelitz from 1934 until his death in 1963. Irina is the great-grandmother of Sophie, Princess of Prussia, wife of Georg Friedrich, Prince of Prussia, current head of the House of Hohenzollern.

Early life

She was born on 18 August 1892 in Tsarskoye Selo, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire, into the highest ranks of Russian nobility. Her parents were :ru:Раевский, Михаил Николаевич|Mikhail Nikolaievich Rayevsky and Princess Mariya Grigoryevna Gagarina. Her paternal grandparents were :ru:Раевский, Николай Николаевич |Nikolas Nikolajewitch Rayevsky and his wife Anna Mikhailovna :ru:Бороздины|Borozdine. Her maternal grandparents were Grigory Gagarin and his wife, Sophia Andreievna :ru:Дашковы |Dachkov. Irina was daughter of the :ru:Раевские|Rayevski family, who were one of heirs of the famed Grigori Potemkin, Prince of Tauria, descending from the childless Prince's sister Maria Alexandrowna Potemkina.

Marriages and children

Irina Mikhailovna Raievskya was married firstly in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire, on 5 November 1915 to Count Alexander Mikhailovich Tolstoy, son of :ru:Толстой, Михаил Павлович|Count Michael Tolstoy and his wife Princess Olga Alexandrovna :ru:Васильчиковы|Vassiltchikov.
The children of her first marriage were:
After Irina was widowed on 2 October 1918, she was married secondly in Geneva, Switzerland, on 7 October 1920 to George, Duke of Mecklenburg, son of Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and his wife, Natalia Feodorovna Vanljarskaya, Countess of Carlow.
The children of her second marriage were:
She fled with her family after October Revolution from Russian Empire first to France then to Denmark and last to Germany. With her second husband, George, Duke of Mecklenburg, she lived since 1923 in :de:Schloss Remplin|Schloss Remplin, Germany until it burned down in the Second World War on 10 April 1940. Subsequently, the family moved to Grunewald, Berlin. After their house in Grunewald was destroyed by bombing in February 1944, they moved by invitation of Margarete of Hohenzollern in March 1944 to Sigmaringen. Her second husband, George, Duke of Mecklenburg, was held prisoner by the Nazi government from 1944 until he was released in February 1945.
Irina and her second husband were interested in art and music.
She died on 22 January 1955 in Sigmaringen, and was buried in the Einsiedlerkapelle, Inzigkofen, Germany.
Her second husband converted to Catholicism in 1920. After he was widowed on 22 January 1955, he married his second wife, Archduchess Charlotte of Austria, on 21 July 1956 in Pöcking. She was the daughter of Emperor Charles I of Austria and his wife, Empress Zita of Bourbon-Parma.
George died in Sigmaringen of a heart attack. He was succeeded as head of the Grand Ducal House by his eldest son, Duke Georg Alexander.

Duchess of Mecklenburg

On 6 December 1934, Charles Michael, Duke of Mecklenburg, uncle of her husband George died, and George succeeded him as head of the House of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.
On 18 December 1950 the House of Mecklenburg-Schwerin confirmed the decisions made in 1929 regarding George's title, and he assumed the style of Highness while his status as head of the House of Mecklenburg-Strelitz was also confirmed. At the same time, the Count of Carlow title was abolished.

Titles and styles