-
Beate Barbara Juliane Freifrau von
Krüdener (née
Freiin von
Vietinghoff genannt Scheel; 22 November [O.S. 11] 1764 – 25 December [O.S. 13] 1824), often...
-
Lerchenfeld wed
Baron Krüdener in Köfering. Her
first child, Nikolai-Arthur, was born on 2 July [O.S. 20 June] 1826. The
Tyutchevs and
Krüdeners continued to frequent...
- Paul
Ludwig von
Krüdener (Russian:
Pavel Alexeevich Kridener; 31
January 1784 – 29
January 1858) was a
Russian diplomat of
Baltic German extraction and...
- not, however,
according to his own account,
until he met the
Baroness de
Krüdener—a
religious adventuress who made the
conversion of
princes her special...
-
Kremer (born 1947),
Latvian classical violinist and
conductor Barbara von
Krüdener (1764–1824),
Baltic German author,
religious mystic and
Pietist Lutheran...
-
Lucretia von
Witzleben (1685–1727), his wife.
Barbara Juliana,
Baroness von
Krüdener was his great-granddaughter.
Count Johann Ernst Munnich (Sergei Khristoforovich...
-
Alexander I
under the
influence of his
spiritual adviser Baroness Barbara von
Krüdener. It was
written by the Tsar and
edited by
Ioannis Kapodistrias and Alexandru...
- colleague,
Baron Alexander von
Krüdener), in
January 1825. Amélie was
coerced by her
relatives into
marrying the much
older Krüdener, but she and
Tyutchev continued...
-
Nikolai Karl
Gregor Freiherr von
Krüdener (Nikolay
Pavlovich Kridener; Николай Павлович Криденер; 10
March 1811 – 17
February 1891) was a
Baltic German...
- 1796 – Velu Nachiyar,
Queen of
Sivagangai (b. 1730) 1824 –
Barbara von
Krüdener,
German mystic and
author (b. 1764) 1824 –
William Lawless,
Irish revolutionary...