Czarina Marie Feodorovna.
It's possible that Marie Feodorovna left the Royal Danish egg in Denmark.
Maria Feodorovna was not just born into a royal house,
she married into one.
In St. Petersburg, the two day flower
festival celebrates the Russian empress, Maria Feodorovna's, love of flowers.
Czarina Marie Feodorovna managed to escape to England,
but Nicholas, Alexandra, and their children were not as lucky.
Czar Alexander III had given it to his wife, Marie Feodorovna, as an Easter gift in 1887.
It was given by Czar Alexander III to his wife,
Empress Maria Feodorovna, as an Easter gift in 1887.
Empress Dowager Maria Feodorovna walks over to a special canopy under which she will follow to the Assumption Cathedral.
Last Seen: In 1903 in Copenhagen, where Marie Feodorovna had gone to celebrate Easter
and her father's 40th anniversary as king.
Marie Feodorovna loved the egg,
and for the rest of his life, Czar Alexander bought all of her Easter eggs from Fabergé.
Having decided to surprise his wife, the Empress Maria Feodorovna, he gave her a special gift- an egg with a secret.
Shvabe then showed a
photo of the girl to the widowed empress Maria Feodorovna, who did not see any similarity with her granddaughters.
The Danish Palaces Egg for 1890 contained a folding screen comprising 10 miniature paintings of the palaces and
royal yachts that Marie Feodorovna, a Danish princess, remembered from her childhood.
In the 1950s, the Swingline stapler tycoons, Jack and Belle Linsky, amassed a huge collection of Fabergé objects that included the 1893 Caucasus Egg and the 1894 Renaissance Egg, both gifts from Czar Alexander III to his wife,
Marie Feodorovna.