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Alexander II |
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Alexander II (1818–1881)Tsar of Russia from 1855. He embarked on reforms of the army, the government, and education, and is remembered as ‘the Liberator’ for his emancipation of the serfs in 1861, but he lacked the personnel to implement his reforms. However, the revolutionary element remained unsatisfied, and Alexander became increasingly autocratic and reactionary. He was assassinated by an anarchistic terrorist group, the Nihilists. Alexander II (1198–1249)King of Scotland from 1214, when he succeeded his father, William the Lion. Alexander supported the English barons in their struggle with King John after Magna Carta. The accession of Henry III of England allowed a rapprochement between the two countries, and the boundaries between England and Scotland were agreed by the Treaty of York in 1237. By the Treaty of Newcastle in 1244 he pledged allegiance to Henry III. Alexander consolidated royal authority in Scotland and was a generous patron of the church. In 1221 he married Joanna, the sister of Henry III. In 1239, after her death he married Marie de Coucy, with whom he had a son, Alexander III. Alexander II (died 122 BC)
Alexander II
Alexander II (died 1075)
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Richard Grayson opens with: "The anarchist's bomb that killed Czar Alexander II in St. For example, when Czar Alexander II of Russia was murdered in 1881, Russian Jews were blamed. Czar Alexander II, his Chancellor Prince Gortchakoff and his Ambassador Count Shuvalov all hastened to assure the British government that Russia had no such warlike intentions. |
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