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ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Soldiers of honour carry the coffin of Empress Maria Fyodorovna at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)

ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Soldiers of honour carry the coffin of Empress Maria Fyodorovna  at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)

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ST PETERSBURG -SEPTEMBER 26: Coffin of Empress Maria Fyodorovna is carried at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images)

ST PETERSBURG -SEPTEMBER 26:  Coffin of  Empress Maria Fyodorovna is carried at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images)

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ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Prince Nikolay Romanov speaks with Countess Olga Romanova as they attend the reburial of the remains of Empress Maria Fyodorovna at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)

ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Prince  Nikolay  Romanov speaks with Countess Olga Romanova as they attend the reburial of the remains of Empress Maria Fyodorovna  at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)

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ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: The coffin of Empress Maria Fyodorovna is carried at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)

ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: The coffin of Empress Maria Fyodorovna is carried at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)

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ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Soldiers of honour carry the coffin of Empress Maria Fyodorovna at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)

ST PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - SEPTEMBER 26: Soldiers of honour carry the coffin of  Empress Maria Fyodorovna  at the St. Peter and Paul's Cathedral on September 26, 2006 in St Petersburg, Russia. Empress Maria Fyodorovna was born Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She married Tsar Alexander III and had six children with him, including the last Russian Tsar, Nicholas II. She lived 52 years in Russia and left after the revolution. She died in exile in Denmark in 1928 and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral. (Photo by Andrey Malashkevich/Epsilon/Getty Images/)