10 March] 1913,[1] Cannes[2][3]) was the daughter of Alexander Pushkin and the morganatic wife of Prince Nikolaus Wilhelm of Nassau.
[6] Concerned her mother wrote to Pyotr Vyazemsky:[7]"The imp Tasha quickly moved from childhood to adulthood, but there is nothing to do - you can't bypass fate.
Natalia moved abroad with her two eldest children to live with her aunt, Alexandra Friesengoff [ru] and mother.
Dubelt followed his wife to the estate, her sister, Alexandra [ru] wrote:"The summer months passed in constant troubles and endless unrest.
Dubelt, who was the first to give this idea to his wife [about leaving], soon changed his mind, refused his word, came to Hungary himself, first to confess, when it turned out to be unsuccessful, he gave rein to his unbridled, frantic character.
It's hard to even remember the scenes that took place until, at the insistence of Baron Friesengoff, he left the estate, giving his wife temporary peace.
In 1876, Natalia Alexandrovna, then Countess of Merenberg, turned to Ivan Turgenev for help in editing and publishing these letters.
The prince had arrived in Russia, acting as a representative of the Nassau court, and upon meeting Natalia Alexandrovna, had been captivated by her.
[4] Natalia Alexandrovna married Prince Nikolaus Wilhelm of Nassau morganatically in London 1 July 1868.