Grand Duke Alexander's father was heir apparent to the Russian throne as the eldest living son of Emperor Alexander II of Russia. The Grand Duke was Alexander and Marie's second child, second son, and the younger brother of the future Emperor Nicholas II.
Alexander died of bacterial meningitis in 1870, one month before his first birthday.[1] Following his death, his mother wrote to her own mother, Queen Louise of Denmark: "The doctors maintain he did not suffer, but we suffered terribly to see and hear him."[2] The only photo taken of the Grand Duke was taken posthumously.
^Igor Viktorovich Zimin. Doctors of the Court of His Imperial Majesty, or How the Royal Family Was Treated. – Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf, 2016. – S. 247–248. — 895 p. — ISBN978-5-227-07530-7 .
^Zeepvat, Charlotte (2005). The Camera and the Tsars. Sutton Publishing. p. 178. ISBN0-7509-4210-X.
^Memoirs of Count S. D. Sheremetyev. M.: Indrik, 2004. c.423–424
^R. E. Krupova, L. Ya. Lurie . Peter and Paul Cathedral – the imperial tomb // Historical cemeteries of St. Petersburg / Alexander Kobak , Yuri Pirotko . – Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf, 2011. – P. 286. – ISBN978-5-227-02688-0 .