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spend much time with their families, she played the part of mother for them, and according to contemporary reports, she did this with success: she reportedly treated her students like her daughters, and they loved her like a mother. It is noted that she never used physical punishment, which was at that time accepted both for parents and teachers. She also lived in the
Institute, as did her students.
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She married
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She was recommended for her educational ability. As an educator, she promoted religious and moral goals. She was described as mother figure for her students, who appreciated her for her tenderness and treated her with gratitude and respect. Aware that her students were, by regulation, not allowed to
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Ivan
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The goal of the institute at the time was to give their students a high education in order to make them better mothers and teachers to their children, and reportedly, the education of the graduates from the institute normally had a level of knowledge which far exceeded their husbands. Her former
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students, reportedly, often returned to the institute to have her approval of their suitors and show her their children and ask for her advice. Empress Maria
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economic ruin. As a poor widow with two daughters, she applied for help from the
Russian embassy in Paris to return to Saint Petersburg. She encountered
194:Бюлер Ф. А., Тимощук В. В. Императрица Мария Феодоровна в её заботах о Смольном монастыре. 1797—1802 (недоступная ссылка) // Русская старина, 1890.
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wine merchant Jean
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Upon the succession of emperor Paul I in 1796, she was awarded the
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A street in Saint
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