Hello everybody, I have a few questions if any of you would be willing to answer.
Welcome to the forum VsriCo!
[1] If the Russian monarchy were to be restored, would the monarch be an Emperor or king?
If the Monarchy in Russia were reinstated, it would be an Empire. The contemporary Russia is a Federation that consists of many republics, regions and parts: it is an Empire in all but name. The Monarch could go by the title ‘Emperor’ or ‘Tsar’ or both.
[2] Today the Georgian Royal house of Mukhrani is active in Georgia, which is now a Sovereign state. Would this recent development add credibility to those who claim the GD's parents marriage was equal? Presumably a rule or two would have to be applied retroactively
Even if the Georgian Monarchy is restored tomorrow, that would affect the current living members only; it would have no effect in retrospective.
When Georgia was merged into Russian Empire, the Georgian Royals acquired the status of Russian nobility, not Royalty. Although the ancestors of Grand Duchess Leonida were Kings of Georgia and Armenia, the Bagrations were no long a Reigning House. The Mukhrani branch to which Princess Leonida belongs to, hadn’t reigned in any part of Georgia for centuries before Georgia became part of the Empire.
Another side of the argument regarding the legality of Maria Vladimirovna's parents' marriage is the fact that Grand Duke Vladimir was the (most widely) accepted Head of the Imperial House: as such, he had the right to decide whether a marriage of any member of the Family (including his) was equal or morganatic: he proclaimed his marriage to be equal.
Also, two years before his marriage to Princess Leonida (and according to most sources, before they even met), Grand Duke Vladimir issued the so-called Act of 1946, which confirmed the
Royal (as opposed to noble) status of the House of Bagration. This was done upon request of Prince Fernando of Bavaria and Bourbon, Infante of Spain, whose daughter, Infanta Mercedes, was set to marry Prince Iraklij (Princess Leonida's brother): Prince Fernando was worried that the marriage would be considered unequal (morganatic), so Grand Duke Vladimir issued his Act.
If the marriage of Grand Duke Vladimir and Princess Leonida is accepted as equal and at the same time, marriages of all other Romanov dynasts is considered morganatic, then Maria Vladimirovna could be considered the rightful Pretender to the Throne, even despite the Pauline Law. Article 30 of the Imperial Succession Laws stipulates that
should there be no more male dynasts (not Romanovs - Romanov dynasts),
then the rights of succession are transferred to the female line of the last Reigning Monarch.
Depending on many complicated points, it could be either Maria Vladimirovna or Prince Nicholas Romanovich (the other pretender to the Headship of the Imperial House and President of the Romanov Family Association).
[3] In this thread people have implied that Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna's son, Grand Duke George Mikhailovich is a Prussian prince and not entitled to a Russian title. What's the reasoning behind this (This questions assumes that the GD's parents marriage was equal)?
Prince George belongs to the House of Hohenzollern, the house of his father, Prince Franz Wilhelm of Prussia. Grand Duke Vladimir knew perfectly well that his daughter's (and her son's) shaky claims to the Headship of the Imperial House would weaken even further because George was a Prussian (German) Prince, so he sought to legally change the baby's name to Romanov: thus, George was registered in French registry as Grand Duke George of Russia. It is often said that this decision eventually led to separation and divorce of Prince Franz Wilhelm and Maria Vladimirovna. Prince Franz Wilhelm never acknowledged the name changed: shortly after the separation, he gave an interview where he disputed the name change and showed Prince George's German passport (issued prior to the French one), where the boy was registered as Prince George of Prussia.
Grand Duke Vladimir may have proclaimed that Prince George belongs to the House of Romanov but it is arguable at best whether he had the right to do so. As for the name change, the boy's surname could have been changed to anything they wished: that didn't make him any more Romanov.
[4] Some people have named Paul Ilyinsky as the senior most living Romanov up until his death, what's the reasoning behind this?
I guess Prince Paul could have been considered the senior most living male Romanov after Grand Duke Vladimir’s death in 1992. He also succeeded the Grand Duke as Head of the House of Holstein-Gottorp (although this is arguable). However, although Prince Paul was perhaps the senior most living
Romanov, he was certainly not the senior most
dynast: Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich (first cousin of Prince Dmitri - Paul's father) elevated Grand Duke Dmitri's morganatic wife Audrey Emery and their descendants to Russian Knyaz rank (equivalent of 'prince') as a nobility and non-dynastical rank) and thus a new branch of Romanovs, the Romanovsky-Ilyinsky, was created.
Theoretically, following Grand Duke Vladimir's death, Prince Paul could have been one of the contenders to the Headship of the Imperial House (if we exclude Maria Vladimirovna because of Pauline Law or other reasons): indeed, following the collapse of the USSR, a private delegation of Russian Monarchists approached Prince Paul with request to come and 'claim the Russian Throne' (an offer he denied). However, the morganatic marriage of his parents, as well as his non-dynast status effectively excluded him from any sort of Line to the Succession.
The accepted Heads (and dynasts) of the different Romanov branches were:
1) Grand Duke Vladimir
2) Prince Vsevolod Ioannovich - the Konstantinovichi branch. After Prince Vsevolod's death in 1973, the male line of Konstantinovichi branch of the Romanov House died out.
3) Prince Roman Petrovich - the Nikolaevichi branch. His son, Prince Nicholas Romanovich, succeeded to his claims. Prince Nicholas's heir is his brother, Prince Dimitri. Their nephew, Prince Rostislav, is expected to succeed to their claims.
4) Prince Andrei Alexandrovich - the Mihailovichi branch. After his death in 1981, the Mihailovichi line was continued in his son, Prince Andrew (whose Godparents included Edward VIII of the UK). Prince Andrew has legitimate male children and grandchildren. However, since his marriage and that of his children were morganatic, they are not dynasts.
In 1969, nearly all Romanov dynasts (excluding Grand Duke Vladimir but including all other Heads of the Romanov branches) wrote a letter to Grand Duke Vladimir where they proclaimed his marriage to Princess Leonida unequal and maintained that his wife could have no higher status than the wives of the other Romanov Princes / dynasts.