Ekaterina and her daughter Alexandra, supported by the Prince of Dietrichstein family, converted themselves to Roman Catholicism from Russian Orthodoxy in 1807. She resided in Rome in the palace on the Via della Scrofa, which the Romans called the Palazzo Golitsyn. Ekaterina Shuvalova died in Rome and her body was transported to Saint Petersburg and was buried in the Alexander Nevsky Monastery.
Ekaterina and her daughter Alexandra, supported by the Prince of Dietrichstein family, converted themselves to Roman Catholicism from Russian Orthodoxy in 1807. She resided in Rome in the palace on the Via della Scrofa, which the Romans called the Palazzo Golitsyn. Ekaterina Shuvalova died in Rome and her body was transported to Saint Petersburg and was buried in the Alexander Nevsky Monastery.
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