When Prince Dashkov died in 1764, Yekaterina decided to ask to leave court and was granted permission, starting in 1768 a 14-year-long journey through Europe, where she was welcomed in several courts with respect and admiration.
Paris In
Paris, she became good friends with
Diderot and
Voltaire, who admired and respected her. She also met
Benjamin Franklin in the French capital on February 3, 1781 and the two became close friends, corresponding frequently and showing mutual respect and admiration.
United Kingdom and Ireland Yekaterina also corresponded with
Garrick,
Dr. Blair, and
Principal William Robertson, meeting them during her visit to the
United Kingdom and entrusting the education of her son Pavel to the latter. She was also friends with English painter
Georgiana Hare-Naylor, daughter of
Jonathan Shipley, whom she met in London. She lived in
Edinburgh from December 1776 to June 1779 at
Palace of Holyrood, where she was involved and wounded in a sword duel with another lady, and donated a collection of Russian commemorative medals to the
University of Edinburgh on the occasion of her son Pavel's graduation from that school. Having recovered from her duel wound, she traveled to
Ireland to visit her friend Lady Catherine Hamilton, daughter of
John Ryder, the Archbishop of Tuam. She can be seen in a painting by
Francis Wheatley watching from a balcony a review of the
Dublin Volunteers on November 4, 1779, during her Irish visit. File:Catherine Dashkova by O.Humphrey (1770s, Hermitage).jpg|Yekaterina Romanovna in the 1770s by
Ozias Humphry File:Francis Wheatley - The Dublin Volunteers on College Green.jpg|''
The Dublin Volunteers on College Green by
Francis Wheatley. ==Career==