According to her published memoirs, Leonida first met Vladimir Kirillovich at a restaurant in France during World War II. But they did not see each other again for a few years, when both were making extended visits to
Sanlúcar de Barrameda, Spain, where their hosts happened to be neighbors. Vladimir was staying with his aunt, the
Princess Beatrice, Duchess of Galliera, a first cousin of both the murdered
Emperor Nicholas II and
Empress Alexandra Feodorovna. On 13 August 1948 (civilly on 12 August 1948) at the Orthodox Church of St. Gerasimus, Lausanne, Switzerland, Princess Leonida wed for the second time, marrying religiously The Grand Duke, who used the pre-revolutionary Russian title
Grand Duke, the style
Imperial Highness and claimed to be, from 1938 to his death, Head of the Russian Imperial House by virtue of being hereditary heir by
primogeniture to the throne of the Romanovs according to the Fundamental Laws of the Russian Empire, as codified in 1906 and in force until overturned by the
Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. As his
consort she used the title Grand Duchess Leonida Georgievna. By him, she had another daughter,
Maria Vladimirovna, who claims to have succeeded her father upon his death in 1992. In 1946, Leonida's brother,
Prince Irakly, married King
Alfonso XIII of Spain's maternal niece,
Princess Doña María de las Mercedes de Baviera y Borbon (1911–1953), obtaining Vladimir's recommendation that the Spanish pretender,
Don Juan, Count of Barcelona, would accept the marriage as
dynastic, which he did not. The Count of Barcelona, then Head of the Royal House of Spain, considered the issue of this marriage to be disqualified from the Spanish succession. The only son of this marriage was sponsored at his baptism by the Count of Barcelona but the latter's refusal to recognize his god-son as a Spanish dynast led to the Bagrations' alienation from the Spanish Royal Family according to
Guy Stair Sainty. In 1948 Vladimir, relying on his own earlier advice on the Bagrations' historically royal status, chose to wed Leonida
dynastically in
Lausanne, Switzerland. ==Controversy==