during Easter 1900 on the eve of their wedding. After the wedding, the couple boarded the Greek royal yacht and sailed to the
Bay of Naples. They spent their honeymoon in Italy and traveled around
Austria-Hungary. Grand Duchess Maria and her husband settled in apartments located within the
New Michael Palace on the
Palace Quay in
Saint Petersburg, the household of her father-in-law, Grand Duke Michael Nicholaievich. They shared the large palace with the Grand Duke's widowed father and two unmarried brothers:
Grand Duke Nicholas Mikhailovich, and
Grand Duke Sergei Mihailovich, to whom Maria Gerogievna became particularly close. The family had Milkhailovkoye near
Peterhof as their summer country retreat. Two years, two months and two days later on 22 August 1903, she had her second daughter and last child
Princess Xenia Georgievna. Shortly after Xenia's birth, Grand Duchess Maria's father in law became paralyzed by a stroke and moved permanently to the south of France to recover. In the summer of 1900, Maria Georgievna visited Crimea with her husband.
Harax As Grand Duchess Maria Georgievna was very fond of everything English, the villa was constructed in the English style with local limestone, but they gave the property a Greek name,
Harax, the fortress, in memory of an ancient fortress that once stood on the tip of Ai-Todor. Construction took place between 1905 and 1907. Harax, encompassing 46 rooms, lay upon a gray stone foundation extending to the surrounding terraces in a cruciform plan. The two-story house, overlooking the
Black Sea with a red-tiled roof and dotted with chimneys, was decorated by the Grand Duchess with English furniture, silverware, textiles, and wallpaper all imported from England. The property was later expanded adding a farm, a playhouse for their daughters, housing for their staff's family and a church in 1908. Husband and wife both took on gardening with enthusiasm working on the surrounding park. As Harax was on walking distance from Livadia Palace, the residence in Crimea of Tsar Nicholas II and his immediate family, the Tsar and his children were frequent visitors. For seven years the Grand Duke and his wife led a quiet life in Crimea, returning to St Petersburg in the winter for the social season at the Imperial capital. With a poor command of Russian, Grand Duchess Maria spoke in French with her husband and in English with her daughters. Princess Nina, the eldest was described by as "dark, calm and indolent" while Xenia, the youngest was "blond, vivacious and full of life". For Maria Georgieva, who had been so close to her father it was a terrible blow. For many weeks, she was inconsolable. Grand Duke George was a devoted father and husband, but the Grand Duchess never fell in love with him. She never liked Russia either and eventually became estranged from her husband. == War and Revolution==