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In page Natalia Sheremeteva:

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Several days after the wedding, the entire Dolgorukov family was exiled to Beryozov, a remote Arctic town. She gave birth to two sons in exile but was allowed to return to Moscow ten years later, after her husband's execution. She took the veil in Florovsky Convent of Kiev, but not before her children had grown up and married. Her short memoir "Handwritten Notes" (Своеручные записки, Svoyeruchnye zapiski) was written shortly before that date. It appeared in print in 1810.[citation needed] Literary historian D. S. Mirsky praised the memoir for the "great simplicity and unpretentious sincerity of the narrative" and its "beautiful, undefiled Russian".[1]