Career
She committed suicide shortly after giving birth to a daughter, fathered by either Tsar Alexander or her other lover, Prince Vladimir Golitsyn. Her surname is also transliterated in Western European languages as Tourkestanoff, Tourkestanov, or Tourkestanow. Varvara Turkestanova, a third-generation émigré of Georgian noble descent, was part of the Turkestanishvili family, established in Russia in 1724.
She was born in Moscow.
Orphaned early in life, she was reared by her relative, General Vasily Arsenyev. Due to her charm and ingenuity, she gained popularity in the Muscovite high society.
By 1818, Varvara had also been in relationship with Prince Vladimir Golitsyn, a son of Varvara Golitsyna and a man 18 years her younger. In 1819, Varvara gave birth to a daughter, Maria, rumored to have been born of Tsar Alexander or Prince Golitsyn.
As Princess Turkestanova was unmarried, the news made a scandal at the court.
In despair, Varava ingested a fatal poison and died in Saint St. Petersburg, tended by the empress Maria Feodorovna. The death was officially pronounced as related to cholera. She was buried at the Alexander Nevsky Lavra.
Varvara Turkestanova"s French-language correspondence with her friend, the Swiss–French émigré and diplomat in Russian service, Ferdinand Christin, from 1813 to 1816 details the Russian court life of the early 19th century and was published in Russkiy arkhiv (Русский архив) in 1882.