Alexander I of Alaska (Napoleon's World)

Aleksandr Nikolayevitch Dmtirov (Russ: Александр Николэйевич Дмайтров) (9/1/1879-10/23/1960), more commonly known as Alexander I of Alaska, was the 5th Tsar of Alaska, reigning from 1934 until his death in 1960. While his reign was considerably shorter than that of his father, Nicholas I (who ruled for 41 years), Alexander I is still styled as Alexander the Great (a name occassionally afforded his nephew, Alexander III of Alaska). His reign was notable for expansive democratic reform, his transformation of Alaska from a sparsely populated backwater into a legitimate regional power, the growth of the Alaskan economy through the oil industry and trade, and for his victory in the Alaskan-Siberian War, as well as pioneering semi-socialized medicine and vast education initiatives. The Premier for the bulk of his reig, Yakov Sighovaryin, is often regarded as Alaska's best Premier, much in the way that Alexander I is regarded as one of its best Tsars. He was succeeded by his son Aleksandr Aleksandreyevitch Dmitrov as Alexander II following his death on October 23rd, 1960.