Do you know if Lutheran chapels were built specifically for such persons? Czar Paul was careful not to make too many demands on religion in his Fundamental Laws: only dynasts had to be Orthodox -- not spouses.
Unless, of course, one were the spouse of the sovereign or heir: in that case, conversion was expected -- if not required. So the record was mixed on the German Lutheran princesses who married into the extended imperial family: some converted (voluntarily), while others did not.
Grand Duchess Vladimir, born Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, was actually resistant to conversion -- but eventually caved into pressure, because her family found themselves increasingly closer to the throne. It wasn't until more than 30 years of marriage; but she finally relented in her opposition to Orthodoxy by joining the Russian church. For this, Czar Nicholas II commended his "Aunt Miechen".
But until that point, she had been a staunch Lutheran: I'm assuming that there had to be chapels for her and others like herself, who became Romanovs by marriage but not yet Orthodox Christians ...
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