Read The Romanov Sisters (Four Sisters) Online
Authors: Helen Rappaport
Tags: #History, #Europe, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Biography & Autobiography, #Women's Studies, #Family & Relationships, #Royalty, #1910s, #Civil War, #WWI
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fell seriously ill with what was at first put down to a severe case of influenza and then diagnosed as ‘an abdominal typhus peculiar to
the Crimea’, although the foreign press widely referred to it as
typhoid fever.50 Its onset provoked widespread concern for Nicholas,
at a time when Russia was viewed as an important international
power during the hostilities of the Boer War in Africa and the Boxer
Rebellion in China.
Many papers referred to the tsar’s supposed delicate health and
that he appeared to have suffered from attacks of vertigo and severe
headaches in the previous three years.51 The reality was that despite being a heavy smoker, Nicholas in general enjoyed very good health
and was extremely physically active. The attack of typhoid while
serious was not ultimately life-threatening, but in all he was confined to bed for five weeks, suffering at times from agonizing pain in his
back and legs and becoming very thin and weak. Despite her preg-
nancy, Alexandra had from the first taken exclusive control of his
nursing and proved an exceptionally capable sickbed nurse. Aside
from the loyal help of Mariya Baryatinskaya, she allowed virtually
nobody near her precious husband and demonstrated ‘a very strong
will’. She also ‘made the most of the fact that she found herself
alone with the Czar in such an emergency’, vetting any urgent
documents regarding affairs of state and ‘with exquisite tact . . .
know[ing] how to keep from the Czar all that might have caused
him excitement or worry’.52
Nicholas was flattered by his wife’s excessive care: ‘My darling
Alix nursed and looked after me like the best of sisters of mercy. I
can’t describe what she was for me during my illness. May God
bless her.’53 The girls meanwhile were sent away from the palace,
for fear of infection, and lodged at the house of one of the imperial entourage who had daughters of his own. Alexandra insisted on
having them brought to the palace every day, ‘to a place where she
could see them through a window, and looked at them for some
time to convince herself that they were in perfect health’. Beyond
the sickroom, however, the spectre of a Russian throne without a
male heir once more rose, provoking considerable concern about
what would happen should Nicholas die.
Back in 1797, Emperor Paul I had regularized the transfer of
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power in Russia by abandoning the old law of primogeniture and
setting down clear rules on a male-only line of succession. This had
been done in an attempt to avoid palace coups of the kind that had
brought the mother he hated, Catherine the Great, to power.54 Until
now, with previous tsars having plenty of sons, there had been no
reason to seek changes to the Fundamental Laws on the succession.
Even though Olga was not yet five years old, neither Nicholas nor
Alexandra wished his brother, twenty-one-year-old Grand Duke
Mikhail, to accede to the throne in preference to their own daughter
or the child Alexandra was carrying. She certainly was distraught at
the prospect; her baby might well be a boy, and she insisted that
she be nominated regent in anticipation of that and until her son
came of age. Although desperately ill, Nicholas was consulted and
sided with his wife. His minister of finance, Count Witte, held a
meeting with other ministers in Yalta; they all agreed that there was no precedent in Russian law that allowed a pregnant tsaritsa to rule
in hopes of eventually producing a son, and it was decided that if
the tsar died, they would swear an oath of allegiance to Mikhail as
tsar.55 Should Alexandra’s baby turn out to be a boy, Witte was
confident that Mikhail would renounce the throne in his nephew’s
favour.
In the aftermath of his illness, Nicholas remained mindful of
protecting his eldest daughter’s dynastic interests, and instructed
government ministers to draft a decree to the effect that Olga would
succeed to the throne if he should die without a son and heir.56 The
impact on Alexandra of this debate over the succession was profound;
psychologically, it marked the onset of a creeping paranoia that the
throne might be wrested from her yet-to-be-born son by plotters
in court circles and it further alienated her from the rest of the
Romanov family, whom she mistrusted. In one thing she was fiercely
resolute: she would defend the Russian throne for her future son,
at
absolutely any
cost.
While their parents had both been hidden from view for weeks,
the three Romanov sisters had been seen a great deal in and around
Yalta that autumn. ‘Nothing can be prettier’, wrote a local corre-
spondent, ‘than the three little girls in the carriage, chattering and asking questions, and bowing when passers-by take their hats off to
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them’, adding somewhat mischievously that ‘the smallest Princess
is living proof of the inefficiency of Professor Schenk’s theories’.57
For some time the girls continued to be the only public face of the
Russian imperial family and according to press reports were extraor-
dinarily unspoilt, thanks to the tsaritsa’s principle that her children should be ‘brought up without any extreme or special consideration
on account of their high position and imperial birth’. They were
always modestly dressed in ‘cheap, white dresses, short English
stockings and plain, light shoes’; the temperature in their rooms was
‘always kept moderate’ and they went out into the fresh air even in
the coldest of weather. ‘All useless, heavy etiquette and luxury are
forbidden.’ The tsar and tsaritsa often went to see their children in the nursery; but even stranger and contrary to normal royal protocol, the correspondent reported with incredulity that ‘the august parents
play with their daughters as mortal parents usually do’.58
The two older girls were already developing very clear and
different personalities. Olga was ‘very kind hearted and of noble
character’. She spoke Russian and English fluently, was talented at
music and already a good pianist. Although she and Tatiana had a
little English donkey, the tsar had recently indulged Olga’s request
to ride side saddle ‘as grown up people do’, after she had admired
the Cossack members of the Tsar’s Escort. ‘Charming Tatiana’,
meanwhile, was ‘of a gay and lively temperament, and always quick
and playful in her movements’. Both were very attached to their
baby sister.59 No doubt they were, but Nicholas had already noted
that Maria, who was now toddling, ‘falls often, because her elder
sisters push her about and when one does not watch them they are
altogether inclined to treat her very roughly’. He was pleased to
report to his mother that Miss Eagar was doing an excellent job:
‘In the nursery all runs smoothly between nurse and the other girls,
– it is real paradise in comparison with the dismal past.’60
With Nicholas’s doctors insisting he take a long convalescence
in the Crimea, it was 9 January 1901 before the family left a beau-
tiful, balmy Yalta in the
Shtandart
. At Sevastopol where they disembarked for the imperial train to St Petersburg, Nicholas and
Alexandra received the news that Queen Victoria, whose health had
been failing for some time, had died at Osborne on 22 January (NS).
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When they arrived back to a grey and gloomy St Petersburg, the
Russian court season was immediately cancelled and the entire
imperial household went into mourning. As Alexandra was now four
months pregnant, the doctors would not allow her to travel to
England for the funeral. Instead she attended a memorial service
for her grandmother at the English Church in the capital, supported
by Nicholas, where, much to everyone’s surprise, she openly wept.
It was the first and only time many saw the tsaritsa give public
display to her feelings.61
The loss of her beloved grandmama was profound but fortunately
Alexandra remained well during this fourth pregnancy. Grand Duke
Konstantin thought she was looking ‘very beautiful’ when he saw
her in February and what is more she was feeling ‘wonderful, unlike
the other occasions’. For this reason, the grand duke noted in his
diary, ‘everyone is anxiously hoping that this time it will be a son’.
But such preoccupations were forgotten in May when five-year-old
Olga contracted typhoid at Peterhof.62 ‘She is separated from her
sibling upstairs in the only empty room . . . but under the roof it
is pretty hot’, Alexandra told a friend. ‘I spend most of the day with her; the stairs are tiring in my present condition.’ Olga was ill for five weeks and became very pale and thin; her long blonde hair had
to be cut short because the illness had started to make it fall out.
‘She loves to have me with her, and for as long as I am on my feet,
it is a delight to sit with her’, Alexandra added, for ‘to see a sick child really hurts and my heart weeps – God watch over her’.63 So
changed was Olga by the illness that when Tatiana was taken in to
see her sister she did not recognize her and wept.
When Madame Günst arrived at Peterhof in preparation for the
fourth baby, she became concerned that the tsaritsa’s exertions
looking after Olga might trigger a premature birth and she called
in the doctors.64 But all was well. At 3 a.m. on 5 June, Alexandra
went into labour at the Lower Dacha. It was very quick this time;
three hours later, and without complications, she gave birth to a
large, 11½ lb (5.2 kg) baby girl. Nicholas had little time to register any disappointment. It all happened so quickly, before the household
were up and about, giving himself and Alexandra ‘a feeling of peace
and seclusion’.65 They gave their new daughter the name Anastasia,
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from the Greek
anastasis
,
meaning ‘resurrection’; in Russian Orthodox usage the name was linked to the fourth-century martyr St Anastasia
who had succoured Christians imprisoned for their faith and was
known as the ‘breaker of chains’. In honour of this Nicholas ordered
an amnesty for students imprisoned in St Petersburg and Moscow
for rioting the previous winter.66 Anastasia was not a traditional
Russian imperial name but in naming her thus the tsar and tsaritsa
were perhaps expressing a profoundly held belief that God would
answer their prayers and that the Russian monarchy might yet be
resurrected – by the birth of a son.
The Russian people and the imperial family were, however,
extremely despondent; as US diplomat’s wife Rebecca Insley
observed, the arrival of Anastasia had ‘created such indescribable
agitation in a nation clamouring for a boy’.67 ‘My God! What a
disappointment! . . . a fourth girl!’ exclaimed Grand Duchess Xenia.
‘Forgive us Lord, if we all felt disappointment instead of joy; we
were so hoping for a boy, and it’s a fourth daughter’, echoed Grand
Duke Konstantin.68 ‘Illuminations, but Disappointment’ ran the
headlines of the
Daily Mail
in London on 19 June (NS). ‘There is much rejoicing, although there is a popular undercurrent of disappointment, for a son had been most keenly hoped for.’ The news-
paper could not but offer commiserations: ‘the legitimate hopes of
the Czar and Czarina have so far been cruelly frustrated, whatever
may be their private parental feelings towards their four little daughters . . . [who] had been born into an expectant world with distressing regularity’.69 In Russia the response was once again heavy with
superstitious resentment, as the French diplomat Maurice Paléologue
reported: ‘We said so, didn’t we! The German, the
nemka
, has the evil eye. Thanks to her nefarious influence our Emperor is doomed
to catastrophe.’70
In the face of so much negativity, and determined to show how
proud he was of his fourth daughter, Nicholas ordered the fullest
possible pageantry at her christening in August, which followed the
same format as those for her sisters, and after which ‘the cannon
boomed all the way from Peterhof back to the capital’. Later Nicholas entertained his illustrious guests to lunch, during which they ‘went
up to the supposedly happy father to present their felicitations’.
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Rebecca Insley reported that for once the tsar seemed unable to
conceal his dismay, for, when he turned to one of the ambassadors,
he was heard to say with a sad smile – ‘We must try again!’71
Three months later, Nicholas and Alexandra visited the new
French president, Emile Loubet, at Compiègne, leaving the girls at
Kiel in the care of Alexandra’s sister Irene. The security surrounding them was intense: the town swarmed with French police who were