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
Mott remembered dining with Grand Duke Vladimir – Nicholas’s
eldest uncle – who would be next in line to the throne after the
childless Mikhail, and after him, his sons Kryil, Boris and Andrey.
On 30 July Mott had joined the grand duke for lunch after attending
army manoeuvres. Upon arriving, Vladimir was handed a telegram
and immediately disappeared. His guest was left waiting for an hour
before the grand duke returned:
We sat down in silence; and as our host did not speak, the rest
of us could not do so. The changing of the plates and the constant
presenting of a fresh cigarette to the Grand Duke by the tall
Cossack who stood at other times immovable behind his chair,
alone relieved the stillness.58
After lunch the grand duke once more absented himself. It was
only later that Mott learned that the telegram that had cast such a
gloom over their lunch had contained the news of the birth of
Alexey.
Had he known then what Nicholas and Alexandra already knew,
the grand duke might well have been less gloomy. It has generally
been accepted that it was not until 8 September, nearly six weeks
after Alexey was born, that the baby first experienced ominous
bleeding from the navel. But bleeding had in fact occurred almost
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as soon as the umbilical cord was cut, and it had taken two days for
the doctors to bring it under control. On 1 August, Nicholas wrote
at length to Militza, on behalf of Alexandra, telling her that:
Thank God the day has passed calmly. After the dressing was
applied from 12 o’clock until 9.30 that evening there wasn’t a
drop of blood. The doctors hope it will stay that way. Korovin
is staying overnight. Fedorov is going into town and coming
back tomorrow . . . The little treasure is amazingly placid, and
when they change the dressing he either sleeps or lies there and
smiles. His parents are now feeling a little easier in their minds.
Fedorov says that the approximate amount of blood loss in 48
hours was from 1/8th to 1/9th of the total quantity of blood.59
The bleeding was frightening. Little Alexey had seemed so robust
– he had ‘the air of a warrior knight’ as Grand Duchess Xenia
remarked when she had first seen him.60 Militza had no doubt from
the start. With their exclusive access to Nicholas and Alexandra at
the time, she and Grand Duke Petr had driven over to the Lower
Dacha the day Alexey was born to congratulate his parents, as their
son Roman later recalled:
When they returned in the evening to Znamenka, my father
remembered that when he had bidden farewell, the Tsar had told
him that even though Alexei was a big and healthy child, the
doctors were somewhat troubled about the frequent splatters of
blood in his swaddling clothes. When my mother heard this, she
was shocked and insisted on the doctors being told about the
cases of haemophilia that were occasionally passed down in
the female line from the English Queen Victoria, who was the
Tsaritsa’s maternal grandmother. My father tried to calm her and
assured her that the Tsar had been in the best of spirits when
he had left. All the same, my father did indeed phone the palace
to ask the Tsar what the doctors had to say about the blood
splatters. When the Tsar answered that they hoped that the
bleeding would soon stop, my mother took the receiver and
asked if the doctors could explain the cause of the bleeding.
When the Tsar could not give her a clear answer, she asked him
with the calmest of voices she could manage: ‘I beg you, ask
them if there is any sign of haemophilia’, and she added that
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FOUR SISTERS
should that be the case, then the doctors of today would be able
to take certain measures. The Tsar fell silent on the phone for
a long time and then started to question my mother and ended
by quietly repeating the word that had staggered him: haemo-
philia.61
Mariya Geringer later recalled how Alexandra had sent for her
soon after Alexey was born. The bleeding, she told Mariya, had
been triggered by the midwife Günst swaddling the baby too tightly.
This was traditional Russian practice but the pressure of the tight
binding over Alexey’s navel had triggered a haemorrhage and had
caused him to scream out in a ‘frenzy’ of pain. Weeping bitter tears, Alexandra had taken Mariya’s hand: ‘If only you knew how fervently
I have prayed for God to protect my son from our inherited curse’,
she had told her, already only too aware that the blight of haemo-
philia had indeed descended on them.62 Nicholas’s first cousin, Maria Pavlovna, had no doubt that he and Alexandra had known almost
immediately that Alexey ‘carried in him the seeds of an incurable
illness’. They hid their feelings from even their closest relatives, but from that moment, she recalled, ‘the Empress’s character underwent
a change, and her health, physical as well as moral, altered’.63
For the remainder of that first month the couple were in a state
of denial, hoping against hope, once the bleeding had stopped, that
all would be well. And then almost six weeks later it had started
again, confirming the very worst fears.64 Dr Fedorov, whom Nicholas
and Alexandra liked and trusted, had been on hand at all times and
had drawn on the best possible medical advice in St Petersburg. But
it was already clear that the medical men could do little. Nicholas
and Alexandra’s son’s fate rested on a miracle: only God could protect him. But nobody in Russia must know the truth. The life-threatening
condition of the little tsarevich – ‘the hope of Russia’ – would remain a closely guarded secret, even from their nearest relatives.65 Nothing must undermine the security of the throne that Nicholas and
Alexandra were absolutely determined to pass on, intact, to their
son.Alexandra Feodorovna, Empress of Russia, was only thirty-two
but was already a physical wreck after ten physically and mentally
draining years of pregnancy and childbirth. Her always precarious
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mental state was severely undermined by the discovery of Alexey’s
condition and she tormented herself that she of all people had
unwittingly transmitted haemophilia to her much-loved and longed-
for son.
*
Her already melancholic air became an inexplicably tragic one to those not privy to the truth. The whole focus of the family
now dramatically shifted, to protecting Alexey against accident and
injury – to literally keeping him alive within their own closely
controlled domestic world. Nicholas and Alexandra abandoned their
newly refurbished apartments in the Winter Palace and ceased
staying in town for the court season. Tsarskoe Selo and Peterhof
would from now on be their refuge.
Alexey’s four still very young but highly sensitive sisters – Olga,
Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia – would bond ever more closely in
response to the family’s retreat and in support of their physically
vulnerable mother. In the late summer of 1904, the world of the
four Romanov grand duchesses began to shrink, at the very point
when they were eager to rush out and explore it. What no one then,
of course, knew was that as female children of the tsaritsa, one or
all of the sisters might be carriers of that terrible defective gene – a hidden time bomb that had already begun to reverberate across the
royal families of Europe. Alexandra’s elder sister Irene – who like
her was a carrier and who had married her first cousin, Prince Henry
of Prussia – had already given birth to two haemophiliac sons. The
youngest, four-year-old Heinrich, had died – ‘of the terrible illness of the English family’, as Xenia described it – just five months before Alexey was born. In Russia they called it the
bolezn gessenskikh
– ‘the Hesse disease’; others called it ‘the Curse of the Coburgs’.66 But
one thing was certain; in the early 1900s, the life expectancy of a
haemophiliac child was only about thirteen years.67
* Even in the early twentieth century haemophilia was little understood and was thought to be caused by a weakness in the blood vessels. It was not until the 1930s that scientists concluded that the fatal defect lay in the lack of proteins in the blood platelets which prevented the blood clotting in those with the condition.
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THE LITTLE PAIR
N
By the beginning of 1905, and despite the arrival of the long-awaited tsarevich, Russia was in crisis, as war continued to rage with Japan.
The Russian Imperial Army had not proved invincible in the East
and was demoralized, weary and undersupplied; press censorship
had become even more rigorous as a result. All comments in foreign
newspapers and magazines arriving in Russia that were in any way
critical of the war – and, by association, the tsarist system – were
heavily blacked out. A notable casualty was an article on the Russian succession in the
Illustrated London News
by journalist Charles Lowe.
Published shortly after Alexey’s birth it had been accompanied by
a portrait of Alexandra, captioned ‘The Mother of a Czar to Be’,
congratulating the Russians on ‘this ray of sunshine amidst the heavy clouds of national misfortune’, but adding provocatively that ‘the
advent of the Czarevitch has probably averted a revolution’. The
Russian censor had been much exercised in how to deal with this
inflammatory statement. It would have been considered sacrilegious
to obliterate the tsaritsa’s portrait on the page, so in the end the
entire article surrounding it was blacked out when the magazine
reached Russian readers.1 Such draconian censorship was a futile
gesture: on the discontented streets of St Petersburg industrial and
political unrest continued to build. It seemed to Grand Duke
Konstantin ‘as if the dam has been broken’. Russia, he said, ‘has
been seized with a thirst for change . . . Revolution is banging on
the door’.2
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THE BIG PAIR AND THE LITTLE PAIR
In a rare performance of public ceremonial Nicholas attended
the ritual of the Blessing of the Waters, traditionally marking the
end of the Christmas festival, held on 6 January in the Orthodox
calendar. The key moment came when he descended the Jordan
Staircase of the Winter Palace to the edge of the frozen River Neva,
to witness the Metropolitan of St Petersburg dip the gold cross into
the water three times through a hole in the ice in commemoration
of the baptism of Christ. After this a flagon of the sacred water was presented to the tsar to cross himself with. However, during the
traditional gun salute that followed, three of the charges fired from the battery on the opposite bank of the Neva – whether by accident
or design – proved to be lives not blanks. One of them smashed
into the windows of the Winter Palace’s Nicholas Hall which was
crowded with guests and showered grapeshot and glass over the
temporary wooden chapel on the ice in which Nicholas and Maria
Feodorovna and other members of the imperial family were gathered.
Nicholas was unhurt, and ‘never moved a muscle except to make
the Sign of the Cross’, as one eyewitness recalled, although his
‘quiet, resigned smile’ seemed ‘almost unearthly’.3 A later investigation suggested it had been a genuine error – shotted cartridges
having been left in the breech of the cannon after target practice.
The fatalistic Nicholas was, however, convinced that the live shells
had been intended for him.4 For a nation reading catastrophe into
every unfortunate incident in this ill-fated reign it was further proof that the autocracy was doomed.
Three days later, tragedy on a grand scale unfolded across St
Petersburg, which had been gripped for weeks by bitter industrial
unrest, exacerbated by mounting discontent with the war with Japan.
Hundreds were left dead and wounded when Cossack troops fired
on a rally of unarmed workers and their families who had marched
to the Winter Palace to present a petition to Nicholas begging for
political and industrial reform. The advent of Bloody Sunday, as it
became known, brought about a radical shift in the traditional
popular perception of the tsar as the protective ‘little father’ of the nation and a volatile nation descended into extreme violence as the
year went on. In February the Russian army was routed at Mukden
in Manchuria, and in mid-May the Baltic Fleet was decimated at
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Tsushima Strait. By the time peace was negotiated with Japan in
August, Nicholas’s Minister of the Interior, Petr Stolypin, had instigated a round of courts martial and summary executions to counter
the escalating violence.
Widespread unrest went hand in hand with a dramatic escalation
in the assassination of prominent government figures. Two of