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
in 1912 she was summoned to Nicholas’s study, where he asked her,
‘What is going on in the nursery?’ – or, as Anna Vyrubova would
have it, ‘rebuked her severely’.9 When Tyutcheva explained her
position, voicing her objections to Rasputin’s familiarity with the
children and her own strongly held opinions on how the girls should
be brought up, the tsar responded:
‘So you do not believe in the sanctity of Grigory?’ . . . I answered
negatively and the Emperor said ‘And what if I told you that all
these difficult years I have survived only because of his prayers?’
‘You have survived them because of the prayers of the whole of
Russia, Your Majesty,’ I replied. The Emperor started to say that
he was convinced it was all a lie, that he did not believe these
stories about R., that the pure always attracts everything dirty.10
Tyutcheva remained in her post for a while after this dressing-
down, Nicholas and Alexandra always reluctant to dismiss anyone
because of the attendant gossip, but finally, in March 1912 and still unrepentant, she was sent back to her home in Moscow, ‘for talking
too much and lying’, as Alexandra told Xenia.11 Iza Buxhoeveden
was sorry to see how ‘deeply distressed’ Tyutcheva was to have to
leave the girls, for she loved them dearly. But it was, sadly, her own fault: ‘What she said carelessly was twisted and turned into marvellous stories, which did the Empress a great deal of harm.’12 But she
continued to write regularly and before too long was allowed to
make occasional visits to see her former charges. Anastasia in particular remained strongly attached to her friend Savanna, and exchanged
letters with her until 1916.13
Tyutcheva was not the only member of the imperial household
to be caught up in the controversy. Mariya (Mary) Vishnyakova,
who after seeing the girls through their early years had become
nursemaid to Alexey in 1909, had at first been an ardent admirer
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of Grigory. But she had of late been suffering from the strain of
her difficult job. When, in the spring of 1910, Alexandra recom-
mended she go for a visit to Grigory at Pokrovskoe in the company
of three other women, Vishnyakova had returned, accusing him of
having sexually assaulted her and begging the empress to protect
her children from his ‘diabolical’ influence.14 There appears to be
no foundation in the disturbed Vishnyakova’s accusation. Anna
Vyrubova and others described her as ‘over-emotional’; indeed,
according to Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna, during a subse-
quent investigation of Vishnyakova’s allegations, the hapless nurse-
maid was caught in bed with a Cossack from the imperial guard.15
Nicholas and Alexandra were as reluctant to dismiss her as they had
been Tyutcheva; she had served the family loyally for fifteen years
and was greatly loved by the children. She was therefore sent to the
Caucasus for a rest cure, and the following June, 1913, was quietly
retired rather than dismissed from service, with a comfortable
pension and her own three-bedroom flat in the commandant’s quar-
ters at the Winter Palace. Right up to the revolution, Nicholas and
Alexandra continued to pay for Mary to have annual rest cures in
the Crimea.16 There would be no replacement for her though; her
role would increasingly be taken by Alexey’s
dyadka
Derevenko, nor would there be any new governess for his sisters. The imperial family closed ranks, trusting to just a few loyal retainers. Trina Schneider
*
would act as chaperone for Maria and Anastasia, while the older
sisters would be accompanied on outings by one or other of
Alexandra’s ladies-in-waiting. Iza Buxhoeveden was finally taken on
formally as a lady-in-waiting in 1914, after which she and Nastenka
Hendrikova took over escorting Olga and Tatiana into town. But
over and above them all and keeping an eagle eye on the girls’ moral
welfare was ‘the old hen’, mistress of the robes Elizaveta Naryshkina.17
The loss of Sofya Tyutcheva left a still sick Alexandra with a lot
to prepare for the spring and summer seasons; for she had to ‘select
and organize the dresses, hats, coats for 4 girls’ to see them through
* According to Dr Botkin’s son Gleb, Schneider was ‘extremely priggish’, so much so that she ‘forbade the Grand Duchesses to stage a play because the dialogue contained the highly improper word “stockings”’. Botkin,
Real Romanovs
, p. 79.
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first a trip south to Livadia, then on to a series of formal engage-
ments in Moscow in May for which the girls needed ‘to be dressed
very elegantly’, and back to Moscow later in the year for the celebrations for the anniversary of the defeat of Napoleon in 1812. A
selection of tea dresses and semi-formal dresses would be required,
at considerable expense.18
Surviving accounts for Maria’s wardrobe allowance during
1909–10 provide a fascinating insight into the kind of money being
spent on each daughter on a wide range of items. All of Maria’s
accounts for that year are meticulously itemized, expenditure on
wardrobe alone amounting to 6,307 roubles (something like £14,500
today). Everything is accounted for: from ribbons, pins, lace, combs, handkerchiefs; to perfume and soap sent from Harrods to the St
Petersburg
parfumier
Brocard & Co; to her manicurist Madame Kühne; to Alice Guisser for repairs and cleaning of her lace; to her
mother’s
coiffeur
Henri-Joseph Delacroix; as well as payments for visits to the American dentist Dr Henry Wallison who had premises
on the upmarket Moika Embankment.19 A considerable variety of
footwear was purchased for Maria at Henry Weiss on 66 Nevsky
Prospekt, whose shoes all bore the legend ‘Fournisseur de S. M.
L’Impératrice de Russie’: thirty-two different pairs ranging from soft glacé leather pumps of various colours, to demi and high button
boots, sandals, felt boots and fur-lined overshoes. The smart firm
of Maison Anglaise on the Nevsky supplied silk and Lisle thread
stockings; swimming costumes and bathing caps came from Dahlberg,
and Robert Heath, ‘Hatter to HM the Queen and all the Courts of
Europe’, sent out hats from his fashionable London store at Hyde
Park Corner. The French couturier Auguste Brisac (next door to
Weiss in a prime spot at 68 Nevsky Prospekt), worked exclusively
for ladies of the imperial family and members of the court, his sixty staff creating the very latest Parisian gowns for special occasions.
But for more simple, day-to-day clothing, Alexandra had garments
made for her daughters by the Russian dressmaker Kitaev, and, true
to her frugal nature, got him to alter hand-me-downs from the older
girls to fit Maria, or enlarge clothes that she was growing out of.
In one year alone Kitaev supplied:
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a grey suit with a silk lining of a foreign fabric – 115 roubles, a
blue sheet-wadded silk-lined suit – 125 roubles, a blue cheviot
suit with a downy silk-lined collar and cuffs of dark mink – 245
roubles, a suit in the English style with a silk lining and a pleated skirt –135 roubles. He also altered a suit – made a new fur, a
new lining and made the slip longer – 40 roubles. He also altered
Olga Nikolaevna’s old suit for her – 35 roubles; made a long
overcoat of hand-made linen – 35 roubles; made two skirts longer
and bought some more fabric for that; made 3 skirts longer and
broader and made new linings for them – 40 roubles; made 4
jackets broader and their sleeves longer – 40 roubles; made new
belts for two skirts and made them broader – 15 roubles; altered
the eldest sister’s riding suit – the jacket, the skirt and the riding breeches – 50 roubles; mended a jacket – 7 roubles.20
*
In the last week of Lent 1912, the family headed south to Livadia
for their first Easter at the White Palace. They arrived in a still
cold and snowy Crimea, at a time of religious contemplation and
sobriety, with long hours spent standing in church and endless
prayers before candle-lit icons. The children’s time was occupied in
the days before Easter in painting and decorating dozens of hard-
boiled eggs that were traditionally exchanged to celebrate Christ’s
resurrection. On Great Saturday – a day when the bells rang out
across Russia and the faithful filled the churches to bursting – the
girls wore mourning, as was the tradition, during the final great
service leading up to midnight, the sadness finally broken by the
joyful announcement
Khristos voskres! –
‘Christ is Risen!’ Although it was now the early hours of the morning, the entire household
broke the long Lenten fast together, enjoying a great feast in the
White Hall. Its centrepiece was the two sweet cakes so looked
forward to after the long period of abstention: the
kulich
, a rich iced Easter cake made with almonds, candied orange peel and raisins;
and
pashka
,
a gloriously sweet blending of everything that the pious had not eaten for weeks: sugar, butter, eggs and cheese.
In private, as he had done every Easter since they were married
(except during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–5), Nicholas
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presented his wife with an exquisite Fabergé jewelled Easter egg to
add to her collection, a tradition begun by his father in 1885, when
Maria Feodorovna had received her own first Fabergé egg. This
particular Easter, Fabergé’s son Eugene delivered Alexandra’s gift in person at the Livadia Palace.21 It would become known as the
Tsarevich Egg, for inside the outer shell of dark blue lapis lazuli
mounted with a gold cagework of flowers, cupids and imperial eagles
was a miniature portrait of Alexey encrusted with diamonds. On
Easter Monday the family gathered in the Italian Courtyard for the
ceremony of greeting the troops – in Livadia this being the crew
of the
Shtandart
and officers of the Tsar’s Escort. As Nicholas exchanged the traditional three kisses and greetings Tatiana and
Olga helped hand out the painted porcelain Easter eggs that the
imperial couple distributed every Easter.22
Whenever she was in the Crimea Alexandra always tried to visit
the TB sanatoria in the region of which she was patron, two of
which – the military and naval hospitals on the imperial estate at
Massandra – she had had built and paid for out of her own fortune.
There was also the Alexander III Sanatorium in Yalta catering to
460 patients, which she had opened in 1901. The care of the sick
had always been one of the few socially acceptable pursuits that
royal princesses could engage in, and Alexandra was determined that
her daughters should continue this family tradition. Elizaveta
Naryshkina was somewhat concerned about the children being
brought into contact with highly infectious TB patients: ‘Is it safe, Madame,’ she had asked the empress, ‘for the young Grand
Duchesses to have people in the last stage of consumption kiss their
hands?’ Alexandra’s response was unequivocal: ‘I don’t think it will
hurt the children, but I am sure it would hurt the sick if they thought that my daughters were afraid of infection.’ The children might love
Livadia but she wanted to ensure that they also learnt to ‘realize
the sadness underneath all this beauty’.23
In hospital visiting as in everything, the girls performed their
duty without complaint and with a smile. All five children took part
in White Flower Day, a major charitable event for the Anti-
Tuberculosis League and the Yalta sanatoria, celebrated on St
George’s Day, 23 April. The idea had originated with Margareta,
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Crown Princess of Sweden, and Alexandra had adopted it in Russia.
The day got its name from the white daisies, or marguerites, that
were carried wreathed round long wooden staffs. Holding their staffs
of flowers and dressed in white, the Romanov children walked round
the streets of Yalta taking donations in return for the gift of a flower, each of them proudly raising between 100 and 140 roubles that
year.24
One of the big social events of the Crimean season was another
charitable venture of the empress’s: the Grand Charity Bazaar in
aid of the sanatoria. Every year Alexandra enlisted the girls in busily knitting, embroidering and sewing, as well as painting water-colours
and making other hand-made items for sale, straining her own eyes
in the process. The bazaar had been held for the first time the
previous year, on the pier at Yalta, where the stall under its white
awning that she staffed with the girls had been besieged by the
fashionable ladies of Yalta eager to buy something made by their
own fair hands. There was barely room to move, with ‘people
pressing forward almost frenziedly to touch the empress’s hand or
her sleeve’.25 This in itself created great anxiety for the officers of the Okhrana and
Shtandart
, on the lookout always for any attack on the family. Their guard had been raised that year when a mild-looking old man in an old-fashioned frockcoat had approached the