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
for her daughter even though she had spent most of the day lying
down; but once again she had been obliged to leave early.1 Tatiana
should have shared the occasion with her sister but she was ill in
bed at the Winter Palace; a couple of days later the doctors confirmed that she had typhoid fever.2
*
Olga had been determined not to let these disappointments spoil
her evening. She looked lovely, ‘dressed in a simple pale-pink chiffon frock’. Much as at her sixteenth birthday ball in Livadia, ‘she danced every dance, enjoying herself as simply and wholeheartedly as any
girl at her first ball’.2 Her own record of the evening was rather
* In her letters Alexandra described it as ‘typhus’, much as she had Nicholas’s attack in 1900 and Olga’s in 1901, the names for the two quite different diseases often being used interchangeably at the time. Typhus is, however, lice-borne and caught in dirty, overcrowded conditions, which is clearly unlikely in either daughter’s case. Tatiana is thought to have contracted typhoid fever from an infected drink of lemonade taken at the Winter Palace.
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more prosaic: ‘I danced a lot – it was so much fun. A ton of people
. . . it was so beautiful.’3 She enjoyed the quadrille and the mazurka with many of her favourite officers and was happy to have her dear
friend Nikolay Sablin from the
Shtandart
in attendance. Meriel Buchanan was captivated by the sight of the eldest grand duchess
that evening, dressed with ‘classical simplicity’, her only necklace a simple string of pearls, but yet so irresistible with her ‘tip-tilted nose’. She ‘had a charm, a freshness, an enchanting exuberance that
made her irresistible’.4 Meriel Buchanan remembered seeing her
‘standing on the steps leading down from the gallery to the floor
of the ball-room, trying gaily to settle a dispute between three young Grand Dukes who all protested that they had been promised the
next dance’. It prompted a pause for thought: ‘watching her I
wondered what the future was going to hold for her, and which of
the many possible suitors who had been mentioned from time to
time she would eventually marry.’5
The issue of Olga’s future marriage had, inevitably, gained in
importance during the Tercentary year. Until now the imperial sisters had been a taboo subject in the Russian press, but here they were
for the first time being officially presented to the nation. Discussion of Olga’s role as eldest child had once more been raised behind the
scenes, when a crisis in the Russian succession broke during the
winter of 1912–13. When Alexey had been lying at death’s door at
Spala, Nicholas’s younger brother Mikhail had secretly gone off to
Vienna to marry his mistress, Natalya Wulfert – a divorcee and a
commoner – knowing that if Alexey died and he became heir
presumptive again Nicholas would forbid this morganatic marriage.
Mikhail hoped that if he married behind his brother’s back it would
be accepted as a fait accompli, but Nicholas was furious. And his
response was draconian: he demanded Mikhail renounce his right
to the throne or immediately divorce Natalya in order to prevent
a scandal. When Mikhail refused to do so, Nicholas froze Mikhail’s
assets and banished him from Russia. At the end of 1912 a manifesto
was published in the Russian papers removing Mikhail from the
regency, his military command and imperial honours. According to
the laws of succession, Grand Duchess Vladimir’s eldest son Kirill
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would become regent if Nicholas should die before Alexey was
twenty-one, but he and his two brothers who followed in the pecking
order were deeply unpopular in Russia. Instead Nicholas overruled
existing law and ordered Count Freedericksz to draft a manifesto
nominating Olga as regent with Alexandra as guardian during
Alexey’s minority. It was published early in 1913 without Nicholas
seeking, as he should have done, the Duma’s approval. It inevitably
provoked a furious objection from Grand Duchess Vladimir.
From her well-connected position at the British Embassy, Meriel
Buchanan could see that the imperial family was in a very bad way
that year:
The marriage of the Grand Duke Michael has caused a tremen-
dous upheaval and they say dear Emp.[eror] is heartbroken.
Nobody quite knows what is the matter with the little boy and
if the worst should happen the question of succession becomes
a serious one. Kyrill is of course the nearest but there is some
doubt as to whether any of the Vladimir lot will be allowed to
succeed as their mother was not an Orthodox when they were
born. It would then come to Dimitri and he would have to marry
one of the Emperor’s daughters.6
Rumours were clearly still circulating about a match between
Olga and Dmitri. The waspish Meriel found the thought rather
amusing; she had seen much of Dmitri Pavlovich of late on the
Petersburg social scene, where everyone had been learning the latest
dance crazes. ‘I had a very ardous [
sic
] lesson from Dimitri the other day’, she wrote to her cousin. ‘It would be rather “chic” if Dimitri
were one day Emperor of all the Russias to be able to say that he
taught me the Bunnyhug wouldn’t it?’7 All talk of the match soon,
however, evaporated when Dmitri Pavlovich proposed to his cousin,
Irina, Grand Duchess Xenia’s only daughter, only to be spurned in
favour of his friend Felix Yusupov. A distancing between Nicholas
and Dmitri followed as the year wore on, even though Dmitri
continued to serve as an ADC.
As for Olga, her romantic teenage thoughts were now firmly
directed much lower down the ranks, towards a favourite officer,
Alexander Konstantinovich Shvedov, a captain in the Tsar’s Escort.
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In her diary she referred to him by the acronym of AKSH and his
presence at afternoon tea parties at Aunt Olga’s was the focal point
of her very limited social life for much of the first half of that year.
These occasions were little more than get-togethers for high jinks
with a group of favourite hand-picked officers; of dancing to the
phonograph and playing childish games of cat-and-mouse, slap-on-
hands, hide-and-seek and tag. They were nominally supervised by
Olga Alexandrovna but regularly degenerated into a lot of giggling
and boisterous play that brought the four sisters into close physical proximity with men with whom they otherwise could never have
had such intimacy. It was the strangest and most perverse kind of
interplay – but one in which both their mother and their aunt saw
no harm. Here were Russian imperial grand duchesses on the brink
of womanhood indulging in infantile behaviour, the end result of
which was to leave the impressionable Olga swooning about a young
man who in every other way was totally off limits. ‘Sat with AKSH
the whole time and strongly fell in love with him’, she confided to
her diary on 10 February, ‘Lord, save us. Saw him all day long – at
liturgy and in the evening. It was very nice and fun. He is so sweet.’8
For weeks afterwards the pattern of her life beyond lessons, walks
with Papa, sitting with Mama and listening to Alexey say his prayers
at bedtime was the occasional day release to Auntie Olga’s in St
Petersburg to play silly games and gaze longingly at the handsome
mustachioed AKSH in his dashing Cossack
cherkeska
.
*
Tatiana was distraught at having to miss out on many of the
celebrations for the Tercentary in St Petersburg, not to mention the
trips to Aunt Olga’s, where she too had looked forward to seeing
her favourite officers. Because of her illness (which Dr Botkin and
Trina Schneider also soon contracted), the family was obliged to
leave the Winter Palace on 26 February and return to Tsarskoe
Selo; but before doing so Tatiana asked her nurse Shura Tegleva to
telephone Nikolay Rodionov and tell him that she would love it if
some of her officers would come and walk past her window at the
Winter Palace so she could at least see them. Rodionov and Nikolay
Vasilevich Sablin were only too happy to oblige and remembered
* A long Circassian collarless coat.
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seeing the poor sick girl, wrapped in a blanket, bowing to them at
the window.9
Upon her return to the Alexander Palace Tatiana was immediately
quarantined from her sisters and was very ill for more than a month;
on 5 March her beautiful long, chestnut hair had to be cropped short, though a wig was made of it for her to wear until her hair grew back
sufficiently (which it had done by the end of December).10 Confined
at home with her invalid mother, each looking after the other, it
wasn’t until early April that Tatiana finally ventured outside onto
Alexandra’s balcony, but it was still too cold and snowy to stay for
long. When she did at last go outside she was deeply self-conscious
about the wig. One day, when she was playing a skipping game in
the park with Maria Rasputin and some young officers from the Corps
de Pages, Alexey’s dog had run up to her barking; Tatiana got her
foot caught in the rope, tripped and as she fell ‘her hair suddenly
tumbled down and, to our amazement, we saw a wig drop off’, Maria
recalled. Poor Tatiana ‘revealed to our eyes and those of the two
embarrassed officers, the top of her head where a few short, sparse
hairs were just beginning to grow’. She was absolutely mortified, and
‘with one bound she was on her feet, had picked up her wig and
dashed towards the nearest clump of trees. We saw only her blushes
and vexation and she did not appear again that day.’11
During the winter months of 1913 at the Alexander Palace,
Nicholas’s diary is a testament to his hands-on parenting of his four daughters in lieu of his perpetually sick wife. No matter the amount
of paperwork on his desk, the number of meetings with ministers,
public audiences and military reviews that filled his day, at this time of year when they were home at Tsarskoe Selo he always found time
for his children. History may have condemned him many times over
for being a weak and reactionary tsar, but he was, without doubt,
the most exemplary of royal fathers. The months of January and
February were a special time for him and his daughters, during
which he treated them all to trips to see the ballets
The Little
Humpbacked Horse
,
Don Quixote
and
The Pharoah’s Daughter
– in which last they were thrilled to see Pavlova dance. As the eldest,
Olga (and Tatiana, until illness prevented her) enjoyed the added
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bonus of seeing the operas
Madame Butterfly
,
The Legend of the
Invisible City of Kitezh
and Wagner’s
Lohengrin
, which latter Olga found particularly beautiful and moving.12 But in the main, time
with Papa was spent out in the park, whatever the weather, sharing
invigorating walks, riding bicycles, helping him break the ice on the canals, skiing, sliding down the ice hill, and joined – when he was
well enough – by Alexey wearing his specially made boot with a
caliper. The girls so enjoyed having their father to themselves; he
was a fast, unrelenting walker and they had all learned to keep up
or be left behind, Olga in particular always walking closest to him
on one side, Tatiana on the other, with Maria and Anastasia running
back and forth in front of them, sliding on the ice and throwing
snowballs. It was clear to anyone who encountered the tsar and his
daughters in the Alexander Park how much pride he had in his girls.
‘He was happy that people admired them. It was as though his kind
blue eyes were saying to them: “Look what wonderful daughters I
have.”’13
*
On the evening of 15 May the family boarded the imperial train
for Moscow and the beginning of a two-week trip in the steamship
Mezhen
up the Volga from Moscow in celebration of the Tercentary.
It was an arduous tour during which they stopped off at the major
religious sites of the Golden Ring, a route taken by the first Romanov tsar from his birthplace to Moscow in 1613.14 It had been a major
pilgrimage route for centuries and was one that Alexandra had long
expressed a wish to see; Nicholas himself had not visited the area
since 1881. From a succession of holy sites at Vladimir, Bogolyubovo
and Suzdal the family travelled to Nizhniy Novgorod for a service
at its beautiful Cathedral of the Transfiguration; then back along
the Volga by steamer, arriving at Kostroma on 19 May. At each stop
there was a traditional welcome of bread and salt from local digni-
taries and clergy. Church bells rang out and military bands played,
as huge crowds of peasants gathered along the river banks – some
wading deep into the water – to catch a glimpse of the imperial