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
– made the sign of the cross as they passed it’.83 In the afternoon,
Nicholas wearing field marshal’s uniform, and Alexandra and the
girls all in white, arrived in the capital in the
Aleksandriya
. Alexey, who was still recovering from his latest accident, had had to be left
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behind. From the royal landing stage at the Palace Bridge, the
imperial family walked the short distance to the Winter Palace
through crowds of people who fell onto their knees shouting hurrahs,
singing hymns and calling out blessings to Nicholas.84
‘Kostroma last year is nothing to this,’ said one eyewitness, ‘they’ll lay down their lives for him.’85
At 3 p.m. after a gun salute had thundered out across the city,
some 5,000 court officials, military and members of the aristocracy
gathered in the Nikolaevsky Hall of the Winter Palace for a solemn
and intensely moving
Te Deum
, sung in front of the talismanic icon of the Virgin of Kazan. This was the same icon Field Marshal
Mikhail Kutuzov had prayed to in August 1812 before leaving for
Smolensk to take on Napoleon, who had just invaded Russia. During
the service Nicholas ‘prayed with a holy fervor which gave his pale
face a movingly mystical expression’, noted the French ambassador
Maurice Paléologue, while Alexandra stood, characteristically tight-
lipped, by his side.86 The assembled crowd ‘all looked tremendously
tense and alive, as if gathering up their strength to offer it collectively to their ruler’.87 ‘Faces were strained and grave’, recalled Maria
Pavlovna. ‘Hands in long white gloves nervously crumpled hand-
kerchiefs and under the large hats fashionable at the time many eyes
were red with crying’. After the service, the court chaplain read out the manifesto declaring that Russia was at war with Germany, after
which Nicholas raised his right hand in front of the gospel and
announced: ‘We will not make peace until the last man and the last
horse of the enemy shall have left our soil.’88 Immediately afterwards,
‘quite spontaneously, from some 5,000 throats broke forth the
national anthem, which was not less beautiful because the voices
choked with emotion. Then cheer upon cheer came, until the walls
rang with their echo!’89
The tsar and tsaritsa then processed out. Nicholas’s face was a
blank; Alexandra more than ever looked like ‘a Madonna of Sorrows,
with tears on her cheeks’ and stooped to console people as she
passed; others fell on their knees or tried to grasp at Nicholas and
kiss his hand. When he emerged on the balcony overlooking Palace
Square, a vast crowd of around 250,000 people, who had been
patiently waiting ‘quiet, with faces grave and rapt’ knelt down ‘as
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GOD SAVE THE TSAR!
one’ ‘in mute adoration’.90 Nicholas made the sign of the cross and
brought Alexandra forward to greet them, after which he and she
retreated inside. But the crowd did not want to let them go: ‘Each
time that the sovereigns left the balcony the people clamoured for
their reappearance with loud hurrahs and sang
God Save the Tsar.
’91
The day had been ‘absolutely wonderful’, Tatiana later wrote in
her diary, but that evening for once there were no games of domi-
noes for Nicholas, and no reading aloud to his family.92 Returning
to Peterhof at 7.15, they all spent it ‘quietly’.93 The next morning, central St Petersburg seemed like a ghost town. The magnet of
everyone’s attention was now the railway stations as column after
column of troops marched in great lines towards them singing
popular Russian folk songs, waving their khaki caps and leaving
behind a trail of sobbing women and children.94 On 22 July (4 August
NS) Russia’s ally Great Britain declared war on Germany, upon
which Nicky received a telegram from the king, his cousin Georgie.
They both were fighting ‘for justice and right’, he said, and he hoped
‘this horrible war will soon be over’. In the meantime, ‘God bless
and protect you my dear Nicky . . . Ever your very devoted cousin
and friend.’95
In those first heady days of July–August 1914 Russia was gripped
by a consuming, almost feudal sense of nationhood that harked back
to the old Mother Russia of legend. ‘It seemed as if the Tsar and
his people embraced each other strongly, and in this embrace stood
before the great Russian land’, declared
Novoe Vremya
in suitably jingoistic terms.96 The declaration of war was a fitting coda to all
the ceremonial of the previous year’s Tercentary. ‘We believe
unshakeably that all our faithful subjects will rise with unanimity
and devotion for the defence of Russian soil’, Nicholas had declared
in his manifesto, adding the hope that ‘internal discord will be
forgotten in this threatening hour, that the unity of the Tsar with
his people will become still more close’.97
The capital might have been gripped by intensely felt patriotism
of a kind that every Russian knew from Tolstoy’s
War and Peace
, but in the countryside most of the peasants were resigned rather than
enthusiastic, knowing full well that the burden of the war effort
would fall on them, as it had always done. Rasputin was in despair
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that his warning had gone unheeded and that he had not had the
opportunity to persuade Nicholas, in person, against going to war.
*
The words of a telegram he had sent in the final days before war
was declared have, ever since, been seen as prophetic:
There is a terrible storm cloud over Russia: calamity, much grief,
no ray of light, an incalculable ocean of tears, and as for blood
– what can I say? There are no words, just an indescribable
horror. I know they all want war from you, even those who are
loyal, but without knowing that the price is destruction . . .
Everything will be drowned in much blood.98
*
There remained one final grandiose public act of ceremonial for
the Romanov family to perform – in Russia’s historic capital, Moscow, on 5 August. The imperial court and the diplomatic community
took the 444-mile (714.5-km) train journey south for what seemed
to British ambassador Sir George Buchanan an occasion where ‘the
heart of Russia voiced the feelings of the whole nation’.99 At the
Kremlin on their way to the
Te Deum
at the Uspensky Cathedral, the tsar and tsaritsa walked in procession, followed by their daughters. Meriel Buchanan thought they seemed ‘a little subdued and
grave, their faces pale’; Olga in particular had had ‘a rapt expression on her face’; Maria had been in tears and Meriel noticed how
‘Anastasia turned to her now and then with a little admonishing
word’.100 Much to his parents’ despair, Alexey had once more had
to be carried. Now, more than ever, the heir to the Russian throne
needed to be perceived as fit and well.
In a speech he made that day, Nicholas emphasized that the
conflict embraced all Slavic peoples of the Russian Empire: this war
would be nothing less than a defence of Slavdom against the Teutons.
Sir George Buchanan was impressed by the power of the religious
ceremony inside the Uspensky, which was ‘beautiful and impressive
beyond description’:
* Rasputin was in hospital in Tyumen, western Siberia, recovering from a knife attack made on him by a mentally unstable woman that summer.
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The long line of archbishops and bishops, in their vestments of
gold brocade, their mitres sparkling with precious stones; the
frescoes on the walls, with their golden background; the jewelled
icons – all lent colour and brilliancy to the picture presented by
the glorious old cathedral.
As soon as we had taken our places behind the imperial family
the deep bass voice of a priest was heard chanting the opening
passages of the liturgy, and then the choir, joining in, flooded
the church with harmony as it intoned the psalms and hymns of
the Orthodox ritual. As the service was nearing its close the
Emperor and Empress, followed by the Grand Duchesses, went
the round of the church, kneeling in deep devotion before each
of its shrines or kissing some specially sacred icon presented
them by the Metropolitan.
As he drove away with Maurice Paléologue, Buchanan ‘could not
help wondering how long this national enthusiasm would last, and
what would be the feeling of the people for their “Little Father”
were the war to be unduly prolonged’.101 A long and costly war of
attrition against Germany and Austria-Hungary, as Nicholas well
knew, would fan the flames of social unrest in Russia yet more, as
it had done during the war with Japan. For Alexandra, distraught
and desperately worried for her brother Ernie and his family trapped
in a Germany she no longer loved or recognized, the outbreak of
war ‘was the end of everything’.102 All that was left now was to beg
Grigory to pray with them for peace.
War of course put paid, at a stroke, to all talk of marriage for
the two eldest Romanov sisters. Nor would there be any more cruises
round the Finnish skerries or holidays in the Crimean sunshine; no
more idling away the long sunny days of summer chatting and
laughing with their favourite officers from the
Shtandart
; and no more Sunday afternoon teas with Aunt Olga, for she had volunteered
as a nurse and had already headed off on a hospital train to the
Russian front at Kiev.
On 1 August Tatiana recorded her aunt’s departure and the usual
mundane routine:
The five of us had lunch with Papa and Mama. In the afternoon
we went for a walk like yesterday. Went on the swing and got
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caught in the rain. Had tea with Papa and Mama. We spoke on
the phone to N. P. [Nikolay Sablin] and N. N. [Nikolay
Rodionov] – to whom I sent my little icon to wear round his
neck via N. P. The two of us had supper with Papa and Mama
and Grandmother. Xenia and Sandro were there too. Then
Kostya [Grand Duke Konstantin Konstaninovich] came to say
goodbye as he’s leaving for the war tomorrow with the Izmailovsky
Regiment. We came back at 10.30. Papa read.103
The safe, unchallenging, insular world that the Romanov sisters
had known until now was about to change dramatically.
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N
When Russia went to war in the summer of 1914, it was faced with
a desperate shortage of nurses. With massive losses of almost 70,000
killed or wounded in the first five days of fighting, the Russian
government predicted that at least 10,000 nurses would be needed.
Stirred by patriotic duty, legions of the fashionable and aristocratic ladies of St Petersburg – or rather Petrograd, as the city was quickly renamed – as well as the wives and daughters of government officials, and professional women such as teachers and academics, rushed to
do medical training and embrace the war effort. By September, with
the need for nurses increasingly acute, the Russian Red Cross had
reduced the usual year-long training to two months. Many women
did not make the grade and with it the right to be called
sestry
miloserdiya
– sisters of mercy – as nurses were termed in Russia.
From the day war broke out the tsaritsa was determined that she
and her two eldest daughters should play their part; in early
September they began their Red Cross training, taking on the
self-effacing titles of Sister Romanova, numbers 1, 2 and 3.1
Although Maria and Anastasia were too young to train they also
were to play an active role, as hospital visitors. No one repre-
sented the female war effort in Russia more emotively than did
the tsaritsa and her daughters through the three long and dispir-
iting years of war that preceded the revolution of 1917.
Everywhere – in newspapers, magazines and shop fronts – one
prevailing, iconic image dominated – of the three imperial sisters
of mercy soberly dressed in their Red Cross uniforms.
Stolitsa i
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Usadba
featured them in uniform regularly on its pages, a fact that inspired many other Russian women to follow their example.2
Edith Almedingen remembered a city full of young women
burning with ‘war-work fever’ and wearing the ‘short white veil
and the scarlet pectoral cross on their white aprons’.3
War galvanized the ailing tsaritsa; ‘Looking after the wounded
is my consolation’, she asserted.’4 Within three days of hostilities
beginning Alexandra had taken command of the vast national war
relief effort, re-establishing the huge supply depots that she had set up in the Winter Palace and elsewhere during the war with Japan.