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 the hospital. Alexandra helped her with this, for the welfare of
refugees became an increasingly urgent issue as the war went on.
The committee’s budget was huge and rose to several million roubles
– so much so that private donation soon was not enough to sustain
it and the government had to step in.21
With Nicholas away for much of the time at Stavka – army HQ
located at a railway junction near Baranovichi (in today’s Belorussia)
– Alexandra sent him regular updates on their daughters’ progress.
On 20 September she told him what a comfort it was ‘to see the
girls working alone & that they will be known more and learn to
be useful’.22 They seemed to adapt quickly to the new demands
made on them, and, as Pierre Gilliard observed, ‘with their usual
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natural simplicity and good humour . . . accepted the increasing
austerity of life at Court’. Gilliard was especially impressed with
their thoughtful attitude to their work and the fact that they had
no problem with covering their beautiful hair in the nunlike nurse’s
wimple and spending most of their time in uniform. They weren’t
playing at being nurses – which from time to time Gilliard observed
in other aristocratic ladies – but were true sisters of mercy.23 Wartime volunteer Svetlana Ofrosimova who had lived at Tsarskoe Selo for
several years noticed it too. ‘I was struck by the change in them.
Most of all I was moved by the deep expression of concentration
on their faces, which were thinner and paler. There was a new kind
of expression in their eyes.’24 Maria Rasputina concurred: ‘I found
them grown taller, more serious, conscious of the responsibilities of the imperial family, bent on doing their duty with all their strength.’25
This applied equally to the younger sisters; although their days were still taken up mainly with lessons they had to adjust to the long
absences of their older siblings and all of them, with their father
now away for much of the time, had to share the burden of their
brother’s and mother’s frequent bouts of sickness.26
Until the war, with so much talk about Olga’s marriage prospects,
as well as her possible future role as heir to the throne after Alexey, much of the attention had inevitably been centred on her. She had
always been the most outgoing and talkative of the two older sisters
but during the war years it was Tatiana who would shine through.
Prior to the war she had seemed to have all the makings of a coquette for, unlike Olga, she was very self-conscious about her appearance,
had the figure of a mannequin and longed to have the fine clothes
and beautiful jewels of fashionable St Petersburg ladies. ‘Any frock, no matter how old, looked well on her’, recalled Iza Buxhoeveden:
‘She knew how to put on her clothes, was admired and liked admir-
ation.’27 ‘She was a Grand Duchess from head to toe, so aristocratic
and regal was she’, recalled Svetlana Ofrosimova.28 From the first,
as a trainee nurse, Valentina Chebotareva felt there was something
special about Tatiana that was quite different from heart-on-sleeve
Olga, and that set her apart from her sisters: ‘I sensed that she had inside her her own completely private, distinctive world.’29 But it
was one that Tatiana never allowed to intrude on her practical skills as a nurse and her devotion to duty.
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Precise and even bossy at times, Tatiana could, for some, seem
too serious and – unlike Olga – lacking in spontaneity. But she was
always ready to help others and her ability to apply herself in tandem with her altruistic personality made her admirably suited for nursing work. Whenever Alexey had been ill she had helped nurse him and
followed the doctors’ instructions with regard to medicines, as well
as sitting with him. She was also unquestioningly tolerant of the
demands of her mother; she ‘knew how to surround her with
unweary ing attentions and she never gave way to her own capricious
impulses’, as Gilliard recalled, which was something that Olga was
increasingly becoming prey to.30 Indeed, in everything she did
Tatiana Nikolaevna would soon prove that she had perseverance of
the kind her more emotionally volatile older sister lacked. Many of
the nurses and doctors who observed her – as well as the patients
themselves – later spoke of her as being born to nurse.
The outbreak of war so soon after the celebrations of the
Tercentary had inevitably brought a complete turn-around in the
popular perception of the Romanov sisters as lofty princesses. With
their mother calling a wartime moratorium on the purchase of any
new clothes for the family, official photographs of the svelte young
women in court dress were replaced by images of the older sisters
in uniform and of their younger siblings in rather plain, ordinary
clothes that belied their imperial status. Alexandra felt that the sight of herself and her daughters in uniform helped to bridge the gap
between them and the population at large in time of war. Some saw
this as a terrible miscalculation: the vast majority of ordinary
Russians, especially the peasantry, still looked upon the imperial
family as almost divine beings and expected their public image to
project that. As Countess Kleinmikhel observed, ‘When a soldier
saw his Empress dressed in a nurse’s uniform, just like any other
nurse, he was disappointed. Looking at the Tsarina, whom he had
pictured as a princess in a fairy tale, he thought: “And that is a
Tsarina? But there is no difference between us.”’31
Similar expressions of distaste circulated among the society ladies
of Petrograd who noted with a sneer how ‘common’ the grand
duchesses’ clothes were, ‘which even a provincial girl would not
dare to wear’.32 They disliked this demystification of imperial women
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– and worse, their association with unclean wounds, mutilation and
men’s bodies. They were horrified to learn that the empress even
cut patients’ fingernails for them. Alexandra’s neglect of protocol
– her acting as a common nurse – was seen as a ‘
beau geste
’, ‘a cheap method of seeking popularity’.33 Even ordinary soldiers were disappointed to see the tsaritsa and her daughters performing the same
duties as other nurses or sitting on the beds of the wounded, rather
than maintaining their exalted difference. ‘The intimacy which
sprang up between the Empress, her young daughters and the
wounded officers destroyed their prestige,’ said Countess Kleinmikhel,
‘for it has been truly said: “
Il n’y a pas de grand homme pour son valet
de chambre
”.’34
*
Be that as it may, many wounded soldiers came to be grateful
for the care they received from Alexandra and her daughters during
the war. In August 1914 Ivan Stepanov, a nineteen-year-old wounded
soldier of the Semenovsk Regiment, arrived at the annexe at Tsarskoe
Selo with his dressings unchanged for over a week. Conscious of
his dirty appearance he felt discomforted at the prospect of being
helped by the nurses who surrounded him in the treatment room
– one of them, a tall gracious sister who smiled kindly as she bent
over him, and opposite her two younger nurses who watched with
interest as his filthy bandages were unwrapped. They seemed familiar, where had he seen these faces? Then suddenly he realized. ‘Really,
was it them . . . the empress and her two daughters?’35 The tsaritsa
seemed a different woman – smiling, younger-looking than her years.
During his time in the hospital Stepanov witnessed many such
instances of her spontaneous warmth and kindness, and that of her
daughters.
Maria and Anastasia inevitably envied their older sisters’ new and
challenging role. But they soon had a small hospital of their own
in which to do their bit for the war effort. On 28 August the Hospital for Wounded Soldiers No. 17 of Their Imperial Highnesses, the
Grand Duchesses Maria Nikolaevna and Anastasia Nikolaevna was
* Kleinmikhel is quoting the famous aphorism by Madame Cornuel: ‘No man is a hero to his valet’ – although the original French was ‘
Il n’y avoit point de héros
pour son valet de chambre
’.
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opened just a stone’s throw from the Alexander Palace in what was
known as the Feodorovsky Gorodok (village).36 Built between 1913
and 1917 as an adjunct to the Feodorovsky Sobor nearby and in the
same ancient Russian Novgorod style, it was comprised of five
buildings contained within a small Kremlin-like fortress wall with
towers.
*
Two of the buildings were designated as a hospital for lower ranks and another one for officers was added in 1916. The two
younger sisters would visit daily after lessons to sit and chat with
the wounded, play board games, and even help the semi-literate
patients to read and write letters. On a more serious note, they were already becoming used to sitting by the bedsides of wounded men,
and sometimes had to deal with the trauma of their subsequent
deaths. Like Olga and Tatiana they took endless photographs of
themselves with their patients, nor did their visiting activities stop here. They supported fund-raising charity concerts for their hospital and often went to the bigger Catherine Palace Hospital and even
some of those in Petrograd with their mother, as well as inspecting
the hospital trains named after various members of the family. They
might be too young to nurse but they were far from immune to the
sufferings of the wounded, as Anastasia wrote and told Nicholas on
21 September:
My precious Papa! I congratulate you on the victory. Yesterday
we visited Alexey’s hospital train. We saw many wounded. Three
died on the journey – two of them officers . . . Pretty serious
wounds, so much so that within the next two days one soldier
may die; they were groaning. Then we went to the big Court
Hospital: Mama and our sisters were dressing wounds, and Maria
and I went round all the wounded, chatted to them all, one of
them showed me a very big piece of shrapnel that they had taken
out of his leg along with a large piece [of flesh]. They all said
that they want to go back and get their revenge on the enemy.37
The girls wrote many loving letters to their father at army HQ,
filling them with kisses and drawing signs of the cross to protect
* Badly damaged in the Second World War, it is now being restored for use by the patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church.
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him. With all four of them and their mother writing with devoted
regularity Nicholas was receiving several letters a day. Much of what the girls said only reiterated in rather laconic form what Alexandra
herself told her husband in her own long, rambling missives. But
the girls clearly missed their father terribly: ‘You absolutely must
take me with you next time,’ Maria told him on 21 September, ‘or
I’ll jump onto the train myself, because I miss you.’ ‘I don’t want
to go to bed, bah! I want to be there with you, wherever you are,
as I don’t know where it is’, added Anastasia two days later.38 Olga
and Tatiana’s letters suffered as a result of their heavy workload and were often quite cursory; but the quirky individuality of Anastasia’s usually made up for it. Her breezy personality, signing off letters as
‘your devoted slave, the 13-year-old Nastasya (Shvybzig)’, constantly flitted from one point of interest to the next and must have been
welcome entertainment for Nicholas during the long weeks away
from his family. Anastasia took great delight in her letters of making fun of Maria’s developing affection for Nikolay (Kolya) Demenkov,
an officer in the Guards Equipage, and teased her about his chub-
biness calling him ‘fat Demenkov’. Maria herself happily confided
her affection for ‘my dear Demenkov’ to her father, for Kolya was
already a firm favourite with the family.39
Alexandra had once observed in conversation with Anna Vyrubova
that ‘Most Russian girls seem to have nothing in their heads but
thoughts of officers’, but she appears not to have taken seriously
what was now going on right under her very nose.40 In 1914 she
was still infantilizing her daughters as ‘my little girlies’ in letters to her husband, when they were all fast growing into young women
with an interest in the opposite sex. What she saw as harmless affec-
tion was, for her oldest daughters, developing into afternoon trysts, sitting chatting on the beds of
nashikh
(‘ours’). Olga’s first favourites were Nikolay Karangozov, an Armenian cornet in the Cuirassier
Life Guards, and the ‘terribly dishy, dark’ David Iedigarov, a Muslim from Tiflis and captain in the 17th Nizhegorod Dragoons who
arrived in mid-October and created a strong impression on her (he
was, however, married).41 Iedigarov and Karangozov were the first
of several swarthy, swashbuckling officers from the Caucasus – many