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
dance a single dance with anyone else from here to the grave’. He
kept his promise for sixteen years, before finally marrying in 1929.
See web site accessible @: http://saltkrakan.livejournal.com/2520.
html
42 See
ASM
,
pp. 179, 181, 182, 186.
43
SA
, p. 412.
44
ASM
, p. 180.
45
WC
, p. 472.
46 See
ASM
, pp. 185–6.
47
NZ
181, p. 231.
48
ASM
, p. 186.
49
WC
, p. 482.
50 Ibid., p. 590.
51 Ibid., p. 500.
52 Letter to Rita Khitrovo from Stavka, July 1916; Hoover Tarsaidze
Papers, Box 16, Folder 5. This original transcript has some gaps.
The quotation can be found in full in Galushkin,
Sobstvennyi ego
. . .
konvoy
, pp. 241–2.
53 Dassel,
Grossfürstin Anastasia Lebt
, p. 16. Felix Dassel later became embroiled in the fraudulent claim of Anna Anderson aka Franziska
Szankowska that she was Grand Duchess Anastasia, miraculously
escaped from death at the Ipatiev House. Dassel published his
memories of the hospital at Feodorovsky Gorodok five months
before he met Anna Anderson in 1927; see King and Wilson,
Resurrection
, pp. 166–7, 303.
54 Ibid., pp. 19, 22.
55
NZ
181, p. 223.
56 Dassel,
Grossfürstin Anastasia Lebt
, pp. 20, 25.
57 Geraschinevsky, ‘Ill-Fated Children of the Czar’, p. 159.
58 Ibid., p. 171.
59 Ibid., p. 160.
426
693GG_TXT.indd 426
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NOTES
60 Ibid.
61
WC
, p. 556.
62 See ibid. Prior to the war Alexander Funk had worked with the St
Petersburg photographer Karl Bulla, but at the time of this photo-
graphic session appears to have moved mainly into war photog-
raphy.
63 Foster Fraser, ‘Side Shows in Armageddon’, pp. 268–9; see also
Paléologue,
Ambassador’s Memoirs
, p. 507.
64 Foster Fraser, ‘Side Shows in Armageddon’, pp. 268–9.
65
ASM
, p. 217.
66 Ibid., p. 220. Some weeks later she received a telegram from him, from Mozdoka in northern Ossetiya in the Caucasus. She saw him
briefly on 22 December 1916 (see
ASM
, p. 237), but did not
mention him again, except for noting his birthday in 1917. A
fellow officer at the annexe heard he was later made commander
of a hospital train (see
SA
, p. 220). Nothing more is known of Dmitri Shakh-Bagov, other than a possible sighting in the autumn
of 1920 when the Red Army was on the brink of victory in
Zakavkaz, when one of the Ezid resistance groups based in
Echmiadzin was commanded by an officer named Shakh-Bagov.
This may well have been Dmitri, who, like David Iedigarov, may
have been a Georgian Muslim. For photographs and a résumé of
what is known of Olga’s Mitya, see web site @: http://saltkrakan.
livejournal.com/658.html
67
WC
, p. 636.
68 Galushkin,
Sobstvennyi ego . . . konvoy
, p. 197.
69 Bokhanov
et al.
,
Romanovs
, p. 268.
70 Ibid., p. 228.
71 Ibid., p. 233.
72
WC
, p. 660.
73 Ibid., p. 681.
74
ASM
, p. 233; see also
WC
, p. 670. Staritsa Mariya died in January 1917, and was later canonized.
75
WC
, p. 670.
76 Vyrubova,
Memories
, p. 148; Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 223.
77
WC
, p. 670.
78 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 223.
79 Paléologue
, Ambassador’s Memoirs
, pp. 541, 677.
80 Ibid., p. 676.
81 Almedingen,
Empress Alexandra
, p. 92.
82
SA
, p. 349.
427
693GG_TXT.indd 427
29/10/2013 16:17
NOTES
83 Paléologue
, Ambassador’s Memoirs
, p. 731.
84 Ibid., p. 680.
Chapter 17
: Terrible Things Are Going on in St Petersburg
1
ASM
, p. 236. Although Anastasia later destroyed her diaries this appears to be a rare survival, perhaps in a notebook.
2 Ibid.
3
WC
, p. 684.
4 Ibid., p. 651.
5 Fuhrmann,
Rasputin
, ch. 11, p. 112.
6 Ibid., p. 140.
7 Ibid., p. 228. ‘Dark Forces’ became the code name for Rasputin used by British agents.
8 Eugene de Savitsch,
In Search of Complications: An Autobiography
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1940), pp. 15 and 16.
9
ASM
, p. 236.
10 A. A. Mordvinov quoted in
LP
, p. 507.
11
WC
, p. 68; Paléologue,
Ambassador’s Memoirs
, p. 740.
12 Dorothy Seymour, MS diary, 26 December (NS) 1916; Paléologue,
Ambassador’s Memoirs
, p. 74. Dorothy Nina Seymour was the well-connected daughter of a lord and granddaughter of an admiral of
the fleet. Prior to volunteering as a VAD, she had been a woman
of the bedchamber to Queen Victoria’s daughter, Helena –
Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein – herself a great patron
of women’s wartime nursing. Dorothy left Petrograd on 24 March
(NS) 1917 and in December that year married General Sir Henry
Cholmondely Jackson. She died in 1953. Her vivid and engaging
diary from November 1914 to May 1919 is in the IWM, as are 49
letters written during the same period – though few of these are
from Petrograd because of the difficulties in sending mail from
Russia during the war and revolution.
13 It is still unclear who fired the fourth bullet into Rasputin’s skull.
Recent studies have claimed that Oswald Rayner and Stephen
Alley – agents of the British Special Intelligence Mission in
Petrograd – played a role in the murder. It has also now been
suggested that wounds on Rasputin’s corpse indicate that he was
tortured before being killed, in an attempt to ascertain whether he
had indeed been a German spy – an act in which the British
agents might well have participated. The Special Intelligence
428
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NOTES
Mission was certainly privy to the plot and its members had their
own good reasons to back any conspiracy to kill Rasputin or at
least remove him from his position of influence over the empress.
14 There is an enormous amount of literature on Rasputin and the
circumstances of his murder, much of it contradictory, some of it
contentious. The most recent books include: Fuhrman,
Rasputin
(2012); Moe,
Prelude
,
(2011), see ch. IX, ‘Death in a Cellar’; and Margarita Nelipa’s extensive study
The Murder of Grigorii Rasputin
(2010), which contains detailed police and forensic evidence. For
British involvement see Richard Cullen,
Rasputin: The Role of the
British Secret Service in his Torture and Murder
(London: Dialogue, 2010) and Andrew Cook,
To Kill Rasputin
(Stroud, Glos: History Press, 2006).
15 Dorothy Seymour, MS diary, 30 December 1916.
16 Maria diary AvSes 237.
17 Vyrubova,
Memories
, pp. 182–3; Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, pp. 122–3.
Rasputin did not rest in peace for long. Shortly after the revolu-
tion his corpse was dug up and taken into Petrograd and burnt.
Recent evidence suggests that it was cremated in the boiler room
of the Polytechnic Institute in the northern suburbs of Petrograd
and the ashes scattered by the roadside. See Nelipa,
Murder of
Rasputin
, pp. 459–60.
18 Oleg Platonov,
Rasputin i ‘deti dyavola’
(Moscow: Algoritm, 2005), p. 351.
19 Paléologue,
Ambassador’s Memoirs
, p. 735;
NZ
181, p. 208. Dorothy Seymour, MS diary, 6 January NS/24 December OS, IWM.
20 Gilliard,
Thirteen Years
, p. 183.
21 Dorr,
Inside the Russian Revolution
, p. 121.
22 22 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, pp. 137–8.
23 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p.p. 137–8.
24
NZ
182, p. 207.
25 Spiridovich,
Les Dernières années
, vol. 2, p. 453.
26 Ibid., p. 452; Buchanan,
Queen Victoria’s Relations
, p. 220.
27 This 158-page notebook kept between 1905 and 1916 survives in
the Russian State Archives, GARF 651 1 110.
28 Paléologue,
Ambassador’s Memoirs
, p. 739.
29 Botkin,
Real Romanovs
, p. 127.
30
ASM
, p. 239
31 Gilliard,
Thirteen Years
, p. 183.
32 In their later memoirs both Iza Buxhoeveden and Anna Vyrubova
said that this visit took place in the autumn of 1916, but it was
429
693GG_TXT.indd 429
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NOTES
recorded in Alexandra and Nicholas’s diaries and comments
relating to Maria’s mishap clearly date it to 8 January 1917. See
Dnevniki
I, p. 46.
33
NZ
182, p. 204.
34 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 235;
NZ
181, p. 204.
35
NZ
182, p. 205.
36 Naryshkina diary, quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 50; Vyrubova,
Memories
, p. 86. Note that the manuscript of the Naryshkina diary, an
extremely valuable eyewitness account of the imperial family’s last
months at Tsarskoe Selo, is held in the state archives in Moscow,
at GARF f. 6501.op.1.D.595.
37 Naryshkina diary, quoted in
Dnevniki
I p. 96.
38 Queen Marie of Romania diary, 12/26 January 1917. Romanian
State Archives.
39 Letter to her mother and sister, 1 December 1916, IWM.
40 17 December (4 December OS) letter to mother and sister.
41 Dorothy Seymour, MS diary, 4 February (NS) 1917, IWM.
42 Ibid.
43 See
Dnevniki
I, pp. 134, 139; Savchenko,
Russkaya devushka
, p. 43.
44 Alexander,
Once a Grand Duke
, pp. 282–3.
45
Dnevniki
I, p. 166.
46 Ibid., p. 171;
ASM
, p. 241.
47 See web site @: http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/mdiaries.
html
48
WC
, p. 691.
49 Zinaida Gippius,
Sinyaya kniga: Peterburgskiy dnevnik 1914 –1918
(Belgrade: Radenkovicha, 1929), p. 39.
50 Almedingen,
Empress Alexandra
, p. 190.
51
WC
, p. 692; Dorr,
Inside the Russian Revolution
, p. 130.
52 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 251.
53
WC
, pp. 694, 695.
54 Naryshkina,
Under Three Tsars
, pp. 217, 212.
55
NZ
182, p. 211; see also pp. 210–12,
Dnevniki
I, p. 193.
56
Dnevniki
I, p. 200; Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 267.
57 Zeepvat, ‘Valet’s Story’, p. 329.
58
Dnevniki
I, p.
206
59 Buchanan,
Ambassador’s Daughter
, p. 146.
60 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 155.
61 Ibid., p. 152; see also Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 254, re the night of 28 February.
62
NZ
182, p. 213.
430
693GG_TXT.indd 430
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NOTES
63 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 156.
64 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
,
p. 255. See also
Dnevniki
I, p. 223; Galushkin,
Sobstevennyi ego . . . konvoy
, p. 262.
65 Ibid., p. 265. For a valuable account of the Tsar’s Escort at the Alexander Palace during the early days of the revolution and the
key role of Viktor Zborovsky, see ibid., pp. 262–80.
66 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 184.
67 Ibid., pp. 151–2.
68 Ibid., pp. 157–8.
69 Ibid., p. 158.
70 Naryshkina diary quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 232.
71 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 254; Benkendorf,
Last Days
, pp.
6–7.
72 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 160;
WC
, p. 698.
73
WC
, p. 700.
74 Naryshkina diary quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 253.
75
Dnevniki
I, p. 253.
76 Ibid., pp. 254, 266.
77 Paul Grabbe,
Windows on the River Neva
(New York: Pomerica Press, 1977), p. 123.
78 Letter to Nicholas, 3 March, accessible @: http://www.alexander-
palace.org/palace/mdiaries.html
79 Ibid.; Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 164; Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 251.
80
Dnevniki
I, p. 258.
81
Fall
, p. 138.
82
Dnevniki
I, p. 259; P. Savchenko,
Gosudarynya imperatritsa
Aleksandra Feodorovna
(Belgrade: Nobel Press, 1939), p. 91.
83
WC
, p. 701.
84
Dnevniki
I, p. 290.
85 Ibid., p. 293.
86 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 262.
87 Galushkin,
Sobstvennyi ego . . . konvoy
, p. 274.
88 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 166.