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
89 Vyrubova
, Memories
, p. 338.
90 Ibid.
91
Dnevniki
I, p. 309.
92 Markov,
Pokinutaya Tsarskaya Semya
,
pp. 93, 95–7; see also Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 170;
Dnevniki
I, pp. 309–10.
93 Galushkin,
Sobstvennyi ego . . . konvoy
, p. 276.
94 Ibid.
431
693GG_TXT.indd 431
29/10/2013 16:17
NOTES
95 Ibid.
96 Penny Wilson, ‘The Memoirs of Princess Helena of Serbia’,
Atlantis Magazine
1. no. 3, 1999, p. 84.
97
NZ
182, p. 215.
98 Ktorova,
Minuvshee
, p. 96. Lili’s husband Charles, a lieutenant in the Guards Equipage, was on a military mission to England when
the revolution broke out.
99 Naryshkina diary, quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 333.
100 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 174. Alexandra mentions the destruction of her papers in her diary entries from 8 March, although Lili
recalled the process beginning on 7 March. See
Dnevniki
I, pp.
340, 366, 378, 382, etc.
101 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, pp. 173–4, 176. Some 1,700 letters and telegrams between Nicholas and Alexandra during the war years
therefore survived and are preserved in GARF, Moscow. See
Fuhrmann’s introduction to
WC
,
pp. 8–11.
102 Dehn,
Real Tsaristsa
, p. 178.
103 Ibid., pp. 174, 184.
104
Fall
, p. 42.
105 Benkendorf
, Last Days
, p. 8;
Fall
, p. 114.
106 One of those who appeared to desert the family at this time was
their former close friend Nikolay Sablin, who spent much of his
life in exile in the USA trying to justify why he did not go with
the family to Tobolsk. In conversation with Roman Gul in Paris
shortly before his death in 1937, Sablin insisted several times that
‘the emperor, through [Admiral] Nilov, had sent word that I had
acted correctly in not going with them’. Nevertheless, Sablin
appeared to be haunted by the fact, as Gul noticed, and was chas-
tised by many in émigré monarchist circles who told him that
‘your place was with the imperial family to the very end’. General
Count Ilya Tatishchev who voluntarily went to Tobolsk in Sablin’s
stead was murdered with the imperial family in Ekaterinburg in
1918. See Roman Gul, ‘S Tsarskoy semi na “Shtandarte”’, TS,
Amherst Center for Russian Culture. See also Radzinsky,
Last Tsar
, p. 189.
107 Naryshkina diary, quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 352.
108 Botkin,
Real Romanovs
, pp. 141, 142.
109 Ibid.
110 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 183.
111 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 270.
112 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 183.
432
693GG_TXT.indd 432
29/10/2013 16:17
NOTES
113 Gilliard,
Thirteen Years
, p. 215.
114 Galushkin,
Sobstvennyi ego . . . konvoy
, pp. 280, 279.
115 Ibid., p. 279.
116 Ibid., p. 280.
117 Benkendorf,
Last Days,
p. 17; Gilliard,
Thirteen Years
, p. 165.
Chapter 18
: Goodbye. Don’t Forget Me
1
Dnevniki
I, p. 367.
2 Botkina,
Vospominaniya
, p. 63;
Dnevniki
I, p. 370.
3 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 189.
4 Naryshkin-Kurakin
, Under Three Tsars
,
p. 220.
5 Long,
Russian Revolution Aspects
, p. 13.
6 Dorr,
Inside the Russian Revolution
, p. 132.
7
Dnevniki
I, p. 378;
The Times
, 22 March 1917 (NS).
8 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 1297; Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, pp.
262–3.
9 Ibid., p. 274.
10 A tantalizing story survives which suggests that thoughts of getting her children to safety had occurred to Alexandra even before then,
perhaps at the end of 1916. A letter in the archives of the Royal
Navy Submarine Museum in Gosport describes how an English
businessman, Frank Best, who had a large timber company in the
Baltic at Riga and Libau and who exported wood via Archangel
during the First World War, was called to a secret meeting at the
British Embassy some time late in 1916. Here he was met by the
tsaritsa and others who discussed the possibility of his making his
sawmill available to house the Romanov children in secret until
they could be collected by a ship of the Royal Navy and taken to
England. Best willingly agreed and as a symbol of her gratitude
the tsaritsa gave him an icon of St Nicholas, the patron saint of
children. Sadly no written evidence has been found to support this
story other than a letter written retrospectively in 1978 describing
the plan in brief. The icon, however, does survive; it was donated
by Best’s widow to the chapel of HMS
Dolphin
in 1962. See letter of Rev. G. V. Vaughan-James, 13 March 1978, Royal Navy
Submarine Museum, A 1917/16/002.
11 Botkin,
Real Romanovs
, p. 140.
12 Buchanan,
Dissolution of an Empire
, p. 195.
13 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 276.
433
693GG_TXT.indd 433
29/10/2013 16:17
NOTES
14 Almedingen,
Empress Alexandra
, p. 211.
15
LP
, p. 567.
16 See Pipes,
Russian Revolution
, p. 332.
17 Quoted in Ariadna Tyrkova-Williams,
From Liberty to Brest-Litovsk
(London: Macmillan, 1919), p. 60.
18
Dnevniki
I, pp. 384–5.
19 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 198. Many years of debate and recrimination followed with regard to the failure to evacuate the family in
time, with accusations variously made – against Kerensky and his
government, the British ambassador Buchanan, the prime minister
Lloyd George and George V himself. Buchanan’s daughter Meriel
later concluded that Lloyd George had advised against it because
of fear of losing British public support for Russia as a wartime ally.
But historian Bernard Pares, a great authority on Russia at the
time, thought that the Romanov asylum ‘could have made no
possible difference to the Russian Army, already then in the
process of disintegration’ and that Kerensky had done ‘everything
he could to save the Imperial Family’. Appraising the situation
with hindsight, a hundred years on, and taking into account the
extremely volatile situation in revolutionary Petrograd in the
spring of 1917, it seems clear that the logistical problems of
getting the family out of such a huge country, by the only viable
means – rail – to Murmansk or any other exit point by sea from
Russia were well nigh impossible. In the end the failure to do so
was the result of circumstance rather than an absence of will.
Later, before the renewed upheavals of the July days, it became
possible once more to evacuate the family, and the subject would
once more be discussed. For a fuller discussion of the Romanov
asylum issue see Rappaport,
Ekaterinburg: Last Days of the
Romanovs
, ch. 11.
20 Long,
Russian Revolution Aspects
, pp. 5, 7.
21 Naryshkin-Kurakin,
Under Three Tsars
,
p. 222.
22 Almedingen,
Empress Alexandra
, p. 211.
23 Kleinmikhel,
Shipwrecked World
, p. 245.
24 Ibid., p. 246; Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 183; Buxhoeveden,
Life and
Tragedy
, p. 284.
25 Long,
Russian Revolution Aspects
, p. 14.
26 Naryshkina diary, quoted in
Dnevniki
I, pp. 434, 436, 438, 439.
27 Marie Pavlovna,
Things I Remember
, p. 305.
28 Long,
Russian Revolution Aspects
, p. 13.
29
Dnevniki
I, p. 383.
434
693GG_TXT.indd 434
29/10/2013 16:17
NOTES
30 Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 262.
31 See
Dnevniki I
, pp. 398, 399; Naryshkin,
Under Three Tsars
, p. 221.
32
Dnevniki
I, pp. 400–1.
33 Vyrubova,
Memories
, p. 221; Anon. [Stopford],
Russian Diary
, p.
144. Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, pp. 266–7.
34
Dnevniki
I, p. 405.
35 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 211; Benkendorf,
Last Days
, p. 29.
36 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, pp. 213–14; Vyrubova,
Memories
, p. 225.
37 Lili was later given permission to travel south and left Russia with Titi via Odessa. She managed to get her letters and papers to
England, where she was reunited with her husband. They had two
more daughters and lived in England for seven years. Widowed in
1932, she inherited an estate in Poland but in 1939 was forced to
flee again. In 1947 she emigrated to Venezuela with Titi, and
eventually joined her daughter Maria. She died in Rome in 1963.
Anna Vyrubova was transferred to the notorious Trubetskoy
Bastion of the Peter and Paul fortress where she was interrogated
and not released till July. She was then confined to house arrest at
her aunt’s house on Znamenskaya Ulitsa in Petrograd. From there
she was deported to Finland, where she died in 1964.
38
Dnevniki
I, p. 424.
39 The Zborovsky family had a strong tradition of imperial service.
Viktor’s and Katya’s father, Erast Grigorevich, had been a highly
decorated long-serving officer under Alexander III and one-time
deputy commander of the Escort. Alexander III stood as godfather
to Xenia Zborovskaya.
40 Galushkin,
Sobstvennyi ego . . . konvoy
, p. 329: ‘Two nurses from the Feodorovsky Hospital of the grand duchesses were given passes to
see the empress. One of them was the sister of Sotnik Zborovsky.
Every time she returned from the palace she brought greetings
from the empress and the grand duchesses.’
41 Ibid., p. 362.
42 Almedingen,
Empress Alexandra
, pp. 209–10; see also Buxhoeveden,
Life and Tragedy
, p. 288.
43 43 Benkendorf,
Last Days
,
pp. 65–6.
44 Benkendorf,
Last Days,
pp. 65–6.
45 Ibid., p. 65;
Dnevniki
I, pp. 430, 433.
46 Ibid., pp. 429, 434.
47 Ibid., pp. 429, 452.
48 See Belyaev’s description of the Easter services in
Fall
, pp. 140–6.
49 Bokhanov
et al.
,
Romanovs
, p. 145.
435
693GG_TXT.indd 435
29/10/2013 16:17
NOTES
50 Belyaev quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 447; Buxhoeveden,
Life and
Tragedy
, p. 296.
51 Ibid., p. 449.
52 Gilliard,
Thirteen Years
, p. 226
.
53
NZ
182, p. 220.
54
Dnevniki
I, p. 451.
55 Kobylinsky quoted in ibid., p. 473.
56
NZ
182, p. 218;
Dnevniki
I, p. 472.
57
NZ
182, p. 218.
58 Ibid.
59 Anon. [Stopford],
Russian Diary
, p. 145.
60
Dnevniki
I, p. 460.
61 Ibid., p. 465.
62
NZ
182, p. 222.
63
SA
,
p. 584
.
64
NZ
182, p. 224.
65 Letter to Katya, 12 April 1917, EEZ.
66 M. K. Diterikhs, ‘V svoem krugu’, in Bonetskaya,
Tsarskie deti
, p.
366; Melnik-Botkina,
Vospominaniya
, pp. 57–8. See also letter in
Dnevniki
I, p. 492.
67
Dnevniki
I, p. 478.
68 Ibid., p. 484.
69
Fall
, p. 148; original Russian in
Dnevniki
I, p. 486.
70 Letter to Katya, 30 April 1917, EEZ.
71 Naryshkin-Kurakin,
Under Three Tsars
, p. 227.
72 Maria to Katya, 8–9 June 1917, EEZ; See also Anastasia to Katya,
29 June 1917, EEZ.
73
Dnevniki
I, p. 503.
74 Ibid., p. 548.
75 Ibid., p. 518. See also Anastasia to Katya, letter no. 4, 30 May, EEZ.
76 Anastasia to Katya, unnumbered letter, 20 May 1917, EEZ.
77 Quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 598.
78 Letter to Katya, no. 11, 4 July 1917, EEZ.
79 Benkendorf,
Last Days
, p. 97.
80 Dehn,
Real Tsaritsa
, p. 233.
81
NZ
182, p. 233.
82 Letter to Alexander Syroboyarsky, 28 May 1917, Bokhanov,
Aleksandra Feodorovna
, p. 277. This letter is a typical example of the heavily religious overtones of many of Alexandra’s letters at
this time.
436
693GG_TXT.indd 436
29/10/2013 16:17
NOTES
83 Anastasia to Katya, letter, 11 June 1917, EEZ.
84 Gilliard,
Thirteen Years
, p. 232. See also
Dnevniki
I, pp. 576–7 and Tatiana’s letter to Grand Duchess Xenia, 20 July, in ibid., p. 599.
85
Fall
, p. 154.
86 Naryshkina diary quoted in
Dnevniki
I, p. 578.
87
Dnevniki
I, p. 587; Kerensky,
Catastrophe
, p. 271.