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
I thank you so
very
much for your dear letter. I am so sorry that your heart is still No. 2.
*
I hope your cold is better. My temperature now is 37.1 [99 degrees F] and my throat acks less than
* Alexandra created her own private code for the levels of intensity of her heart pain, ranging from 1 to 3, used in notes to her daughters.
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THE LITTLE ONE WILL NOT DIE
yesterday. Am so sorry not to see you today, but sertenly its
better for you to rest. 1000 kisses from your own loving Maria.39
For the four sisters, especially Olga and Tatiana, there was also
a major public role to perform in the coming year – 1913 – of the
Romanov Tercentary in promoting the popular image of the im perial
family in their mother’s frequent absences and in acting, too, as ‘the faithful companions of their beloved father’. ‘It was as if the young, beautiful princesses should protect the ever-threatened czar,’ observed Baroness Souiny, ‘and they did protect him.’40
*
Brilliant sunshine in a cloudless sky greeted a St Petersburg in the
grip of the winter thaw, when on Thursday 21 February 1913 the
streets were set ablaze with the most splendid decorations in red,
white and blue in celebration of the Tercentary of the ascent of the
Romanov dynasty to the throne of Russia.41 At 8 a.m. that morning
a twenty-one-gun salute from the Peter and Paul Fortress had
announced the start of the celebrations. Every shopfront and lamp-
post along the Nevsky Prospekt was festooned with the tsarist
double-headed eagle and portraits of all the Romanov tsars, since
Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich had accepted the nomination back in
February 1613. Shops were full of commemorative items, special
stamps bearing the tsar’s head for the first time (it had previously
been considered an insult to depict it), medals and coins were issued and a manifesto by Nicholas published in which he proclaimed his
‘steadfast desire, in unalterable agreement with our beloved people,
to continue to lead the Empire along the path of peaceful develop-
ment of the national life’.42
Over the last few years Russia, which occupied one-sixth of the
world’s surface, had been enjoying a remarkable period of growth
that had seen St Petersburg become one of the six largest cities in
Europe. The economy was still an agricultural-based one, the corner-
stone of its enormous wealth being cereal production, but this now
outstripped that of the USA and Canada combined. The territories
of the Russian Empire contained a burgeoning iron and steel
industry; and yet to be exploited natural reserves in Central Asia
and Siberia that were being opened up by a vast new Trans-Siberian
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Railway network that was also linked to the valuable oilfields at
Baku in Azerbaijan and Batumi in Georgia. In the City of London
and on Wall Street, Russia, for so long viewed as Asiatic and back-
ward, was now at last seen as a ‘profitable field for investment’. As the
Illustrated London News
told its readers, ‘the general public are beginning to awaken to the great riches and the greater potential
riches – agricultural, mineral, and industrial – of the Empire of the Great White Tsar’.43 There was much talk abroad too about the
growing military and political might of imperial Russia – having as
it did a potential war strength of 4 million men – a fact that had
recently been confirmed by the establishment of the
entente cordiale
with Britain and France.
But it was not just in industrial and military strength that Russia
was carving out a higher international profile for itself: the country was enjoying an extraordinary and unprecedented burst of artistic
creativity – with the music of Stravinsky and Rachmaninov; the
avant-garde paintings of Malevich, Kandinsky and Chagall;
Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes featuring outlandish set and costume
designs by Léon Bakst; a musical stage graced by the legendary
dancers Pavlova and Nijinsky and the opera singer Chaliapin; the
innovative direction of Stanislavsky and Meyerhold in the theatre;
and a vibrant ‘Silver Age’ of poetry dominated by Alexander Blok,
Andrey Bely and Anna Akhmatova.
In tones of the highest optimism
The Times
in early 1913 was therefore predicting a rosy future for Russia: ‘The House of
Romanoff has done more than create a mighty Empire. It has flung
wide the gates of knowledge to a great people, and has launched
them upon all her boundless ways.’44 But in order to ensure further
economic development it still lacked one crucial element: a stable
political system and a proper, constitutional government. Since 1906
the Duma had juddered from one crisis to the next in an increas-
ingly emasculated form, three times being dissolved and then re-
instated by Nicholas. The Fourth Duma of 1912, created in the
wake of Stolypin’s assassination, had been the most dysfunctional
yet and the political mood that year of 1913 was ‘antagonistic’ in
continuing response to the repressive measures instituted after the
1905 revolution.45 Many Russians felt there was little to celebrate.
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The Tercentary had brought a raft of concessions including amnes-
ties and reductions in sentences for many prisoners – but not for
those imprisoned for their opposition to tsarism.
In February Nicholas and Alexandra installed themselves and the
children in the Winter Palace for the three days of official celebra-
tions – their first real time in St Petersburg since 1905 – the focus of which was entirely religious. Thursday the 21st was a day of pious observance, with twenty-five different religious processions winding
their way across the capital, singing hymns and bursts of the national anthem. From the Winter Palace, the imperial family led the procession of carriages, Nicholas and Alexey in uniform at its head in an
open victoria, followed by closed state coaches containing Alexandra, Maria Feodorovna and the girls. It processed down the Nevsky
Prospekt the short distance to the Kazan Cathedral for a very long
Te Deum
conducted by the Patriarch of Antioch, who had travelled from Greece specially, and attended by over 4,000 of the Russian
nobility, and by foreign diplomats and dignitaries, as well as by
representatives of the peasantry and from the duchy of Finland. ‘It
was all brilliance,’
Novoe Vremya
reported, ‘the brilliance of the ladies’ diamonds, the brilliance of the medals and the stars, the
brilliance of the gold and silver of the uniforms.’46 But it was not
the spectacular beauty of the assembled costumes, the icons, lighted
tapers and incense, that had moved everyone; it was the ‘inexpress-
ibly sad’ sight of the tsarevich, who was still too lame to walk, being carried into the service by a Cossack, his ‘white, pinched small face
. . . gazing anxiously round him at all the sea of human beings before him’.47
Although the Okhrana had been prepared for trouble, on the
streets of St Petersburg ordinary citizens, huddled in their quilted
coats and felt boots, demonstrated a marked indifference towards
much of the ceremonial. Prince Gavriil Konstantinovich later wrote
that he had the ‘distinct impression that there was no special enthu-
siasm in the capital for the Romanov Dynasty Jubilee’. Meriel
Buchanan noticed it too: the crowds were ‘strangely silent’, she
recalled, ‘breaking into cheers only when they caught sight of the
young Grand Duchesses smiling under their big flower-trimmed
hats’.48
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The ceremony at the Kazan Cathedral would be the first of many
collective public professions of faith led by the imperial family that year, accompanied by much genuflection, crossing, and kissing of
miracle-working icons, all intended to ‘arouse a general upsurge of
patriotic sentiment in the people’ at a time of continuing political
discontent.49 Meriel Buchanan had, like many, hoped that the festiv-
ities ‘would force the Imperial Family to come out of their seclusion, and that the Emperor, when he attended the Duma, would make
some public announcement that would relieve the internal situa-
tion’.50 But she was disappointed; it soon became apparent that the
primary objective of the Tercentary was to reinforce the image of
a national life driven by religious faith, harking back to the ancient mystical union of tsar and people, rather than one where democracy
and the work of the Duma held any true significance. Indeed, many
members of the Fourth Duma were squeezed out at the celebrations,
the limited number of places being given to members of the aris-
tocracy and monarchist organizations.51
Later that day Nicholas and Alexandra received a great proces-
sion of 1,500 dignitaries in the Nicholas Hall at the Winter Palace
in order to accept their congratulations. It was a milestone for Olga and Tatiana to be present, wearing matching formal Russian court
dresses. These were made in the workshop of Olga Bulbenkova who
specialized in ceremonial clothes for the court, and were full-length, off-the-shoulder style in white satin with long, pointed, open sleeves, a front panel of pink velvet and a detachable train decorated with
garlands of artificial roses.52 Across their chests both girls wore their orders of St Catherine on scarlet sashes, and on their heads
kokoshniki
of pink velvet encrusted with pearls and decorated with bows. It
must have been a moment of great pride for them, for they had not
worn full-length formal dresses before and it signalled their final
arrival in the adult world of the court. The two sisters were never
more beautiful, as official photographs taken of them by the family’s favourite studio, Boissonnas & Eggler, testified. The reception itself was something new for both of them, ‘a rare chance of seeing
Petersburg society, and from their attentive, animated faces it was
clear that they were trying to take everything in and remember all
the faces’.53
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That evening the still crowded streets of St Petersburg were lit
up with celebratory illuminations; it reminded Nicholas of his coro-
nation, but the happiness of the occasion was marred by the news
the following morning that Tatiana – who had not been feeling well
for a day or so – was in bed with a fever. Alexandra had been too
exhausted to take part in any of the public receptions during the
day, where Maria Feodorovna had enjoyed the limelight in her stead.
But the tsaritsa did steel herself to attend a gala performance of
Glinka’s opera,
A Life for the Tsar
, starring Chaliapin that evening at the Mariinsky Theatre. She and Nicholas received a standing
ovation from the audience as they entered the imperial box with
Olga. But Anna Vyrubova detected a false note: ‘there was in the
brilliant audience little real enthusiasm, little real loyalty’.54 Alexandra looked extremely pale and sombre, thought Meriel Buchanan, ‘her
eyes, enigmatical in their dark gravity, seeming fixed on some secret inward thought that was certainly far removed from the crowded
theatre and the people who acclaimed her’.55 Flushed and uncom-
fortable at all eyes being directed on her, the tsaritsa sank gratefully into her chair but she ‘looked listless, as though she were in pain’, thought Agnes de Stoeckl and indeed such was her extreme discomfort and her anxious laboured breathing, that she left after the first act. ‘A little wave of resentment rippled over the theatre’, noted
Meriel Buchanan. ‘Was it not always the same story?’ with the
empress yet again making no effort to disguise her distaste for St
Petersburg society.56 For that is how her retreat that evening was
perceived. Only her daughter Olga and her husband knew the terrible
toll Alexey’s recent near-fatal illness had taken on her. It was the
‘sad knowledge’ of her son’s life- threatening condition that made
the tsaritsa ‘so extraordinary in her ways’, thought Princess Radziwill.
It explained why ‘she hates so much to see anyone, or to take part
in any festivity, even for the sake of her daughters’. For their part, as always, the Romanov sisters had made the best of things. ‘The
whole city was celebrating, a lot of people’, Olga recalled of the day in her diary, but, sensing as she did an atmosphere of change in
Russia, it had not passed without some apprehension on her part:
‘Thank you God that everything is OK.’57
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LORD, SEND HAPPINESS TO HIM,
MY BELOVED ONE
N
The 23rd of February 1913 was a very special day for eighteen-
year-old Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna, when, accompanied by
her father, her mother and her aunt Olga, she attended her first
major public ball in St Petersburg, at the Assembly of Nobles. The
tsar and tsaritsa had not attended a ball in the city since the grand costume ball of 1903, and Alexandra was determined to be there