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
with the officers’. How ironic that a mother so scrupulous about
her daughters’ moral probity should allow them the ‘greatest inti-
macy’ with these young men, unsupervised, and ‘in perfect inde-
pendence without a lady to look after them’.31 The duchess was
anxious to prepare her daughter for what she considered a degree
of difficulty when the Romanians arrived: ‘People who think they
know all have decided that Carol intends marrying Tatiana, not
Olga, as the eldest could not be missed by her parents, being a great help to them and would remain in Russia.’32
The Crimea would have seemed the far more logical location
for a first meeting – being only a short journey across the Black Sea from Romania, but the duchess assured Marie that the Romanovs
would not invite them there. In Livadia ‘the acquaintance would
have been hopeless as the naval favourites would laugh into ridicule
every prince that would come with matrimonial intentions’. The
duchess was deeply disapproving of the girls’ familiarity with the
officers of the
Shtandart
, which she considered totally
infra dig
:
‘Each girl, the big ones like the small ones, have their favourites,
qui leur
font la cour
[who pay court to them] and Alix not only allows it but finds it natural and amusing.’33 This particularly troubled the duchess’s rigid sense of
comme il faut
. Despite the fact that ‘Olga and Tatiana are very well educated’, as well as being ‘gay, natural and
amiable’, she felt they were entirely lacking in the sophisticated
social skills of the kind needed by any young woman marrying into
a royal court. ‘You must put away all
our
ideas of imperial young ladies’, she told her daughter. ‘As they have now no governess, no
lady, they cannot be taught any manners, they have
never
paid me a visit and I really don’t know them at all.’ Even their aunts Xenia
and Olga had at least been ‘allowed to go out and never had any
intimacy with officers’.34
There was one other important topic that did not pass without
comment – haemophilia. The duchess had clearly been checking
the lie of the land in this regard ahead of her daughter’s visit: ‘What can I find out about inheriting that sad illness? We all know that it can be propagated, but the children can also escape. I can only quote Uncle Leopold’s two children who never had it but Alice’s boys
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FOUR SISTERS
inherited it.’
*
It was, as the duchess concluded, ‘a mere chance, but one is never sure. The risk is there always.’35 Such comments beg
the question of whether other royal houses had by now considered
and rejected the Romanov daughters as prospective brides, for fear
of haemophilia being brought into their families. And then there
was the prospect of union with a country as politically unstable as
Russia. The duchess’s letters to her daughter that January and
February are full of foreboding about the future of the country, with a tsar too timid to spend time with anyone beyond his family circle
and a tsaritsa stubbornly isolated from society through a combina-
tion of perverted choice and physical incapacity, hiding herself away with her only two friends – her ‘false prophet’ and Anna Vyrubova.
The duchess sensed a ‘despair and hopelessness’ in St Petersburg
so great that ‘people are panting with fear and anxiety of it all’. She was longing to get away – ‘the heavy moral atmosphere simply kills
me’.36 Nevertheless she had tried to have a private word with
Nicholas and Alexandra about the possible engagement. ‘What shall
I say? Do I think it very hopeful? They seem to wish it but Alix is
so strange and I have not the slightest idea what she wishes about
her daughters.’ The duchess had long since given up on her, and
now thought the tsaritsa ‘absolutely mad’.37
On 15 March 1914 Crown Prince Ferdinand of Romania, his
wife Marie and their son Carol arrived in St Petersburg and were
installed in the west wing of the Alexander Palace. That same day,
Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna officially completed her ten-year
period of studies. Her final exams had covered the history of the
Orthodox Church; Russian language (dictation, composition and
answers on the history of Russian words); general and Russian
history; geography and three foreign languages – English, French
and German, with dictation and composition in each. (All these
subjects had been taught at home; for physics lessons she and her
* Queen Victoria’s son Leopold, Duke of Albany, who died after an attack of haemophilia brought on by a fall at the age of thirty-one, had a son and a daughter: his son Charles was not a haemophiliac but his daughter Alice was a carrier and passed it on to her sons, Maurice who died in infancy and Rupert who died of haemorrhaging after an accident when he was twenty.
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GOD SAVE THE TSAR!
sisters had gone to the Nicholas II Practical Institute in Tsarskoe
Selo.)38 In all of them Olga had received top marks, although she
had struggled with English composition and German dictation. ‘An
average of 5 [out of marks 1 to 5],’ she noted in her diary. ‘Mama
was pleased.’39
During the week of the Romanian visit she acted as escort to
her second cousin Karlusha – as she referred to him (a somewhat
belittling, Russian diminutive form of Carol’s name). She seemed
unimpressed with his shock of blond hair, sticky-out ears and bulbous blue eyes – the latter an unmistakable Hanoverian trait inherited
from his English grandfather Alfred. Nevertheless Olga dutifully
went everywhere with him: to church, for walks round the park,
dinner with Grandmama at the Anichkov and a ball at the exclusive
Smolny Girls Institute. She smiled and chatted and went through
the motions (in so doing giving the lie to the Duchess of Coburg’s
insistence that she had no social graces) but revealed nothing. A
young secretary at the Romanian legation noted during the first day
of the visit: ‘The Imperial Family retired rather early to their chambers, with the daughters casting short and anxious glances at Carol.
I found out later that they had not liked him.’40 The gossips still
insisted that Olga was not the object of Carol’s interests. An American diplomat heard tell that he was actually ‘trying to get Tatiana, but
Olga must go first’.41 In the event the two sets of parents were
disappointed at the negative outcome but were not quite ready to
give up. They agreed that the Russians would reciprocate with a
visit to Constanza in June to enable the young couple to take a
second look at each other. The Russian press made no comment on
a possible marriage, but in London
The Times
put it eloquently into perspective: ‘The view propounded in official quarters is that Russia would like to see Rumania as free to choose her friendships as Prince Carol and the Grand Duchess Olga are to follow the inclinations
of their hearts.’42
Three days later, with a sigh of relief the Romanovs boarded the
imperial train for the south and Easter in Livadia. On board the
Shtandart
that year (and contrary to what the Duchess of Coburg had heard) there had been a distinct shift in the attitude of the crew to the now teenage Romanov sisters. Nikolay Vasilievich Sablin
noted in particular how Olga had ‘turned into a real lady’. On the
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FOUR SISTERS
Shtandart
, like everywhere else, the officers had begun discussing the future marriages of the sisters and had come to ‘a kind of
unspoken agreement . . . to conduct themselves with these charming
Grand Duchesses no longer as juveniles or little girls’.43 Sablin was fully aware that the older two sisters ‘preferred the company of
certain officers to that of others’ – no doubt an allusion to the
favouritism for Rodionov and the now departed Voronov. But the
former relationship the men had had with the sisters was now ‘inad-
missable’: ‘We had to remember they were the daughters of the
tsar.’ These were not the same little girls they had first encountered seven years previously, and they must all ensure that they behaved
punctiliously, as officers and gentlemen. They did, however, gently
tease the sisters, telling them ‘that they would soon be brides and
leave us’. In response the girls had laughed and promised that they
would ‘never marry foreigners and leave their beloved homeland’.44
Sablin thought this was wishful thinking; for since when, he asked,
had royal brides ever had freedom of choice? In this respect, however, he was most certainly wrong.
The men in the
Shtandart
were not the only ones to notice how the Romanov sisters were all becoming beautiful young women that
last hot summer before the war. Visiting Count Nostitz’s estate near
Yalta one day, they were taken by the countess to feed the black
swans on the lake: ‘I thought how lovely they looked as they flitted
in and out among the flower-beds in their light summer dresses,
like so many flowers themselves’, she recalled.45 At a ball at the
White Palace shortly afterwards the sisters enjoyed another magical
Crimean evening, when ‘a great golden moon hung low over the
dark ruffled waters of the Black Sea, gilding the silhouettes of the
tall cypress trees’.
From the ball-room behind us came the dreamy lilt of a Viennese
waltz, the light laughter of the Grand Duchesses Olga and
Tatiana, their merry eyes sparkling with pleasure, as they drifted
past the open windows, dancing with Jean Woroniecki and Jack
de Lalaing.46
*
* Foreign Office official Prince Jean Woroniecki, and Comte Jacques de Lalaing,
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GOD SAVE THE TSAR!
It was a perfect picture-book image; but it would be the girls’
last ball in their beloved Crimea.
With the visit to Constanza imminent, Nicholas walked over to
visit Grand Duchess George at Harax one last time before leaving,
‘escaping from the horde of detectives and his bodyguard by taking
the mountain paths’. As the duchess’s lady-in-waiting Agnes de
Stoeckl stood with him looking out over the sea in the still of the
Crimean evening, he turned to her: ‘We are in June now,’ he said,
‘we have had two very happy months, we must repeat them . . . Let
us make a pact we all meet here again on 1 October.’47 And then
after a pause he added ‘more slowly, rather seriously’ – ‘After all,
in this life we do not know what lies before us.’48
Alexandra too was privately expressing her apprehensions about
what might be to come. During a discussion she had with Sergey
Sazonov on the balcony of the White Palace before they left for
Constanza, she spoke of the possible political repercussions of high-
profile dynastic matches and the responsibilities her girls would have to take on. ‘I think with terror . . . that the time draws near when
I shall have to part with my daughters’, she told him.
I could desire nothing better than they should remain in Russia
after their marriage. But I have four daughters, and it is, of
course, impossible. You know how difficult marriages are in
reigning families. I know it by experience, although I was never
in the position my daughters occupy . . . The Emperor will have
to decide whether he considers this or that marriage suitable for
his daughters, but parental authority must not extend beyond
that.49
Privately, although Sazonov had been bullish about the desira-
bility of the Romanian match, saying that ‘It’s not every day that
an Orthodox Hohenzollern comes along’, Olga was already very
clear in her mind, even before they had set sail. ‘I will never leave Russia’, she told her friends in the
Shtandart
and she said as much to Pierre Gilliard too.50 She was adamant that she did not want to
a secretary at the Belgian legation, were house guests of the Nostitz family at their estate at Yalta.
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be a queen or princess in some foreign court. ‘I’m a Russian, and
mean to remain a Russian!’
*
On 1 June the Romanovs sailed from Yalta across the Black Sea to
Romania. It was a glorious sunny day, ‘smiling, windless and yet not
too hot, a day of rare beauty’, when the
Shtandart
steamed into view at Constanza escorted by the
Polyarnaya Zvezda
, like ‘two marvelous Chinese toys of laquer, black and gold’.51 Waiting on the quayside,
the Romanian royal family caught sight of Nicholas on deck, ‘a little white figure’ and his wife ‘very tall and dominat[ing] her family as
a solitary poplar dominates the garden’. As for the girls, it was the same bland, collective view: ‘four light dresses, four gay summer
hats’.52
As they disembarked, the Romanovs were greeted by a fanfare
of guns, flags, hurrahs, military bands and a warm welcome from
King Carol and Queen Elizabeth, their son Crown Prince Ferdinand,
his wife Marie and their children. Crown Princess Marie later wrote
to her mother about their ‘great Russian day’, which had been an