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
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FOUR SISTERS
Yanyshev, arrived from Russia to give Alix instruction in the Russian Orthodox religion. He had a hard time of it; Alix was a rigorous
and questioning pupil. Her evangelical upbringing had taught her
to dislike dogma and she refused adamantly to make a formal state-
ment renouncing her Lutheranism as heretical. A compromise had
to be reached.
With the wedding scheduled for the spring of 1895, Alix antici-
pated having several quiet months back home in Hesse to prepare,
but plans were dramatically changed with news from Russia that
Alexander III had fallen dangerously ill and was not expected to
live. By now reconciled to the marriage, he wished to see Alix before he died and she left Hesse in great haste, making the long train
journey south to Simferopol in the Crimea accompanied by her
loyal friend Gretchen. After she had joined Nicky at the Romanov
palace at Livadia, the couple was formally betrothed in front of the
dying tsar. Alexander’s death on 20 October
*
was followed the day after by Alix’s formal acceptance into the Russian Orthodox Church.
As Nicholas was now tsar the marriage was brought forward. But
it did not take place as the couple would have wished, in private,
in Livadia.42 The Russian grand dukes objected; court protocol
demanded a formal ceremony in the capital. And so in a bitterly
cold St Petersburg, after three weeks of exhausting and excruciat-
ingly protracted court mourning for the late tsar, Nicholas and
Alexandra were married on 14 November in front of hundreds of
invited guests at the chapel of the Winter Palace.
Alix could not have looked more beautiful or serene that day –
tall and statuesque in her white-and-silver brocade dress, the train
heavily trimmed in ermine and the imperial mantle of cloth of gold
across her shoulders, her lovely figure complemented by her limpid
blue eyes and her wavy reddish gold hair enhanced by the diamond-
encrusted wedding crown. British envoy Lord Carrington was deeply
impressed: ‘She looked the perfection of what one would imagine
an Empress of Russia on her way to the altar would be’, he informed
* All events taking place in Russia prior to February 1918 are given according to the Old Style, Julian calendar then in use there. Where confusion might arise, New Style dates are added in brackets.
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MOTHER LOVE
Queen Victoria.43 Other witnesses noted the commanding stature
of the princess alongside her shorter and rather delicate-looking
consort; to all intents and purposes she appeared to be the one with
the physical strength, a woman of considerable presence, ‘much
above the traditional level of Duchy Princesses’.44
There was, however, something about the royal bride’s solemn,
guarded look and the thin tight mouth that told a different story,
of a strong, determined personality fighting a natural, but violent,
antipathy to being on public display after having enjoyed the
domestic privacy of the Hessian court for so long. Alix endured the
ordeal, but at the end of her wedding day, much like her grand-
mother Victoria before her, she retreated to bed early with a head-
ache. For others who had attended the proceedings that day, such
as Princess Radziwill, it had been ‘one of the saddest sights I ever
remember having seen’. So long as the authoritarian Alexander III
had lived the Russian aristocracy had felt safe, but their sense of
security had vanished with his untimely death, and had been replaced
with ‘the feeling of approaching calamity’.45
After a few nights spent in the relatively cramped surroundings
of Nicholas’s bachelor apartments at the Anichkov Palace in St
Petersburg (their own at the Winter Palace still being redecorated)
the newly married couple travelled to the Alexander Palace at
Tsarskoe Selo. They ensconced themselves in the dowager empress’s
apartments in the east wing, where Nicky himself had been born
in 1868, for four blissful days of absolute privacy, ‘hand in hand and heart to heart’, as Nicky told his brother-in-law Ernie.46 Alix had
also written shortly before her wedding assuring Ernie that ‘I am
so happy & never can thank God enough for having given me such
a treasure as my Nicky’.47 The obscure and serious-minded Alix of
Hesse, whom even her own grandmother had described as ‘ein
kleines deutsches Prinzesschen with no knowledge of anything
beyond small German courts’, had won for herself not only one of
the greatest royal catches but the richest man in the world.48
But in leaving Darmstadt prematurely the new tsaritsa had arrived
in Russia ignorant of its customs and profound superstitions, with
a limited knowledge of its language and having made the enormous
leap of faith from the militant austerity of her devout Lutheranism
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FOUR SISTERS
to the mystical and opulent rituals of Russian Orthodoxy. The
cultural divide was enormous. Princess Alix of Hesse encountered
the same problems – on a much grander scale – that her mother
before her had first met in Darmstadt, and – for that matter – her
grandfather Prince Albert, who as a homesick Coburger had arrived
in an alien English court fifty-four years before. Alix’s adoptive
country was as wary of her as a German and an interloper – the
fifth princess of German blood to become a Russian empress in
barely a century – as England had been of the obscure Saxe-Coburg
princeling Albert.
She might have embraced Orthodoxy with all her heart, but Alix
was English through and through, with English habits, English
sentiments and a no-nonsense English approach to family life bred
in the bone by her mother and grandmother before her. Such a
background would have served her well had she remained within
the familiar sphere of her Western-European bloodline, but Russia
– despite the seductive beauty of its landscape, which she already
loved – was unknown territory, a country legendary for its turbulent
history and for the overpowering wealth and grandeur of its court.
Fin-de-siècle
imperial St Petersburg was a far cry from the comfortable domesticity of the Neues Palais and the rose gardens of
Darmstadt.
Nevertheless, for the sake of love, ‘gentle simple Alicky’ had
summoned up all her courage to leave the shelter of her brother’s
quiet and peaceful
residenz
in Darmstadt to become ‘the great Empress of Russia’.49 To counter her apprehensions about the unfamiliar court practices she was presented with, she closed the door
to the hostile world outside and everything in it that frightened her.
Instead, she clung to those few close, familiar things in which she
took comfort, and to her role as Nicholas’s devoted ‘little wifey’.
For now, the world – and Russia – could wait.
Except in one respect: shortly after Alexander III’s death, Nicholas
had issued a proclamation commanding his subjects to swear the
oath of allegiance to him as their new tsar. His younger brother
Grand Duke Georgiy Alexandrovich, he proclaimed, would bear the
title of tsarevich ‘until it please God to bless our approaching union
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with the Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt with the birth of a son’.50
In the dynastic scheme of things, Alix’s primary and most urgent
duty was to provide a male heir to the Russian throne.
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N
From her very first days in Russia, Princess Alix of Hesse was deter-
mined to counter anything she saw as a threat to the quiet family
life that she had envisaged for herself and Nicky. Family had been
her only security when death had taken those most dear from her;
she was far from home, lonely and apprehensive, and dreaded being
exposed as an object of curiosity. But in protecting her own deeply
held insecurities by retreating, at every opportunity, from public
view, she only succeeded in accentuating her already marked air of
chilly reserve. Alexandra Feodorovna, as she was now styled, found
herself at the receiving end of hostile looks from a Russian aristoc-
racy that was already critical of her English upbringing and manners
– and, to their horror, her poor French, which was still very much
the language of their elite circles.1 Worse, this insignificant German princess had, in the eyes of the court, displaced the much loved and
highly sociable former empress, Maria Feodorovna – a still vigorous
widow in her forties – from her central position at court.
From the first, Alexandra found the strain of fulfilling her cere-
monial duties almost intolerable, such as in January 1895, when she
had to face a line of 550 court ladies for the New Year
baise-main
ceremony at which they all processed to kiss her imperial hand. Her
visible discomfort and habit of recoiling in horror when anyone
tried to get too close were quickly misinterpreted as manifestations
of a difficult personality. Her new sister-in-law Grand Duchess Olga
Alexandrovna later recalled: ‘Even in that first year – I remember
so well – if Alicky smiled they called it mockery. If she looked grave
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LA PETITE DUCHESSE
they said she was angry.’2 And so, in response, Alexandra retreated
behind the protective wall of domesticity, preoccupied with the one
thing primarily expected of her – getting pregnant. Everyone was
watching for the telltale signs. Grand Duke Konstantin
Konstantinovich pointedly noted in his diary within weeks of the
wedding that ‘the young Empress again felt faint in church. If this
is for the reason the whole of Russia longs for, then praise be to
God!’3 Sure enough, by the end of February Alexandra was confiding
to Ernie (whose own wife was about to give birth to her first child
in Darmstadt and to whom Alexandra was sending the imperial
accoucheur
Madame Günst to attend her): ‘I
think
now I can have hopes – a certain thing has stopped – and I think . . . Oh I cannot
believe it, it would be too good and too great a happiness.’ She
swore Ernie to secrecy; her sister Ella had ‘fidgeted in December
already about it’ and her other sister Irene too, but she would tell
them in her own time.4 As for her old nurse, whom she had brought
with her from Darmstadt, ‘Orchie watches me the whole time in a
tiresome way’. Within a week of this letter, Alexandra was ‘feeling
daily so terribly sick’ that she could not attend the funeral service for the young Grand Duke Alexey Mikhailovich who had died of
tuberculosis, and thereafter she was frequently confined to bed with
violent nausea.5 Orchie coaxed her to have the occasional mutton
chop, which more often than not would send her fleeing from the
dining table to vomit. Alexandra was fearful that she was being
watched for signs of her legendary poor health, and again begged
Ernie not to tell anyone about how severe her morning sickness
was.6 From now until her due date tsarist officialdom protected
Alexandra’s health and welfare behind a wall of silence; there were
no announcements or bulletins in the Russian press and the people
at large knew nothing of her condition.
For the time being the couple was still living at the Anichkov
Palace in St Petersburg. Alexandra spent her days here resolutely
hidden away from view in a ‘big armchair in a corner, half-hidden
by the screen’, reading the
Darmstadter Zeitung
,
sewing and painting, while her adored husband dealt with his ‘aggravating people’. She
resented Nicky’s absence on official business for even a couple of
hours in the morning (echoes of her grandmother Victoria’s solipsism
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FOUR SISTERS
and inability to let her beloved Albert out of her sight). But she did have him to herself in the afternoons: ‘whilst he usually reads his
heaps of papers from the ministers, I look through the begging
letters, of which there are not [a] few & cut out the stamps’, the latter act a mark of her ingrained Hessian frugality.7 The business
of state seemed an irritating diversion – ‘a horrid bore’.8 Evenings
were spent listening to Nicky reading aloud, after which, while he
decamped to his study for more paperwork, Alexandra would spin
out the time playing the board game halma with her mother-in-law
until Nicky returned for more bedtime reading. What few perfunc-
tory duties Alexandra was obliged to fulfil – meeting foreign depu-
tations or line-ups of ministers – were now made doubly unpleasant,
for she was feeling dreadfully sick and suffering constant headaches.
Nevertheless, the tsaritsa had every reason to be confident that
she would produce the expected son before the year was out. The
statistics certainly favoured it, there having been plenty of boys born to the previous three Romanov tsars. Male children were crucial in