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
had ordered that the door to their room be kept open the girls
managed to chat,
sotto voce
, with the women as they worked, and when his back was turned, Anastasia with typical irreverence cocked
a snook at him. They told the women how much they missed having
any physical work, although Olga was suffering with her health and
could not do much. But Maria in particular was as vigorous as ever.
‘We would do the most arduous work with the greatest pleasure;
washing dishes is not enough for us’, they said.31 The women were
greatly moved by the girls’ quiet acceptance of their situation and
told them that they hoped they would not have to endure such
suffering for much longer. They thanked the women. Yes, they still
had hope, they said; there was still a sparkle in their kind eyes.
After the women left at lunchtime the family settled back into
their quiet routine, reading, playing cards, walking the same small,
dusty circuit in the garden. But in the early hours of the following
morning, Wednesday 17 July, they were unexpectedly awoken by
their captors and ordered to dress. Told that they were being moved
downstairs for their safety from unrest and artillery fire in the city, they complied without question. In an orderly line Nicholas,
Alexandra and their five children, Dr Botkin and their three loyal
servants Demidova, Trupp and Kharitonov, walked quietly down the
wooden stairs from their apartments, across the courtyard and into
a dingy basement room. As they went, there were ‘no tears, no sobs
and no questions’.32
Later that morning, young Vladimir Storozhev recalled, ‘I was
on the roof flying my kite, when Father called me down and told
me they had been shot. It was July seventeenth, I remember, and
very hot.’33
Many weeks later, on 16 August, one of the last affectionate
postcards, sent during the first week of Lent by Olga to a friend in
Kiev, like so many others written by the four sisters that were never delivered, finally arrived back in Petrograd bearing an official stamp:
‘Returned due to military circumstances.’34
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On the day of their arrival in Ekaterinburg, the seventeen remaining
members of the entourage who had accompanied the children were
left to sit for several hours on their train while it was shunted back and forth before finally coming to a halt. Later, Gibbes and Gilliard saw the footman Volkov, Kharitonov the cook, Trupp the valet and
the kitchen boy Leonid Sednev taken off and put in droshkies which
took them to join the family at the Ipatiev House. Ilya Tatishchev,
Nastenka Hendrikova and Trina Schneider were taken away next;
Tatishchev to the Ipatiev House but Trina and Nastenka were trans-
ported to Perm. Here they languished in prison until, on 4
September, the Cheka came for them and they were taken out with
a group of hostages, and shot. Their bodies, at least, were soon
recovered, by the Whites, the following May.1
Ilya Tatishchev and Vasili Dolgorukov were removed from the
Ipatiev House not long after their arrival there and taken to prison
where they too were shot, on 10 July 1918; their bodies were never
found. En route to a similar death in Perm in September the footman
Volkov, by a miracle, managed to escape; he survived to tell his story and died in exile in Estonia in 1929.2 Before leaving the Alexander
Palace, Anna Demidova had sent her things home to Cherepovets
in anticipation of returning there after seeing the imperial family
safely off to exile somewhere. During the Stalinist years, her family was forced, out of fear, to destroy most of the valuable photographs
and documents she entrusted to them. But her diary, discovered in
the Ipatiev House, survives in GARF, the State Archives in Moscow.
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FOUR SISTERS
The rest of the servants who had loyally volunteered to go with the
family to the Ipatiev House, like Anna, shared their violent fate,
their bodies dumped in the same mass grave in the Koptyaki Forst
outside Ekaterinburg. The little kitchen boy Leonid Sednev escaped
the carnage, having been taken from the house the day before. He
was sent back to his family in Kaluga. But the tentacles of Stalinist repression finally caught up with him and he was arrested and shot
by the NKVD in 1942.
On 23 May Sydney Gibbes and Pierre Gilliard had been left
sitting on the train at Ekaterinburg with Iza Buxhoeveden and Mariya
Tegleva and some of the other former servants in a state of growing
apprehension until Rodionov finally reappeared at 5 p.m. and told
them they were free. The train would, however, be their home for
the best part of the next month, for they were obliged to live on it
while waiting for permits to leave the city. During that time Gibbes
and Gilliard walked past the Ipatiev House on numerous occasions
and made repeated visits to the English consul Thomas Preston,
who lived nearby, to find out what was being done to help the
imperial family; but Preston’s requests to be granted access to them
were also consistently refused. On one occasion, when approaching
the house, Gilliard and Gibbes happened to catch sight of the valet
Ivan Sednev (Leonid’s uncle) and Alexey’s
dyadka
Nagorny being brought out of the front door. Soon afterwards, the Ekaterinburg
Cheka shot both of them.
On 26 May the group on the train was finally ordered back to
Tobolsk but en route was stranded at Tyumen – now under martial
law and besieged by a huge wave of refugees fleeing the fighting
along the Trans-Siberian Railway.3 It was here, their money running
out and short of food, that they had news of the murder of the tsar,
though at the time nothing was said about the fate of Alexandra and
the children. When Ekaterinburg fell to the Whites on 25 July,
Gibbes and Gilliard returned to the city and made their way back
to the Ipatiev House. The interior had been stripped of its furnish-
ings, though a great deal of small personal belongings of the family
had been left strewn around the rooms and Gibbes rescued a few
things, including the Italian glass chandelier from the grand duch-
esses’ bedroom. They saw the dim and grimy basement room where
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the family had been killed and found it ‘sinister beyond expression’.4
Finally, in February 1919, Gilliard, Gibbes, Tegleva and
Buxhoeveden made their way east to Omsk, where Gilliard joined
the French Military Mission. He, Tegleva and Gibbes subsequently
gave evidence to the Sokolov Commission set up by Alexander
Kolchak, leader of the White forces, at the end of July 1918 to
investigate the murder of the family, as too did Klavdiya Bitner,
Kobylinsky, Pankratov and many others. Gilliard and Tegleva even-
tually travelled on to Switzerland via Japan and the USA and were
married in Geneva in 1922. Gilliard went back to teaching French,
as a professor at Lausanne University, and died in 1962. In 1923 he
published an account of his time in Russia:
Thirteen Years at the
Russian Court
.
In Omsk in 1919 Sydney Gibbes joined the British Military
Mission, and later left Russia for Harbin, where he worked for the
Chinese Maritime Customs for many years. In April 1934, he
converted to Russian Orthodoxy and was ordained as a priest. On
his return to England in 1937 he settled in Oxford, where he founded
his own religious community of St Nicholas the Wonderworker.
After his death in 1963 the community went into decline, but it is
now thriving, and has its own church in Headington, South Oxford.
From Omsk, Iza Buxhoeveden travelled on the Trans-Siberian
Railway to Manchuria and on to Vladivostok on the Pacific coast,
from where she took a boat to the USA and eventually made her
way to Europe. She lived for a while in Denmark and then in
Germany before accepting a post in England as lady-in-waiting to
Alexandra’s sister Victoria, Marchioness of Milford Haven. She lived
in a grace-and-favour apartment at Hampton Court till her death
in 1956, and wrote three memoirs of her time with the Imperial
Family.5
Elizaveta Naryshkina, who was seventy-nine when the Romanovs
left Tsarskoe Selo, eventually told her story to the Austrian writer
René Fülöp-Miller, in Moscow some time in the 1920s. Published
in 1931
Under Three Tsars
is, however, a heavily edited version of her wonderful and extremely valuable diaries for the last year at
Tsarskoe Selo. These survive in GARF and are extensively quoted
in Nicholas and Alexandra’s diaries for 1917–18 that were published
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FOUR SISTERS
in Russia in 2008. Naryshkina eventually emigrated to Paris, dying
in the Russian Emigrants’ Home in Sainte Geneviève-des-Bois in
1928.
Klavdiya Bitner later married Evgeny Kobylinsky and they settled
in Rybinsk in central Russia, where they had a son, Innokenty. Here
in 1927 Kobylinsky was arrested for supposed ‘counter-revolutionary
activities’; he was held in the much-feared Butyrki Prison near
Moscow, where he was probably tortured before being shot that
December. Klavidya did not escape; in September 1937 she too was
arrested. Two weeks later she was taken to the Butovo Poligon, a
favourite killing ground of the NKVD during the Great Terror,
located in woodland 15 miles (24 km) outside Moscow. Here she
was shot and her body thrown into a mass grave – just one of 21,000
victims of the purges who were dumped there during 1937–8. The
Kobylinskys’ orphaned son was abandoned; his fate is unknown.
During the terrible anarchy that raged in Ekaterinburg after the
murder of the Romanovs, and under threat of being taken hostage
by the Cheka, Father Ivan Storozhev fled the city. He and others
dug a hole in the cellar of a convent and walled themselves in with
a supply of food until the Czech Legion and the Whites liberated
the city.6 From there he joined the White Army as a chaplain and
with his family fled to Harbin in China. Storozhev served as a
respected priest at St Nicholas’s Russian Orthodox Church in Harbin
and taught religion in the town’s commercial school, becoming a
leading member of the émigré community by the time of his death
in 1927.7
Of the Romanov sisters’ closest friends from the hospitals at
Tsarskoe Selo, Rita Khitrovo managed to get her precious papers,
including her letters from Olga and Tatiana, to safe-keeping in Paris.
She emigrated to Yugoslavia and then to the USA, dying in New
York in 1952; her papers have recently been donated to GARF. Dr
Vera Gedroits settled in Kiev where she continued to work and
teach, becoming chair of the faculty of surgery at the Kiev Medical
Institute. She died of cancer in 1932. After the annexe hospital was
closed in late 1917, Valentina Chebotareva continued to work as a
nurse in military hospitals. She died of typhus in Novocherkassk in
south-western Russia on 6 May 1919. Her son Gregory emigrated
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to the USA, ensuring the survival of his mother’s diary and letters,
which form a key testimony of the Romanov sisters during the war
years at Tsarskoe Selo.
After the revolution, Anastasia’s friend and confidante Katya
Zborovskaya had gone south, back to the family’s original home in
the Kuban, where she worked as a nurse in a TB hospital. Her
brother Viktor fought on with former members of the Tsar’s Escort
on the side of the Whites in southern Russia, before he was wounded
again in 1920. He was evacuated to Lemnos with his family and
settled in Yugoslavia. Katya had been sick and unable to travel with
the family at the time they left, but she had had the foresight to
entrust to them her precious letters and postcards from Anastasia
and other mementoes of the Romanovs, which the family took with
them into exile. Viktor died in 1944, but his widow and her daughter
eventually settled in California where they have since placed
Anastasia’s letters to Katya in safe-keeping with the Hoover
Institution Archives.
As for Katya’s fate, like that of her dear friend Anastasia, she
would become a representative ‘victim of repression’ during the
terrifying round-ups of perceived ‘enemies’ by the new Soviet state
– and in particular those having any links to the imperial family.
On 12 June 1927 she was arrested on a trumped-up charge of
‘counter-revolutionary activities’, under the notorious article 58 of the new Soviet Criminal Code. She was sentenced to three years’
imprisonment, without trial, by a three-man kangaroo court – or
troika
– on 18 August 1927 and sent to the Gulag in Central Asia.
A few letters found their way to her family but said very little; and then they suddenly stopped. Katya died in the Gulag, one of many