37 The girls sobbing: Gilliard, 263.
38 The journey to Tyumen: ibid., 263; Bykov, 68–9; Pares, 490. Waving white handkerchiefs: Bykov, 69. The sign of the Cross: Kobylinsky, 209; Bulygin, 212.
39 Red cavalry: Bulygin, 212. “Proceeding safely”: Kobylinsky, 210.
40 Yakovlev leaves in the wrong direction: Pares, 490.
41 “A traitor to the revolution,” “To all, to all, to all”: Bykov, 70.
42 Kulomzino: Gibbs, in Wilton, 235; Pares, 490. Telephone conversation with Sverdlov: Bykov, 71; Bulygin, 225.
43 “I have orders to take you to Ekaterinburg”: Kobylinsky, 210.
44 “Judging from the local papers”: Bykov, 72.
45 Yakovlev a monarchist agent: Bykov, 69. Pares believes that Yakovlev was trying to save the Imperial family from falling into the clutches of the Ekaterinburg Soviet and that he may possibly have been trying to rescue them completely: Pares, 491.
46 German domination of Russia: Bulygin, 223.
47 “Be calm”: ibid., 202, 219. The Kaiser’s personal responsibility: ibid., 220–1. Restoration of the Tsar: ibid., 223.
48 Mirbach’s game: Wilton, 151. Sverdlov’s game: Gilliard, 282–3; Bulygin, 224–5.
49 Yakovlev deserted to Kolchak: Bykov, 73; Pares, 491.
50 Mirbach outwitted: Bulygin, 226.
51–52 Yussoupov and the German envoy: Yussoupov, 268. 504–5 “The fate of the Russian Emperor”: Bulygin, 227. “The dictatorship of Mirbach”: Bruce Lockhart, 296–7.
CHAPTER 34 EKATERINBURG
1 Ekaterinburg and the Ipatiev house: Wilton, 19; Bykov, 72.
2 “Show us the Romanovs”: Bykov, 72.
3 Nicholas steps out, carrying his own bags: Bulygin, 230–1; Benckendorff, 136.
4 “Citizen Romanov, you may enter”: Bulygin, 231.
5 “So far, we have had polite treatment”: Kobylinsky, 216.
6 The swastika: Gilliard, 274; Kobylinsky, 239.
7 Telegram to Kobylinsky: Gilliard, 264.
8 “Dispose of the medicines”: Bulygin, 232; Wilton, 74.
9 Tatiana supervised the children: Kobylinsky, 220.
10–11 Rodionov: Bulygin, 228–30; Gilliard, 264. “Nobody is permitted to look at the windows”: Botkin, 208. “The child is ill”: Bulygin, 230; Gilliard, 265. Fourth-class carriage: Bulygin, 233.
12 “Several carriages were drawn up”: Gilliard, 269.
13–14 The suite divided: ibid., 270. Gilliard rescued: ibid., 273.
15 Living arrangements in the Ipatiev house: Medvedev, in Wilton, 287; Gilliard, 283. The guards: Bulygin, 231–2; Gilliard, 282. Avadeyev: Yakimov, in Wilton, 261–2.
16 Avadeyev’s drinking and pilfering: Bulygin, 232; Yakimov, in Wilton, 267.
17 “Let them go to hell”: Yakimov, in Wilton, 273.
18 The daily schedule: Bykov, 74; Benckendorff, 137; Yakimov, in Wilton, 271; Proskuriakov, in Wilton, 299; Gilliard, 284.
19 “You’ve had enough, you idle rich”: Bulygin, 232.
20 Nagorny’s defense of Alexis: Gibbs, in Wilton, 252–3; Gilliard, 272.
21–22 “Nagorny was going to the carriage”: Gilliard, 272. In the cell with Prince Lvov: Gibbs, in Wilton, 252–3.
23 “I have still an impression of them”: Yakimov, in Wilton, 274–5.
24 “We spent long hours discussing ways and means”: Vorres, 243.
25 “Half-crazy ladies, countesses and baronesses”: Bykov, 76.
26 “The hour of liberation is approaching”: ibid., 78. An assessment of the rescue plots in Ekaterinburg: Pares, 493–4.
27 “With God’s help and your prudence”: quoted by Bykov, 78.
28 “The second window from the corner”: quoted by Bykov, 79.
29 “We spent an anxious night”: Krasny Arkhiv, 1928, Vol XXVII, p. 136, quoted by Bykov.
30 The “Letts”: Bulygin, 235; Wilton, 82–3; Yakimov, in Wilton, 268. Yurovsky: Wilton, 29, 81.
31 “This specimen we like least of all”: Pares, 495.
32 “Anxiety unnecessary”: Gilliard, 286; Bulygin, 235, 242.
33 Goloshchekin and Sverdlov: Bulygin, 243; Wilton, 27–8, 75; Pares, 495. Public trial with Trotsky as prosecutor: Bykov, 75.
34 The Czechs: Pares, 485.
35 The decision to shoot the Romanovs: Wilton, 127, 139; Bykov, 80.
36 The “Four Brothers”: Bulygin, 248. Gasoline and acid: ibid., 249, Wilton, 101.
37 Yurovsky had no strong feelings: Yakimov, in Wilton, 277. His conversation with Alexis: Bulygin, 237; Gilliard, 286.
38 Father Storozhov: Bulygin, 236. “At Rest with the Saints”: Pares, 496.
39 Nicholas carried Alexis: Medvedev, in Wilton, 289. Anastasia and Jimmy: Wilton, 95. The basement room: Wilton, 88.
40 The Tsar and his daughters went for a walk: Yakimov, in Wilton, 277. “Tonight, we will shoot the whole family”: Bulygin, 237; Medvedev, in Wilton, 288.
41 The murder: Bulygin, 237–8; Gilliard, 287–8; Pares, 497. Demidova pierced thirty times: Yakimov, in Wilton, 281. Jimmy killed: Wilton, 95. Anastasia: Gilliard, 288.
EPILOGUE
1 Destruction of the bodies: Bulygin, 249–50; Wilton 101–2; Gilliard, 290. “The world will never know what we did with them”: Pares, 498. Voikov becomes Soviet ambassador: Pares, 496.
2 Ekaterinburg falls to the Whites: Wilton, 104. “Joy” found in the courtyard: Buxhoeveden, Left Behind, 154. Appearance of the murder room: Gilliard, 274.
3 “But the children—”: Gilliard, 277. Sokolov: Bulygin, 248; Wilton, 15.
4 Evidence found in the mine: Gilliard, 293–4; Wilton, 116–17; Gibbs, in Wilton, 254; Bulygin, 252. Jimmy’s body: Wilton, 95.
5 “Comrade Sverdlov wants to make a statement”: Bykov, 82.
6 “Tell Sverdlov that the whole family met the same fate”: Bulygin, 244.
7–8 Text of the death announcements: Gilliard, 292; Wilton, 14.
9 Bolsheviks arrest 28 Social Revolutionaries: Wilton, 21, 103.
10 “Oh, yes, and where is the Tsar?”: Trotsky’s Diary in Exile, 1935 (Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1953), p. 81.
11–12 Wilson at Lane’s dinner party: Walworth, II, 171. Death of Grand Duke Michael: Wilton, 121; Pares, 493. Death of Grand Duchess Elizabeth: Wilton, 124; Benckendorff, 140–2; Bulygin, 256; Pares, 498–9. Death of the four Grand Dukes: Wilton, 127. “The Revolution does not need historians”: Vyrubova, 294.
13 Was Lenin murdered by Stalin? In two recent biographies of Lenin, both excellent, the two biographers disagree. Louis Fischer doubts that Stalin had a hand in Lenin’s death; Robert Payne is certain that Stalin had Lenin poisoned.
14 Yalta Conference in Livadia Palace: Winston Churchill, Triumph and Tragedy (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1953), 346, 349, and Robert E. Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins (New York, Harper, 1948), 850–1.
15 Sverdlov’s death: Wilton (p. 161) declares that although Sverdlov was said to have died naturally, he was in fact “knocked on the head” by a Moscow workman.
16 American correspondents visit Sverdlovsk: Harrison Salisbury, New York Times, Aug. 1, 1959.
17 The account of Empress Marie’s last years is taken from Vorres (the memoirs of her daughter Grand Duchess Olga). Marie leaves Russia: Vorres, 163. Refuses to believe Nicholas is dead: ibid., 171. Argues with King Christian over the light bill: ibid., 169. A pension from King George V: ibid., 170. Her death: ibid., 181.
18 Grand Duchess Olga. Moves to Toronto: ibid., 192. Invited to lunch by Queen Elizabeth: ibid., 213. Dies in an apartment over a barbershop: ibid., 221.
19 Grand Duke Cyril. Nicholas’s heir: Vyrubova, 207; Vorres, 236. “The day of glory is near”: Cyril’s obituary in New York Times, Oct. 13, 1938. Vladimir Cyrilovich: Kschessinska, 252; Vorres, 236.
20 Grand Duke Nicholas: Pares, 501.
21 Grand Duke Dmitry: Time, March 16, 1941; Kschessinska, 150–60, 248.
22 The fate of the suite: Pares, 499.
23 The ministers: Pares, 500. Prince Lvo
v: Kokovtsov, 545.
24 Alexeiev and Kornilov: Pares, 500. Brusilov and Polivanov, ibid., 501.
25 “The Poles are besieging Russian fortresses”: Vorres, 232.
26 Sukhomlinov: Escaped in a sailboat: Kokovtsov, 526. Dedicated his memoirs to the Kaiser: Tuchman, 63. Wife married a Georgian officer and was killed: Vyrubova, 191.
27 Buchanan: Buchanan, II, 93, 261.
28 Benckendorff: Benckendorff, vii, 166. Fredericks: Botkin, 40
29 Vyrubova, Polar Star: Vyrubova, 276–7. Gorky: ibid., 292–4.
30 Gilliard: from his obituary, Gazette de Lausanne, June 8, 1962.
31 Iliodor: New York Herald Tribune, July 5,1933. Time, Feb. 11, 1952.
32 Maria Rasputin: Time, Dec. 4, 1939. In November, 1966, a circus poster advertising Mlle. Rasputin was on display in a collection of circus posters at the Lincoln Center Museum in New York City.
33 Kschessinska instructed Margot Fonteyn: Kschessinska, 237. Danced at Covent Garden, 238.
34 Yussoupov: The author attended the 1965 trial in its entirety.
35 Hemophilia. Alfonso and Gonzalo; McKusick, 94. The possibility that hemophilia will recur in this family is remote: Armand J. Quick, M.D. “International Forum on Hemophilia,” Spectrum, Vol. 10, No. 2, (March-April, 1962).
36–37 The legend of the Romanov gold. All Imperial properties taken: Benckendorff, 125–6. Nicholas’s capital on abdication: Benckendorff, 89. The relics buried near Paris: Vorres, 171. Marie’s jewels valued at $2 million: ibid., 183. Many appeared in Queen Mary’s possession: ibid., 184. Funds in Berlin: ibid., 179. Valued at $1,500: New York Herald Tribune, Nov. 18, 1965.
38 English deposits brought back to Russia: Vorres, 179.
39 “I see Buchanan tomorrow”: AF to N, 123, 125.
40 Sir Edward Peacock. Instructed by King George V: Vorres, 183. “I am pretty sure there never was any money”: ibid., 246.
41 The Tsar in London: Benckendorff, 146. In Rome: ibid., 147. Family on a ship in the White Sea: Bulygin, 272. Dozens of claimants: ibid., 271, 276–7.
42 Numerous Anastasias: Vorres, 201, 202. Mrs. Anderson and Grand Duchess Olga: ibid., 175–6. “Dear Aunt Olga”: ibid., 200. “My telling the truth does not help”: from a letter published in Life, Dec. 30, 1963, written by Ian Vorres.
Bibliography
PRIMARY SOURCES
Nicholas II, Journal Intime. Translated by A. Pierre. Paris, Payot, 1925. (Cited in Notes as N’s Diary.)
The Letters of the Tsar to the Tsaritsa 1914–1917. London, Bodley Head; New York, Dodd, Mead, 1929. (Cited in Notes as N to AF.)
Letters of the Tsaritsa to the Tsar 1914–1916. Introduction by Sir Bernard Pares. London, Duckworth, 1923. (Cited in Notes as AF to N.)
The Secret Letters of the Last Tsar: The Confidential Correspondence Between Nicholas II and His Mother, Dowager Empress Marie Feodorovna. Edited by Edward J. Bing. New York, Longmans, Green, 1938. (Cited in Notes as N to MF or MF to N.)
Alexander, Grand Duke of Russia, Once a Grand Duke. New York, Garden City, 1932.
Benckendorff, Count Paul, Last Days at Tsarskoe Selo. London, Heinemann, 1927.
Botkin, Gleb, The Real Romanovs. New York, Revell, 1931.
Botkina, Tatiana Melnik, Vospominanya o Tsarskoy Sem’ye. Belgrade, Stefanonivich, 1921.
Bovey, Kate Koon, Russian Coronation 1896. Minneapolis, privately printed, 1942.
Bruce Lockhart, R. H., British Agent. New York and London, Putnam, 1933.
Buchanan, Sir George, My Mission to Russia. 2 vols. London and New York, Cassell, 1923. (Cited in Notes as Buchanan.)
Buchanan, Meriel, The Dissolution of an Empire. London, Murray, 1932.
Bulygin, Paul, and Alexander Kerensky, The Murder of the Romanovs. Introduction by Sir Bernard Pares. London, Hutchinson, 1935.
Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, Left Behind: Fourteen Months in Siberia During the Revolution. New York and London, Longmans, Green, 1929.
——, The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna, Empress of Russia. New York and London, Longmans, Green, 1928. (Cited in Notes as Buxhoeveden.)
Bykov, P. M., The Last Days of Tsardom. London, Martin Lawrence [1934].
Dehn, Lili, The Real Tsaritsa. London, Thornton Butterworth, 1922.
Gilliard, Pierre, Thirteen Years at the Russian Court. New York, Doran, 1921.
Golovine, Lieutenant General Nicholas, The Russian Army in the World War. Yale and Oxford University Presses, 1931.
Hanbury-Williams, Major-General Sir John, The Emperor Nicholas as I Knew Him. London, Arthur L. Humphreys, 1922.
(Iliodor) Trufanoff, Sergei, The Mad Monk of Russia. New York, Century, 1918.
(Izvolsky) Iswolsky, Alexander, Memoirs. Edited and translated by Charles L. Seeger. London, Hutchinson, 1920.
Kerensky, Alexander, The Catastrophe. New York, Appleton, 1927.
——, The Crucifixion of Liberty. New York, Day, 1934.
——, Russia and History’s Turning Point. New York, Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1965.
——, and Paul Bulygin, The Murder of the Romanovs. Introduction by Sir Bernard Pares. London, Hutchinson, 1935.
Knox, Major-General Sir Alfred, With the Russian Army, 1914–1917, New York, Dutton, 1921.
Kobylinsky, Colonel Eugene, Deposition in Robert Wilton, The Last Days of the Romanovs. London, Thornton Butterworth, 1920.
Kokovtsov, Count Vladimir N., Out of My Past: The Memoirs of Count Kokovtsov. Stanford University Press, 1935.
Kschessinska, Mathilde, Dancing in Petersburg. Translated by Arnold Haskell. Garden City, Doubleday, 1961.
Lloyd George, David, War Memoirs: 1916–17. Boston, Little, Brown, 1934.
Marye, George Thomas, Nearing the End in Imperial Russia, 1914–1916. Philadelphia, Dorance, 1929.
(Mosolov) Mossolov, A. A., At the Court of the Last Tsar. London, Methuen, 1935.
Narishkin-Kurakin, Elizabeth, Under Three Tsars. New York, Dutton, 1931.
Novikoff-Priboy, A., Tsushima. New York, Knopf, 1937.
Obolensky, Serge, One Man in His Time. New York, McDowell Obolensky, 1958.
Oukhtomsky, E. E., Voyage en Orient, 1890–1891, de Son Altesse Imperiale le Tsarevitch. Paris, Dèlegrave, 1893.
Paléologue, Maurice, An Ambassador’s Memoirs. 3 vols. Translated by F. A. Holt. New York, Doran, 1925.
Pobedonostsev, Konstantin P., Reflections of a Russian Statesman. Ann Arbor Paperbacks, University of Michigan Press, 1965.
(Purishkevich) Pourichkevitch, Vladimir, Comme j’ai tué Raspoutine. Paris, Povolozky, 1923.
Rasputin, Maria, My Father. London, Cassell, 1934.
Red Archives [Krasny Arkhiv]. Edited by C. E. Vulliamy, translated by A. L. Hynes. London, Bles, 1929.
Reed, John, Ten Days That Shook the World. New York, Modern Library, 1935.
Rodzianko, M. V., The Reign of Rasputin. London, Philpot, 1927.
Sazonov, Serge, Fateful Years. New York, Stokes, 1928.
Spiridovitch, General Alexandre, Les Dernières Années de la Cour de Tsarkoie-Selo. 2 vols. Paris, Payot, 1928.
Trotsky, Leon, The History of the Russian Revolution. 3 vols. Translated by Max Eastman. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1932.
Vorres, Ian, Last Grand Duchess: The Memoirs of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna. London, Hutchinson, 1964. New York, Scribner, 1965.
(Vyrubova) Viroubova, Anna, Memories of the Russian Court. New York, Macmillan, 1923.
The Willy-Nicky Correspondence. Edited by Herman Bernstein. New York, Knopf, 1918.
Wilton, Robert, The Last Days of the Romanovs (including Depositions of Colonel Kobylinsky, Pierre Gilliard, Sidney Gibbs, Anatoly Yakimov, Pavel Medvedev, Philip Proskuriakov). London, Thornton Butterworth, 1920.
Windsor, Edward, Duke of, A King’s Story. New York, Putnam, 1947.
Witte, Count Sergius. Memoirs. Translated and edited by Abraham Yarmolinsky. New York, Doubleday, Page, 1921.
(Yussoupov) Youssoupoff, Prince Felix, Lost Splendor. London, Cape, 1953. (Cited in
Notes as Yussoupov.)
——, Rasputin. New York, Dial, 1927.
GENERAL SOURCES
Almedingen, E. M. The Empress Alexandra. London, Hutchinson, 1961.
Bainbridge, Henry Charles, Peter Carl Fabergé: An Illustrated Record and Review of His Life and Work. London, Batsford, 1949.
Balfour, Michael, The Kaiser and His Times. Boston, Houghton Miffin, 1964.
Billington, James H., The Icon and the Axe. New York, Knopf, 1966.
Chamberlin, William Henry, The Russian Revolution 1917–1921. 2 vols. New York, Macmillan, 1935.
Charques, Richard, The Twilight of Imperial Russia. Fair Lawn, N.J., Essential Books, 1959.
Cherniavsky, Michael, Tsar and People. Yale University Press, 1961.
Churchill, Winston S., The World Crisis: The Aftermath. London, Thornton Butterworth, 1929.
——, The World Crisis. New York, Scribner, 1931.
Cowles, Virginia, The Kaiser. New York, Harper and Row, 1963.
Dennis, Jessie McNab, “Fabergé’s Objects of Fantasy,” Bulletin, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vol. 23, No. 7: 229–242 (March, 1965).
Fennell, J. L. I., editor and translator, The Correspondence Between Prince A. M. Kurbsky and Tsar Ivan IV of Russia, 1564–1569. Cambridge University Press, 1963.
Fischer, Louis. The Life of Lenin. New York, Harper Colophon Books, 1965.
Florinsky, Michael T., The End of the Russian Empire. New York, Collier Books, 1961.
——, Russia: A History and an Interpretation. 2 vols. New York, Macmillan, 1964. (Cited in Notes as Florinsky.)
Frankland, Noble, Imperial Tragedy. New York, Coward-McCann, 1961.
Fülöp-Miller, René, Rasputin: The Holy Devil. New York, Garden City, 1928.
Gorer, Geoffrey, and John Rickman, The People of Great Russia: A Psychological Study. New York, Norton, 1962.
Harcave, Sidney, First Blood: The Russian Revolution of 1905. New York, Macmillan, 1964.
Heckstall-Smith, Anthony. Sacred Cowes. London, Anthony Blond, 1965.
Kaun, Alexander, “The Twilight of the Romanov Dynasty,” American Review, Vol. 3: 129–142 (1925).
Kennan, George, Russia Leaves the War. Princeton University Press, 1956.
Nicholas and Alexandra: The Tragic, Compelling Story of the Last Tsar and his Family Page 76