The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia

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The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia Page 27

by Candace Fleming


  28 “I fired. The night …”: ibid.

  29 “In my frenzy …”: Yusupov, 231.

  30 “People kissed each other …”: Paléologue Memoirs, 20 December 1916, in Maylunas, 508.

  31 “A patrolman standing …”: Vyrubova, 179.

  32 “I cannot, and won’t …”: Alexandra to Nicholas II, 17 December/30 December 1916, in Maylunas, 493.

  33 “[They] sat on …”: Mordvinov Memoirs, ibid., 507.

  Chapter Twelve

  1 “My dear martyr …”: Paléologue, III: 136.

  2 “He listened to me …”: Kokovtsov, 478–479.

  3 “The Emperor’s words …”: Paléologue, III: 151–152.

  4 “It seems the empress …”: ibid., III: 140–141.

  5 “These exhausted mothers …”: Reports of the Petrograd Okhrana to the Special Section of the Police, 2 January/26 February 1917, GARF. “lunatic asylum,” “poisonous atmosphere,” and “profound despondency and fear”: Paléologue, III: 164.

  6 “hungry revolt” and “the most savage excesses”: Addendum to Reports of the Petrograd Okhrana to the Special Section of the Police, 26 January/8 February 1917, GARF.

  7 “To prevent a catastrophe …”: Kerensky, Crucifixion, 261.

  8 “That’s not true …”: Alexander, Grand Duke of Russia, 283–284.

  9 “It’s enough to drive …”: Alexander Mikhailovich to Nikolai Mikhailovich, 14 February/27 February 1917, in Maylunas, 530.

  10 “Daite khleb—Give us bread!”: Steinberg, 47.

  11 “I will miss …”: Nicholas II to Alexandra, 23 February 1917, Letters of the Tsar, 313.

  12 “Down with the war” and “Down with the tsar.”: Fige, 310.

  13 “Don’t worry. We …”: Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra, 400.

  14 “My brain is …”: Nicholas II to Alexandra, 24 Februrary/9 March 1917, Letters of the Tsar, 315.

  15 “Down with the …”: Ferro, Russian Revolution, 28.

  16 “I command you …”: Steinberg, 50.

  17 “It’s a hooligan …”: Alexandra to Nicholas II, 25 February/10 March 1917, ibid., 73.

  18 “Fire!” and “aim for the heart”: Ferro, Russian Revolution, 29.

  19 “The hungry, unemployed …”: Michael Rodzianko to Nicholas II, 26 February/11 March 1917, in Steinberg, 76.

  20 “That fat …”: Steinberg, 50.

  21 “the same wide streets …”: Meriel Buchanan, 164.

  22 “It looked as if …”: Paléologue, III: 217.

  23 “I see …”: Bulygin, 78.

  24 “Sire, do not …”: Gelardi, 254.

  25 “a motley, exuberant …”: Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra, 404–405.

  26 “Can I say …”: Pares, 449–451.

  27 “Comrades! I speak …”: Trotsky, Diary, 201.

  28 “their petty notions …”: Shipside, 63.

  29 “Leave tomorrow …”: Nicholas II to Alexandra, 27 February/9 March 1917, in Steinberg, 83.

  Chapter Thirteen

  1 “Petrograd is in …”: Dehn, 149.

  2 “When a house …”: Gilliard, 211.

  3 “Drunken soldiers …”: Kurth, 144.

  4 “We shall not …”: Dehn, 151.

  5 “It’s just like …”: ibid., 153.

  6 “How astonished …”: ibid., 158.

  7 “The train is …”: ibid.

  8 “Address of person …”: Vyrubova, 209.

  9 “I’m beginning …”: Dehn, 158.

  10 “My sailors …”: ibid., 162.

  11 “I must not …”: ibid.

  12 “His Majesty …”: Bulygin, 90–92.

  13 “I have decided …”: ibid., 93.

  14 “For the sake …”: ibid., 94.

  15 “Down with the dynasty!” and “Long live the Republic!”: Paléologue, III: 238.

  16 “I have decided …”: Bulygin, 94.

  17 “The entire city …”: Poole, 53.

  18 “Haven’t you understood …”: Fige, 379.

  19 “The church was full …”: ibid., 346.

  20 “What will become of us?”: ibid.

  21 “Our [village] burst …”: ibid., 347.

  22 “It’s all lies!”: Alexandrov, 141.

  23 “God and the army …”: ibid.

  24 “the study door …”: Dehn, 165.

  25 “Abdiqué …”: ibid.

  Chapter Fourteen

  1 “I am going …”: Gilliard, 214.

  2 “Your father does not …”: ibid., 214–215.

  3 “like survivors …”: Vyrubova, 218.

  4 “No longer was …”: Welch, 55.

  5 “My beloved, Soul …”: Kurth, 149.

  6 “He sobbed like …”: Vyrubova, 212.

  7 “like a schoolboy …”: Kurth, 157.

  8 “plenty of [hours] …”: ibid., 156.

  9 “A pleasant thought”: ibid.

  10 “Too many hard …”: Bulygin, 123.

  11 “What an appetizing …”: Kurth, 161.

  12 “Don’t call me …”: Dehn, 199.

  13 “Well, this may …”: ibid.

  14 “It is necessary …”: Kurth, 161.

  15 “It’s staggering!”: Volkogonov, 106.

  16 “We renounce the …”: Fige, 357.

  17 “shameless imperialist slaughter …”: Trotsky, History, I: 309.

  18 “We don’t need …”: Fischer, 128.

  19 “That is raving.”: Trotsky, History, I: 310.

  20 “a hopeless failure.”: Paléologue, III: 302.

  21 “drive to power.”: Volkogonov, 222.

  22 “Bread, peace, land …”: ibid., 231.

  23 “a curious, hypnotic power”: Fige, 392.

  24 “[Lenin] was followed …”: ibid.

  25 “several guards even …”: Gilliard, 229.

  26 “Down with the …”: Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra, 466.

  27 “It is clear …”: Fige, 429.

  28 “The Bolsheviks are …”: Bulygin, Pares in introduction, np.

  29 “I chose Tobolsk …”: ibid., 120.

  30 “Start packing …”: ibid., 121.

  31 “Where are we …”: ibid.

  32 “For your safety …”: ibid.

  33 “Only five or six …”: ibid., 128.

  34 “Behave like gentlemen …”: Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra, 469.

  35 “What shall the future …”: Buxhoeveden, Life and Tragedy, 302.

  36 “weeping copiously”: Bulygin, 130.

  37 “she wept and worried …”: ibid.

  Chapter Fifteen

  1 “arranged all quite cozily.”: Olga Nikolaevna to Anna Vyrubova, 10 December/23 December 1917, in Vyrubova, 309.

  2 “We were all amazed …”: Kurth, 171.

  3 “very fat …”: Alexandra to Anna Vyrubova, 15 December/28 December 1917, in Vyrubova, 316.

  4 “The whole day …”: Alexis Diary, 7 January/20 January 1918, in Maylunas, 601.

  5 “Everything is the same!”: Alexis Diary, 18 January/31 January 1918, ibid.

  6 “Boring!!!!”: ibid.

  7 “It’s still boring.”: Alexis Diary, 22 January/4 February 1918, ibid.

  8 “He absolutely pounced …”: Welch, 66.

  9 “extremely … cheerful …”: Trewin, 72.

  10 “got[ten] much thinner …”: ibid.

  11 “you could hardly find …”: ibid., 73.

  12 “She liked Tobolsk …”: ibid., 74.

  13 “short and stout …”: ibid.

  14 “rarely did what …”: ibid.

  15 “Week by week …”: Reed, 11.

  16 “History will not …”: Andrews, 59.

  17 “I had never seen …”: Kurth, 174.

  18 “in the hope …”: Gilliard, 243–244.

  19 “a war to the …”: Burleigh, 84.

  20 “smelled of printer’s ink …”: Paustovsky, 506.

  21 “This is how …”: Smith, 16.

  22 “I’ve spent all my life …”: Hosking, 31.


  23 “former people”: Rendle, 203.

  24 “former landowners, capitalists …”: ibid.

  25 “For centuries, our fathers …”: Leon Trotsky as quoted in “Revolution: Russia: Area of Study 2: Creating a New Society,” np.

  26 “Where are the …”: Bainton, 197.

  27 “We often take …”: Tatiana to Peter Petrov, 26 January/11 March 1918, in Steinberg, 202.

  28 “Soldiers’ rations.”: Steinberg, 178.

  29 “We held a ‘sitting’ …”: Gilliard, 255.

  30 “became cruder …”: Nicholas II to Grand Duchess Xenia, 7 January/20 January 1918, in Steinberg, 218.

  31 “To stop us …”: Nicholas II Diary, 20 February/5 March 1918, in Maylunas, 604.

  32 “The children are disconsolate”: Gilliard, 255.

  33 “pack of blackguardly-looking …”: ibid.

  34 “filthy, stupid, crude …”: Gilliard testimony of 5–6 March 1919, Houghton Library, Harvard University, Sokolov Archive, vol. 2: document 55.

  35 “It is obvious …”: ibid.

  36 “a great inconvenience”: Kurth, 177.

  37 “I should like …”: Alexandra to Anna Vyrubova, 30 March/12 April 1918, in Maylunas, 611.

  38 “developed a pain …”: Nicholas II Diary, 30 March/12 April 1918, in Maylunas, 610.

  39 “an awful internal …”: Alexandra to Anna Vyrubova, 30 March/12 April 1918, ibid.

  40 “He is frightfully …”: ibid., 611.

  41 “It is such …”: Gilliard, 257.

  42 “To think …”: Bulygin, 202.

  43 “Everything is in …”: Nicholas II Diary, 9 March/22 March 1918, in Maylunas, 608.

  44 “The yellow-complexioned …”: Inspection of Freedom House, 23 April/6 May 1918, in Steinberg, 238.

  45 “Only principal part …”: Negotiations by telegraph between Yakovlev and Moscow, 24 April/7 May 1918, GARF.

  46 “Removal [of] principal …”: Negotiations by telegraph between Moscow and Yakovlev, 24 April/7 May 1918, GARF.

  47 “I must tell you …”: Kobylinksy Deposition in Wilton, 205.

  48 “I refuse to go”: Bulygin, 208.

  49 “Then I must …”: ibid.

  50 “You want to tear …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 85.

  51 “Like an animal …”: ibid.

  52 “I can’t let the tsar …”: Gilliard, 260–261.

  53 “Mother, something …”: Gilliard, 261.

  54 “would take great care of …”: ibid.

  55 “too young to be …”: Kurth, 180.

  56 “an angel …”: ibid.

  57 “God won’t allow …”: Bykov, 68.

  58 “[They] gazed …”: Kurth, 181.

  Chapter Sixteen

  1 “sadness … descended …”: Volkov, np.

  2 “These days …”: Anastasia to Marie, 24 April/7 May 1918, in Steinberg, 302.

  3 “Why Ekaterinburg?”: Kobylinksy Deposition in Wilton, 207.

  4 “finishing off …”: Steinberg, 186.

  5 “I consider it …”: Negotiations by telegraph between Yakovlev and officials on transfer of Nicholas II to Ekaterinburg, 29 April/12 May 1918, in Steinberg, 252.

  6 “It is not clear …”: Marie to Olga Nikolaevich, 18 April/1 May 1918, in Steinberg, 298.

  7 “right snake …”: Kurth, 188.

  8 “a strict prison”: ibid.

  9 “We get nasty surprises …”: Marie to Olga Nikolaevich, 27 April/10 May 1918, in Steinberg, 304.

  10 “Your soldiers would …”: ibid.

  11 “If you do not …”: ibid.

  12 “Are you Olga …”: Buxhoeveden, Life and Tragedy, 336.

  13 “Darling, you must …”: Olga Nikolaevna to Anna Vyrubova, nd, May 1918, GARF.

  14 “We feel …”: Gilliard, 264–265.

  15 “In our thoughts …”: Anastasia to Marie, 24 April/7 May 1918, in Steinberg, 302.

  16 “The rooms are empty”: King and Wilson, Fate, 137.

  17 “Life down there …”: Tegleva testimony of 5–6 March 1913, Houghton Library, Harvard University, Sokolov Archive, vol. 5: document 36.

  18 “I cannot describe …”: Buxhoeveden, Left Behind, 75.

  19 “Look! [The tsar] …”: ibid.

  20 “Death to the tyrant!”: ibid.

  21 “The dresses … of wanton …”: ibid.

  22 “Down with them …”: ibid.

  23 “a tragic symphony …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 145.

  24 “Nagorny the sailor …”: Gilliard, 269–270.

  25 “It [always] looks …”: Nicholas II Diary, 15 May/28 May 1918, in Maylunas, 622.

  26 “hot and stuffy”: Nicholas II Diary, 22 May/4 June 1918, ibid., 627.

  27 “cosy”: Marie to Olga Nikolaevna, 22 April/5 May 1918, in Maylunas, 618. “Nicholas the Blood-Drinker”: Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra, 509.

  28 “are original …”: Nicholas II Diary, 25 April/8 May 1918, in Maylunas, 620.

  29 “money”: King and Wilson, Fate, 122.

  30 “all kinds of mistakes …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934, np.

  31 “In my opinion …”: Kurth, 190.

  32 “The shoes [you have] on …”: Buxhoeveden, Life and Tragedy, 342.

  33 “insisted on changing …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 161.

  34 “astronomical!” and “a little work …”: ibid.

  35 “[I] could find no …”: ibid.

  36 “Comrade Laundry Teacher …”: ibid.

  37 “[he] proved rather clever …”: ibid.

  38 “excellent”: Alexandra Diary, 18 June/1 July 1918, GARF.

  39 “Hugged him to” and “Being a child …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934.

  40 “It [is] unbearable …”: Krustalev, XLI.

  41 “Why?”: Nicholas II Diary, 14 May/27 May 1918 in Steinberg, 324.

  42 “everyone had a chance …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934, np.

  43 “passed some sleepless …”: ibid.

  44 “There is nothing …”: ibid.

  45 “stuck up and stupid”: King and Wilson, Fate, 238.

  46 “There was something …”: Strekotin, Statement, 1934, np.

  47 “We’re so bored!”: King and Wilson, Fate, 240.

  48 “Don’t try to …”: ibid.

  49 “pretending fright …”: ibid.

  50 “everyone relaxed more …”: ibid.

  51 “Our dear Marie is …”: Nicholas II Diary, 14 June/27 June 1918, in Maylunas, 632.

  Chapter Seventeen

  1 “Today there was …”: Nicholas II Diary, 21 June/4 July 1918, in Maylunas, 633.

  2 “Because of …”: ibid.

  3 “dark gentleman”: Kurth, 193.

  4 “It was left to me …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 258.

  5 “all obedience …”: ibid., 257.

  6 “Always fright[ened] …”: Alexandra Diary, 28 June/11 July 1918, in Steinberg, 333.

  7 “Constantly hear …”: Alexandra Diary, 29 June/12 July 1918, ibid., 334. “liquidated”: Yurovsky’s Account of the Execution of the Tsar, 1 February 1934, in Steinberg, 357.

  8 “It has to be said …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Maylunas, 633.

  9 “Everything is the same”: The Guard’s Duty Log Book, 30 June/13 July 1918, GARF.

  10 “Baby … managed …”: Alexandra Diary, 30 June/13 July 1918, in Steinberg, 334.

  11 “Today we have absolutely …”: Nicholas II Diary, 30 June/12 July 1918, in Maylunas, 633.

  12 “gave the impression …”: Testimony of Father Storozhev in King and Wilson, Fate, 275–276.

  13 “With the saints …”: Keating, 146.

  14 “were spirited …”: Testimony of Eudokia Semyonova in King and Wilson, Fate, 277–278.

  15 “a giant among men”: ibid.

  16 “They were not gods …”: ibid.

  17 “It’s been decided …”: ibid., 290.

  18 “to be in a state …”: ibid., 291.

  19 “arr
anging [their] medicines”: Alexandra Diary, 3 July/16 July 1918, in Maylunas, 634.

  20 “the execution …”: Trotsky, Diary, 213.

  21 “anything out of …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 280.

  22 “[They] said they …”: ibid., 300.

  23 “complaining about the murders”: ibid.

  24 “15 degrees”: Alexandra Diary, 3 July/16 July 1918, in Maylunas, 634.

  25 “Everyone [must] …”: Yurovsky’s Account of the Execution, 17 February 1934, in Steinberg, 356.

  26 “all skin and bones”: King and Wilson, Fate, 304.

  27 “they smiled naturally …”: ibid.

  28 “They still did not imagine …”: Yurovsky’s Account of the Execution,

  29 17 February 1934, in Steinberg, 348.

  30 “None of the members …”: Interrogation of Pavel Medvedev, 21–22 February 1919, in Steinberg, 348.

  31 “Well, we’re going …”: Testimony of Peter Ermakov in Halliburton, 135. “What, there isn’t …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

  32 “Please, you stand here …”: Massie, Romanovs, 5.

  33 “They [still] had no idea …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

  34 “with a flash …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 306.

  35 “In light of the fact …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

  36 “Lord, oh, my God …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 306.

  37 “So we’re not …”: ibid.

  38 “I can’t understand …”: ibid.

  39 “What? What?”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 352.

  40 “This!”: King and Wilson, Fate, 306.

  41 “jumped about …”: Yurovsky’s Note on the Execution, 1920, in Steinberg, 353.

  Chapter Eighteen

  1 “The … Soviet passed …”: King and Wilson, Fate, 338.

  2 “the world will never …”: Bulygin, 239.

  3 “received the news …”: Lockhart, 304.

  4 “missing Romanovs”: Fige, 641.

  5 “But the children …”: Gilliard, 277.

  6 “I could not believe …”: ibid., 275.

  7 “The houses looked …”: Goldman, 8–9.

  8 “Comrade Stalin … has concentrated …”: Clarkson, 566.

  9 “We wanted …”: Massie, Romanovs, 27.

  10 “It was frightening!”: ibid., 33.

  11 “We swore an oath …”: ibid., 35.

 

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