COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL C01.Qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 32 C01.Qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 33

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL C01.Qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 32 C01.Qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 33

c01.qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 31 Part One PERSONAGES COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL c01.qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 32 c01.qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 33 1 THE LAST TSAR ON OCTOBER 20, 1894, AT HALF-PAST TWO in the afternoon, Alexander III of Russia died of nephritis at his Livadia Palace in the Crimea. The once powerful emperor lay in agony, his massive frame wasted. His last hours were passed with his family until, with a dying breath, he uttered a short prayer and kissed his wife. Alexander was only forty-nine. Although he had been unwell for months, his premature death came as a shock, both to his family and to his empire. “Sandro, what am I going to do?” the new emperor, Nicholas II, tearfully asked his cousin and brother-in-law, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich. “What is going to happen to me, to you . to all of Russia? I am not pre- pared to be a Tsar. I never wanted to become one. I know nothing of the business of ruling. I have no idea of even how to talk to the ministers.”1 The twenty-six-year-old man who stood weeping on his cousin’s shoulder in the dim light of an October sunset was the eighteenth sovereign of the Romanov Dynasty to accede to the Russian throne. By blood and marriage, he was related to the royal houses of Great Britain, Spain, Nicholas II, painted by Liphart, 1900 33 c01.qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 34 34 THE COURT OF THE LAST TSAR Sweden, Germany, Denmark, Romania, and Greece. The wealthiest man in the world, he possessed an empire that stretched across one-sixth of the land surface of the globe and encompassed 140 million subjects. As an autocrat, Nicholas II was responsible to no one. Imbued with a deep belief that his was a role ordained by God, he relied only on his own conscience for guidance as his empire entered the turbulent waters of the twentieth century. Yet it is hard to imagine a man more incapable of this onerous burden than Nicholas II. Shy, thoughtful, and exceptionally polite, Nicholas came to the throne obsessed with the idea that he was ill prepared to rule and was pursued by fate. Even the date of his birth—May 6, 1868, the Feast of St. Job in the Orthodox liturgical calendar—played into this self-fulfilling prophecy. Like Job, Nicholas felt himself tested and tried at every turn, a victim of divinely mandated misfortune. With a tragic sense of fatalism, Nicholas would ascribe every catas- trophe that befell his empire to “God’s will.” Nicholas was the eldest of six children born to Alexander and his wife, Marie Feodorovna. A second son, Alexander, lived less than a year; a brother, George Alexandrovich, followed in 1871; a sister, Xenia Alexandrovna, in 1875; another brother, Michael Alexandrovich, in 1878; and a second sister, Olga Alexandrovna, in 1882. Alexander III had dominated his fam- ily in much the same way he did his empire: his word was law, his decisions uncontestable. Capable of great warmth and indulgence, he was, at the same time, “ruthless even with his children,” recalled an official at court, “and loathed everything that savored of weakness.”2 He despised his eldest son’s gentle character, once loudly complaining, “You are a little girlie!”3 Nicholas feared the unpredictable behavior that followed his father’s drunken carousals; when Alexander became violent, his The future Nicholas II with his two brothers, George and Michael, and eldest sister, Xenia, 1886 wife gathered their children and escaped to an apartment in St. Petersburg’s Tauride Palace.4 Marie Feodorovna provided a warm refuge, but her protection took the form of an oppressive cocoon that stifled maturity, and Nicholas remained innocent c01.qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 35 THE LAST TSAR 35 and childish. The cloistered world of the impe- rial palaces, with their fawning servants and gold-braided courtiers, did little to encourage independent thought. Instead, Nicholas was subject only to emotion, relying on instinct and on passion in making important decisions. From his sixth birthday on, a string of teachers, military instructors, generals, and government officials tutored Nicholas in history, Russian lit- erature, the classics, geography, arithmetic, sci- ence, languages, and religion, yet it was an education conceived along idiosyncratic lines. On his father’s orders, instructors were not allowed to question him, nor were his studies graded, leaving Nicholas’s mistakes and opin- ions unchallenged.5 The role of his mother was equally damaging. Fearing the loss of her dom- inance, Marie Feodorovna personally selected men of limited capabilities, arranging lessons so that Nicholas never saw the same tutors for The future Emperor Alexander III and his fiancée, more than two successive days to avoid any last- Marie Feodorovna, 1866 ing influences.6 Nicholas had an excellent memory. He spoke Russian, French, German, Dan- ish, and English, the latter with a perfect accent; his Russian, as Prince Andrei Lobanov-Rostovsky noted, was even tinged with “a slightly English accent.”7 In May 1890, he jubilantly recorded in his diary: “Today I finished forever my edu- cation!”8 Short, with blue eyes and a chestnut beard and mustache, Nicholas made his first forays into official life, though the results were far from encourag- ing. One Russian referred to him derisively as “just a little, fair officer. He comes up to my shoulders.”9 The wife of an American diplomat noted, “The men of the Imperial Family are such large, tall, fine-looking men that the Russians will find it difficult to connect the idea of majesty with one who is so small.”10 He lacked, recalled one courtier, “the inspiring presence of his father; nor did he convey his mother’s vibrant charm.”11 At official receptions, his boredom gave offense. Yet his father, himself poorly trained, did nothing to prepare Nicholas for his even- tual role. When Nicholas was twenty-three, Alexander III dismissed his son as “nothing but a boy, whose judgments are utterly childish.”12 c01.qxd 1/16/06 2:08 PM Page 36 36 THE COURT OF THE LAST TSAR Like any other young aristocrat, Nicholas joined the Imperial Army, immers- ing himself in the carefully regulated world of the Russian military. He had a liai- son with the prima ballerina Mathilde Kschessinska, but his true passion lay elsewhere. He first met Princess Alix of Hesse und Bei Rhein in 1884 at the wed- ding of her sister Elizabeth, known as Ella, to his uncle, Grand Duke Serge Alexandrovich. After a week together, the sixteen-year-old tsesarevich was utterly convinced of his love for the shy and solemn golden-haired girl, but it was to be five years before they met again. Alix spent that winter of 1889 with Ella and Serge, and Nicholas lavished her with attentions, much to the consternation of his mother, who, recalled one aristocratic lady, “made no attempt to disguise her displeasure at her son’s infatuation.”13 St. Petersburg society thought her ill humored and unsmiling, but Nicholas was determined. “My dream is to one day marry Alix H.,” he confided to his diary.14 The politically unimportant German state of Hesse, stretched along the banks of the Rhine and centered round the medieval city of Darmstadt, had long pro- vided brides to the Romanov Dynasty. Only six when her mother, Queen Victo- ria’s second daughter, Princess Alice, died, Alix had been raised according to the dictates of her powerful grandmother. Under her direction, Alix developed into a shy but serious young woman with a stubborn will and belief in the superiority Empress Alexandra, 1896. of her own morality and intelligence. Her cousin Princess Marie Louise later See plate 9. complained that “from her earliest childhood, there was that strange, impreg- nable obstinacy that nothing could overcome.”15 She never developed the social skills necessary to her rank, giving the impression of boredom, of disinterest, and of distinct unease. The most powerful influences in her life were her mother, her grandmother, and her sisters. Her father was easily dictated to, and her brother Ernie was equally submissive. These models of feminine power, weak men, and domination characterized her youth and later marriage. Alix was confirmed into the Lutheran Church at sixteen, and her devotion to her faith became for Nicholas an almost insurmountable obstacle. “I can never change my religion,” she wrote to his sister Xenia Alexandrovna.16 This was wel- come news to Nicholas’s mother, who “remained in a negative state of mind” over her son’s obsession, according to one official; she even “forbade” him to meet Alix during her 1890 visit to Russia.17 Nicholas was persistent, and circumstance con- spired in his favor when, two years after her father’s death, he traveled to Ger- many to attend the wedding of Alix’s brother Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig IV to his cousin Princess Victoria Melita of Edinburgh, known as Ducky within the family. Conspiring with him were Alix’s brother and her sister Elizabeth, his aunt c01.qxd 1/16/06 10:05 AM Page 37 THE LAST TSAR 37 Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna—known in the family as Miechen—and his and Alix’s mutual cousin, Kaiser Wilhelm II. Nicholas’s efforts weakened her resolve, and changing personal circumstances ultimately led her to accept his proposal. Six months later, Alexander III’s death brought Nicholas to the throne. Alix, who had come to the Crimea to receive the dying emperor’s blessing for the betrothal, converted to Russian Orthodoxy, embracing her new faith with a fer- vor bordering on exaltation and taking the new name of Alexandra Feodorovna.

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