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Anna Vyrubova

Anna Alexandrovna Vyrubova (née Taneyeva; Russian: А́нна Алекса́ндровна Вы́рубова (Тане́ева)); 16 July 1884 – 20 July 1964[1]) was a lady-in-waiting in the late Russian Empire, the best friend and confidante of Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna.

Anna Alexandrovna Vyrubova
Anna Alexandrovna Vyrubova
Born(1884-07-16)16 July 1884
Died20 July 1964(1964-07-20) (aged 80)
Parent(s)Countess Nadezhda Tolstoy
Aleksandr Taneyev
RelativesAlexandra Pistohlkors (sister)

Early life edit

Anna Alexandrovna Taneeva was born in Oranienbaum as the daughter of Aleksandr Taneyev, Chief Steward to His Majesty's Chancellery and a noted composer. Her mother, Countess Nadezhda Tolstoy, was descended from Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov. Due to these connections, she was attached to the imperial court at an early age. She had two younger siblings: Sergei and Alexandra.

She was a childhood playmate of Felix Yussupov, who later spearheaded the murder of Rasputin. Yussupov found her unattractive:

Anna the eldest Taneev girl, was tall and stout with a puffy, shiny face, and no charm whatsoever. Although she was not at all intelligent, she was extremely crafty and rather sly. It was quite a problem to find partners for her. No one could have foreseen that this unattractive girl would one day become the intimate friend and evil genius of the Tsarina. It was largely due to her that Rasputin owed his amazing rise to favour.[2]

Life at court edit

 
Anna Vyrubova wading at the beach with Grand Duchesses Tatiana, left, and Olga Nikolaevna of Russia. Courtesy: Beinecke Library.

The Tsarina valued Anna's devotion to her and befriended her, ignoring women of more distinction at the court. In 1905, at the age of twenty, she was given a position at court for the first time.[3] She went on holidays with the Romanovs in three succeeding years. In 1907, Anna married nobleman Alexander Vasilievich Vyrubov, an officer appointed in the Imperial chancellery. A few days before, she was warned by Rasputin that the marriage would be an unhappy one.[4] According to Vyrubova, her husband was mad and went for treatment in Switzerland. The couple divorced within a year and a half. It is said that her husband was upset after he found out she had contacted Rasputin.[citation needed] Lili Dehn has another view.[5] Vyrubova's mother reportedly told interrogators following the February Revolution that her son-in-law "proved to be completely impotent, with an extremely perverse sexual psychology that manifested itself in various sadistic episodes in which he inflicted moral suffering on her and evoked a feeling of utter disgust."[6]

Vyrubova became one of Rasputin's adherents and on the order of the Tsarina, she went on a trip to his home village of Pokrovskoye to investigate the rumours about Rasputin.[7] She visited some monasteries in the area.[5] Vyrubova's importance grew at the court, as the friendship with Milica of Montenegro and her sister Anastasia deteriorated.[8] "With the death of Father John of Kronstadt, "Father" Grigori became, in her eyes, the only mediator with God, the only man with effective prayers. He was called to replace Father John."[9] In 1909 she received to hieromonk Iliodor in her house for a meeting with the Tsar.[10] Around Easter 1912 Vyrubova stashed Rasputin on a train to Yalta, so he could visit the Imperial family in the Livadia Palace on the Crimea.[11]

Rasputin edit

In early October 1912, during a grave crisis in Spała, in Russian Poland, the Tsarevich Alexei received the last sacrament. The desperate Tsarina turned to Vyrubova[12][13][14] to secure the help of the peasant healer, who at that time was out of favor. (The basis for the denunciation of Rasputin as a Khlyst was his participation in mixed bathing, a perfectly usual custom among the peasants of many parts of Siberia.)[15]

 
For Pierre Gilliard and Alexander Spiridovich, Vyrubova had been ignorant and devoid of common sense when she entered the court. The latter said she openly became Rasputin's "fanatical admirer, the driving force of his cult, and was at the head of his loyalists"

For a long time, she served as a go-between for the Tsarina and Rasputin. In the Summer of 1914, Vyrubova received a cable from Rasputin, recovering from the attack by Khioniya Guseva in a Tyumen hospital. She had to show it directly to the Tsar Nicholas II. Rasputin was fearful of the consequences of war with Germany. Nicholas had been furious, but Anna arranged a reunion.[16] While seldom meeting with Alexandra personally after the debate in the Imperial Duma, Rasputin had become her personal adviser after the Tsar took supreme command of the Russian armies in the field on 23 August 1915 (O.S.), hoping this would lift morale. All contacts between the Tsarina and Rasputin went through Vyrubova; every morning at ten she phoned Rasputin and he came to visit her lemon-yellow house in Tsarskoye Selo to meet Alexandra. The Tsar's biggest concern was that Alexandra might share information with others.[17]

During World War I, she trained as a Red Cross nurse and nursed soldiers along with the Tsarina and the Tsarina's two older daughters, The Grand Duchesses Olga and Tatiana. Vyrubova was severely injured in a train accident between the capital and Tsarskoye Selo in January 1915; the convalescent Vyrubova found herself a paraplegic, but credited Rasputin with saving her life with his prayers.[18] In September 1916 she, Lili Dehn and Rasputin went to Tobolsk to pay tribute to John of Tobolsk, who had been glorified.[5][19]

 
Pierre Giallard Thirteen Years at the Russian Court – Chapter Thirteen – Tsar at the Duma – Galacia – Life at G.Q.H. – Growing Disaffection. Click to open the PDF.

Vyrubova started a hospital with the money she received from the train company as compensation. Protopopov came to visit the hospital almost every day. She also planned to build a church dedicated to Seraphim of Sarov on her property. (Rasputin would be buried on the spot.[20]) On Friday evening 16 December 1916 Rasputin told Vyrubova, who presented him a small icon, signed and dated at the back by the Tsarina and her daughters,[21] of a proposed midnight visit to Prince Yusupov in his Moika Palace to meet his wife.[22] The next morning Rasputin's disappearance was reported by his daughter to Vyrubova.[23] When Vyrubova spoke of it to the Empress, Alexandra pointed out that Irina Aleksandrovna Romanova was absent from Petrograd. An investigation followed and Prince Yusupov and Grand Duke Dmitri were placed under house arrest in the Sergei Palace. The Tsarina had refused to meet the two but was told by Anna they could explain what had happened in a letter.[24] Two days later Rasputin's body was found near Bolshoy Petrovsky Bridge. His body was taken to the Chesmensky Almshouse for autopsy. In the middle of the night, Vyrubova and the Tsarina brought some clothes to the almshouse.[25] On 21 December Rasputin's body was taken in a zinc coffin from the Chesme Church to be buried in a secret location in a corner on the property of Vyrubova adjacent to the palace.[26] [27] The burial was attended by the Imperial couple with their daughters – the tsesarevich was too ill, Vyrubova, her maid, and a few of Rasputin's friends, as Colonel Loman and Lili Dehn. It is unclear if Maria Rasputin was there. On 11 March 1917, following the February Revolution, the coffin with Rasputin was dug up and transported to Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University, and cremated in the cauldrons of the nearby boiler shop, without leaving a single trace.

Later life edit

 
Anna Vyrubova with Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna in 1916. Courtesy: Beinecke Library.

Sick with measles, Anna Vyrubova was arrested on 21 March 1917 and underwent five months of prison in the Peter and Paul Fortress, which included a medical examination to prove her virginity. The interrogation on her political role started on 6 May. Vyrubova admitted she saw Rasputin once or twice a week but feigned a childish innocence.[28] The investigator concluded that she was too naïve and unintelligent to have had any influence over the Tsarina.[29]

In Anna's own memoirs, she describes her perils in prison and her narrow escape from execution when, miraculously, she met several old friends of her father on a St. Petersburg street who helped her escape. She endured much hardship avoiding the Bolsheviks, and she was able to escape to Finland only in December 1920.[18] Before leaving the Soviet Union, she became friends with the revolutionary writer Maxim Gorky, who urged her to write her memoirs; she followed his advice. She met with Zinaida Gippius, Alexander Blok and Valery Bryusov.[28] Her memories of life at court provided rare descriptions of the home life of the Tsar and his family[30]

Vyrubova spent the rest of her life first in Viipuri and later in Helsinki. She took vows as a Russian Orthodox nun but was permitted to live in a private home because of her physical disabilities. She died at 80, in Helsinki, where her grave is located in the Orthodox section of Hietaniemi cemetery.

 
Anna Vyrubova in Helsinki in 1957
 
Anna Vyrubova's grave at the Hietaniemi Orthodox Cemetery in Helsinki

References edit

  1. ^ Nicholson, Nick. . Alexander Palace. Archived from the original on 14 July 2018. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
  2. ^ Maylunas, Andrei, and Mironenko, Sergei, eds.; Galy, Darya, translator, A Lifelong Passion: Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story, Doubleday, 1997 ISBN 0-385-48673-1, p. 418
  3. ^ Romanov Archives – 1917 Interrogation of Anna Vyroubova. Alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2018.
  4. ^ Radzinsky, p. 81
  5. ^ a b c The Real Tsaritsa by Madame Lili Dehn. Alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2018.
  6. ^ Radzinsky, p. 91
  7. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 60.
  8. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 61.
  9. ^ Alexander Palace Eyewitness Accounts – How Rasputin Met the Imperial Family. Alexanderpalace.org (12 August 1907). Retrieved on 2018-07-15.
  10. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 69.
  11. ^ Fuhrmann (2013), p. 95.
  12. ^ Vyrubova, p. 94
  13. ^ Moe, p. 156
  14. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 101.
  15. ^ Vyrubova, p. 388.
  16. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 132.
  17. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 151.
  18. ^ a b Vyrubova
  19. ^ "The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna – Empress of Russia". Alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2018.
  20. ^ Radzinsky, p. 667
  21. ^ Nelipa, pp. 99, 399.
  22. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 208.
  23. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 215.
  24. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 216.
  25. ^ Hoare, Samuel (1930) The Fourth Seal. William Heinemann. pp. 155–156.
  26. ^ Pierre Gilliard - Thirteen years at the Russian court.
  27. ^ Places connected with the murder. Petersburg-mystic-history.info. Retrieved on 15 July 2018.
  28. ^ a b Fuhrmann, p. 237.
  29. ^ Radzinsky, p. 88
  30. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 48.

Sources edit

  • Fuhrmann, Joseph T. (2013). Rasputin, the untold story (illustrated ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 314. ISBN 978-1-118-17276-6.
  • Maylunas, Andrei, and Mironenko, Sergei, eds.; Galy, Darya, translator, A Lifelong Passion: Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story, Doubleday, 1997 ISBN 0-385-48673-1
  • Nelipa, Margarita (2010) The Murder of Grigorii Rasputin. A Conspiracy That Brought Down the Russian Empire, Gilbert's Books. ISBN 978-0-9865310-1-9.
  • Radzinsky, Edvard (2000) The Rasputin File, Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-48909-9
  • Vyrubova, Anna (1923) Memories of the Russian Court
  • Virubova, Anna Taneleff & Irmeli Viherjuuri, Anna Virubova: Keisarinnan Hovineiti. Otava, 1987. ISBN 951-1-09357-6.

External links edit

  • Later Memoirs by Anna Vyrubova
  • 1917 Interview with Anna Vyrubova by an American Reporter, Rheta Childe Dorr
  • in Helsinki

anna, vyrubova, anna, alexandrovna, vyrubova, née, taneyeva, russian, нна, Алекса, ндровна, Вы, рубова, Тане, ева, july, 1884, july, 1964, lady, waiting, late, russian, empire, best, friend, confidante, empress, alexandra, fyodorovna, anna, alexandrovna, vyrub. Anna Alexandrovna Vyrubova nee Taneyeva Russian A nna Aleksa ndrovna Vy rubova Tane eva 16 July 1884 20 July 1964 1 was a lady in waiting in the late Russian Empire the best friend and confidante of Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna Anna Alexandrovna VyrubovaAnna Alexandrovna VyrubovaBorn 1884 07 16 16 July 1884Oranienbaum Russian EmpireDied20 July 1964 1964 07 20 aged 80 Helsinki FinlandParent s Countess Nadezhda TolstoyAleksandr TaneyevRelativesAlexandra Pistohlkors sister Contents 1 Early life 2 Life at court 2 1 Rasputin 3 Later life 4 References 5 Sources 6 External linksEarly life editAnna Alexandrovna Taneeva was born in Oranienbaum as the daughter of Aleksandr Taneyev Chief Steward to His Majesty s Chancellery and a noted composer Her mother Countess Nadezhda Tolstoy was descended from Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov Due to these connections she was attached to the imperial court at an early age She had two younger siblings Sergei and Alexandra She was a childhood playmate of Felix Yussupov who later spearheaded the murder of Rasputin Yussupov found her unattractive Anna the eldest Taneev girl was tall and stout with a puffy shiny face and no charm whatsoever Although she was not at all intelligent she was extremely crafty and rather sly It was quite a problem to find partners for her No one could have foreseen that this unattractive girl would one day become the intimate friend and evil genius of the Tsarina It was largely due to her that Rasputin owed his amazing rise to favour 2 Life at court edit nbsp Anna Vyrubova wading at the beach with Grand Duchesses Tatiana left and Olga Nikolaevna of Russia Courtesy Beinecke Library The Tsarina valued Anna s devotion to her and befriended her ignoring women of more distinction at the court In 1905 at the age of twenty she was given a position at court for the first time 3 She went on holidays with the Romanovs in three succeeding years In 1907 Anna married nobleman Alexander Vasilievich Vyrubov an officer appointed in the Imperial chancellery A few days before she was warned by Rasputin that the marriage would be an unhappy one 4 According to Vyrubova her husband was mad and went for treatment in Switzerland The couple divorced within a year and a half It is said that her husband was upset after he found out she had contacted Rasputin citation needed Lili Dehn has another view 5 Vyrubova s mother reportedly told interrogators following the February Revolution that her son in law proved to be completely impotent with an extremely perverse sexual psychology that manifested itself in various sadistic episodes in which he inflicted moral suffering on her and evoked a feeling of utter disgust 6 Vyrubova became one of Rasputin s adherents and on the order of the Tsarina she went on a trip to his home village of Pokrovskoye to investigate the rumours about Rasputin 7 She visited some monasteries in the area 5 Vyrubova s importance grew at the court as the friendship with Milica of Montenegro and her sister Anastasia deteriorated 8 With the death of Father John of Kronstadt Father Grigori became in her eyes the only mediator with God the only man with effective prayers He was called to replace Father John 9 In 1909 she received to hieromonk Iliodor in her house for a meeting with the Tsar 10 Around Easter 1912 Vyrubova stashed Rasputin on a train to Yalta so he could visit the Imperial family in the Livadia Palace on the Crimea 11 Rasputin edit In early October 1912 during a grave crisis in Spala in Russian Poland the Tsarevich Alexei received the last sacrament The desperate Tsarina turned to Vyrubova 12 13 14 to secure the help of the peasant healer who at that time was out of favor The basis for the denunciation of Rasputin as a Khlyst was his participation in mixed bathing a perfectly usual custom among the peasants of many parts of Siberia 15 nbsp For Pierre Gilliard and Alexander Spiridovich Vyrubova had been ignorant and devoid of common sense when she entered the court The latter said she openly became Rasputin s fanatical admirer the driving force of his cult and was at the head of his loyalists For a long time she served as a go between for the Tsarina and Rasputin In the Summer of 1914 Vyrubova received a cable from Rasputin recovering from the attack by Khioniya Guseva in a Tyumen hospital She had to show it directly to the Tsar Nicholas II Rasputin was fearful of the consequences of war with Germany Nicholas had been furious but Anna arranged a reunion 16 While seldom meeting with Alexandra personally after the debate in the Imperial Duma Rasputin had become her personal adviser after the Tsar took supreme command of the Russian armies in the field on 23 August 1915 O S hoping this would lift morale All contacts between the Tsarina and Rasputin went through Vyrubova every morning at ten she phoned Rasputin and he came to visit her lemon yellow house in Tsarskoye Selo to meet Alexandra The Tsar s biggest concern was that Alexandra might share information with others 17 During World War I she trained as a Red Cross nurse and nursed soldiers along with the Tsarina and the Tsarina s two older daughters The Grand Duchesses Olga and Tatiana Vyrubova was severely injured in a train accident between the capital and Tsarskoye Selo in January 1915 the convalescent Vyrubova found herself a paraplegic but credited Rasputin with saving her life with his prayers 18 In September 1916 she Lili Dehn and Rasputin went to Tobolsk to pay tribute to John of Tobolsk who had been glorified 5 19 nbsp Pierre Giallard Thirteen Years at the Russian Court Chapter Thirteen Tsar at the Duma Galacia Life at G Q H Growing Disaffection Click to open the PDF Vyrubova started a hospital with the money she received from the train company as compensation Protopopov came to visit the hospital almost every day She also planned to build a church dedicated to Seraphim of Sarov on her property Rasputin would be buried on the spot 20 On Friday evening 16 December 1916 Rasputin told Vyrubova who presented him a small icon signed and dated at the back by the Tsarina and her daughters 21 of a proposed midnight visit to Prince Yusupov in his Moika Palace to meet his wife 22 The next morning Rasputin s disappearance was reported by his daughter to Vyrubova 23 When Vyrubova spoke of it to the Empress Alexandra pointed out that Irina Aleksandrovna Romanova was absent from Petrograd An investigation followed and Prince Yusupov and Grand Duke Dmitri were placed under house arrest in the Sergei Palace The Tsarina had refused to meet the two but was told by Anna they could explain what had happened in a letter 24 Two days later Rasputin s body was found near Bolshoy Petrovsky Bridge His body was taken to the Chesmensky Almshouse for autopsy In the middle of the night Vyrubova and the Tsarina brought some clothes to the almshouse 25 On 21 December Rasputin s body was taken in a zinc coffin from the Chesme Church to be buried in a secret location in a corner on the property of Vyrubova adjacent to the palace 26 27 The burial was attended by the Imperial couple with their daughters the tsesarevich was too ill Vyrubova her maid and a few of Rasputin s friends as Colonel Loman and Lili Dehn It is unclear if Maria Rasputin was there On 11 March 1917 following the February Revolution the coffin with Rasputin was dug up and transported to Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University and cremated in the cauldrons of the nearby boiler shop without leaving a single trace Later life edit nbsp Anna Vyrubova with Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna in 1916 Courtesy Beinecke Library Sick with measles Anna Vyrubova was arrested on 21 March 1917 and underwent five months of prison in the Peter and Paul Fortress which included a medical examination to prove her virginity The interrogation on her political role started on 6 May Vyrubova admitted she saw Rasputin once or twice a week but feigned a childish innocence 28 The investigator concluded that she was too naive and unintelligent to have had any influence over the Tsarina 29 In Anna s own memoirs she describes her perils in prison and her narrow escape from execution when miraculously she met several old friends of her father on a St Petersburg street who helped her escape She endured much hardship avoiding the Bolsheviks and she was able to escape to Finland only in December 1920 18 Before leaving the Soviet Union she became friends with the revolutionary writer Maxim Gorky who urged her to write her memoirs she followed his advice She met with Zinaida Gippius Alexander Blok and Valery Bryusov 28 Her memories of life at court provided rare descriptions of the home life of the Tsar and his family 30 Vyrubova spent the rest of her life first in Viipuri and later in Helsinki She took vows as a Russian Orthodox nun but was permitted to live in a private home because of her physical disabilities She died at 80 in Helsinki where her grave is located in the Orthodox section of Hietaniemi cemetery nbsp Anna Vyrubova in Helsinki in 1957 nbsp Anna Vyrubova s grave at the Hietaniemi Orthodox Cemetery in HelsinkiReferences edit Nicholson Nick Bio of Anna Vyrubova Alexander Palace Archived from the original on 14 July 2018 Retrieved 14 July 2018 Maylunas Andrei and Mironenko Sergei eds Galy Darya translator A Lifelong Passion Nicholas and Alexandra Their Own Story Doubleday 1997 ISBN 0 385 48673 1 p 418 Romanov Archives 1917 Interrogation of Anna Vyroubova Alexanderpalace org Retrieved on 15 July 2018 Radzinsky p 81 a b c The Real Tsaritsa by Madame Lili Dehn Alexanderpalace org Retrieved on 15 July 2018 Radzinsky p 91 Fuhrmann p 60 Fuhrmann p 61 Alexander Palace Eyewitness Accounts How Rasputin Met the Imperial Family Alexanderpalace org 12 August 1907 Retrieved on 2018 07 15 Fuhrmann p 69 Fuhrmann 2013 p 95 Vyrubova p 94 Moe p 156 Fuhrmann p 101 Vyrubova p 388 Fuhrmann p 132 Fuhrmann p 151 a b Vyrubova The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna Empress of Russia Alexanderpalace org Retrieved on 15 July 2018 Radzinsky p 667 Nelipa pp 99 399 Fuhrmann p 208 Fuhrmann p 215 Fuhrmann p 216 Hoare Samuel 1930 The Fourth Seal William Heinemann pp 155 156 Pierre Gilliard Thirteen years at the Russian court Places connected with the murder Petersburg mystic history info Retrieved on 15 July 2018 a b Fuhrmann p 237 Radzinsky p 88 Fuhrmann p 48 Sources editFuhrmann Joseph T 2013 Rasputin the untold story illustrated ed Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 314 ISBN 978 1 118 17276 6 Maylunas Andrei and Mironenko Sergei eds Galy Darya translator A Lifelong Passion Nicholas and Alexandra Their Own Story Doubleday 1997 ISBN 0 385 48673 1 Nelipa Margarita 2010 The Murder of Grigorii Rasputin A Conspiracy That Brought Down the Russian Empire Gilbert s Books ISBN 978 0 9865310 1 9 Radzinsky Edvard 2000 The Rasputin File Doubleday ISBN 0 385 48909 9 Vyrubova Anna 1923 Memories of the Russian Court Virubova Anna Taneleff amp Irmeli Viherjuuri Anna Virubova Keisarinnan Hovineiti Otava 1987 ISBN 951 1 09357 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anna Alexandrovna Vyrubova Later Memoirs by Anna Vyrubova 1917 Interview with Anna Vyrubova by an American Reporter Rheta Childe Dorr Anna s Grave in Helsinki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anna Vyrubova amp oldid 1211146955, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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