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Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia

Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia (Russian: Анастасия Николаевна Романова, romanizedAnastasiya Nikolaevna Romanova; 18 June [O.S. 5 June] 1901 – 17 July 1918) was the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II, the last sovereign of Imperial Russia, and his wife, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna.

Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna
Photo, c. 1914
Born18 June [O.S. 5 June] 1901
Peterhof Palace, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died17 July 1918(1918-07-17) (aged 17)
Ipatiev House, Yekaterinburg, Russian Soviet Republic
Burial17 July 1998
Names
Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova
HouseHolstein-Gottorp-Romanov
FatherNicholas II of Russia
MotherAlix of Hesse and by Rhine
ReligionRussian Orthodox
Signature

Anastasia was the younger sister of Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, and Maria and was the elder sister of Alexei Nikolaevich, Tsarevich of Russia. She was killed with her family by a group of Bolsheviks in Yekaterinburg on 17 July 1918.[1]

Persistent rumors of her possible escape circulated after her death, fueled by the fact that the location of her burial was unknown during the decades of communist rule. The abandoned mine serving as a mass grave near Yekaterinburg which held the acidified remains of the Tsar, his wife, and three of their daughters was revealed in 1991. These remains were put to rest at Peter and Paul Fortress in 1998. The bodies of Alexei and the remaining daughter—either Anastasia or her older sister Maria—were discovered in 2007. Her purported survival has been conclusively disproven. Scientific analysis including DNA testing confirmed that the remains are those of the imperial family, showing that all four grand duchesses were killed in 1918.[2][3]

Several women falsely claimed to have been Anastasia; the best known impostor was Anna Anderson. Anderson's body was cremated upon her death in 1984; DNA testing in 1994 on pieces of Anderson's tissue and hair showed no relation to the Romanov family.[4]

Biography edit

Early years edit

 
Grand Duchess Anastasia in 1904
 
Grand Duchess Anastasia in a formal portrait taken in 1906

Anastasia was born on 18 June 1901. She was the fourth daughter of Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra. When she was born, her parents and extended family were disappointed that she was a girl. They had hoped for a son who would have become heir apparent to the throne. Her father went for a long walk to compose himself before going to visit his wife and their newborn child for the first time.[5] Her paternal aunt Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia said, "My God! What a disappointment!... a fourth girl!"[6] Her first cousin twice removed Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich wrote, "Forgive us, Lord, if we all felt disappointment instead of joy. We were so hoping for a boy, and it's a daughter."[7] The travel writer Burton Holmes wrote, "Nicholas would part with half his Empire in exchange for one Imperial boy."[8]

Anastasia was named for the fourth-century martyr St. Anastasia.[9] "Anastasia" is a Greek name (Αναστασία), meaning "of the resurrection", a fact often alluded to later in stories about her rumored survival. Anastasia's title is most precisely translated as "Grand Princess". "Grand Duchess" became the most widely used translation of the title into English from Russian.[10]

The Tsar's children were raised as simply as possible. They slept on hard camp cots without pillows, except when they were ill, took cold baths in the morning, and were expected to tidy their rooms and do needlework to be sold at various charity events when they were not otherwise occupied. Most in the household, including the servants, generally called the Grand Duchess by her first name and patronym, "Anastasia Nikolaevna", and did not use her title or style. She was occasionally called by the French version of her name, "Anastasie", or by the Russian nicknames "Nastya", "Nastas", or "Nastenka". Other family nicknames for Anastasia were "Malenkaya", meaning "little (one)" in Russian,[11] or "Shvybzik", meaning "merry little one"[12] or "little mischief"[13] in German.

 
From left to right: Maria, Anastasia, Alexei, Olga and Tatiana at the Gulf of Finland, 1908

Anastasia and her older sister Maria were known within the family as "The Little Pair". The two girls shared a room, often wore variations of the same dress, and spent much of their time together. Their older sisters Olga and Tatiana also shared a room and were known as "The Big Pair". The four girls sometimes signed letters using the nickname OTMA, which derived from the first letters of their first names.[14]

DNA testing on the remains of the royal family proved conclusively in 2009 that Anastasia’s younger brother, Alexei, suffered from Hemophilia B, a rare form of the disease. His mother and one sister, identified alternatively as Maria or Anastasia, were carriers. Symptomatic carriers of the gene, while not hemophiliacs themselves, can have symptoms of hemophilia including a lower than normal blood-clotting factor that can lead to heavy bleeding.[15] If Anastasia lived to have children of her own, it is genetically probable that they would have been afflicted by the disease.[16]

Appearance and personality edit

Anastasia was short and inclined to be chubby, and she had blue eyes[17] and blonde hair.[18] Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden, her mother's lady-in-waiting, reflected that "her features were regular and finely cut. She had fair hair, fine eyes, with impish laughter in their depths, and dark eyebrows that nearly met."[19] Buxhoeveden believed that Anastasia resembled her mother, saying that she "was more like her mother's than her father's family."[19]

Anastasia was a vivacious and energetic child. Margaretta Eagar, a governess to the four grand duchesses, said one person commented that the toddler Anastasia had the greatest personal charm of any child she had ever seen.[20]

While often described as gifted and bright, she was never interested in the restrictions of the school room, according to her tutors Pierre Gilliard and Sydney Gibbes. Gibbes, Gilliard, and ladies-in-waiting Lili Dehn and Anna Vyrubova described Anastasia as lively, mischievous, and a gifted actress. Her sharp, witty remarks sometimes hit sensitive spots.[18][21][22]

Anastasia's daring occasionally exceeded the limits of acceptable behavior. "She undoubtedly held the record for punishable deeds in her family, for in naughtiness she was a true genius", said Gleb Botkin, son of the court physician Yevgeny Botkin, who later died with the family at Yekaterinburg.[23] Anastasia sometimes tripped the servants and played pranks on her tutors. As a child, she would climb trees and refuse to come down. Once, during a snowball fight at the family's Polish estate, Anastasia rolled a rock into a snowball and threw it at her older sister Tatiana, knocking her to the ground.[18] A distant cousin, Princess Nina Georgievna, recalled that "Anastasia was nasty to the point of being evil", and would cheat, kick and scratch her playmates during games; she was affronted because the younger Nina was taller than she was.[24] She was less concerned about her appearance than her sisters. Hallie Erminie Rives, a best-selling American author and wife of an American diplomat, described how 10-year-old Anastasia ate chocolates without bothering to remove her long, white opera gloves at the St. Petersburg opera house.[25]

Despite her energy, Anastasia's physical health was sometimes poor. The Grand Duchess suffered from painful bunions, which affected both of her big toes.[26] Anastasia had a weak muscle in her back and was prescribed twice-weekly massage. She hid under the bed or in a cupboard to put off the massage.[27] Anastasia's older sister, Maria, reportedly hemorrhaged in December 1914 during an operation to remove her tonsils, according to her paternal aunt Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia, who was interviewed later in her life. The doctor performing the operation was so unnerved that he had to be ordered to continue by Maria's mother. Olga Alexandrovna said she believed all four of her nieces bled more than was normal and believed they were carriers of the hemophilia gene, like their mother.[28]

Association with Grigori Rasputin edit

 
Grand Duchess Anastasia with her mother, Tsarina Alexandra, in about 1908

Her mother relied on the counsel of Grigori Rasputin, a Russian peasant and wandering starets or "holy man," and credited his prayers with saving the ailing Tsarevich on numerous occasions. Anastasia and her siblings were taught to view Rasputin as "Our Friend" and to share confidences with him. In the autumn of 1907, Anastasia's aunt Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia was escorted to the nursery by the Tsar to meet Rasputin. Anastasia, her sisters and brother Alexei were all wearing their long white nightgowns. "All the children seemed to like him," Olga Alexandrovna recalled. "They were completely at ease with him."[29] Rasputin's friendship with the imperial children was evident in some of the messages he sent to them. In February 1909, Rasputin sent the imperial children a telegram, advising them to "Love the whole of God's nature, the whole of His creation in particular this earth. The Mother of God was always occupied with flowers and needlework."[30]

However, one of the girls' governesses, Sofia Ivanovna Tyutcheva, was horrified in 1910 that Rasputin was permitted access to the nursery when the four girls were in their nightgowns and wanted him barred. Nicholas asked Rasputin to avoid going to the nurseries in the future. The children were aware of the tension and feared that their mother would be angered by Tyutcheva's actions. "I am so afr(aid) that S.I. (governess Sofia Ivanovna Tyutcheva) can speak ... about our friend something bad," Anastasia's twelve-year-old sister Tatiana wrote to their mother on 8 March 1910. "I hope our nurse will be nice to our friend now."[31]

 
Grand Duchess Anastasia with her brother Alexei
 
Grand Duchess Anastasia in court dress in 1910

Tyutcheva was eventually fired. She took her story to other members of the family.[32] While Rasputin's visits to the children were, by all accounts, completely innocent in nature, the family was scandalized. Tyutcheva told Nicholas's sister, Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia, that Rasputin visited the girls, talked with them while they were getting ready for bed, and hugged and patted them. Tyutcheva said the children had been taught not to discuss Rasputin with her and were careful to hide his visits from the nursery staff. Xenia wrote on 15 March 1910, that she could not understand "...the attitude of Alix and the children to that sinister Grigory (whom they consider to be almost a saint, when in fact he's only a khlyst!)"[31]

In the spring of 1910, Maria Ivanovna Vishnyakova, a royal governess, claimed that Rasputin had raped her. Vishnyakova said the empress refused to believe her account of the assault, and insisted that "everything Rasputin does is holy."[33] Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna was told that Vishnyakova's claim had been immediately investigated, but instead "they caught the young woman in bed with a Cossack of the Imperial Guard." Vishnyakova was kept from seeing Rasputin after she made her accusation and was eventually dismissed from her post in 1913.[34]

However, rumors persisted and it was later whispered in society that Rasputin had seduced not only the Tsarina but also the four grand duchesses.[35] This was followed by circulation of pornographic cartoons, which depicted Rasputin having relations with the Empress, her four daughters and Anna Vyrubova.[36] After the scandal, Nicholas ordered Rasputin to leave St. Petersburg for a time, much to Alexandra's displeasure, and Rasputin went on a pilgrimage to Palestine.[37] Despite the rumors, the imperial family's association with Rasputin continued until his murder on 17 December 1916. "Our Friend is so contented with our girlies, says they have gone through heavy 'courses' for their age and their souls have much developed", Alexandra wrote to Nicholas on 6 December 1916.[38]

In his memoirs, A. A. Mordvinov reported that the four grand duchesses appeared "cold and visibly terribly upset" by Rasputin's death, and sat "huddled up closely together" on a sofa in one of their bedrooms on the night they received the news. Mordvinov recalled that the young women were in a gloomy mood and seemed to sense the political upheaval that was about to be unleashed.[39] Rasputin was buried with an icon signed on its reverse by Anastasia, her mother and her sisters. She attended his funeral on 21 December 1916, and her family planned to build a church over the site of Rasputin's grave.[40] After they were killed by the Bolsheviks, it was discovered Anastasia and her sisters were all wearing amulets bearing Rasputin's picture and a prayer.[41]

Captivity during World War I and Russian Revolution edit

 
Grand Duchess Maria and Grand Duchess Anastasia with wounded soldiers while visiting their hospital in about 1915.

During World War I, Anastasia, along with her sister Maria, visited wounded soldiers at a private hospital in the grounds at Tsarskoye Selo. The two teenagers, too young to become Red Cross nurses like their mother and elder sisters, played games of checkers and billiards with the soldiers and tried to lift their spirits. Felix Dassel, who was treated at the hospital and knew Anastasia, recalled that the grand duchess had a "laugh like a squirrel", and walked rapidly "as though she tripped along."[42]

In February 1917, Anastasia and her family were placed under house arrest at the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoye Selo during the Russian Revolution. Nicholas II abdicated on 15 March [O.S. 2 March] 1917. As the Bolsheviks approached, Alexander Kerensky of the Provisional Government had them moved to Tobolsk, Siberia.[43] After the Bolsheviks seized majority control of Russia, Anastasia and her family were moved to the Ipatiev House, or House of Special Purpose, at Yekaterinburg.[44]

The stress and uncertainty of captivity took their toll on Anastasia as well as her family. "Goodby [sic]", she wrote to a friend in the winter of 1917. "Don't forget us."[45] At Tobolsk, she wrote a melancholy theme for her English tutor, filled with spelling mistakes, about "Evelyn Hope", a poem by Robert Browning about a girl:

"When she died she was only sixteen years old ... Ther(e) was a man who loved her without having seen her but (k)new her very well. And she he(a)rd of him also. He never could tell her that he loved her, and now she was dead. But still he thought that when he and she will live [their] next life whenever it will be that ...", she wrote.[45]

Upon arriving in Yekaterinburg, Pierre Gilliard recalled his last sight of the children:

"The sailor Nagorny, who attended to Alexei Nikolaevitch, passed my window carrying the sick boy in his arms, behind him came the Grand Duchesses loaded with valises and small personal belongings. I tried to get out, but was roughly pushed back into the carriage by the sentry. I came back to the window. Tatiana Nikolayevna came last carrying her little dog and struggling to drag a heavy brown valise. It was raining and I saw her feet sink into the mud at every step. Nagorny tried to come to her assistance; he was roughly pushed back by one of the commisars ..."[46]

Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden told of her sad last glimpse of Anastasia:

"Once, standing on some steps at the door of a house close by, I saw a hand and a pink-sleeved arm opening the topmost pane. According to the blouse the hand must have belonged either to the Grand Duchess Marie or Anastasia. They could not see me through their windows, and this was to be the last glimpse that I was to have of any of them!"[47]

 
Grand Duchesses Anastasia, Maria, and Tatiana Nikolaevna at Tsarskoye Selo in the spring of 1917

However, even in the last months of her life, she found ways to enjoy herself. She and other members of the household performed plays for the enjoyment of their parents and others in the spring of 1918. Anastasia's performance made everyone howl with laughter, according to her tutor Sydney Gibbes.[48]

On 7 May 1918, in a letter from Tobolsk to her sister Maria in Yekaterinburg, Anastasia described a moment of joy despite her sadness and loneliness and worry for the sick Alexei:

"We played on the swing, that was when I roared with laughter, the fall was so wonderful! Indeed! I told the sisters about it so many times yesterday that they got quite fed up, but I could go on telling it masses of times ... What weather we've had! One could simply shout with joy."[49]

In his memoirs, one of the guards at the Ipatiev House, Alexander Strekotin, remembered Anastasia as "very friendly and full of fun", while another guard said Anastasia was "a very charming devil! She was mischievous and, I think, rarely tired. She was lively, and was fond of performing comic mimes with the dogs, as though they were performing in a circus."[23] Yet another of the guards, however, called the youngest grand duchess "offensive and a terrorist" and complained that her occasionally provocative comments sometimes caused tension in the ranks.[50] Anastasia and her sisters helped their maid darn stockings and assisted the cook in making bread and other kitchen chores while they were in captivity at the Ipatiev House.[51]

In the summer, the privations of the captivity, including their closer confinement at the Ipatiev House negatively affected the family. On 14 July 1918, local priests at Yekaterinburg conducted a private church service for the family. They reported that Anastasia and her family, contrary to custom, fell on their knees during the prayer for the dead, and that the girls had become despondent and hopeless, and no longer sang the replies in the service. Noticing this dramatic change in their demeanor since his last visit, one priest told the other, "Something has happened to them in there."[52] But the next day, on 15 July 1918, Anastasia and her sisters appeared in good spirits as they joked and helped move the beds in their shared bedroom so that cleaning women could clean the floors. They helped the women scrub the floors and whispered to them when the guards were not watching. Anastasia stuck her tongue out at Yakov Yurovsky, the head of the detachment, when he momentarily turned his back and left the room.[53]

Death edit

 
Grand Duchesses Maria and Anastasia making faces for the camera in Tsarskoye Selo, 1917.

After the Bolshevik revolution in October 1917, Russia quickly disintegrated into civil war. Negotiations for the release of the Romanovs between their Bolshevik (commonly referred to as 'Reds') captors and their extended family, many of whom were prominent members of the royal houses of Europe, stalled.[54] As the Whites (anti-Bolshevik forces, although not necessarily supportive of the Tsar) advanced toward Yekaterinburg, the Reds were in a precarious situation. The Reds knew Yekaterinburg would fall to the better manned and equipped White Army. When the Whites reached Yekaterinburg, the imperial family had simply disappeared. The most widely accepted account was that the family had been murdered. This was due to an investigation by White Army investigator Nicholas Sokolov, who came to the conclusion based on items that had belonged to the family being found thrown down a mine shaft at Ganina Yama.[55]

The "Yurovsky Note", an account of the event filed by Yurovsky to his Bolshevik superiors following the killings, was found in 1989 and detailed in Edvard Radzinsky's 1992 book, The Last Tsar. According to the note, on the night of the deaths, the family was awakened and told to dress. They were told they were being moved to a new location to ensure their safety in anticipation of the violence that might ensue when the White Army reached Yekaterinburg. Once dressed, the family and the small circle of servants who had remained with them were herded into a small room in the house's sub-basement and told to wait. Alexandra and Alexei sat in chairs provided by guards at the Empress's request.[56]

After several minutes, the guards entered the room, led by Yurovsky, who quickly informed the Tsar and his family that they were to be executed. The Tsar had time to say only "What?" and turn to his family before he was killed by several bullets to the chest (not, as is commonly stated, to the head; his skull, recovered in 1991, bears no bullet wounds).[57] The Tsarina and her daughter Olga tried to make the sign of the cross but were killed in the initial volley of bullets fired by the executioners. The rest of the Imperial retinue were shot in short order, with the exception of Anna Demidova, Alexandra's maid. Demidova survived the initial onslaught but was quickly stabbed to death against the back wall of the basement while trying to defend herself with a small pillow she had carried into the sub-basement that was filled with precious gems and jewels.[56]

 
Grand Duchesses Tatiana and Anastasia and the dog Ortipo in captivity at Tsarskoe Selo in the spring of 1917

The "Yurovsky Note" further reported that once the thick smoke that had filled the room from so many weapons being fired in such close proximity cleared, it was discovered that the executioners' bullets had ricocheted off the corsets of two or three of the Grand Duchesses. The executioners later came to find out that this was because the family's crown jewels and diamonds had been sewn inside the linings of the corsets to hide them from their captors. The corsets thus served as a form of "armor" against the bullets. Anastasia and Maria were said to have crouched up against a wall, covering their heads in terror, until they were shot down by bullets, recalled Yurovsky. However, another guard, Peter Ermakov, told his wife that Anastasia had been finished off with bayonets. As the bodies were carried out, one or more of the girls cried out, and were clubbed on the back of the head, wrote Yurovsky.[55]

False reports of survival edit

Anastasia's supposed escape and possible survival was one of the most popular historical mysteries of the 20th century, provoking many books and films. At least ten women claimed to be her, offering varying stories as to how she had survived. Anna Anderson, the best known Anastasia impostor, first surfaced publicly between 1920 and 1922. She contended that she had feigned death among the bodies of her family and servants, and was able to make her escape with the help of a compassionate guard who noticed she was still breathing and took sympathy upon her.[58] Her legal battle for recognition from 1938 to 1970 continued a lifelong controversy and was the longest running case ever heard by the German courts, where it was officially filed. The final decision of the court was that Anderson had not provided sufficient proof to claim the identity of the grand duchess.[59]

Anderson died in 1984 and her body was cremated. DNA tests were conducted in 1994 on a tissue sample from Anderson located in a hospital and the blood of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, a great-nephew of Empress Alexandra. According to Dr Gill who conducted the tests, "If you accept that these samples came from Anna Anderson, then Anna Anderson could not be related to Tsar Nicholas or Tsarina Alexandra." Anderson's mitochondrial DNA was a match with a great-nephew of Franziska Schanzkowska, a missing Polish factory worker.[4] Some supporters of Anderson's claim acknowledged that the DNA tests proving she could not have been the Grand Duchess had "won the day".[60][61]

Other lesser known claimants were Nadezhda Ivanovna Vasilyeva[62] and Eugenia Smith.[63] Two young women claiming to be Anastasia and her sister Maria were taken in by a priest in the Ural Mountains in 1919 where they lived as nuns until their deaths in 1964. They were buried under the names Anastasia and Maria Nikolaevna.[64]

 
Grand Duchess Anastasia in captivity at Tobolsk in the spring of 1918

Rumors of Anastasia's survival were embellished with various contemporary reports of trains and houses being searched for "Anastasia Romanov" by Bolshevik soldiers and secret police.[65] When she was briefly imprisoned at Perm in 1918, Princess Helena Petrovna, the wife of Anastasia's distant cousin, Prince John Constantinovich of Russia, reported that a guard brought a girl who called herself Anastasia Romanova to her cell and asked if the girl was the daughter of the Tsar. Helena Petrovna said she did not recognize the girl and the guard took her away.[66] Although other witnesses in Perm later reported that they saw Anastasia, her mother and sisters in Perm after the murders, this story is now widely discredited.[66] Rumors that they were alive were fueled by deliberate misinformation designed to hide the fact that the family was dead. A few days after they had been murdered, the German government sent several telegrams to Russia demanding "the safety of the princesses of German blood". Russia had recently signed a peace treaty with the Germans, and did not want to upset them by letting them know the women were dead, so they told them they had been moved to a safer location.[67]

In another incident, eight witnesses reported the recapture of a young woman after an apparent escape attempt in September 1918 at a railway station at Siding 37, northwest of Perm. These witnesses were Maxim Grigoyev, Tatiana Sitnikova (and her son Fyodor Sitnikov), Ivan Kuklin and Matrina Kuklina, Vassily Ryabov, Ustinya Varankina, and Dr Pavel Utkin, a physician who treated the girl after the incident.[68] Some of the witnesses identified the girl as Anastasia when they were shown photographs of the grand duchess by White Russian Army investigators. Utkin also told the White Russian Army investigators that the injured girl, whom he treated at Cheka headquarters in Perm, told him, "I am the daughter of the ruler, Anastasia." Utkin obtained a prescription from a pharmacy for a patient named "N" at the orders of the secret police. White Army investigators later independently located records for the prescription.[69] During the same time period in mid-1918, there were several reports of young people in Russia passing themselves off as Romanov escapees. Boris Soloviev, the husband of Rasputin's daughter Maria, defrauded prominent Russian families by asking for money for a Romanov impostor to escape to China. Soloviev also found young women willing to masquerade as one of the grand duchesses to assist in deceiving the families he had defrauded.[69]

Some biographers' accounts speculated that the opportunity for one or more of the guards to rescue a survivor existed. Yakov Yurovsky demanded that the guards come to his office and turn over items they had stolen following the murder. There was reportedly a span of time when the bodies of the victims were left largely unattended in the truck, in the basement and in the corridor of the house. Some guards who had not participated in the murders and had been sympathetic to the grand duchesses were reportedly left in the basement with the bodies.[70]

Romanov graves and DNA proof edit

 
From left to right, Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia, Tsar Nicholas II, Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia and Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia in captivity at Tobolsk in the winter of 1917

In 1991, the presumed burial site of the imperial family and their servants was excavated in the woods outside Yekaterinburg. The grave had been found nearly a decade earlier, but was kept hidden by its discoverers from the Communists who were still ruling Russia at the time. The grave only held nine of the expected eleven sets of remains. DNA and skeletal analysis matched these remains to Tsar Nicholas II, Tsarina Alexandra, and three of the four grand duchesses (Olga, Tatiana and presumably Maria). The other remains, with unrelated DNA, correspond to the family's doctor (Yevgeny Botkin), their valet (Alexei Trupp), their cook (Ivan Kharitonov), and Alexandra's maid (Anna Demidova). Forensic expert William R. Maples found that the Tsarevitch Alexei and Anastasia's bodies were missing from the family's grave. Russian scientists contested this conclusion, however, claiming it was the body of Maria that was missing. The Russians identified the body as that of Anastasia by using a computer program to compare photos of the youngest grand duchess with the skulls of the victims from the mass grave. They estimated the height and width of the skulls where pieces of bone were missing. American scientists found this method inexact.[71]

American scientists thought the missing body to be Anastasia because none of the female skeletons showed the evidence of immaturity, such as an immature collarbone, undescended wisdom teeth, or immature vertebrae in the back, that they would have expected to find in a seventeen-year-old. In 1998, when the remains of the imperial family were finally interred, a body measuring approximately 5'7" was buried under the name of Anastasia. Photographs taken of her standing beside her three sisters up until six months before the murders demonstrate that Anastasia was several inches shorter than all of them. Her mother commented on sixteen-year-old Anastasia's short stature in a 15 December 1917 letter, written seven months before the murders. "Anastasia, to her despair, is now very fat, as Maria was, round and fat to the waist, with short legs. I do hope she will grow."[72] Scientists considered it unlikely that the teenager could have grown so much in the last months of her life. Her actual height was approximately 5'2".[73]

 
Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia aboard the Rus, the ship that ferried her to Yekaterinburg in May 1918. This is the last known photograph of Anastasia.

The account of the "Yurovsky Note" indicated that two of the bodies were removed from the main grave and cremated at an undisclosed area in order to further disguise the burials of the Tsar and his retinue, if the remains were discovered by the Whites, since the body count would not be correct. Searches of the area in subsequent years failed to turn up a cremation site or the remains of the two missing Romanov children.[74]

However, on 23 August 2007, a Russian archaeologist announced the discovery of two burned, partial skeletons at a bonfire site near Yekaterinburg that appeared to match the site described in Yurovsky's memoirs. The archaeologists said the bones were from a boy who was roughly between the ages of twelve and fifteen years at the time of his death and of a young woman who was roughly between the ages of fifteen and nineteen years old.[3] Anastasia was seventeen years and one month old at the time of the assassination, while her sister Maria was nineteen years, one month old and her brother Alexei was two weeks shy of his fourteenth birthday. Anastasia's elder sisters Olga and Tatiana were twenty-two and twenty-one years old respectively at the time of the assassination. Along with the remains of the two bodies, archaeologists found "shards of a container of sulfuric acid, nails, metal strips from a wooden box, and bullets of various caliber". The site was initially found with metal detectors and by using metal rods as probes.[75]

DNA testing by multiple international laboratories including the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory and Innsbruck Medical University confirmed that the remains belong to the Tsarevich Alexei and to one of his sisters, proving conclusively that all family members, including Anastasia, died in 1918. The parents and all five children are now accounted for, and each has his or her own unique DNA profile.[3][76] While the tests have confirmed that all the Romanov bodies have been found, one of the studies was still unsure which body from the two graves was Maria's and which was Anastasia's:[3]

[…] a well publicized debate over which daughter, Maria (according to Russian experts) or Anastasia (according to US experts), has been recovered from the second grave cannot be settled based upon the DNA results reported here. In the absence of a DNA reference from each sister, we can only conclusively identify Alexei – the only son of Nicholas and Alexandra.

Sainthood edit

Saint Anastasia Romanova
Saint, Grand Duchess and Passion bearer
Venerated inRussian Orthodox Church
Canonized1981 and 2000 by Russian Orthodox Church Abroad and the Russian Orthodox Church
Major shrineChurch on Blood, Yekaterinburg, Russia
Feast17 July

In 2000, Anastasia and her family were canonized as passion bearers by the Russian Orthodox Church. The family had previously been canonized in 1981 by the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad as holy martyrs. The bodies of Tsar Nicholas II, Tsarina Alexandra, and three of their daughters were finally interred in the St. Catherine Chapel at Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral, St Petersburg on 17 July 1998, eighty years after they were murdered.[77] As of 2018 the bones of Alexei and Maria (or possibly Anastasia) were still being held by the Orthodox Church.[78]

Depictions in art, media, and literature edit

 
A forensic facial reconstruction of Grand Duchess Anastasia by S. A. Nikitin, 1994

The purported survival of Anastasia has been the subject of cinema (such as the 1997 animated film and the 1956 film that inspired it starring Ingrid Bergman and Yul Brynner), made-for-television films, and a Broadway musical. The earliest, made in 1928, was called Clothes Make the Woman. The story followed a woman who turns up to play the part of a rescued Anastasia for a Hollywood film, and ends up being recognized by the Russian soldier who originally rescued her from her would-be assassins.[79]

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Did Duchess Anastasia Survive Her Family's Execution?". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
  2. ^ "DNA Confirms Remains Of Czar's Children". CBS News. 11 February 2009. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
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Bibliography edit

  • Bokhanov, Alexander; Knodt, Manfred; Oustimenko, Vladimir; Peregudova, Zinaida; Tyutynnik, Lyubov (1993). The Romanovs: Love, Power, and Tragedy. London: Leppi Publications. ISBN 0-9521644-0-X
  • Buxhoeveden, Sophie (1928). The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna, Empress of Russia. London: Longmans, Green & Co. Available at alexanderpalace.org, archive.org and openlibrary.org.
  • Buxhoeveden, Sophie (1929). Left Behind: Fourteen Months in Siberia During the Revolution, December 1917 – February 1919. London: Longmans, Green & Co. Available at alexanderpalace.org.
  • Christopher, Peter; Kurth, Peter; Radzinsky, Edvard (1995). Tsar: The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra. Boston: Little Brown and Co. ISBN 0-316-50787-3
  • Dehn, Lili (1922). The Real Tsaritsa. London: Butterworth via alexanderpalace.org. Also available at archive.org, gutenberg.org and hathitrust.org.
  • Eagar, Margaretta (1906). Six Years at the Russian Court. New York: Bowman via alexanderpalace.org. Also available at archive.org, and openlibrary.org.
  • Gilliard, Pierre (1921). Thirteen Years at the Russian Court. London: Hutchinson via alexanderpalace.org. Also available at archive.org, gutenberg.org, openlibrary.org, perlego.com and wikipedia. Translated by F. Appleby Holt.
  • King, Greg; Wilson, Penny (2003). The Fate of the Romanovs. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley and Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-20768-3
  • Kurth, Peter (1983). Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson. Boston: Back Bay Books. ISBN 0-316-50717-2
  • Lovell, James Blair (1991). Anastasia: The Lost Princess. Washington, D.C.: Regnery Gateway. ISBN 0-89526-536-2
  • Mager, Hugo (1998). Elizabeth: Grand Duchess of Russia. New York: Carroll and Graf Publishers, Inc. ISBN 0-7867-0678-3
  • Massie, Robert K. (1967). Nicholas and Alexandra. New York: Dell Publishing Co. ISBN 0-440-16358-7
  • Massie, Robert K. (1995). The Romanovs: The Final Chapter. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-394-58048-6
  • Maylunas, Andrei; Mironenko, Sergei (eds), Galy, Darya (translator) (1997). A Lifelong Passion, Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-48673-1
  • Occleshaw, Michael (1993). The Romanov Conspiracies: The Romanovs and the House of Windsor. London: Orion Publishing Group Ltd. ISBN 1-85592-518-4
  • Rappaport, Helen (2008). The Last Days of the Romanovs. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 978-0-312-60347-2
  • Rappaport, Helen (2014). Four Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Romanov Grand Duchesses. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-76817-8
  • Radzinsky, Edvard (1992). The Last Tsar. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-42371-3
  • Radzinsky, Edvard (2000). The Rasputin File. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-48909-9
  • Vorres, Ian (1965). The Last Grand Duchess. New York: Scribner. ASIN B0007E0JK0
  • Vyrubova, Anna (1923). Memories of the Russian Court. London: Macmillan via alexanderpalace.org. Also available at gutenberg.org and openlibrary.org. Reprint available at perlego.com
  • Zeepvat, Charlotte (2004). The Camera and the Tsars: A Romanov Family Album. Stroud: Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0-7509-3049-7

Further reading edit

  • Brewster, Hugh (1996). Anastasia's Album: The Last Tsar's Youngest Daughter Tells Her Own Story. Hachette Books. ISBN 978-0786802920
  • Fleming, Candace (2014). The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia. Schwartz & Wade. ISBN 978-0375867828
  • King, Greg and Wilson, Penny (2011). The Resurrection of the Romanovs: Anastasia, Anna Anderson, and the World's Greatest Royal Mystery. Wiley. ISBN 978-0470444986

External links edit

  •   Media related to Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia at Wikimedia Commons
  • The Murder of Russia's Imperial Family Nicolay Sokolov Investigation of the murder of the Romanov Imperial Family in 1918, in Russian.
  • FrozenTears.org A media library of the last Imperial family
  • Anastasia Information A web site dealing with the controversy surrounding Anastasia's death.
  • Hemophilia B (Factor IX Deficiency)
  • Anastasia and Anna Anderson A website with an overview of Anastasia's life and legend and a brief discussion of Anna Anderson's tale along with links to various books on the subject.

grand, duchess, anastasia, nikolaevna, russia, anastasia, romanova, anastasia, romanov, anastasia, romanoff, redirect, here, other, people, anastasia, romanova, disambiguation, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, nikolaevna. Anastasia Romanova Anastasia Romanov and Anastasia Romanoff redirect here For other people see Anastasia Romanova disambiguation In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Nikolaevna and the family name is Romanova Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia Russian Anastasiya Nikolaevna Romanova romanized Anastasiya Nikolaevna Romanova 18 June O S 5 June 1901 17 July 1918 was the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II the last sovereign of Imperial Russia and his wife Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna Grand Duchess Anastasia NikolaevnaPhoto c 1914Born18 June O S 5 June 1901Peterhof Palace Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireDied17 July 1918 1918 07 17 aged 17 Ipatiev House Yekaterinburg Russian Soviet RepublicBurial17 July 1998Peter and Paul Cathedral Saint Petersburg Russian FederationNamesAnastasia Nikolaevna RomanovaHouseHolstein Gottorp RomanovFatherNicholas II of RussiaMotherAlix of Hesse and by RhineReligionRussian OrthodoxSignatureAnastasia was the younger sister of Grand Duchesses Olga Tatiana and Maria and was the elder sister of Alexei Nikolaevich Tsarevich of Russia She was killed with her family by a group of Bolsheviks in Yekaterinburg on 17 July 1918 1 Persistent rumors of her possible escape circulated after her death fueled by the fact that the location of her burial was unknown during the decades of communist rule The abandoned mine serving as a mass grave near Yekaterinburg which held the acidified remains of the Tsar his wife and three of their daughters was revealed in 1991 These remains were put to rest at Peter and Paul Fortress in 1998 The bodies of Alexei and the remaining daughter either Anastasia or her older sister Maria were discovered in 2007 Her purported survival has been conclusively disproven Scientific analysis including DNA testing confirmed that the remains are those of the imperial family showing that all four grand duchesses were killed in 1918 2 3 Several women falsely claimed to have been Anastasia the best known impostor was Anna Anderson Anderson s body was cremated upon her death in 1984 DNA testing in 1994 on pieces of Anderson s tissue and hair showed no relation to the Romanov family 4 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Appearance and personality 1 3 Association with Grigori Rasputin 1 4 Captivity during World War I and Russian Revolution 1 5 Death 2 False reports of survival 3 Romanov graves and DNA proof 4 Sainthood 5 Depictions in art media and literature 6 Ancestry 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography editEarly years edit nbsp Grand Duchess Anastasia in 1904 nbsp Grand Duchess Anastasia in a formal portrait taken in 1906Anastasia was born on 18 June 1901 She was the fourth daughter of Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra When she was born her parents and extended family were disappointed that she was a girl They had hoped for a son who would have become heir apparent to the throne Her father went for a long walk to compose himself before going to visit his wife and their newborn child for the first time 5 Her paternal aunt Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia said My God What a disappointment a fourth girl 6 Her first cousin twice removed Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich wrote Forgive us Lord if we all felt disappointment instead of joy We were so hoping for a boy and it s a daughter 7 The travel writer Burton Holmes wrote Nicholas would part with half his Empire in exchange for one Imperial boy 8 Anastasia was named for the fourth century martyr St Anastasia 9 Anastasia is a Greek name Anastasia meaning of the resurrection a fact often alluded to later in stories about her rumored survival Anastasia s title is most precisely translated as Grand Princess Grand Duchess became the most widely used translation of the title into English from Russian 10 The Tsar s children were raised as simply as possible They slept on hard camp cots without pillows except when they were ill took cold baths in the morning and were expected to tidy their rooms and do needlework to be sold at various charity events when they were not otherwise occupied Most in the household including the servants generally called the Grand Duchess by her first name and patronym Anastasia Nikolaevna and did not use her title or style She was occasionally called by the French version of her name Anastasie or by the Russian nicknames Nastya Nastas or Nastenka Other family nicknames for Anastasia were Malenkaya meaning little one in Russian 11 or Shvybzik meaning merry little one 12 or little mischief 13 in German nbsp From left to right Maria Anastasia Alexei Olga and Tatiana at the Gulf of Finland 1908Anastasia and her older sister Maria were known within the family as The Little Pair The two girls shared a room often wore variations of the same dress and spent much of their time together Their older sisters Olga and Tatiana also shared a room and were known as The Big Pair The four girls sometimes signed letters using the nickname OTMA which derived from the first letters of their first names 14 DNA testing on the remains of the royal family proved conclusively in 2009 that Anastasia s younger brother Alexei suffered from Hemophilia B a rare form of the disease His mother and one sister identified alternatively as Maria or Anastasia were carriers Symptomatic carriers of the gene while not hemophiliacs themselves can have symptoms of hemophilia including a lower than normal blood clotting factor that can lead to heavy bleeding 15 If Anastasia lived to have children of her own it is genetically probable that they would have been afflicted by the disease 16 Appearance and personality edit Anastasia was short and inclined to be chubby and she had blue eyes 17 and blonde hair 18 Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden her mother s lady in waiting reflected that her features were regular and finely cut She had fair hair fine eyes with impish laughter in their depths and dark eyebrows that nearly met 19 Buxhoeveden believed that Anastasia resembled her mother saying that she was more like her mother s than her father s family 19 Anastasia was a vivacious and energetic child Margaretta Eagar a governess to the four grand duchesses said one person commented that the toddler Anastasia had the greatest personal charm of any child she had ever seen 20 While often described as gifted and bright she was never interested in the restrictions of the school room according to her tutors Pierre Gilliard and Sydney Gibbes Gibbes Gilliard and ladies in waiting Lili Dehn and Anna Vyrubova described Anastasia as lively mischievous and a gifted actress Her sharp witty remarks sometimes hit sensitive spots 18 21 22 Anastasia s daring occasionally exceeded the limits of acceptable behavior She undoubtedly held the record for punishable deeds in her family for in naughtiness she was a true genius said Gleb Botkin son of the court physician Yevgeny Botkin who later died with the family at Yekaterinburg 23 Anastasia sometimes tripped the servants and played pranks on her tutors As a child she would climb trees and refuse to come down Once during a snowball fight at the family s Polish estate Anastasia rolled a rock into a snowball and threw it at her older sister Tatiana knocking her to the ground 18 A distant cousin Princess Nina Georgievna recalled that Anastasia was nasty to the point of being evil and would cheat kick and scratch her playmates during games she was affronted because the younger Nina was taller than she was 24 She was less concerned about her appearance than her sisters Hallie Erminie Rives a best selling American author and wife of an American diplomat described how 10 year old Anastasia ate chocolates without bothering to remove her long white opera gloves at the St Petersburg opera house 25 Despite her energy Anastasia s physical health was sometimes poor The Grand Duchess suffered from painful bunions which affected both of her big toes 26 Anastasia had a weak muscle in her back and was prescribed twice weekly massage She hid under the bed or in a cupboard to put off the massage 27 Anastasia s older sister Maria reportedly hemorrhaged in December 1914 during an operation to remove her tonsils according to her paternal aunt Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia who was interviewed later in her life The doctor performing the operation was so unnerved that he had to be ordered to continue by Maria s mother Olga Alexandrovna said she believed all four of her nieces bled more than was normal and believed they were carriers of the hemophilia gene like their mother 28 Association with Grigori Rasputin edit nbsp Grand Duchess Anastasia with her mother Tsarina Alexandra in about 1908Her mother relied on the counsel of Grigori Rasputin a Russian peasant and wandering starets or holy man and credited his prayers with saving the ailing Tsarevich on numerous occasions Anastasia and her siblings were taught to view Rasputin as Our Friend and to share confidences with him In the autumn of 1907 Anastasia s aunt Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia was escorted to the nursery by the Tsar to meet Rasputin Anastasia her sisters and brother Alexei were all wearing their long white nightgowns All the children seemed to like him Olga Alexandrovna recalled They were completely at ease with him 29 Rasputin s friendship with the imperial children was evident in some of the messages he sent to them In February 1909 Rasputin sent the imperial children a telegram advising them to Love the whole of God s nature the whole of His creation in particular this earth The Mother of God was always occupied with flowers and needlework 30 However one of the girls governesses Sofia Ivanovna Tyutcheva was horrified in 1910 that Rasputin was permitted access to the nursery when the four girls were in their nightgowns and wanted him barred Nicholas asked Rasputin to avoid going to the nurseries in the future The children were aware of the tension and feared that their mother would be angered by Tyutcheva s actions I am so afr aid that S I governess Sofia Ivanovna Tyutcheva can speak about our friend something bad Anastasia s twelve year old sister Tatiana wrote to their mother on 8 March 1910 I hope our nurse will be nice to our friend now 31 nbsp Grand Duchess Anastasia with her brother Alexei nbsp Grand Duchess Anastasia in court dress in 1910Tyutcheva was eventually fired She took her story to other members of the family 32 While Rasputin s visits to the children were by all accounts completely innocent in nature the family was scandalized Tyutcheva told Nicholas s sister Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia that Rasputin visited the girls talked with them while they were getting ready for bed and hugged and patted them Tyutcheva said the children had been taught not to discuss Rasputin with her and were careful to hide his visits from the nursery staff Xenia wrote on 15 March 1910 that she could not understand the attitude of Alix and the children to that sinister Grigory whom they consider to be almost a saint when in fact he s only a khlyst 31 In the spring of 1910 Maria Ivanovna Vishnyakova a royal governess claimed that Rasputin had raped her Vishnyakova said the empress refused to believe her account of the assault and insisted that everything Rasputin does is holy 33 Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna was told that Vishnyakova s claim had been immediately investigated but instead they caught the young woman in bed with a Cossack of the Imperial Guard Vishnyakova was kept from seeing Rasputin after she made her accusation and was eventually dismissed from her post in 1913 34 However rumors persisted and it was later whispered in society that Rasputin had seduced not only the Tsarina but also the four grand duchesses 35 This was followed by circulation of pornographic cartoons which depicted Rasputin having relations with the Empress her four daughters and Anna Vyrubova 36 After the scandal Nicholas ordered Rasputin to leave St Petersburg for a time much to Alexandra s displeasure and Rasputin went on a pilgrimage to Palestine 37 Despite the rumors the imperial family s association with Rasputin continued until his murder on 17 December 1916 Our Friend is so contented with our girlies says they have gone through heavy courses for their age and their souls have much developed Alexandra wrote to Nicholas on 6 December 1916 38 In his memoirs A A Mordvinov reported that the four grand duchesses appeared cold and visibly terribly upset by Rasputin s death and sat huddled up closely together on a sofa in one of their bedrooms on the night they received the news Mordvinov recalled that the young women were in a gloomy mood and seemed to sense the political upheaval that was about to be unleashed 39 Rasputin was buried with an icon signed on its reverse by Anastasia her mother and her sisters She attended his funeral on 21 December 1916 and her family planned to build a church over the site of Rasputin s grave 40 After they were killed by the Bolsheviks it was discovered Anastasia and her sisters were all wearing amulets bearing Rasputin s picture and a prayer 41 Captivity during World War I and Russian Revolution edit nbsp Grand Duchess Maria and Grand Duchess Anastasia with wounded soldiers while visiting their hospital in about 1915 During World War I Anastasia along with her sister Maria visited wounded soldiers at a private hospital in the grounds at Tsarskoye Selo The two teenagers too young to become Red Cross nurses like their mother and elder sisters played games of checkers and billiards with the soldiers and tried to lift their spirits Felix Dassel who was treated at the hospital and knew Anastasia recalled that the grand duchess had a laugh like a squirrel and walked rapidly as though she tripped along 42 In February 1917 Anastasia and her family were placed under house arrest at the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoye Selo during the Russian Revolution Nicholas II abdicated on 15 March O S 2 March 1917 As the Bolsheviks approached Alexander Kerensky of the Provisional Government had them moved to Tobolsk Siberia 43 After the Bolsheviks seized majority control of Russia Anastasia and her family were moved to the Ipatiev House or House of Special Purpose at Yekaterinburg 44 The stress and uncertainty of captivity took their toll on Anastasia as well as her family Goodby sic she wrote to a friend in the winter of 1917 Don t forget us 45 At Tobolsk she wrote a melancholy theme for her English tutor filled with spelling mistakes about Evelyn Hope a poem by Robert Browning about a girl When she died she was only sixteen years old Ther e was a man who loved her without having seen her but k new her very well And she he a rd of him also He never could tell her that he loved her and now she was dead But still he thought that when he and she will live their next life whenever it will be that she wrote 45 Upon arriving in Yekaterinburg Pierre Gilliard recalled his last sight of the children The sailor Nagorny who attended to Alexei Nikolaevitch passed my window carrying the sick boy in his arms behind him came the Grand Duchesses loaded with valises and small personal belongings I tried to get out but was roughly pushed back into the carriage by the sentry I came back to the window Tatiana Nikolayevna came last carrying her little dog and struggling to drag a heavy brown valise It was raining and I saw her feet sink into the mud at every step Nagorny tried to come to her assistance he was roughly pushed back by one of the commisars 46 Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden told of her sad last glimpse of Anastasia Once standing on some steps at the door of a house close by I saw a hand and a pink sleeved arm opening the topmost pane According to the blouse the hand must have belonged either to the Grand Duchess Marie or Anastasia They could not see me through their windows and this was to be the last glimpse that I was to have of any of them 47 nbsp Grand Duchesses Anastasia Maria and Tatiana Nikolaevna at Tsarskoye Selo in the spring of 1917However even in the last months of her life she found ways to enjoy herself She and other members of the household performed plays for the enjoyment of their parents and others in the spring of 1918 Anastasia s performance made everyone howl with laughter according to her tutor Sydney Gibbes 48 On 7 May 1918 in a letter from Tobolsk to her sister Maria in Yekaterinburg Anastasia described a moment of joy despite her sadness and loneliness and worry for the sick Alexei We played on the swing that was when I roared with laughter the fall was so wonderful Indeed I told the sisters about it so many times yesterday that they got quite fed up but I could go on telling it masses of times What weather we ve had One could simply shout with joy 49 In his memoirs one of the guards at the Ipatiev House Alexander Strekotin remembered Anastasia as very friendly and full of fun while another guard said Anastasia was a very charming devil She was mischievous and I think rarely tired She was lively and was fond of performing comic mimes with the dogs as though they were performing in a circus 23 Yet another of the guards however called the youngest grand duchess offensive and a terrorist and complained that her occasionally provocative comments sometimes caused tension in the ranks 50 Anastasia and her sisters helped their maid darn stockings and assisted the cook in making bread and other kitchen chores while they were in captivity at the Ipatiev House 51 In the summer the privations of the captivity including their closer confinement at the Ipatiev House negatively affected the family On 14 July 1918 local priests at Yekaterinburg conducted a private church service for the family They reported that Anastasia and her family contrary to custom fell on their knees during the prayer for the dead and that the girls had become despondent and hopeless and no longer sang the replies in the service Noticing this dramatic change in their demeanor since his last visit one priest told the other Something has happened to them in there 52 But the next day on 15 July 1918 Anastasia and her sisters appeared in good spirits as they joked and helped move the beds in their shared bedroom so that cleaning women could clean the floors They helped the women scrub the floors and whispered to them when the guards were not watching Anastasia stuck her tongue out at Yakov Yurovsky the head of the detachment when he momentarily turned his back and left the room 53 Death edit Further information Murder of the Romanov family nbsp Grand Duchesses Maria and Anastasia making faces for the camera in Tsarskoye Selo 1917 After the Bolshevik revolution in October 1917 Russia quickly disintegrated into civil war Negotiations for the release of the Romanovs between their Bolshevik commonly referred to as Reds captors and their extended family many of whom were prominent members of the royal houses of Europe stalled 54 As the Whites anti Bolshevik forces although not necessarily supportive of the Tsar advanced toward Yekaterinburg the Reds were in a precarious situation The Reds knew Yekaterinburg would fall to the better manned and equipped White Army When the Whites reached Yekaterinburg the imperial family had simply disappeared The most widely accepted account was that the family had been murdered This was due to an investigation by White Army investigator Nicholas Sokolov who came to the conclusion based on items that had belonged to the family being found thrown down a mine shaft at Ganina Yama 55 The Yurovsky Note an account of the event filed by Yurovsky to his Bolshevik superiors following the killings was found in 1989 and detailed in Edvard Radzinsky s 1992 book The Last Tsar According to the note on the night of the deaths the family was awakened and told to dress They were told they were being moved to a new location to ensure their safety in anticipation of the violence that might ensue when the White Army reached Yekaterinburg Once dressed the family and the small circle of servants who had remained with them were herded into a small room in the house s sub basement and told to wait Alexandra and Alexei sat in chairs provided by guards at the Empress s request 56 After several minutes the guards entered the room led by Yurovsky who quickly informed the Tsar and his family that they were to be executed The Tsar had time to say only What and turn to his family before he was killed by several bullets to the chest not as is commonly stated to the head his skull recovered in 1991 bears no bullet wounds 57 The Tsarina and her daughter Olga tried to make the sign of the cross but were killed in the initial volley of bullets fired by the executioners The rest of the Imperial retinue were shot in short order with the exception of Anna Demidova Alexandra s maid Demidova survived the initial onslaught but was quickly stabbed to death against the back wall of the basement while trying to defend herself with a small pillow she had carried into the sub basement that was filled with precious gems and jewels 56 nbsp Grand Duchesses Tatiana and Anastasia and the dog Ortipo in captivity at Tsarskoe Selo in the spring of 1917The Yurovsky Note further reported that once the thick smoke that had filled the room from so many weapons being fired in such close proximity cleared it was discovered that the executioners bullets had ricocheted off the corsets of two or three of the Grand Duchesses The executioners later came to find out that this was because the family s crown jewels and diamonds had been sewn inside the linings of the corsets to hide them from their captors The corsets thus served as a form of armor against the bullets Anastasia and Maria were said to have crouched up against a wall covering their heads in terror until they were shot down by bullets recalled Yurovsky However another guard Peter Ermakov told his wife that Anastasia had been finished off with bayonets As the bodies were carried out one or more of the girls cried out and were clubbed on the back of the head wrote Yurovsky 55 False reports of survival editAnastasia s supposed escape and possible survival was one of the most popular historical mysteries of the 20th century provoking many books and films At least ten women claimed to be her offering varying stories as to how she had survived Anna Anderson the best known Anastasia impostor first surfaced publicly between 1920 and 1922 She contended that she had feigned death among the bodies of her family and servants and was able to make her escape with the help of a compassionate guard who noticed she was still breathing and took sympathy upon her 58 Her legal battle for recognition from 1938 to 1970 continued a lifelong controversy and was the longest running case ever heard by the German courts where it was officially filed The final decision of the court was that Anderson had not provided sufficient proof to claim the identity of the grand duchess 59 Anderson died in 1984 and her body was cremated DNA tests were conducted in 1994 on a tissue sample from Anderson located in a hospital and the blood of Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh a great nephew of Empress Alexandra According to Dr Gill who conducted the tests If you accept that these samples came from Anna Anderson then Anna Anderson could not be related to Tsar Nicholas or Tsarina Alexandra Anderson s mitochondrial DNA was a match with a great nephew of Franziska Schanzkowska a missing Polish factory worker 4 Some supporters of Anderson s claim acknowledged that the DNA tests proving she could not have been the Grand Duchess had won the day 60 61 Other lesser known claimants were Nadezhda Ivanovna Vasilyeva 62 and Eugenia Smith 63 Two young women claiming to be Anastasia and her sister Maria were taken in by a priest in the Ural Mountains in 1919 where they lived as nuns until their deaths in 1964 They were buried under the names Anastasia and Maria Nikolaevna 64 nbsp Grand Duchess Anastasia in captivity at Tobolsk in the spring of 1918Rumors of Anastasia s survival were embellished with various contemporary reports of trains and houses being searched for Anastasia Romanov by Bolshevik soldiers and secret police 65 When she was briefly imprisoned at Perm in 1918 Princess Helena Petrovna the wife of Anastasia s distant cousin Prince John Constantinovich of Russia reported that a guard brought a girl who called herself Anastasia Romanova to her cell and asked if the girl was the daughter of the Tsar Helena Petrovna said she did not recognize the girl and the guard took her away 66 Although other witnesses in Perm later reported that they saw Anastasia her mother and sisters in Perm after the murders this story is now widely discredited 66 Rumors that they were alive were fueled by deliberate misinformation designed to hide the fact that the family was dead A few days after they had been murdered the German government sent several telegrams to Russia demanding the safety of the princesses of German blood Russia had recently signed a peace treaty with the Germans and did not want to upset them by letting them know the women were dead so they told them they had been moved to a safer location 67 In another incident eight witnesses reported the recapture of a young woman after an apparent escape attempt in September 1918 at a railway station at Siding 37 northwest of Perm These witnesses were Maxim Grigoyev Tatiana Sitnikova and her son Fyodor Sitnikov Ivan Kuklin and Matrina Kuklina Vassily Ryabov Ustinya Varankina and Dr Pavel Utkin a physician who treated the girl after the incident 68 Some of the witnesses identified the girl as Anastasia when they were shown photographs of the grand duchess by White Russian Army investigators Utkin also told the White Russian Army investigators that the injured girl whom he treated at Cheka headquarters in Perm told him I am the daughter of the ruler Anastasia Utkin obtained a prescription from a pharmacy for a patient named N at the orders of the secret police White Army investigators later independently located records for the prescription 69 During the same time period in mid 1918 there were several reports of young people in Russia passing themselves off as Romanov escapees Boris Soloviev the husband of Rasputin s daughter Maria defrauded prominent Russian families by asking for money for a Romanov impostor to escape to China Soloviev also found young women willing to masquerade as one of the grand duchesses to assist in deceiving the families he had defrauded 69 Some biographers accounts speculated that the opportunity for one or more of the guards to rescue a survivor existed Yakov Yurovsky demanded that the guards come to his office and turn over items they had stolen following the murder There was reportedly a span of time when the bodies of the victims were left largely unattended in the truck in the basement and in the corridor of the house Some guards who had not participated in the murders and had been sympathetic to the grand duchesses were reportedly left in the basement with the bodies 70 Romanov graves and DNA proof edit nbsp From left to right Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia Tsar Nicholas II Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia and Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia in captivity at Tobolsk in the winter of 1917In 1991 the presumed burial site of the imperial family and their servants was excavated in the woods outside Yekaterinburg The grave had been found nearly a decade earlier but was kept hidden by its discoverers from the Communists who were still ruling Russia at the time The grave only held nine of the expected eleven sets of remains DNA and skeletal analysis matched these remains to Tsar Nicholas II Tsarina Alexandra and three of the four grand duchesses Olga Tatiana and presumably Maria The other remains with unrelated DNA correspond to the family s doctor Yevgeny Botkin their valet Alexei Trupp their cook Ivan Kharitonov and Alexandra s maid Anna Demidova Forensic expert William R Maples found that the Tsarevitch Alexei and Anastasia s bodies were missing from the family s grave Russian scientists contested this conclusion however claiming it was the body of Maria that was missing The Russians identified the body as that of Anastasia by using a computer program to compare photos of the youngest grand duchess with the skulls of the victims from the mass grave They estimated the height and width of the skulls where pieces of bone were missing American scientists found this method inexact 71 American scientists thought the missing body to be Anastasia because none of the female skeletons showed the evidence of immaturity such as an immature collarbone undescended wisdom teeth or immature vertebrae in the back that they would have expected to find in a seventeen year old In 1998 when the remains of the imperial family were finally interred a body measuring approximately 5 7 was buried under the name of Anastasia Photographs taken of her standing beside her three sisters up until six months before the murders demonstrate that Anastasia was several inches shorter than all of them Her mother commented on sixteen year old Anastasia s short stature in a 15 December 1917 letter written seven months before the murders Anastasia to her despair is now very fat as Maria was round and fat to the waist with short legs I do hope she will grow 72 Scientists considered it unlikely that the teenager could have grown so much in the last months of her life Her actual height was approximately 5 2 73 nbsp Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia aboard the Rus the ship that ferried her to Yekaterinburg in May 1918 This is the last known photograph of Anastasia The account of the Yurovsky Note indicated that two of the bodies were removed from the main grave and cremated at an undisclosed area in order to further disguise the burials of the Tsar and his retinue if the remains were discovered by the Whites since the body count would not be correct Searches of the area in subsequent years failed to turn up a cremation site or the remains of the two missing Romanov children 74 However on 23 August 2007 a Russian archaeologist announced the discovery of two burned partial skeletons at a bonfire site near Yekaterinburg that appeared to match the site described in Yurovsky s memoirs The archaeologists said the bones were from a boy who was roughly between the ages of twelve and fifteen years at the time of his death and of a young woman who was roughly between the ages of fifteen and nineteen years old 3 Anastasia was seventeen years and one month old at the time of the assassination while her sister Maria was nineteen years one month old and her brother Alexei was two weeks shy of his fourteenth birthday Anastasia s elder sisters Olga and Tatiana were twenty two and twenty one years old respectively at the time of the assassination Along with the remains of the two bodies archaeologists found shards of a container of sulfuric acid nails metal strips from a wooden box and bullets of various caliber The site was initially found with metal detectors and by using metal rods as probes 75 DNA testing by multiple international laboratories including the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory and Innsbruck Medical University confirmed that the remains belong to the Tsarevich Alexei and to one of his sisters proving conclusively that all family members including Anastasia died in 1918 The parents and all five children are now accounted for and each has his or her own unique DNA profile 3 76 While the tests have confirmed that all the Romanov bodies have been found one of the studies was still unsure which body from the two graves was Maria s and which was Anastasia s 3 a well publicized debate over which daughter Maria according to Russian experts or Anastasia according to US experts has been recovered from the second grave cannot be settled based upon the DNA results reported here In the absence of a DNA reference from each sister we can only conclusively identify Alexei the only son of Nicholas and Alexandra Sainthood editFurther information Canonization of the RomanovsSaint Anastasia RomanovaSaint Grand Duchess and Passion bearerVenerated inRussian Orthodox ChurchCanonized1981 and 2000 by Russian Orthodox Church Abroad and the Russian Orthodox ChurchMajor shrineChurch on Blood Yekaterinburg RussiaFeast17 JulyIn 2000 Anastasia and her family were canonized as passion bearers by the Russian Orthodox Church The family had previously been canonized in 1981 by the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad as holy martyrs The bodies of Tsar Nicholas II Tsarina Alexandra and three of their daughters were finally interred in the St Catherine Chapel at Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral St Petersburg on 17 July 1998 eighty years after they were murdered 77 As of 2018 the bones of Alexei and Maria or possibly Anastasia were still being held by the Orthodox Church 78 Depictions in art media and literature edit nbsp A forensic facial reconstruction of Grand Duchess Anastasia by S A Nikitin 1994The purported survival of Anastasia has been the subject of cinema such as the 1997 animated film and the 1956 film that inspired it starring Ingrid Bergman and Yul Brynner made for television films and a Broadway musical The earliest made in 1928 was called Clothes Make the Woman The story followed a woman who turns up to play the part of a rescued Anastasia for a Hollywood film and ends up being recognized by the Russian soldier who originally rescued her from her would be assassins 79 Ancestry editAncestors of Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia8 Alexander II of Russia 82 4 Alexander III of Russia 80 9 Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine 82 2 Nicholas II of Russia10 Christian IX of Denmark 83 5 Princess Dagmar of Denmark 80 11 Princess Louise of Hesse Kassel 83 1 Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia12 Prince Charles of Hesse and by Rhine 84 6 Louis IV Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine 81 13 Princess Elisabeth of Prussia 84 3 Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine14 Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha 85 7 Princess Alice of the United Kingdom 81 15 Victoria of the United Kingdom 85 References edit Did Duchess Anastasia Survive Her Family s Execution Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2 December 2020 DNA Confirms Remains Of Czar s Children CBS News 11 February 2009 Retrieved 8 September 2011 a b c d Coble Michael D Loreille Odile M Wadhams Mark J Edson Suni M Maynard Kerry Meyer Carna E Niederstatter Harald Berger Cordula Berger Burkhard Falsetti Anthony B Gill Peter Parson Walther Finelli Louis N Hofreiter Michael 2009 Mystery Solved The Identification of the Two Missing Romanov Children Using DNA Analysis PLOS ONE 4 3 e4838 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 4838C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0004838 PMC 2652717 PMID 19277206 a b Massie 1995 pp 194 229 Massie 1967 p 153 Rappaport 2014 p 60 Rappaport 2014 p 60 Rappaport 2014 p 62 Rappaport 2014 pp 59 60 Zeepvat 2004 p xiv Kurth 1983 p 309 Rappaport 2008 p 82 Rappaport 2014 p 103 Christopher Kurth and Radzinsky 1995 pp 88 89 Zeepvat 2004 p 175 Price Michael 2009 Case Closed Famous Royals Suffered from Hemophilia Science Retrieved 26 March 2016 Massie 1967 p 134 a b c Vyrubova 1923 a b Buxhoeveden 1928 Chapter 16 The Empress and her Family Eagar 1906 Gilliard 1921 Dehn 1922 a b King and Wilson 2003 p 250 King and Wilson 2003 p 50 Lovell 1991 pp 35 36 Kurth 1983 p 106 Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 327 Vorres 1965 p 115 Massie 1967 pp 199 200 Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 321 a b Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 330 Massie 1967 p 208 Moss Vladimir 2005 The Mystery of Redemption St Michael s Press retrieved 21 February 2007 Radzinsky 2000 pp 129 30 Mager 1998 Christopher Kurth and Radzinsky 1995 p 115 Christopher Kurth and Radzinsky 1995 p 116 Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 489 Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 507 Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 511 Massie 1995 p 8 Kurth 1983 p 187 King and Wilson 2003 pp 57 59 King and Wilson 2003 pp 78 102 a b Kurth 1983 p xiv Bokhanov et al 1993 p 310 Buxhoeveden 1929 Chapter VII Journey to Ekaterinburg Christopher Kurth and Radzinsky 1995 p 177 Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 619 King and Wilson 2003 p 251 Massie 1995 p 288 Rappaport 2008 pp 162 63 Rappaport 2008 p 172 King and Wilson 2003 p 203 a b King and Wilson 2003 pp 353 67 a b Radzinsky 1992 pp 380 93 Rappaport 2008 p 180 Kurth 1983 pp 33 39 Kurth 1983 pp 289 358 Christopher Kurth and Radzinsky 1995 p 218 Anastasia Dead or Alive Michael Barnes screenwriter amp Michael Barnes director amp Paula S Apsell executive producer amp Michael Barnes producer amp Julia Cort amp Julian Nott co producers Nova 10 October 1995 Season 23 Ep 1 Massie 1995 pp 145 46 Massie 1995 p 157 Massie 1995 p 146 Kurth 1983 p 44 a b Kurth 1983 p 43 Alexeev V V Last Act of a Tragedy documents from German government files discovered by Sokolov Occleshaw 1993 p 46 a b Occleshaw 1993 p 47 King and Wilson 2003 p 314 Massie 1995 p 67 Maylunas and Mironenko 1997 p 595 King and Wilson 2003 p 434 King and Wilson 2003 p 469 Gutterman Steve 24 August 2007 Remains of tzar s heir may have been found The Guardian London UK Retrieved 24 August 2007 Rogaev Evgeny I Grigorenko Anastasia P Moliaka Yuri K Faskhutdinova Gulnaz Goltsov Andrey Lahti Arlene Hildebrandt Curtis Kittler Ellen L W Morozova Irina 31 March 2009 published online before print 27 February 2009 Genomic identification in the historical case of the Nicholas II royal family Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 13 5258 63 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 5258R doi 10 1073 pnas 0811190106 PMC 2664067 PMID 19251637 Shevchenko Maxim 2000 The Glorification of the Royal Family Nezavisimaya Gazeta Archived from the original on 24 August 2005 Retrieved 10 December 2006 MacFarquhar Neil 13 February 2016 Russian Orthodox Church Blocks Funeral for Last of Romanov Remains Published 2016 The New York Times Archived from the original on 27 March 2023 Harlow Robinson Russians in Hollywood Hollywood s Russians biography of an image Northeastern University Press 2007 p 27 a b Nicholas II Tsar of Russia at the Encyclopaedia Britannica a b Gelardi Julia P 1 April 2007 Born to Rule Five Reigning Consorts Granddaughters of Queen Victoria St Martin s Press p 10 ISBN 9781429904551 Retrieved 15 July 2018 a b Alexander III Emperor of Russia at the Encyclopaedia Britannica a b Christian IX The Danish Monarchy Archived from the original on 3 April 2005 Retrieved 14 July 2018 a b Willis Daniel A 2002 The Descendants of King George I of Great Britain Clearfield Company p 717 ISBN 978 0 8063 5172 8 a b Louda Jiri Maclagan Michael 1999 Lines of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe London Little Brown p 34 ISBN 978 1 85605 469 0 Bibliography editBokhanov Alexander Knodt Manfred Oustimenko Vladimir Peregudova Zinaida Tyutynnik Lyubov 1993 The Romanovs Love Power and Tragedy London Leppi Publications ISBN 0 9521644 0 X Buxhoeveden Sophie 1928 The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna Empress of Russia London Longmans Green amp Co Available at alexanderpalace org archive org and openlibrary org Buxhoeveden Sophie 1929 Left Behind Fourteen Months in Siberia During the Revolution December 1917 February 1919 London Longmans Green amp Co Available at alexanderpalace org Christopher Peter Kurth Peter Radzinsky Edvard 1995 Tsar The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra Boston Little Brown and Co ISBN 0 316 50787 3 Dehn Lili 1922 The Real Tsaritsa London Butterworth via alexanderpalace org Also available at archive org gutenberg org and hathitrust org Eagar Margaretta 1906 Six Years at the Russian Court New York Bowman via alexanderpalace org Also available at archive org and openlibrary org Gilliard Pierre 1921 Thirteen Years at the Russian Court London Hutchinson via alexanderpalace org Also available at archive org gutenberg org openlibrary org perlego com and wikipedia Translated by F Appleby Holt King Greg Wilson Penny 2003 The Fate of the Romanovs Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley and Sons Inc ISBN 0 471 20768 3 Kurth Peter 1983 Anastasia The Riddle of Anna Anderson Boston Back Bay Books ISBN 0 316 50717 2 Lovell James Blair 1991 Anastasia The Lost Princess Washington D C Regnery Gateway ISBN 0 89526 536 2 Mager Hugo 1998 Elizabeth Grand Duchess of Russia New York Carroll and Graf Publishers Inc ISBN 0 7867 0678 3 Massie Robert K 1967 Nicholas and Alexandra New York Dell Publishing Co ISBN 0 440 16358 7 Massie Robert K 1995 The Romanovs The Final Chapter New York Random House ISBN 0 394 58048 6 Maylunas Andrei Mironenko Sergei eds Galy Darya translator 1997 A Lifelong Passion Nicholas and Alexandra Their Own Story New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 48673 1 Occleshaw Michael 1993 The Romanov Conspiracies The Romanovs and the House of Windsor London Orion Publishing Group Ltd ISBN 1 85592 518 4 Rappaport Helen 2008 The Last Days of the Romanovs New York St Martin s Griffin ISBN 978 0 312 60347 2 Rappaport Helen 2014 Four Sisters The Lost Lives of the Romanov Grand Duchesses Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 76817 8 Radzinsky Edvard 1992 The Last Tsar New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 42371 3 Radzinsky Edvard 2000 The Rasputin File New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 48909 9 Vorres Ian 1965 The Last Grand Duchess New York Scribner ASIN B0007E0JK0 Vyrubova Anna 1923 Memories of the Russian Court London Macmillan via alexanderpalace org Also available at gutenberg org and openlibrary org Reprint available at perlego com Zeepvat Charlotte 2004 The Camera and the Tsars A Romanov Family Album Stroud Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 3049 7Further reading editBrewster Hugh 1996 Anastasia s Album The Last Tsar s Youngest Daughter Tells Her Own Story Hachette Books ISBN 978 0786802920 Fleming Candace 2014 The Family Romanov Murder Rebellion and the Fall of Imperial Russia Schwartz amp Wade ISBN 978 0375867828 King Greg and Wilson Penny 2011 The Resurrection of the Romanovs Anastasia Anna Anderson and the World s Greatest Royal Mystery Wiley ISBN 978 0470444986External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Media related to Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia at Wikimedia Commons The Murder of Russia s Imperial Family Nicolay Sokolov Investigation of the murder of the Romanov Imperial Family in 1918 in Russian FrozenTears org A media library of the last Imperial family Anastasia Information A web site dealing with the controversy surrounding Anastasia s death Hemophilia B Factor IX Deficiency Could the Bulgarian mountain village of Gabarevo be the last refuge of the lost Romanov Princess Anastasia and Anna Anderson A website with an overview of Anastasia s life and legend and a brief discussion of Anna Anderson s tale along with links to various books on the subject Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia amp oldid 1210186858, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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