Tsar's daughter anastasia. Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna

Tsar's daughter anastasia.  Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna
Tsar's daughter anastasia. Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna

This news shocked humanity. The Bolshevik regime shot and finished off with bayonets the Russian Tsar Nicholas II, Tsarina Alexandra Fedorovna, their four children and four servants in the basement of a small house in the Urals.

After the revolution and the tsar's abdication from the throne, the Russian Empire lost its former power, and, as a result, the tsar's family was sent into exile and then shot.

Since then, many assumptions have been made about their death. They say that the youngest of the Tsar's daughters, Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova, escaped the tragic fate of the rest of the family. She was saved by a Russian soldier, who was subsequently shot. This is how the legend of Anastasia was born, which historians and scientists have studied for many decades.

According to the official version, after the February Revolution of 1917, Nicholas abdicated the throne on March 2. The struggle for power between the Mensheviks and the Bolsheviks ended in victory for the latter, and seized power in the state led by Vladimir Ulyanov (Lenin).

They created the Red Army and established communist rule. The arrested imperial family was sent to Yekaterinburg (Ural), but a few months later, fearing that the White Guards would try to free the tsar, the Bolshevik government in July 1918 ordered the execution of the imperial family, which was carried out in the basement of the merchant Ipatiev's house by a group of Red Guards under under the command of Yakov Yurovsky.

The whole family and servants were gathered in the basement, saying that now they would be photographed. But instead of the photographer, a group of soldiers entered, and Yurovsky turned to the tsar, saying that the Russian people had sentenced him to death. Shots were immediately heard. Then the executioners examined the bodies and finished off with bayonets those who still showed signs of life.

They wanted to take the bodies to a more secure place, but the car broke down, and it was decided to bury them in the nearby Ganina Yama. There they dug a grave, laid the dead in it and poured it with sulfuric acid and lime. But, as one of the soldiers who participated in the execution said, Anastasia and her younger brother Tsarevich Alexei were buried elsewhere.

Based on this episode, the legend was born that Anastasia remained alive. In the memo that Yurovsky sent to his superiors in Moscow in 1918, nothing was said about the episode with Anastasia.

The White Guard troops, who fought for the restoration of the monarchy with the Reds, soon occupied Yekaterinburg and did not find any traces of the tsar and his family, secretly buried in Ganina Yama.

Since then, many stories have appeared, which to this day are passed from mouth to mouth. They are told by various monarchists and "witnesses" based on an event that shocked the world: Anastasia Romanova, the youngest of the four daughters of the tsar, apparently survived and, after a series of vicissitudes, appeared in public under the name Anna Anderson, demanding to recognize herself as Grand Duchess Romanova, the legitimate daughter of the tsar.

Anne Anderson, who claimed that she was the daughter of the king, excited the world community, dividing it into two opposite camps. Her story sounded very convincing to the press and salon public, as well as to ordinary people on all continents.

Although not only Anna demanded recognition as the daughter of Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra, she soon became the only applicant, since for more than half a century she insisted that she was the real Grand Duchess Anastasia Romanova.

Thorough investigations were carried out in relation to Anna, because if it were proved that she was the real Anastasia, then the untold fortune of the tsar would have passed to her, which was completely not in the interests of the closest relatives of Nicholas II, who lost all rights to inheritance.

It all began on February 27, 1920 in Berlin, when a young girl tried to commit suicide by jumping from a bridge into the Landwehrkanal. She was rescued by a police sergeant and taken to a mental hospital. Since she did not have any documents with her, she was recorded as Fräulein Unbekannt, that is, an unknown girl. She began to call herself Anna Tchaikovskaya and stayed there for two years.

Clara Peuthert, one of the residents of the mental hospital, assured that Anna was one of the Tsar's daughters - Tatiana or Anastasia. After leaving the hospital, Peitert spread the news and it gained a lot of notoriety. Anna was visited by journalists, Russian émigrés and even people close to the royal family. The story began to gain momentum.

Some accepted her, while others called her an impostor. Upon leaving the hospital, she was accepted by many who believed in her, including representatives of the nobility who found themselves in exile. They sheltered her and helped her financially.

Anna had a difficult character, which was explained by her difficult fate. She was invited to Switzerland and various cities in Germany from 1922 to 1927. One of the queen's relatives even placed her in Seeon Castle. Mary, the Tsar's mother, was convinced that Anna was Anastasia, while other relatives denied this, which made the whole story even more mysterious.

American journalist Gleb Botkin has written a number of articles on this topic. Anastasia's childhood friend, Princess Xenia Leeds, who was married to an American industrial magnate, lived in the United States. She became interested in Anna and invited her to visit her in the USA, where Anna met many Russian emigrants who believed in Botkin's articles. There Anna took the name Anderson.

Together with lawyer Edward Fallows, the journalist founded the Grand Russian Princess Anastasia Corporation, which was involved in the sale of the Romanovs' property when it was handed over to Anna / Anastasia by the British royal court, which was aware of the case.

Anne Anderson returned to Germany in 1931, but returned to the United States in 1968, where Botkin lived. There she lived until her death in 1984. She died of pneumonia. A few months earlier, she had married Jack Manahan, who was 20 years younger and called himself "the king's son-in-law."

In the 1970s, the litigation ended, and none of the parties was able to establish whether Anna Anderson was the real Anastasia or simply pretended to be the daughter of Nicholas II. The gripping legend remained a mystery.

InoSMI materials contain assessments exclusively of foreign mass media and do not reflect the position of the InoSMI editorial board.

October 21, 2009 6:54 pm

Ladies and Gentlemen, Ladies and Gentlemen, how much can you read about silicones, Baysarovs, Lopez, etc. ???? It's time to remember the mysterious history of the Great Russian Princess. Overview Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna (Romanova Anastasia Nikolaevna) (June 5 (18), 1901, Peterhof - on the night of July 16-17, 1918, Yekaterinburg) is the fourth daughter of Emperor Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna. She was shot with her family in the Ipatiev house. After her death, about 30 women declared themselves “the miraculously escaped Grand Duchess,” but sooner or later all were exposed as impostors. Glorified together with her parents, sisters and brother in the Cathedral of the New Martyrs of Russia as a passion-bearer at the jubilee Bishops' Council of the Russian Orthodox Church in August 2000. Earlier, in 1981, they were canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church abroad. Remembrance July 4th Julian. The village of Anastasievka in the Black Sea province was named in her honor in 1902. Birth and Disappointment of the Royal Family Born on June 5 (18), 1901 in Peterhof. By the time of her appearance, the royal couple already had three daughters - Olga, Tatiana and Maria. The absence of an heir heated up the political situation: according to the Act of Succession to the throne, adopted by Paul I, a woman could not ascend the throne, because the younger brother of Nicholas II, Mikhail Alexandrovich, was considered the heir, which did not suit many, and first of all, Empress Alexandra Fedorovna. In her attempts to beg her son from Providence, at this time she plunges more and more into mysticism. With the assistance of the Montenegrin princesses Militsa Nikolaevna and Anastasia Nikolaevna came to the court a certain Philip, a French national, who declared himself a hypnotist and a specialist in nervous diseases. Philip predicted to Alexandra Fedorovna the birth of a son, however, a girl was born - Anastasia. Nikolai wrote in his diary: At about 3 o'clock Alix started to have severe pains. At 4 o'clock I got up and went to my room and got dressed. Exactly at 6 in the morning, daughter Anastasia was born. Everything happened under excellent conditions soon and, thank God, without complications. Thanks to the fact that it all started and ended while everyone was still asleep, we both had a sense of calm and solitude! After that, he sat down to write telegrams and notify relatives to all parts of the world. Fortunately, Alix is ​​doing well. The baby weighs 11½ pounds and is 55 cm tall. The entry in the emperor's diary contradicts the assertions of some researchers who believe that, disappointed by the birth of his daughter, Nicholas did not dare to visit his newborn and his wife for a long time. Grand Duchess Xenia, sister of the reigning emperor, also noted this event: What a disappointment! 4th girl! She was named Anastasia. Mom telegraphed me about the same and writes: "Alix gave birth to a daughter again!" The Grand Duchess was named after the Montenegrin princess Anastasia Nikolaevna, a close friend of the empress. The "hypnotist" Philip, not bewildered after the failed prophecy, immediately predicted to her "an amazing life and a special destiny." Margaret Yeager, author of the memoir Six Years at the Russian Imperial Court, recalled that Anastasia was named after the emperor pardoned and reinstated the rights of St. Petersburg University students who took part in the recent unrest, since the very name Anastasia means "brought back to life", in the image of this saint there are usually chains torn in half. Palace life The full title of Anastasia Nikolaevna sounded like Her Imperial Highness, the Grand Duchess of Russia Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova, but they did not use it, calling her by name and patronymic in the official speech, and at home they called her “little, Nastaska, Nastya, egg-capsule” - for her small height (157 cm .) and a round figure and a "shvybzik" - for mobility and inexhaustibility in the invention of pranks and pranks. The life of the grand duchesses was rather monotonous. Breakfast at 9 o'clock, lunch at 13.00 or 12.30 on Sundays. At five o'clock - tea, at eight - a general dinner, and the food was quite simple and unassuming. In the evenings, the girls would solve charades and embroider while their father read aloud to them. Early in the morning it was supposed to take a cold bath, in the evening - a warm one, to which a few drops of perfume were added, and Anastasia preferred Kochi's perfume with the scent of violets. This tradition has survived since the time of Catherine I. When the girls were small, the servants carried buckets of water to the bathroom, when they grew up - it was their responsibility. There were two baths - the first large one, left over from the reign of Nicholas I (according to the preserved tradition, everyone who washed in it left their autograph on the side), the other, smaller, was intended for children. They were looking forward to Sunday with special impatience - on this day the Grand Duchesses attended children's balls at their aunt's, Olga Alexandrovna's. The evening was especially interesting when Anastasia was allowed to dance with young officers. Like other children of the emperor, Anastasia was educated at home. Teaching began at the age of eight and included French and English, history, geography, the law of God, science, drawing, grammar, as well as dancing and lessons in good manners. Anastasia was not very diligent in her studies, she could not stand grammar, wrote with horrific mistakes, and called arithmetic with childish spontaneity "swinish". The royal family and Grigory Rasputin. With Princess Tatiana
War period According to the memoirs of contemporaries, following her mother and older sisters, Anastasia sobbed bitterly on the day of the declaration of war. During the war, the Empress gave many of the palace rooms to hospital premises. The elder sisters Olga and Tatiana, together with their mother, became sisters of mercy; Maria and Anastasia, being too young for such hard work, became patroness of the hospital. Both sisters gave their own money to buy medicines, read aloud to the wounded, knitted things for them, played cards and checkers, wrote letters home under their dictation, and entertained them with telephone conversations in the evenings, sewed linen, prepared bandages and lint. Maria and Anastasia gave concerts to the wounded and did their best to distract them from heavy thoughts. They spent their days in the hospital, reluctant to break away from work for the sake of lessons. With Princess Mary Execution of the royal family It is officially believed that the decision to shoot the royal family was finally made by the Ural Council on July 16 in connection with the possibility of surrendering the city to the White Guard troops and the allegedly discovered conspiracy to save the royal family. On the night of July 16-17, at 11:30 pm, two specially authorized representatives from the Ural Council handed a written order on the execution to the commander of the security detachment P.Z. The royal family was awakened and, under the pretext of a possible shootout and the danger of being killed by bullets that bounced off the walls, they offered to go down to the corner basement room. According to Yakov Yurovsky's report, the Romanovs did not suspect anything until the last moment. At the request of the empress, chairs were brought into the basement, on which she and Nikolai with her son in her arms sat down. Anastasia, along with her sisters, stood behind. The sisters brought several handbags with them, Anastasia also took her beloved dog Jimmy, who accompanied her throughout the exile. There is information that after the first volley Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia survived, they were saved by jewels sewn into the corsets of dresses. Later, the witnesses interrogated by the investigator Sokolov testified that of the tsar's daughters Anastasia resisted death the longest, the already wounded “had” to be finished off with bayonets and rifle butts. According to the materials discovered by the historian Edward Radzinsky, Anna Demidova, Alexandra's servant, remained alive for the longest time, who managed to protect herself with a pillow filled with jewelry. Together with the corpses of relatives, Anastasia's body was wrapped in sheets taken from the beds of the Grand Duchesses, and taken to the Four Brothers tract for burial. There the corpses, disfigured to complete unrecognizability by blows of butts and sulfuric acid, were thrown into one of the old mines. Later, investigator Sokolov found the body of Ortipo's dog here. After the shooting, the last drawing made by Anastasia's hand was found in the room of the grand duchesses - a swing between two birches. The basement of the Ipatiev house, where the royal family was shot The last picture of Anastasia 3 days before the bloody massacre Drawings of the princess Stories with the rescue of the Tsarovich and the Grand Duchess or false Anastasia Anna Anderson Rumors that one of the tsar's daughters managed to escape - either by running away from the Ipatiev house, or even before the revolution, being replaced by some of the servants, began to circulate among Russian emigrants almost immediately after the execution of the tsarist family. Attempts by a number of people to use for their own ends the belief in the possible salvation of the youngest princess Anastasia led to the emergence of over thirty false Anastasias. One of the most famous impostors was Anna Anderson, who claimed that a soldier named Tchaikovsky was able to pull her wounded from the basement of the Ipatiev house after he saw that she was still alive. Another version of the same story was presented by the former Austrian prisoner of war Franz Svoboda at the trial, at which Anderson tried to defend her right to be called the Grand Duchess and gain access to the hypothetical inheritance of her “father”. Freedom proclaimed himself the savior of Anderson, and, according to his version, the wounded princess was transported to the house of “a neighbor in love with her, a certain H.”. This version, however, contained quite a lot of obviously implausible details, for example, about the violation of the curfew, which was unthinkable at that moment, about posters announcing the Grand Duchess's escape, allegedly pasted all over the city, and about general searches, which, fortunately , gave nothing. Thomas Hildebrand Preston, who at that time was the British Consul General in Yekaterinburg, rejected such fabrications. Despite the fact that Anderson defended her “royal” origin until the end of her life, she wrote the book “I, Anastasia” and for several decades led legal proceedings , no final decision was made during her lifetime. Currently, genetic analysis has confirmed the already existing assumptions that Anna Anderson was in fact Franziska Schanzkowska, a worker in a Berlin explosives plant. As a result of an accident at work, she was seriously injured and received a mental shock, the consequences of which she could not get rid of for the rest of her life. Eugenia Smith Another fake Anastasia was Evgenia Smith (Evgenia Smetisko), an artist who published "memoirs" in the United States about her life and miraculous salvation. She managed to attract significant attention to her person and seriously improve her financial situation, speculating on the interest of the public. " Natalia Bilikhodze The last of the fake Anastasias, Natalia Bilikhodze, died in 2000. Prince Dmitry Romanovich Romanov, great-great-grandson of Nicholas, summed up the long-term epic of impostors:Self-styled Anastasias in my memory were from 12 to 19. In the conditions of the post-war depression, many went crazy. We, the Romanovs, would be happy if Anastasia, even in the person of this very Anna Anderson, was alive. But alas, it was not her! The last dot on the i was put by the discovery in the same tract in 2007 of the bodies of Alexei and Maria and anthropological and genetic examination, which finally confirmed that there could not be any rescued among the royal family Based on the story of Anna Anderson, a cartoon was filmed, directed by Don Bluth and Gary Goldman. The Grand Duchess was canonized in 1981 by the Russian Orthodox Church abroad, and in 2000 in Russia.

Grand Duchess Anastasia, the youngest daughter of Emperor Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna, can be considered the most famous of the royal daughters. After her death, about 30 women declared themselves a miracle rescued Grand Duchess.

Why Anastasia?

Why was the youngest daughter of the royal family named Anastasia? There are two versions on this score. According to the first, the girl was named after a close friend of the Russian Empress Anastasia (Stana) Nikolaevna, a Montenegrin princess.

Montenegrin princesses, who were disliked at the imperial court for their addiction to mysticism and were called "Montenegrin spiders", had a great influence on Alexandra Feodorovna.

It was they who introduced the royal family to Grigory Rasputin.

The second version of the choice of the name was presented by Margaret Yeager, who wrote her memoir "Six Years at the Russian Imperial Court." She argued that Anastasia was named in honor of the pardon granted by Nicholas II in honor of the birth of his daughter to students at St. Petersburg University who participated in anti-government unrest. The name "Anastasia" means "brought back to life", in the image of this saint there are usually chains torn in half.

Unexpected daughter

When Anastasia was born, the royal couple already had three daughters. Everyone was waiting for the heir boy. According to the Act of Succession to the throne, a woman could take the throne only after the termination of all male lines of the ruling dynasty, therefore, the heir to the throne (in the absence of the prince) was the younger brother of Nicholas II, Mikhail Alexandrovich, which did not suit many.

Dreaming of a son, Alexandra Feodorovna, with the assistance of the already mentioned "Montenegrins", meets a certain Philip, who appears to be a hypnotist and promises to ensure the birth of a boy to the royal family.

As you know, a boy in the imperial family will be born - three years later. Now, on June 5, 1901, a girl was born.

Her birth caused a mixed reaction in court circles. Some, for example, Princess Xenia, sister of Nicholas II, wrote: “What a disappointment! 4th girl! She was named Anastasia. Mom telegraphed me about the same and writes: "Alix gave birth to a daughter again!"

The emperor himself wrote the following in his diary about the birth of his fourth daughter: “About 3 o'clock Alix began to have severe pains. At 4 o'clock I got up and went to my room and got dressed. Exactly at 6 in the morning, daughter Anastasia was born. Everything happened under excellent conditions soon and, thank God, without complications. Thanks to the fact that it all began and ended while everyone was still asleep, we both had a sense of calm and solitude. "

"Schwibs"

Since childhood, Anastasia was distinguished by a difficult character. At home, for her cheerful irrepressible childishness, she even received the nickname "Shvybs". She had an undeniable talent as a comic actress. General Mikhail Dieterichs wrote: “Its distinguishing feature was to notice the weaknesses of people and talentedly imitate them. He was a natural, gifted comedian. Always, it happened, she made everyone laugh, keeping a pretensely serious look. "

Anastasia was very playful. Despite her physique (short, stout), for which the sisters called her a "pod", she deftly climbed trees and often refused to climb out of mischief, adored playing hide and seek, rounders and other games, played the balalaika and guitar, introduced fashion among their sisters to weave flowers and ribbons in their hair.

Anastasia was not very diligent in her studies, she wrote with mistakes, and called arithmetic "swinish."

English teacher Sydney Gibbs recalled that the younger princess once tried to "bribe" him with a bouquet of flowers, then gave the bouquet to the Russian teacher Petrov.

The maid of honor of the Empress Anna Vyrubova in her memoirs recalled how once, during a reception in Kronstadt, a very little three-year-old Anastasia crawled on all fours under the table and began to bite those present by the legs, pretending to be a dog. For which she immediately received a reprimand from her father.

Of course she loved animals. She had a Spitz Schwibzik. When he died in 1915, the Grand Duchess was inconsolable for several weeks. Later she got another dog - Jimmy. He accompanied her during her exile.

Army bunk

Despite her playful disposition, Anastasia still tried to comply with the customs of the royal family. As you know, the emperor and the empress tried not to pamper the children, therefore, in some matters, discipline in the family was almost Spartan. So, Anastasia slept on an army bed. What is significant, the princess took this same bed with her to the Livadia Palace when she left for the holidays. She slept on the same army bed during her exile.

The daily routine of the princesses was rather monotonous. In the morning it was supposed to take a cold bath, warm in the evening, to which a few drops of perfume were added.

The younger princess preferred Kitty's perfume with the scent of violets. This "bathroom tradition" has been observed in the royal dynasty since the time of Catherine the First. When the girls grew up, the responsibility to carry buckets of water in the bath began to be imputed to them, before that the servants were responsible for this.

The first Russian "selfie"

Anastasia was fond of not only pranks, but was also not indifferent to newfangled trends. So, she was seriously interested in photography. Many unofficial photos of the royal family were taken by the hand of the younger Grand Duchess.
One of the first "selfies" in world history and probably the first Russian "selfie" was taken by her in 1914 with a Kodak Brownie camera. A note to her father dated October 28, which she attached to the picture, read: “I took this photo while looking at myself in the mirror. It was not easy because my hands were shaking. ”To stabilize the image, Anastasia put the camera on a chair.

Patroness Anastasia

During World War I, Anastasia was only fourteen. As a young woman, she could not, like older sisters and mother, be a sister of mercy. Then she became a patroness of the hospital, gave her own money to buy medicines for the wounded, read them aloud, gave concerts, wrote letters to their loved ones under dictation, played with them, sewed clothes for them, prepared bandages and lint. Afterwards, their photographs were kept at her house; she remembered the wounded by their first and last names. She taught some illiterate soldiers to read and write.

Pseudo-nastasia

After the execution of the royal family, three dozen women appeared in Europe, claiming that they were Anastasia who miraculously escaped. One of the most famous impostors was Anna Anderson, she claimed that the soldier Tchaikovsky was able to pull her wounded from the basement of the Ipatiev house after he saw that she was still alive.

At the same time, Anna Anderson, according to the testimony of Duke Dimitri of Leuchtenberg, with whom she visited in 1927, did not know either Russian, English or French. She spoke only German with a North German accent. Didn't know Orthodox worship. Also Dimitri Leuchtenberg wrote: "Doctor Kostritsky, a dentist of the Imperial Family, testified in writing that the teeth of Mrs. Tchaikovskaya, a cast of which we sent to him made by our family dentist in 1927, have nothing to do with the teeth of Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna."

In 1995 and 2011, genetic analysis confirmed the already existing assumptions that Anna Anderson was in fact Franziska Schanzkowska, a Berlin factory worker, who received a mental shock during the explosion at the factory, from which she could not recover for the rest of her life.

Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna.

Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna


The youngest of the Grand Duchesses, Anastasia Nikolaevna, seemed to be made of mercury, not flesh and blood. She was very, extremely witty and possessed an undeniable gift of a mime. She knew how to find a funny side in everything.

During the revolution, Anastasia turned only sixteen - after all, not so hot what old age! She was pretty, but her face was bright, and her eyes shone with a remarkable intelligence.

The girl-"tomboy", "Schwibz", as her relatives called her, maybe she would like to correspond to the girl's ideal of Domostroy, but she could not. But, most likely, She simply did not think about it, because the main feature of Her not fully revealed character was cheerful childishness.



Anastasia Nikolaevna was ... a big minx, and not without guile. She quickly grasped the funny sides in everything; It was difficult to fight against Her attacks. She was a darling - a flaw from which She corrected herself over the years. Very lazy, as is sometimes the case with very capable children, She had an excellent pronunciation of French and acted out small theatrical scenes with real talent. She was so cheerful and so knew how to disperse the wrinkles of anyone who was out of sorts that some of those around them began, recalling the nickname given to Her Mother at the English court, to call Her "Sunbeam" "

Birth.


Born June 5, 1901 in Peterhof. By the time of her appearance, the royal couple already had three daughters - Olga, Tatiana and Maria. The absence of an heir heated up the political situation: according to the Act of Succession to the throne, adopted by Paul I, a woman could not ascend to the throne, because the younger brother of Nicholas II, Mikhail Alexandrovich, was considered the heir, which did not suit many, and first of all, Empress Alexandra Fedorovna. In her attempts to beg her son from Providence, at this time she plunges more and more into mysticism. With the assistance of the Montenegrin princesses Militsa Nikolaevna and Anastasia Nikolaevna came to the court a certain Philip, a French national, who declared himself a hypnotist and a specialist in nervous diseases. Philip predicted to Alexandra Fedorovna the birth of a son, however, a girl was born - Anastasia.

Nicholas II, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna with her daughters Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia

Nikolay wrote in his diary: “At about 3 o'clock Alix began to have severe pains. At 4 o'clock I got up and went to my room and got dressed. Exactly at 6 in the morning, daughter Anastasia was born. Everything happened under excellent conditions soon and, thank God, without complications. Thanks to the fact that it all started and ended while everyone was still asleep, we both had a sense of calm and solitude! After that, he sat down to write telegrams and notify relatives to all parts of the world. Fortunately, Alix is ​​doing well. The baby weighs 11½ pounds and is 55cm tall. "

The Grand Duchess was named after the Montenegrin princess Anastasia Nikolaevna, a close friend of the empress. The "hypnotist" Philip, not being lost after a failed prophecy, immediately predicted for her "an amazing life and a special fate." reinstated the rights of the students of St. Petersburg University who took part in the recent unrest, since the very name "Anastasia" means "brought back to life", the image of this saint usually has chains torn in half.

Childhood.


Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia Nikolaevna in 1902

The full title of Anastasia Nikolaevna sounded like Her Imperial Highness, the Grand Duchess of Russia Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova, but they did not use it, calling her by name and patronymic in the official speech, and at home they called her “little, Nastaska, Nastya, egg-capsule” - for her small height (157 cm .) and a round figure and a "shvybzik" - for mobility and inexhaustibility in the invention of pranks and pranks.

According to the memoirs of contemporaries, the emperor's children were not pampered with luxury. Anastasia shared a room with her older sister Maria. The walls of the room were gray and the ceiling was decorated with images of butterflies. On the walls are icons and photographs. The furniture is white and green, the furnishings are simple, almost spartan, a couch with embroidered cushions, and an army bunk where the Grand Duchess slept all year round. This bed moved around the room in order to find itself in a more illuminated and warmer part of the room in winter, and in summer it was sometimes even pulled out onto the balcony so that one could take a break from the stuffiness and heat. The same bed was taken with them on vacation to the Livadia Palace, on which the Grand Duchess slept during her Siberian exile. One large room next door, divided in half by a curtain, served as a common boudoir and bathroom for the Grand Duchesses.

Princess Maria and Anastasia

The life of the grand duchesses was rather monotonous. Breakfast at 9 o'clock, lunch at 13.00 or 12.30 on Sundays. At five o'clock - tea, at eight - a general dinner, and the food was quite simple and unassuming. In the evenings, the girls would solve charades and embroider while their father read aloud to them.

Princess Maria and Anastasia


Early in the morning it was supposed to take a cold bath, in the evening - a warm one, to which a few drops of perfume were added, and Anastasia preferred Kochi's perfume with the scent of violets. This tradition has survived since the time of Catherine I. When the girls were small, the servants carried buckets of water to the bathroom, when they grew up - it was their responsibility. There were two baths - the first large one, left over from the reign of Nicholas I (according to the preserved tradition, everyone who washed in it left their autograph on the side), the other, smaller, was intended for children.


Grand Duchess Anastasia


Like other children of the emperor, Anastasia was educated at home. Teaching began at the age of eight, the program included French, English and German, history, geography, the law of God, natural sciences, drawing, grammar, arithmetic, as well as dance and music. Anastasia was not very diligent in her studies, she could not stand grammar, wrote with horrific mistakes, and called arithmetic with childish spontaneity "swinish". English teacher Sydney Gibbs recalled that once she tried to bribe him with a bouquet of flowers in order to increase his grade, and after he refused, she gave these flowers to the teacher of the Russian language, Petrov.

Grand Duchess Anastasia



Grand Duchesses Maria and Anastasia

In mid-June, the family went on trips on the imperial yacht "Standart", usually in the Finnish skerries, landing from time to time on the islands for short excursions. The imperial family especially fell in love with a small bay, which was dubbed the Standard Bay. They held picnics there, or played tennis on the court, which the emperor arranged with his own hands.



Nicholas II with his daughters -. Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia




We also rested in the Livadia Palace. The main premises housed the imperial family, in the outbuildings there were several courtiers, guards and servants. They swam in the warm sea, built fortresses and towers of sand, sometimes got out into the city to ride a wheelchair through the streets or visit shops. In St. Petersburg, this could not be done, since any appearance of the royal family in public created a crowd and excitement.



Visit to Germany


We sometimes visited Polish estates belonging to the royal family, where Nicholas loved to hunt.





Anastasia with sisters Tatyana and Olga.

World War I

According to the memoirs of contemporaries, following her mother and older sisters, Anastasia sobbed bitterly on the day of the declaration of war.

On the day of the fourteenth birthday, by tradition, each of the emperor's daughters became an honorary commander of one of the Russian regiments.


In 1901, after her birth, the name of St. In honor of the princess, Anastasia Uzorezresitelitsa received the Caspian 148th Infantry Regiment. He began to celebrate his regimental holiday on December 22, the saint's day. The regimental church was erected in Peterhof by the architect Mikhail Fedorovich Verzhbitsky. At 14, she became his honorary commander (colonel), about which Nikolai made a corresponding entry in his diary. From now on, the regiment was officially named the 148th Caspian Her Imperial Highness Grand Duchess Anastasia Infantry Regiment.


During the war, the Empress gave many of the palace rooms to hospital premises. The elder sisters Olga and Tatiana, together with their mother, became sisters of mercy; Maria and Anastasia, being too young for such hard work, became patroness of the hospital. Both sisters gave their own money to buy medicines, read aloud to the wounded, knitted things for them, played cards and checkers, wrote letters home under their dictation, and entertained them with telephone conversations in the evenings, sewed clothes, prepared bandages and lint.


Maria and Anastasia gave concerts to the wounded and did their best to distract them from heavy thoughts. They spent their days in the hospital, reluctant to break away from work for the sake of lessons. Anastasia remembered these days until the end of her life:

Under house arrest.

According to the recollections of Lily Den (Yulia Aleksandrovna von Den), a close friend of Alexandra Feodorovna, in February 1917, in the midst of the revolution, children one after another fell ill with measles. Anastasia was the last to take to her bed, when the Tsarskoye Selo palace was already surrounded by the insurgent troops. The tsar was at that time in the headquarters of the commander-in-chief, in Mogilev, only the empress and the children remained in the palace. ...

Grand Duchesses Maria and Anastasia are looking at photographs

On the night of March 2, 1917, Lily Den stayed overnight in the palace, in the Crimson Room, with the Grand Duchess Anastasia. The children, so that they would not worry, were explained that the troops that surrounded the palace and the distant shots were the result of the ongoing exercises. Alexandra Fyodorovna assumed "to hide the truth from them for as long as possible." At 9 o'clock on March 2, they learned about the abdication of the king.

On Wednesday, March 8, Count Pavel Benckendorff appeared at the palace with the message that the Provisional Government had decided to subject the imperial family to house arrest in Tsarskoye Selo. It was suggested that they make a list of people willing to stay with them. Lily Deng immediately offered her services.


A.A. Vyrubova, Alexandra Fedorovna, Yu.A. Den.

On March 9, the children were informed about the father's abdication. Nikolai returned a few days later. Life under house arrest turned out to be bearable enough. I had to reduce the number of dishes during lunch, since the menu of the royal family was announced publicly from time to time, and it was not worth giving an extra reason to provoke an already angry crowd. The curious often looked through the bars of the fence as the family walk in the park and sometimes greeted her with whistles and swearing, so the walks had to be shortened.


On June 22, 1917, it was decided to shave the girls' heads, as their hair was falling out due to the persistent temperature and strong medications. Alexei insisted that he be shaved too, thus causing extreme displeasure in his mother.


Grand Duchesses Tatiana and Anastasia

In spite of everything, the education of the children continued. The entire process was led by Jillard, a French teacher; Nikolai himself taught children geography and history; Baroness Buxgewden took over English and music lessons; Mademoiselle Schneider taught arithmetic; Countess Gendrikova - drawing; Alexandra taught Orthodoxy.

The eldest, Olga, despite the fact that her education was completed, was often present at the lessons and read a lot, improving what had already been learned.


Grand Duchesses Olga and Anastasia

At this time there was still hope for the family of the former tsar to go abroad; but George V, whose popularity among his subjects was rapidly falling, decided not to risk it and chose to sacrifice the royal family, thereby causing shock in his own cabinet.

Nicholas II and George V

Ultimately, the Provisional Government decided to transfer the family of the former tsar to Tobolsk. On the last day before leaving, they managed to say goodbye to the servants, and for the last time they visited their favorite places in the park, ponds, and islands. Alexei wrote in his diary that on that day he managed to push his older sister Olga into the water. On August 12, 1917, a train flying the flag of the Japanese Red Cross mission left the siding in the strictest confidence.



Tobolsk.

On August 26, the imperial family arrived in Tobolsk on the "Rus" steamer. The house intended for them was not yet completely ready, so they spent the first eight days on the steamer.

Arrival of the Royal Family to Tobolsk

Finally, under escort, the imperial family was taken to the two-story governor's mansion, where they would henceforth live. The girls were given a corner bedroom on the second floor, where they were accommodated in the same army bunks captured from the Alexander Palace. Anastasia additionally decorated her corner with her favorite photographs and drawings.


Life in the governor's mansion was rather monotonous; the main entertainment is to watch passers-by from the window. From 9.00 to 11.00 - lessons. Hour break for a walk with your father. Lessons again from 12.00 to 13.00. Dinner. From 14.00 to 16.00 walks and simple entertainment like home performances, or in winter - riding from a slide built with your own hands. Anastasia, in her own words, enthusiastically prepared firewood and sewed. Further, according to the schedule, followed the evening service and going to bed.


In September, they were allowed to go to the nearest church for the morning service. Again, the soldiers formed a living corridor all the way to the church doors. The attitude of local residents to the royal family was rather benevolent.


The news that Nicholas II, exiled to Tobolsk, and the royal family were going to see the monument to Ermak, spread not only around the city, but also around the region. The Tobolsk photographer Ilya Efimovich Kondrakhin, carried away by photography, hastened to capture this moment with his bulky apparatus - a great rarity in those days. And here we have a photograph showing how several dozen people climb the slope of the hill on which there is a monument, so as not to miss the arrival of the last Russian tsar. Vladimir Vasilievich Kondrakhin (grandson of the photographer) took a picture from the original photo


Tobolsk

Suddenly, Anastasia began to gain weight, and the process was proceeding at a fairly fast pace, so that even the empress, worried, wrote to her friend:

"Anastasia, to her despair, has grown fat and looks exactly like Maria a few years ago - the same huge waist and short legs ... Let's hope this will pass with age ..."

From a letter to Sister Mary.

“The iconostasis for Easter has been arranged terribly well, everything is in the tree, as it should be here, and flowers. We filmed, I hope it will come out. I continue to paint, they say - not bad, very nice. We were swinging on a swing, when I fell, it was such a wonderful fall! .. yeah! Yesterday I told the sisters so many times that they were already tired of it, but I can tell many more times, although there is no one else. In general, I have a carload of things to tell you and you. My Jimmy woke up and coughs, so he sits at home, helmet bows. That was the weather! It was possible to shout straight out of pleasure. I am the most tanned, oddly enough, just an acrobat! And these days are boring and ugly, it's cold, and we got cold this morning, although of course we didn't go home ... I'm very sorry, I forgot to congratulate all of my loved ones on the holidays, whole not three, but a lot of times All. All of you darling thank you very much for the letter "

In April 1918, the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee of the fourth convocation decided to transfer the former tsar to Moscow with a view to his trial. After long hesitation, Alexandra decided to accompany her husband; Maria had to leave with her “to help”.

The rest had to wait for them in Tobolsk, Olga's duties were to take care of her sick brother, Tatyana - to keep house, Anastasia - "to entertain everyone." However, in the beginning, the entertainment was tight, on the last night before leaving, no one closed his eyes, and when, finally, in the morning, peasant carts for the tsar, the tsarina and those accompanying were brought to the doorstep, three girls - "three figures in gray" with tears saw off those leaving all the way to the gate.

In the courtyard of the governor's house

In the empty house, life went on slowly and sadly. They wondered from books, read aloud to each other, walked. Anastasia was still swinging on a swing, drawing and playing with her sick brother. According to the recollections of Gleb Botkin, the son of a physician who died with the royal family, he once saw Anastasia in the window and bowed to her, but the guards immediately chased him away, threatening to shoot if he dared to come so close again.


Conducted. Princess Olga, Tatiana, Anastasia () and Tsarevich Alexei at tea. Tobolsk, governor's house. Apr-May 1918

On May 3, 1918, it became clear that for some reason, the departure of the former tsar to Moscow was canceled and instead Nikolai, Alexandra and Maria were forced to stay at the house of the engineer Ipatiev in Yekaterinburg, requisitioned by the new government specifically in order to accommodate the royal family ... In a letter marked with this date, the empress instructed her daughters to “properly dispose of medicines” - this word meant jewelry that they managed to hide and take with them. Under the leadership of Tatyana's older sister, Anastasia sewed the remaining jewelry into the corset of her dress - with a successful coincidence, it was supposed to redeem her way to salvation for them.

On May 19, it was finally decided that the remaining daughters and Alexei, who was quite strong by that time, would join the parents and Maria in the Ipatiev house in Yekaterinburg. The next day, May 20, all four boarded the steamer Rus, which brought them to Tyumen. According to the recollections of eyewitnesses, the girls were taken in locked cabins, Alexei rode with his orderly named Nagorny, access to them in the cabin was prohibited even for a doctor.


"My dear friend,

I'll tell you how we drove. We left early in the morning, then got on the train and I fell asleep, followed by all the others. We were all very tired, because we had not slept all night before. The first day was very stuffy and dusty, and at every station we had to draw up the curtains so that no one could see us. One evening I looked out when we stopped at a small house, the station was not there, and you could look outside. A little boy came up to me and asked: "Uncle, give me a newspaper if you have one." I said: "I am not an uncle, but an aunt, and I have no newspaper." At first I did not understand why he decided that I was an "uncle", and then I remembered that my hair was cut short and, together with the soldiers who accompanied us, we laughed for a long time at this story. In general, there was a lot of fun on the way, and if there is time, I will tell you about the journey from beginning to end. Goodbye, don't forget me. Everyone is kissing you.

Your Anastasia. "


On May 23, at 9 o'clock in the morning, the train arrived in Yekaterinburg. Here, the teachers of the French language Zhiyard, the sailor Nagorny and the maid of honor, who had arrived with them, were removed from the children. The carriages were brought to the train and at 11 o'clock in the morning Olga, Tatiana, Anastasia and Aleksey were finally taken to the house of engineer Ipatiev.


Ipatiev House

Life in a "special purpose home" was monotonous, boring - but nothing more. Wake up at 9 o'clock, breakfast. At 2.30 - lunch, at 5 - noon tea and dinner at 8. The family went to bed at 10.30 in the evening. Anastasia, together with her sisters, sewed, walked in the garden, played cards and read spiritual publications aloud to her mother. A little later, the girls were taught to bake bread and they enthusiastically devoted themselves to this occupation.


The dining room, the door visible in the picture leads to the Princess's room.


Room of the Sovereign, Empress and Heir.


On Tuesday June 18, 1918, Anastasia celebrated her last, 17th birthday. The weather that day was excellent, only in the evening a small thunderstorm broke out. Lilacs and lungwort were blooming. The girls baked bread, then Alexei was taken to the garden, and the whole family joined him. At 8 pm we had supper, played several games of cards. They went to bed at the usual time, at 10.30 pm.

Firing squad

It is officially believed that the decision to shoot the royal family was finally made by the Ural Council on July 16 in connection with the possibility of surrendering the city to the White Guard troops and the allegedly discovered conspiracy to save the royal family. On the night of July 16-17, at 11:30 pm, two specially authorized representatives from the Ural Council handed a written order to shoot to the commander of the security detachment P.Z. After a brief dispute about the method of executing the execution, the royal family was awakened and, under the pretext of a possible firefight and the danger of being killed by bullets that bounced off the walls, they offered to go down to the corner basement room.


According to Yakov Yurovsky's report, the Romanovs did not suspect anything until the last moment. At the request of the empress, chairs were brought into the basement, on which she and Nikolai with her son in her arms sat down. Anastasia, along with her sisters, stood behind. The sisters brought several handbags with them, Anastasia also took her beloved dog Jimmy, who accompanied her throughout the exile.


Anastasia keeps dog Jimmy

There is information that after the first volley Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia survived, they were saved by jewels sewn into the corsets of dresses. Later, the witnesses interrogated by the investigator Sokolov testified that of the tsar's daughters Anastasia resisted death the longest, the already wounded “had” to be finished off with bayonets and rifle butts. According to the materials discovered by the historian Edward Radzinsky, Anna Demidova, Alexandra's servant, remained alive for the longest time, who managed to protect herself with a pillow filled with jewelry.


Together with the corpses of relatives, Anastasia's body was wrapped in sheets taken from the beds of the Grand Duchesses, and taken to the Four Brothers tract for burial. There the corpses, disfigured to complete unrecognizability by blows of butts and sulfuric acid, were thrown into one of the old mines. Later, investigator Sokolov found the body of Ortino's dog here.

Grand Duchess Anastasia, Grand Duchess Tatiana holding the dog Ortino

After the shooting, the last drawing made by Anastasia's hand was found in the room of the grand duchesses - a swing between two birches.

Drawings of Grand Duchess Anastasia

Anastasia over Ganina Yama

Finding the remains

The tract "Four Brothers" is located a few kilometers from the village of Koptyaki, not far from Yekaterinburg. One of its pits was chosen by Yurovsky's team to bury the remains of the royal family and servants.

It was not possible to keep the place secret from the very beginning, due to the fact that the road to Yekaterinburg passed literally next to the tract, early in the morning the procession was seen by a peasant from the village of Koptyaki Natalya Zykova, and then several more people. The Red Army men, threatening with weapons, drove them away.

Later, on the same day, explosions of grenades were heard in the tract. Interested in the strange incident, the local residents, a few days later, when the cordon had already been removed, came to the tract and managed to find several valuables (apparently belonging to the royal family) in a hurry, unnoticed by the executioners.

From May 23 to June 17, 1919, investigator Sokolov conducted reconnaissance of the area and interviewed the villagers.

Photo by Gilliard: Nikolai Sokolov in 1919 near Yekaterinburg.

From June 6 to July 10, by order of Admiral Kolchak, excavations began on Ganina's pit, which were interrupted due to the retreat of the Whites from the city.

On July 11, 1991, in Ganina Yama, at a depth of just over one meter, remains were found, identified as the bodies of the royal family and servants. The body, which probably belonged to Anastasia, was marked with number 5. Doubts arose regarding him - the entire left side of the face was smashed into pieces; Russian anthropologists tried to combine the found fragments together, and put together the missing part from them. The result of rather painstaking work was in doubt. Russian researchers tried to proceed from the growth of the found skeleton, however, measurements were taken from photographs and were questioned by American experts.

American scientists believed that the missing body belonged to Anastasia, because none of the female skeletons showed evidence of immaturity, such as an immature collarbone, undeveloped wisdom teeth, or immature vertebrae in the back, which they expected to find in the body of a seventeen-year-old girl.

In 1998, when the remains of the imperial family were finally interred, a 5'7 "body was buried under the name of Anastasia. Photos of a girl standing next to her sisters, taken six months before the murder, show that Anastasia was several inches shorter than them. Her mother, commenting on the figure of her sixteen-year-old daughter, wrote in a letter to her friend seven months before the murder: “Anastasia, to her despair, has grown fat and looks exactly like Maria a few years ago - the same huge waist and short legs ... Let's hope with with age, it will pass ... "Scientists believe it is unlikely that in the last months of her life she grew much. Her real height was approximately 5'2".

The doubts were finally resolved in 2007, after the discovery of the remains of a young girl and a boy in the so-called Porosenkovsky Log, later identified as Tsarevich Alexei and Maria. Genetic testing confirmed the initial findings. In July 2008, this information was officially confirmed by the Investigative Committee under the Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation, saying that an examination of the remains found in 2007 on the old Koptyakovskaya road established that the discovered remains belong to Grand Duchess Maria and Tsarevich Alexei, who was the emperor's heir.










Fireplace with "charred wood parts"



Another version of the same story was presented by the former Austrian prisoner of war Franz Svoboda at the trial, at which Anderson tried to defend her right to be called the Grand Duchess and gain access to the hypothetical inheritance of her “father”. Freedom proclaimed himself the savior of Anderson, and, according to his version, the wounded princess was transported to the house of “a neighbor in love with her, a certain H.”. This version, however, contained quite a lot of obviously implausible details, for example, about the violation of the curfew, which was unthinkable at that moment, about posters announcing the Grand Duchess's escape, allegedly pasted all over the city, and about general searches, which, fortunately , gave nothing. Thomas Hildebrand Preston, who was at that time the British Consul General in Yekaterinburg, rejected such fabrications. Despite the fact that Anderson defended her "royal" origin until the end of her life, wrote the book "I, Anastasia" and for several decades was in litigation, no final decision was made during her lifetime.

Currently, genetic analysis has confirmed the already existing assumptions that Anna Anderson was in fact Franziska Schanzkowska, a worker in a Berlin explosives plant. As a result of an accident at work, she was seriously injured and received a mental shock, the consequences of which she could not get rid of for the rest of her life.

Another fake Anastasia was Evgenia Smith (Evgenia Smetisko), an artist who published “memoirs” in the USA about her life and miraculous salvation. She managed to attract significant attention to her person and seriously improve her financial situation, speculating on the interest of the public.

Eugenia Smith. the photo

Rumors about the salvation of Anastasia were fueled by news of trains and houses that the Bolsheviks searched in search of the missing princess. During a brief imprisonment in Perm in 1918, Princess Elena Petrovna, the wife of Anastasia's distant relative, Prince Ivan Konstantinovich, reported that the guards brought a girl to her cell, who called herself Anastasia Romanova, and asked if the girl was the Tsar's daughter. Elena Petrovna replied that she did not recognize the girl, and the guards took her away. Another message is given more credibility by one historian. Eight eyewitnesses reported the return of a young woman after an apparent rescue attempt in September 1918 at a railway station at Sid 37, northwest of Perm. These witnesses were Maxim Grigoriev, Tatyana Sytnikova and her son Fyodor Sytnikov, Ivan Kuklin and Marina Kuklina, Vasily Ryabov, Ustina Varankina, and Dr. Pavel Utkin, the doctor who examined the girl after the incident. Some witnesses identified the girl as Anastasia when they were shown photographs of the Grand Duchess by White Army investigators. Utkin also told them that the injured girl, whom he examined at the Cheka headquarters in Perm, told him: "I am the daughter of the ruler, Anastasia."

At the same time, in mid-1918, there were several reports of young people in Russia posing as the surviving Romanovs. Boris Solovyov, the husband of Rasputin's daughter Maria, deceived noble Russian families for money for the allegedly escaped Romanov, actually wanting to go to China with the proceeds. Solovyov also found women who were willing to impersonate the Grand Duchesses and thereby contributed to the introduction of deception.

However, there is a possibility that indeed one or more of the guards could have saved one of the surviving Romanovs. Yakov Yurovsky demanded that the guards come to his office and review the things they had stolen after the murder. Accordingly, there was a period of time when the bodies of the victims were left unattended in the truck, in the basement and in the corridor of the house. Some of the guards who did not participate in the killings and sympathized with the Grand Duchesses, according to some reports, remained in the basement with the bodies.

In 1964-1967, during the Anna Anderson case, the Viennese tailor Heinrich Kleibenzetl testified that he allegedly saw the wounded Anastasia shortly after the murder in Yekaterinburg on July 17, 1918. The girl was looked after by his landlady, Anna Baoudin, in a building directly opposite Ipatiev's house.

“The lower part of her body was covered in blood, her eyes were closed, and she was white as a sheet,” he testified. “We washed her chin, Frau Annushka and I, then she groaned. The bones must have been broken ... Then she opened her eyes for a minute. " Kleibenzetl claimed that the injured girl remained in his landlord's house for three days. The Red Army men allegedly came to the house, but they knew his landlord too well and did not actually search the house. "They said something like this: Anastasia has disappeared, but she's not here, that's for sure." Finally, a Red Army soldier, the same person who brought her, came to pick up the girl. Kleibenzetl knew nothing more about her future fate.

Rumors revived again after the publication of Sergo Beria's book "My Father - Lavrenty Beria", where the author casually recalls a meeting in the foyer of the Bolshoi Theater with Anastasia, who allegedly escaped, who became the abbess of an unnamed Bulgarian monastery.

Rumors of a "miraculous salvation", as if subdued after the royal remains were subjected to scientific study in 1991, resumed with renewed vigor when publications appeared in the press that one of the grand duchesses was absent among the bodies found (it was assumed that it was Maria) and Tsarevich Alexei. However, according to another version, Anastasia, who was a little younger than her sister and almost as built, might not have been among the remains, so an error in identification seemed likely. This time, Nadezhda Ivanova-Vasilyeva claimed the role of the rescued Anastasia, who spent most of her life in the Kazan psychiatric hospital, where she was assigned by the Soviet authorities, allegedly fearing the surviving princess.

Prince Dmitry Romanovich Romanov, great-great-grandson of Nicholas, summed up the long-term epic of impostors:

Self-styled Anastasias in my memory were from 12 to 19. In the conditions of the post-war depression, many went crazy. We, the Romanovs, would be happy if Anastasia, even in the person of this very Anna Anderson, was alive. But alas, it was not her.

The last dot on the i was put by the discovery in the same tract in 2007 of the bodies of Alexei and Maria and anthropological and genetic examination, which finally confirmed that there could not be any rescued among the royal family

Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova - a great mystery

Princesses.

July 17 "href =" / text / category / 17_iyulya / "rel =" bookmark "> July 17, 1918, Yekaterinburg) - the Grand Duchess, the fourth daughter of Emperor Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna. She was shot together with her family in the Ipatiev house. After her death about 30 women declared themselves “the miraculously escaped Grand Duchess,” but sooner or later they were all exposed as impostors. in 1981, they were canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, Commemorated on July 4, Julian calendar.

Birth

Born on June 5 (18), 1901 in Peterhof. By the time of her appearance, the royal couple already had three daughters - Olga, Tatiana and Maria. The absence of an heir heated up the political situation: according to the Act of Succession to the throne, adopted by Paul I, a woman could not ascend the throne, because the younger brother of Nicholas II, Mikhail Alexandrovich, was considered the heir, which did not suit many, and first of all, Empress Alexandra Fedorovna. In her attempts to beg God for her son, at this time she is more and more immersed in mysticism. With the assistance of the Montenegrin princesses Militsa Nikolaevna and Anastasia Nikolaevna came to the court a certain Philip, a French national, who declared himself a hypnotist and a specialist in nervous diseases. Philip predicted to Alexandra Fedorovna the birth of a son, however, a girl was born - Anastasia. Nikolai wrote in his diary:

The entry in the emperor's diary contradicts the assertions of some researchers who believe that, disappointed by the birth of his daughter, Nicholas did not dare to visit his newborn and his wife for a long time.

Grand Duchess Xenia, sister of the reigning emperor, also noted this event:

The Grand Duchess was named after the Montenegrin princess Anastasia Nikolaevna, a close friend of the empress. The "hypnotist" Philip, not bewildered after the failed prophecy, immediately predicted to her "an amazing life and a special destiny." Margaret Yeager, author of the memoir Six Years at the Russian Imperial Court, recalled that Anastasia was named after the emperor pardoned and reinstated the rights of St. Petersburg University students who took part in the recent unrest, since the very name Anastasia means "brought back to life", in the image of this saint there are usually chains torn in half.

The full title of Anastasia Nikolaevna sounded like Her Imperial Highness, the Grand Duchess of Russia Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova, but they did not use it, calling her by name and patronymic in the official speech, and at home they called her “little, Nastaska, Nastya, egg-capsule” - for her small height (157 cm ) and a round figure and a "shvybzik" - for mobility and inexhaustibility in the invention of pranks and pranks.

According to the memoirs of contemporaries, the emperor's children were not pampered with luxury. Anastasia shared a room with her older sister Maria. The walls of the room were gray and the ceiling was decorated with images of butterflies. On the walls are icons and photographs. The furniture is white and green, the furnishings are simple, almost spartan, a couch with embroidered cushions, and an army bunk where the Grand Duchess slept all year round. This bed moved around the room in order to find itself in a more illuminated and warmer part of the room in winter, and in summer it was sometimes even pulled out onto the balcony so that one could take a break from the stuffiness and heat. The same bed was taken with them on vacation to the Livadia Palace, on which the Grand Duchess slept during her Siberian exile. One large room next door, divided in half by a curtain, served as a common boudoir and bathroom for the Grand Duchesses.

The life of the grand duchesses was rather monotonous. Breakfast at 9 o'clock, lunch at 13:00 or 12:30 on Sundays. At five o'clock - tea, at eight - a general dinner, and the food was quite simple and unassuming. In the evenings, the girls would solve charades and embroider while their father read aloud to them.

Early in the morning it was supposed to take a cold bath, in the evening - a warm one, to which a few drops of perfume were added, and Anastasia preferred Kochi's perfume with the scent of violets. This tradition has survived since the time of Catherine I. When the girls were small, the servants carried buckets of water to the bathroom, when they grew up - it was their responsibility. There were two baths - the first large one, left over from the reign of Nicholas I (according to the preserved tradition, everyone who washed in it left their autograph on the side), the other, smaller, was intended for children.

They were looking forward to Sunday with special impatience - on this day the Grand Duchesses attended children's balls at their aunt's, Olga Alexandrovna's. The evening was especially interesting when Anastasia was allowed to dance with young officers.

Like other children of the emperor, Anastasia was educated at home. Teaching began at the age of eight, and the program included French, English and German, history, geography, the Law of God, natural sciences, drawing, grammar, arithmetic, as well as dance and music. Anastasia was not very diligent in her studies, she could not stand grammar, wrote with horrific mistakes, and called arithmetic with childish spontaneity "swinish". English teacher Sydney Gibbs recalled that once she tried to bribe him with a bouquet of flowers in order to increase his grade, and after he refused, she gave these flowers to the teacher of the Russian language, Pyotr Vasilyevich Petrov.

Basically, the family lived in the Alexander Palace, occupying only a part of several dozen rooms. Sometimes we moved to the Winter Palace, despite the fact that it was very large and cold, the girls Tatiana and Anastasia were often sick here.

In mid-June, the family went on trips on the imperial yacht "Standart", usually in the Finnish skerries, landing from time to time on the islands for short excursions. The imperial family especially fell in love with a small bay, which was dubbed the Standard Bay. They held picnics there, or played tennis on the court, which the emperor arranged with his own hands.

We also rested in the Livadia Palace. The main premises housed the imperial family, in the outbuildings there were several courtiers, guards and servants. They swam in the warm sea, built fortresses and towers of sand, sometimes got out into the city to ride a wheelchair through the streets or visit shops. In St. Petersburg, this could not be done, since any appearance of the royal family in public created a crowd and excitement.

We sometimes visited Polish estates belonging to the royal family, where Nicholas loved to hunt.

The First World War turned into a disaster for the Russian Empire and for the Romanov dynasty. By February 1917, having lost hundreds of thousands of killed, the country wavered. In the capital, Petrograd, the people staged hunger riots, students joined the striking workers, and the troops sent to restore order raised a mutiny themselves. Tsar Nicholas II, hastily summoned from the front, where he personally commanded the imperial army, was given an ultimatum: abdication. For himself and his sickly 12-year-old son, he renounced the throne that his dynasty had held since 1613.
The Provisional Government placed the family of the former emperor under house arrest in Tsarskoe Selo, a comfortable ensemble of palaces near Petrograd. Together with Nicholas II, Empress Alexandra Fedo-Rovnaya and Tsarevich Alexei, there were four daughters of the Tsar, Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia, the eldest of whom was 22 years old, and the youngest - 16 years old. Apart from constant supervision, the family experienced practically no hardships during their imprisonment in Tsarskoye Selo.
By the summer of 1917, conspiracies began to worry Kerensky: on the one hand, the Bolsheviks sought to eliminate the former tsar; on the other hand, the monarchists, who remained loyal to the tsar, wanted to save Nicholas II and return the throne to him. For safety's sake, Kerensky decided to send his royal captives to Tobolsk, a remote Siberian town more than 1,500 kilometers east of the Ural Mountains. On August 14, Nicholas II, his wife and five children, accompanied by about 40 servants, set off from Tsarskoye Selo on a six-day journey on a carefully guarded train.
... In November, the Bolsheviks seized power and concluded a separate peace with Germany and Austria-Hungary (the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty was signed in March 1918). The new leader of Russia, Vladimir Lenin, faced many problems, including what to do with the former tsar, who has now become his prisoner.
In April 1918, when the White Army, the tsar's supporters, was advancing to Tobolsk along the Trans-Siberian Railway, Lenin ordered the tsar's family to be transported to Yekaterinburg, located at the western end of the road. Nicholas II and his family were settled in the two-story residence of the merchant Ipatiev, giving it the ominous name "House of Special Purpose".
The guards, most of whom were former factory workers, were commanded by the uncouth and often drunk Alexander Avdeev, who liked to call the former Tsar Nikolai the Bloody.
In early July 1918, Avdeev was replaced by Yakov Yurovsky, the head of the local Cheka detachment. Two days later, a courier arrived from Moscow with the order to prevent the former Tsar from falling into the hands of the Whites. The pro-monarchist army, united with the 40,000-strong Czech corps, steadily advanced west to Yekaterinburg, despite the resistance of the Bolsheviks.
Somewhere after midnight, on the night of July 16-17, 1918, Yurovsky woke up the members of the royal family, ordered them to get dressed and ordered them to gather in one of the rooms on the first floor. Chairs were brought to Alexandra and the sick Alexei, Nicholas II, the princesses, Doctor Botkin and four servants remained standing. After reading the death sentence, Yurovsky shot Nicholas II in the head - this was a signal to the other participants in the execution to open fire at the targets indicated in advance. Those who did not die immediately were stabbed to death with bayonets.
The bodies were thrown into a truck and taken to an abandoned mine outside the city, where they were mutilated, doused with acid and thrown into an adit. On July 17, the government in Moscow received an encrypted message from Yekaterinburg: "Inform Sverdlov that all family members suffered the same fate as its head. Officially, the family died during the evacuation."
At the meeting of the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee held on July 18, its chairman announced a telegram received by direct wire about the execution of the former tsar.
On July 19, the Council of People's Commissars issued a decree on the confiscation of the property of Nikolai Romanov and members of the former imperial house. All their property was declared the property of the Soviet Republic. The execution of the Romanovs in Yekaterinburg was officially published on July 22. On the eve of this, a message was made at a working meeting in the city theater, greeted with a stormy expression of delight ...
Almost immediately, rumors arose about how true this message was. The version was actively discussed that Nicholas II was indeed executed on the night of July 16-17, but the life of the former queen, her son and four daughters was spared. However, since the former queen and her children never appeared anywhere, the conclusion about the death of the entire family became generally accepted. True, from time to time there were candidates for the role of survivors of this terrible tragedy. They were considered impostors, and the legend that not all of the Romanovs died that night was viewed as a fantasy.
... In 1988, with the onset of publicity, sensational facts were revealed. Yakov Yurovsky's son handed over to the authorities a secret report detailing the location and circumstances of the bodies' burial. From 1988 to 1991 there were searches and excavations. As a result, nine skeletons were found in the indicated location. After a thorough computer analysis (comparison of skulls with photographs) and comparison of genes (the so-called collation of DNA prints), it became obvious that five skeletons belonged to Nicholas II, Alexandra and three of the five children. Four skeletons - to three servants and Dr. Botkin, a family doctor.
The discovery of the remains raised the veil of secrecy, but also added fuel to the fire. In a burial found near Yekaterinburg, two skeletons were missing. Experts concluded that there are no remains of Tsarevich Alexei and one of the Grand Duchesses. Whose skeleton is missing, Maria or Anastasia, is not known. The question remains open: fifty-fifty.

Memories of contemporaries testify that Anastasia was well educated, knew how to dance, knew foreign languages, took part in home performances ... In her family she had a funny nickname: "Shvibzik" for her playfulness. She seemed to be made of mercury, not flesh and blood, was very witty and possessed an undeniable gift of mime. She was so cheerful and so knew how to disperse the wrinkles of anyone who was out of sorts, that some of those around them began to call Her "Sunbeam"
... The life of the youngest daughter of Nicholas II ended at the age of 17. On the night of July 16-17, 1918, she and her relatives were shot in Yekaterinburg.
Or were they not shot? In the early 90s, the burial of the royal family near Yekaterinburg was discovered, but the remains of Anastasia and Tsarevich Alexei were not found. However, another skeleton, "number 6", was later found and buried as belonging to the Grand Duchess. True, a small detail raises doubts about its authenticity - Anastasia was 158 cm tall, and the buried skeleton was 171 cm ... Well, the princess didn't grow up in the grave?
There are other inconsistencies that allow hoping for a miracle ...

Despite the seeming transparency of the story of the death of the family of the last Russian tsar, white spots still remain in it. Too many people were not interested in finding out the truth, but in creating the illusion of truth. Numerous examinations carried out in different laboratories in different countries of the world brought to the matter not so much clarity as confusion.
It is well known that in the early 90s, the burial of the royal family near Yekaterinburg was discovered, but the remains of Anastasia (or Maria) and Tsarevich Alexei were not found. However, another skeleton, "number 6", was later found and buried as belonging to the Grand Duchess. However, a small detail casts doubt on its authenticity - Anastasia was 158 cm tall, and the buried skeleton was 171 cm ...
It is less known that Nicholas II had seven twin families, and their fate is not clear. Two court rulings in Germany, based on DNA examinations of the Yekaterinburg remains, showed that they are one hundred percent consistent with the Filatov family - doubles of the family of Nicholas II ... So, perhaps it remains to be seen whose remains were buried under the name of Grand Duchess Anastasia in St. Petersburg in July 1998 (there are doubts about other remains buried then), and whose remains were found in the summer of 2007 in the Koptyakovsky forest.
Official point of view: ALL members of the family of Nicholas II and he himself were shot in Yekaterinburg in 1918, and no one was able to escape. Applicants for the "role" of the escaped Anastasia and Alexei are swindlers and impostors with a vested interest in obtaining foreign bank deposits of Nicholas II. According to various estimates, the amount of these deposits in England ranges from $ 100 billion to $ 2 trillion.
This official point of view is contradicted by facts and evidence that do not allow Anastasia to be considered dead along with the entire Royal family on the night of July 17, 1918:
- There is eyewitness testimony who saw the wounded but alive Anastasia in the house on Voskresensky Prospekt in Yekaterinburg (almost opposite the Ipatiev house) in the early morning of July 17, 1918; it was Heinrich Kleinbetzetl, a tailor from Vienna, an Austrian prisoner of war, who in the summer of 1918 worked in Yekaterinburg as an apprentice for the tailor Baudin. He saw her at Baudin's house in the early morning of July 17, a few hours after the brutal massacre in the basement of the Ipatiev house. It was brought by one of the guards (probably from the former, more liberal composition of the guard - Yurovsky did not replace all the former guards), one of those few young guys who have long sympathized with girls, the tsar's daughters;
- There is confusion in the testimonies, reports and stories of the participants in this bloody massacre - even in different versions of the stories of the same people;
- It is known that the "Reds" were looking for the missing Anastasia for several months after the murder of the Tsar's family;
- It is known that one (or two?) Women's corsets have not been found.
- It is known that the Bolsheviks conducted secret negotiations with the Germans about the extradition of the Russian Tsarina and her children in exchange for Russian political prisoners in Germany after the tragedy in Yekaterinburg!
- In 1925 A. Anderson met Olga Alexandrovna Romanova-Kulikovskaya, the sister of Nicholas II and the aunt of Anastasia, who could not help but recognize her niece. Olga Alexandrovna treated her kindly warmly. “I cannot grasp this with my mind,” she said after the meeting, but my heart tells me that this is Anastasia! ” Later, the Romanovs decided to abandon the girl, declaring them an impostor.
- the archives of the Cheka-KGB-FSB about the murder of the Tsar's family and about what the Chekists headed by Yurovsky in 1919 (a year after the execution) and officers of the MGB (Beria's department) in 1946 did in the Koptyakovsky forest have not yet been opened. All the documents known so far about the execution of the Tsar's family (including Yurovsky's "Note") were obtained from other state archives (not from the archives of the FSB).
If all members of the Royal family were killed, then why do we not have answers to all these questions until now?

Fraulein Unbekant (Unbekannt - unknown)

Under the name of Fraulein Unbekant, a girl rescued in a suicide attempt was registered in the Berlin police report on February 17, 1920. She had no documents with her and refused to give her name. She had light brown hair and piercing gray eyes. She spoke with a clearly pronounced Slavic accent, therefore, in her personal file, the postscript "unknown Russian" was made.
Since the spring of 1922, dozens of articles and books have been written about her. Anastasia Tchaikovskaya, Anna Anderson, later - Anna Manakhan (by the name of her husband). These are the names of the same woman. The last name written on her tombstone is Anastasia Manakhan. She died on February 12, 1984, but even after her death, her fate haunts her friends and enemies.
... On that evening, February 17, she was admitted to the Elizabethan hospital on Lutzowstrasse. At the end of March, she was transferred to a neurological clinic in Daldorf with a diagnosis of "depressive mental illness", where she lived for two years. In Daldorf, when examined on March 30, she admitted that she tried to commit suicide, but refused to give a reason or give any comments. During the examination, her weight was recorded - 50 kilograms, height - 158 centimeters. On examination, the doctors discovered that six months ago she had undergone childbirth. For a girl "under the age of twenty", this was an important circumstance.
On the patient's chest and abdomen, they saw numerous scars from lacerations. There was a 3.5 cm long scar on the head behind the right ear, deep enough for a finger to enter, as well as a scar on the forehead at the very roots of the hair. On the right foot there was a characteristic scar from a perforating wound. It fully corresponded to the shape and size of the wounds inflicted with a Russian rifle bayonet. Cracks in the upper jaw. The day after the examination, she confessed to the doctor that she was afraid for her life: “She makes it clear that she does not want to identify herself for fear of persecution. An impression of restraint born of fear. More fear than restraint. " The medical history also records that the patient has a third degree congenital orthopedic disease of the feet, hallux valgus.
The disease discovered in the patient by the doctors of the clinic in Daldorf absolutely coincided with the congenital disease of Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova. The girl had the same height, foot size, hair and eye color and portrait resemblance to the Russian princess, and from the data on the medical card it is clear that the traces of the injuries "Fraulein Unbekant" fully correspond to those that, according to the investigator Tomashevsky, were inflicted on Anastasia in the basement of the Ipatiev house ... The scar on the forehead also matches. Anastasia Romanova had such a scar since childhood, so she was the only daughter of Nicholas II who always wore hairstyles with bangs.
In the end, the girl named herself Anastasia Romanova. A miraculous salvation, according to her version, looked like this: together with all the killed family members, she was taken to the burial place, but on the way a half-dead Anastasia was hidden by some soldier. With him, she got to Romania, where they got married, but what happened next was a failure ...
For the next 50 years, conversations and court cases about whether Anna Anderson was Anastasia Romanova did not subside, but in the end she was never recognized as a "real" princess. Nevertheless, fierce controversy about the mystery of Anna Anderson continues to this day ...
Opponents: Starting in March 1927, opponents of Anna Anderson's recognition by Anastasia put forward a version that the girl posing as the escaped Anastasia was in fact a native of a peasant family (from East Prussia) named Franciska Shantskovskaya.
This view is supported by a 1995 examination carried out by the Department of Forensic Medicine of the British Home Office. According to the results of the examination, studies of the mitochondrial DNA of "Anna Anderson" convincingly prove that she is not the Grand Duchess Anastasia, the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II. According to the conclusion of a group of British geneticists in Aldermaston, headed by Dr. Peter Gill, the DNA of Mrs. Anderson does not match either the DNA of female skeletons recovered from a grave near Yekaterinburg in 1991 and supposedly belonged to the queen and her three daughters, or with the DNA of Anastasia's maternal relatives. and paternal lineage living in England and elsewhere. At the same time, a blood test of Karl Mauger, the grand-nephew of the disappeared factory worker Franziska Schanzkowska, revealed a mitochondrial coincidence, suggesting that Franziska and Anna Anderson are one person. Tests in other labs that looked at the same DNA led to the same conclusion. Although there are doubts about the source of DNA samples from Anna Anderson (she was cremated, and the samples were taken from the remains of a surgical operation performed 20 years before the examination).
These doubts are aggravated by the testimonies of people who knew Anna-Anastasia personally:
“… I knew Anna Anderson for over ten years and was familiar with almost everyone who was involved in her struggle for recognition over the last quarter of a century: with friends, lawyers, neighbors, journalists, historians, with representatives of the Russian royal family and royal families of Europe , the Russian and European aristocracy - a wide circle of competent witnesses who did not hesitate to recognize her as the royal daughter. My knowledge of her character, all the details of her case and, as it seems to me, the probability and common sense - all convinces me that she was a Russian Grand Duchess.
This belief of mine, while challenged (by DNA research), remains unshakable. Without being an expert, I cannot question Dr. Gill's findings; if these results only revealed that Ms. Anderson is not a member of the Romanov family, I might be able to accept them - if not easily now, then at least over time. However, no amount of scientific evidence, nor the results of a forensic medical examination will convince me that Ms. Anderson and Franziska Shantskovskaya are one and the same person.
I categorically affirm that those who knew Anna Anderson, who lived next to her for months and years, treated her and looked after her during her many illnesses, be it a doctor or a nurse, who observed her behavior, posture, demeanor, “They cannot believe that she was born in a village in East Prussia in 1896 and was the daughter and sister of beet-growing peasants.”
Peter Kurt, author of the book “Anastasia. The mystery of Anna Anderson "(in Russian translation" Anastasia. The mystery of the Grand Duchess ")

Anastasia in Anna, in spite of everything, was recognized by some foreign relatives of the Romanov family, as well as Tatyana Botkina-Melnik, the widow of Dr. Botkin, who died in Yekaterinburg.
Supporters: Supporters of Anna Anderson's recognition by Anastasia draw attention to the fact that Franziska Shantskovskaya was five years older than Anastasia, taller, wore shoes four sizes larger, never gave birth to children and had no orthopedic foot diseases. In addition, Franziska Shantskovskaya disappeared from her home at a time when “Fraulein Unbekant” was already in the Elizabethan hospital on Lyutzowstrasse. "
The first graphological examination was made at the request of the Gessenskys in 1927. It was performed by an employee of the Institute of Graphology in Prisna, Dr. Lucy Weizsäcker. Comparing the handwriting on the recently written samples with the handwriting on the samples written by Anastasia during the life of Nicholas II, Lucy Weizsacker came to the conclusion that the samples belong to the same person.
In 1960, by the decision of the Hamburg court, the graphologist Dr. Minna Becker was appointed as the graphological expert. Four years later, while reporting her work to the Senate High Court of Appeals, the gray-haired Dr. Becker said, "I have never seen so many similarities in two texts written by different people." Another important point made by the doctor is worth mentioning. For the examination, samples of handwriting were provided in the form of texts written in German and Russian. In her speech, speaking about Russian texts, Mrs. Anderson, Dr. Becker noted: "It seems as if she has again found herself in a familiar environment."
Due to the inability to compare fingerprints, anthropologists were brought into the investigation. Their opinion was considered by the court as "a probability close to certainty." Research carried out in 1958 at the University of Mainz by Drs Eickstedt and Klenke, and in 1965 by the founder of the German Anthropological Society, Professor Otto Rehe, led to the same result, namely:
1. Mrs. Anderson is not a Polish factory worker Francisca Szankowska.
2. Mrs. Anderson is the Grand Duchess Anastasia Romanova.
Opponents pointed to the discrepancy between the shape of Anderson's right ear and Anastasia Romanova's ear, referring to an examination made back in the twenties.
These doubts were resolved by one of the most famous forensic experts in Germany, Dr. Moritz Furthmeier. In 1976, Dr. Furthmeier discovered that, by an absurd coincidence, experts used a photograph of Daldorf's patient taken from an inverted negative to compare the auricles. That is, the right ear of Anastasia Romanova was compared with the left ear "Fraulein Unbekant" and naturally received a negative result for identity. When comparing the same photograph of Anastasia with the photograph of Anderson's (Tchaikovskaya's) right ear, Moritz Furthmeier got a match in seventeen anatomical positions. For the recognition of the identification in the West German court, the coincidence of five positions out of twelve was quite sufficient.
One can only guess how her fate would have developed, had it not been for that fatal mistake. Even in the sixties, this mistake formed the basis of the decision of the Hamburg court, and then the highest court of appeal in the Senate.
... In recent years, to the riddle of Anna Anderson's identification as Anastasia, one more important consideration has been added, which was previously ignored for an incomprehensible reason.
It is about congenital deformity of the feet, which was known from the childhood of the Grand Duchess and which Anna Anderson also had. The fact is that this is a very rare disease. As a rule, this disease appears in women who have reached the age of 30-35 years. As for the cases of congenital disease, they are isolated and extremely rare. For 142 million inhabitants of Russia over the past ten years, only eight cases of this disease have been registered.
Simply put, the statistics of a congenital case is approximately 1:17. Thus, with a probability of 99.9999947, Anna Anderson really was Grand Duchess Anastasia!
This statistics refutes the negative results of DNA tests carried out with the remains of tissue materials in years, since the reliability of DNA research does not exceed 1: 6000 - three thousand times less reliable than the statistics of Anna-Anastasia! At the same time, the statistics of congenital diseases are actually statistics of artifacts (there is no doubt about them), while DNA studies are a complex procedure in which the possibility of accidental genetic contamination of the original tissue materials, or even their malicious substitution, cannot be ruled out.

Possible reasons for non-recognition

Why did some members of the House of Romanov in Europe and their relatives from the royal dynasties of Germany almost immediately, in the early 1920s, turn sharply against Anna-Anastasia? There are several possible reasons.
Firstly, Anna Anderson spoke sharply about the Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich (“he is a traitor”), while the latter claimed the vacant throne.
Secondly, she inadvertently revealed a big state secret about the arrival of her uncle Ernie of Hesse to Russia in 1916. The visit was connected with the intention to persuade Nicholas II to a separate peace with Germany. This failed, and when leaving the Alexander Palace, Ernie even said to his sister, Empress Alexandra: "You are no longer a sun for us" - this is how all German relatives called Alix in her childhood. In the early twenties, it was still a state secret, and Ernie Gessensky had no choice but to accuse Anastasia of slander.
Thirdly, by the time of meeting with relatives in 1925, Anna-Anastasia herself was in a very difficult physical and psychological condition. She was sick with tuberculosis. Her weight barely reached 33 kg. The people around Anastasia believed that her days were numbered. But she survived, and after meeting with Aunt Olya and other close people, she dreamed of meeting her grandmother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna. She waited for the recognition of her relatives, and instead, in 1928, on the second day after the death of the dowager empress, several members of the Romanov family publicly disowned her, announcing that she was an impostor. The insult inflicted led to a break in relations.
In addition, in 1922, in the Russian diaspora, the question of who would lead the dynasty and take the place of the "Emperor in Exile" was being decided. The main contender was Kirill Vladimirovich Romanov. He, like most Russian emigrants, could not even imagine that the rule of the Bolsheviks would drag on for seven long decades. The appearance of Anastasia in Berlin in the summer of 1922 caused confusion and division of opinions in the ranks of the monarchists. The information disseminated afterward about the physical and mental ill health of the princess, and the presence of an heir to the throne who was born in an unequal marriage (either from a soldier, or from a lieutenant of peasant origin), all this did not contribute to her immediate recognition, not to mention the consideration of her candidacy in place of the head of the dynasty.
... This could be the end of the story of the missing Russian princess. It is amazing that for more than 80 years it never occurred to anyone to find out the medical statistics of hallux valgus foot deformity! It is strange that the results of the ridiculous examination of the comparison of “Anastasia Romanova's right ear with the left ear of“ Fraulein Unbekant ”(!), Served as the basis for the fateful court decisions, in spite of multiple graphological examinations and personal testimonies. It is surprising that serious people can seriously discuss the question of the “identity” of an illiterate Polish peasant woman with a Russian princess, and believe that Francisca could mystify others for so many years without giving away her true origin ... And lastly, it is known that Anastasia gave birth to a son in the fall of 1919. , somewhere on the border with Romania (at that time she was hiding from the Reds under the name Tchaikovskaya, after the name of the person who saved her and took her to Romania). What is the fate of this son? Really, no one asked? Perhaps it is his DNA that should be compared with the DNA of the Romanovs' relatives, and not dubious “tissue materials”?

FACTS ONLY:
Since the day of the murder of the royal family in Yekaterinburg, about 30 pseudo-Anastasias have appeared in the world (according to data). Some of them did not even speak Russian, explaining that the stress experienced in the Ipatiev House made them forget their native language. A special service was created in the Bank of Geneva for their "identification", the exam of which none of the candidates could pass. True, the bank's interest in identifying the heiress of the amount of about $ 500 billion is also not obvious.
Among the many obvious impostors, apart from Anna Anderson, several other applicants stand apart.

ELEONORA KRUGER
In the early 1920s, a young woman with an aristocratic bearing appeared in the Bulgarian village of Grabarevo. She introduced herself as Eleanor Albert Kruger. A Russian doctor was with her, and a year later a tall, sickly-looking young man appeared in their house, who was registered in the community under the name of Georgy Zhudin. Rumors that Eleanor and George were brother and sister, and belonged to the Russian royal family, circulated in the community. Nevertheless, they did not express any statements or claims for anything.
George died in 1930, and in 1954 - Eleanor. The Bulgarian researcher Blagoy Emmanuilov believes that Eleanor is the missing daughter of Nicholas II, and George is Tsarevich Alexei. In his conclusions, he relies on the memories of Eleanor about how “the servants bathed her in a gold trough, combed her hair and dressed her. She talked about her own royal room, and about her children's drawings, drawn in it ”.
In addition, in the early 1950s, in the Bulgarian Black Sea town of Balchik, a Russian White Guard, describing in detail the life of the executed imperial family, told witnesses that Nicholas II ordered him to personally take Anastasia and Alexei out of the palace and hide them in the provinces. He also claimed to have brought the children to Turkey. Comparing the photographs of 17-year-old Anastasia and 35-year-old Eleanor Kruger from Gabarevo, experts have established a significant similarity between them. The years of their birth also coincide. George's contemporaries claim that he was ill and speak of him as a tall, weak and pale young man. Russian authors describe the hemophiliac prince Alexei in the same way. In 1995, the remains of Eleanor and George were exhumed in the presence of a forensic doctor and anthropologist. In the grave of George, they found an amulet - an icon with the face of Christ - one of those with which only representatives of the highest strata of the Russian aristocracy were buried.

Nadezhda Vladimirovna Ivanova-Vasilieva
In April 1934, a young woman, very emaciated and poorly dressed, entered the Church of the Resurrection at the Semyonovskoye cemetery. She came to confession, and was sent by Hieromonk Afanasy (Alexander Ivanshin).
During the confession, the woman announced to the priest that she was the daughter of the former Tsar Nicholas II - Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanova. When asked how she managed to escape the execution, the stranger replied: "You can't talk about it."
She was prompted to seek help by the need to get a passport in order to try to leave the country. They managed to get a passport, but someone reported to the NKVD about the activities of the "counter-revolutionary monarchist group", and everyone who helped the woman was arrested.
File No. 000 is still kept in the State Archives of the Russian Federation (GARF) and is not subject to disclosure. The woman, who called herself Anastasia, after endless prisons and concentration camps, by the verdict of the Special Meeting at the NKVD, was sent to a mental hospital for compulsory treatment. The verdict proved to be indefinite, and in 1971 she died in a psychiatric hospital on the island of Sviyazhsk. Buried in an unknown grave.
Ivanova-Vasilyeva spent almost forty years in the walls of medical institutions, but she was never tested for a blood group (!). Not a single questionnaire, not a single protocol contains the date and month of birth. Only the year and place, which coincide with the data of Anastasia Romanova. Investigators, speaking of the person under investigation in the third person, called her “Princess Romanova,” and not an impostor. And knowing that the woman lives on a fake, self-filled passport, the investigators never once asked her a question about her real name.

Natalia Petrovna Bilikhodze

N. Bilikhodze lived in Sukhumi, then Tbilisi. In 1994 and 1997, she applied to the Tbilisi court to recognize her as Anastasia. However, the court sessions did not take place due to her failure to appear. She claimed that ALL the family was saved. She died in 2000. Posthumous genetic examination did not confirm her relationship with the Royal family (more precisely, with the remains buried in 1998 in St. Petersburg).
Yekaterinburg researcher Vladimir Viner believes that Natalia Belikhodze was a member of the backup family (Berezkins) who lived in Sukhumi. This explains her outward resemblance to Anastasia and the positive results of "22 examinations conducted in a judicial commission in three states - Georgia, Russia and Latvia." . cases. "Perhaps the story of the confession was started in the expectation of the monetary inheritance of the royal family, in order to return it to Russia.

“Where is the truth,” you ask. I will answer: “The truth is somewhere out there ...”, because it’s “Fiction must remain within the boundaries of the possible. Truth is not ”(Mark Twain).