
| 1917
November 21: The new patriarch Tikhon is enthroned in the Assumption Cathedral of Moscow. Patriarch Tikhon is a good-natured and approachable man, who is aware of the responsibilities of his position and his obligations towards the Church and the country. November 22: The bolsheviks capture the Smirnoff Company. Vladimir Smirnoff escapes, but is arrested in the Ukrain, for collaboration with the Tsarist regime. General Yuri Daniloff's son Serge was a cadet in Tenishev, the elite military academy in St. Petersburg, where only sons of generals and field marshalls were allowed to study. In March 1917 General Daniloff advised Tsar Nicholas II to abdicate. When Nicholas refused, the General made sure that his three children could leave for Paris; he could see the storm coming. After his arrival in Paris Serge Yuryevich Daniloff, the eldest son of General Yuri and Anna, served as a second lieutenant in the Russian Embassy in Rome. After the October Revolution he and his fellow officers of the embassy divide the money, after which they all go their own way. November 26: Vladimir Smirnoff is taken
before a firing squad. No one orders to shoot. Vladimir is scared to death.
November 27: Svekhin, the Russian Envoy in the Netherlands, moves from The Hague and leaves the legation in charge of his First Secretary Henri de Bach. November 27: Numerous prominents and high
officers are executed, as enemies of the state or oppressors of the working
class. Among them are some pilots of the Ilya Muromets-squadrons, who are
shot because of the simple fact that they are officers, and as such represent
the Tsar's regime. Igor Sikorsky understands that he's no longer safe,
especially as some very good friends of him are executed without any form
of trial. He escapes to Murmansk, where he embarks the English freighter
Oporto. One week later he disembarks the ship in England, as a free man.
November 28: Vladimir Smirnoff is once more taken before a firing squad. Once more nothing happens, once more he's scared s...less. Shortly before the banks are closed by the bolsheviki, Count Paul Nikolaevich Ignatieff (1870-192- 6), the last Minister of Education under Nicholas II, is able to transfer his money to a local cooperative society, and some hours before the society is nationalized, he cashes the complete amount. He and his wife, the former Princess Natasha Meshchersky, hide the money in an earthenware jar. Princess Ekaterina Alexandrovna Meshcherskaya,
a cousin of Princess Natasha, chooses not to escape.
There are more aristocrats who want to stay in Russia. Ekaterina sees them becoming isolated and lonely. They sell all their valuables in the black market, and when nothing is left they become beggars, who in perfectly French ask for charity. `It is a sorry and disgraceful sight,' she writes in her diary. November: The last Ambassador of Russia to France is Vasili Maklakov, who is appointed by the Kerensky administration. He only arrives in Paris after the October Revolution, and although the bolsheviki have dismissed him from his office in the mean time, he and his staff keep manning the Embassy in the Grand H“tel d'Estrées, as if nothing had happened. (Until 1922 the French government will consider him the Ambassador of Russia.) From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: December 1, 1917: a lamentation from Aunty. Grandfather is dying, the house has been plundered. December 4: The farmlands of the churches and monasteries are confiscated. From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: December
10, 1917: Grandfather died. Gorbunov came to tell us that we are allowed
to burry him wherever we want; he even allowed a clergyman to be present.
December 11: The government closes the churches, seminaries and theological academies. December 17: 3,000 mutineers of the Russian expeditionary force in France are shipped via Marseille to North Africa. 89 mutineers, the leaders of the pack, are imprisoned in Bordeaux. Among them is soldier Rodyon Malinovsky, 19, who later will become Marshall and Minister of War of the Soviet-Union, and even more later will be convicted and sentenced to death. December 18: The Church looses the right to register births and marriages. December 20: The institution of civil marriage is introduced. Lenin founds the Special Commissi- on for the Oppression of the Counterrevolution (Cheka), and Felix Dzherzhinsky becomes its first director. The Red Terror gives short shrift to all `enemies' of the new administration. The Davidoffs own a house in Kiev, where more and more refugees find a shelter. Shortly before Christmas 1917 they hear that the bolsheviki are preparing an attack on Kiev. 1918
January 23: The bolsheviks abolish religious education at all schools. That ukase becomes the starting point of the Soviet legislation regarding the Church. January 23: The Civil War reaches Kiev. Kiev is bombarded severely. After 15 days of defending the city the Ukrainian nationalists have to withdraw; the bolsheviki capture the city. One refugee after another is caught and taken hostage. The Davidoffs, who live in a common suburb of Kiev, notice relatively little of the terror of the bolsheviki, but they fear for it all the time. They hear that Kamenka is completely plundered. During the battle between the Reds and the Whites many churches and monasteries of the city are bombed and destructed. The famous Kievo-Pecherskaya Lavra Monastery is bombed heavily by the communists, because they suspect that the bell tower is used as a military watchtower. In fact the bell tower is closed, and there are virtually no troops in sight. The bombing of churches and their bell towers is a matter of course during the communist actions. The communists capture the monastery, and from that moment on the inhabitants of the Lavra Monastery witness an accumulation of violence and barbarism. Armed soldiers of the Red Army force an entry into the churches. Cursing and screaming they search the premises, even during services. Old monks are dragged outside, undressed in the court yard, and beaten merciless. January 24: Vladimir Smirnoff is `officially' sentenced to death, without a trial that is. He is brought before a firing squad. He prays. Nothing happens. January 25: A night of terror in the Lavra
Monastery. Four armed men and a woman, dressed up as members of the Red
Cross, force an entry into the chambers of the abbott, search everything
and take everything valuable with them. In the middle of the night three
of them rob the bursar. Later that day three armed soldiers search the
rooms of the Metropolitan and because they can't find anything else valuable,
they take a golden medal from the safe.
`They are executing the Metropolitan,'
says one of the monks in the Lavra monastery.
After a short prayer the body is layed
on a stretcher and brought to the monastery chapel, where Metropolitan
Vladimir has spent the last days of his life. When Archimandrite Anfin
lifts the body, he is surrounded by ten armed men who shout, `Do you want
to burry him!? He doesn't deserve any better than to be thrown in a ditch!
You want to make a place of pilgrimage out of his grave, that's why you
take him from here!'
February: The most important center of
the anti-communists is in Southern Russia, where this month the Volunteer
Army is formed by the Generals Alexeev and Kornilov. In the beginning the
Volunteer Army composes of a small group of officers, cadets, students
and even boys from highschool, who are badly armed, but very motivated.
The new farmers, who are a large part
of the population, now fall between two stools, between the Reds, who rob
and murder them, and the Whites, who chase them from `their' land. So a
`Green' government is formed, which has to protect the farmers against
the two other parties. The Greens are not very steady. Sometimes they side
with the Whites, only to side with the Reds a week later, who they subsequently
have chased away by the Whites.
February 1: Lenin asks General Daniloff
to join the Red Army. The General turns down the offer and leaves for Kiev,
to join the White Army.
February 2: This time it's for real. Vladimir
Smirnoff is taken before a firing squad. He waits and waits...
Petrograd, February 14: All Russians have become 13 days older today, because the old Julian calendar is replaced by the new Georgian calendar, which is used in Western countries. Halfway through February 1918 the Germans and the Ukrainian nationalists enter Kiev. Piece is restored immediately. Subsequently these troops occupy the southern provinces, as a result of which Kamenka returns into the hands of the Davidoffs. The local population is forced to return all stolen goods and cattle. The Davidoffs will never return to Kamenka, but work in the estate is resumed. February 18: Vladimir Smirnoff is freed by the White Army. He escapes to Paris, via Poland. February 28: Patriarch Tikhon calls on
the believers to found parochial unions, which should not call themselves
`religious groups'. This way the unions can call themselves the legal owners
of the church properties, to prevent that the `raiders' (the bolsheviki)
will take possession of it.
March 1: The Davidoffs leave for Odessa, where they have rented a house. March 2: Because Germany uses the Civil War to claim certain areas for itself, and the German troops are on their way to Murmansk, in the north, the Allied Forces are forced to intervene. Moreover particularly France and Great-Britain have invested large sums in Russia's economy, especially in the Ukrain, and they want to secure these interests. March 3: Signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between Russia and Germany. March 6: An American force appears in
Vladivostok; 130 British marines land in Murmansk, Russia's only ice-free
port, and shortly afterwards British marines are stationed in Arkhangelsk.
In Odessa, in the south-west, French ships put ashore 80,000 French, Serbian,
Polish and Greek troops.
Since 1917 Prince Ilarion (Lari) Sergeevich
Vasilchikov, his wife Lydia, who before her marriage was called Princess
Viatzemsky, and their children Alexander, Irina, Tatiana and Missie, live
in the Crimea.
April 20: the Germans arrive, as a result of which the peace in the Crimea returns. Only then they hear what happened that day. The Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, her daughters Olga and Xenia and their families were interned by the bolsheviki in the villa Duelber, at the coast. They would certainly all have been killed, when Sadoroshni, a sailor of the Black Sea fleet, hadn't been in charge of the Duelber villa. When the bolshevist gang arrived at the villa and demanded to see the prisoners, Sadoroshni fobbed the men off. He and he alone was responsible for the Imperial Family, and nobody but the administration in Moscow could deprive him of his responsibilities. At first Sadoroshni had about 60 guards, but later this was reduced to 20, and when the train with the bolsheviki arrived to kill the Romanoffs, he armed all his `prisoners', so they would be able to defend themselves against the rebellions. Thanks to Sadoroshni's courage the bolsheviki had nothing to show for their pains. Weeks later the sons of Grand Duchess Xenia still boast about the fact that they have carried firearms. In fact only the eldest boy was given a revolver. April 23: The Germans conquer the patheticly bad organized Red Army and capture Kiev, while the Austrians occupy Odessa. Paris, May 2: Vladimir Smirnoff buys a small distillery to produce vodka. In a country full of wine drinkers... May 8: Rostov on the Don falls into the
hands of the Germans. Subsequently General Paul Skoropadsky, a puppet of
the Germans, is appointed head of the new Ukrainian government.
May 13: General Kornilov is mortally wounded by a grenade. General Denikin makes sure that he is burried in the German colony of Gnachbau. May 14: When the last diplomatic train
leaves from Petrograd, Tatiana Dolgorouky misses this last opportunity
to leave legally. She is drafted in a brigade of snow clearers and receives
a pittance for it.
May 17: Prince Peter Dolgorouky smuggles a letter to his daughter out of the Peter and Paul fortress, in which he begs Tatiana to escape. She can't do anything for him, he writes. Tatiana Petrovna escapes from Petrograd
with false identity papers, but with that she still isn't safe.
May 20: Grand Duke Serge Mikhaïlovich Romanoff (1869-1918), his secretary F. Remez, the Grand Dukes Ivan, Constantin and George Constantinovich (the sons of Grand Duke Constantin) and 22 years old Prince Vladimir Paley arrive from Perm. They are accommodated in a dirty hotel in Ekaterinburg. They are put in one room, badly treated
and almost starve. Sometimes they are however allowed to leave the hotel,
to meet people and even to visit old acquaintances. At the end of May all
of them are brought to Alapaevsk, near Ekaterinburg, where they are accommodated
in an old school. June 5: The White Army fights a battle against the Reds,
less than 70 miles from Moscow. Count Paul Ignatieff uses this opportunity
to transfer part of his money behind the lines.
June 12: The Czechs occupy all important towns between Samara and Vladivostok, and shortly afterwards they chase the Red Army from entire Eastern Russia and Siberia. The Allies are in the north and in the Far East, the Czechs control the area of the Trans Siberian Railroad, and the Germans occupy the south-west. They can do that unpunished, because the communists acknowledged the independence of the Ukrain in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. June 13: At night three Cheka agents show up in a hotel in Perm, and with them a warrant for the arrest of Tsar Nicholas' brother Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich Romanoff. Outside three other Cheka agents are waiting with two carriages. Michael's secretary, the Englishman Brian
Johnson, also stays in the hotel, just like Michael's valet and driver.
`We are sick and tired of you Romanoffs!'
July 12: Picasso marries Olga Khoklova, a young dancer of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes and daughter of a colonel. The marriage is celebrated in Paris, in the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, and the ushers are: Guillaume Apollinaire, Jean Cocteau and Max Jacob. Originally article 12 of the constitution
of July 6, 1918 adjudges the citizens the right to make both religious
and anti-religious propaganda, but the right to make religious propaganda
is limited soon, while the government does everything to stimulate anti-religious
propaganda. The state for example paints slogans like, `Religion is opium
for the people' on church walls.
July 18: Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna
Romanoff (1864-1918), Grand Duke Serge Mikha&i- uml;lovich Romanoff
(1869-1918), his secretary F. Remez, the Grand Dukes Ivan, Constantin and
George Constantinovich (the sons of Grand Duke Constantin) and Prince Vladimir
Paley are cruelly murdered, not far from Ekaterinburg.
After she was engaged to Grand Duke Serge
Alexandrovich Romanoff, the young Grand Duchess enthousiasticly started
to study the Russian people, and particularly its religion, Russian Orthodoxy,
which had so much influenced Russian culture.
Grand Duke Ivan Constantinovich Romanoff
always had been a lover of singing in church; he directed the church choir
of the palace in Pavlovsk, and even in his place of bannishment Perm he
kept singing in the church choir. The young Prince Vladimir Paley, son
of Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich Romanoff (1860-1919), was a talented poet.
Some of his poetry regards his bannishment, `All my loved ones are so painfully
far away and all my enemies so painfully nearby.'
The Pravda of July 18, `On the morning of July 16 the ex-tsar was transferred from his prison to a parade ground outside of the city of Ekaterinburg, where ten soldiers of the Red Guard were waiting for him. The chairman of the Soviet read the death sentence, after which the ex-tsar asked permission to say a few last words to his wife and children before he was executed. This request was turned down. Without any resistance and completely poised the tsar stood in front of the firing squad; the execution was carried out. His body was taken away by car.' July 18: Countess Sophia Karlovna Buxhoeveden, who was lady in waiting to Tsaritsa Alexandra Feodorovna and went voluntarily in exile with the Imperial Family, escapes from Russia with the help of the German Kaiser. The endOche! Prosti jim, ibo nye znayut, chto dyelayut. (Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.Luke 23:34.) Nicholas II Alexandrovich (1868-1918), the last Emperor of Russia and the last Tsar of the House of Romanoff (1894-1917), was the eldest son of Alexander III. On March 2, 1917 Nicholas was forced to abdicate. He and his family were interned. All of them were shot in Ekaterinburg, in July 1918, at the command of the local soviet administration. That's what it says in most encyclopaedia's,
and that still is the official version of the death of the Romanoffs. But
what happened really?
Nicholas was instantly killed. This was
the sign for all the other men to start shooting. Alexandra only had time
to cross herself before she was mortally wounded by the first shot. Olga,
Tatiana and Marie were hit and died within seconds. Dr. Botkin, Kharitonov
and Trupp were also killed instantly. Demidova survived the first volley
and in stead of reloading their revolvers the men got their rifles from
the room nextdoor and pursued her with their bayonets. (...) Suddenly it
was quired in the room, which was full of powder-smoke. Blood ran over
the floor. They heard someone moan. Alexis, still in the arms of his father,
tried to hold on to his father's coat. One of the men cruelly kicked the
head of the boy with his heavy boot. Yurovsky walked towards them and shot
the Tsarevich twice in the head. At that very moment Anastasia, who only
had fainted, regained consciousness. She started to scream. The entire
gang pounced on her with bayonets and rifle butts. Then she also stopped
moving. It was all over.
Harrison E. Salisbury: `Immediately after that the members of the Cheka opened fire. (...) Alexis didn't die instantly and Yurovsky shot another two bullets into his body. The bodies were brought to a deserted mine. They were chopped into pieces, burned, dowsed with acid and disappeared so completely, that only small pieces of bone could be found later.' Elisabeth Heresch: `The same day he orders large quantities of sulphuric acid, to make the faces of the corpses, which already are lying in an open spot in the forest, unrecognizable. (...) The bodies were cut into pieces and burned, the faces were made unrecognizable with hydrochloric acid. (...) May 1992: the skeletons of the in 1918 murdered ex-Tsar and his family have been found.' In numerous novels that are enacted in this period, the murder of the Romanoffs is described alike. It all comes down to the same: the whole family has been murdered in the House of Ipatiev in Ekaterinburg, in the night of July 16, 1918. Even Edvard Radzinsky, a Russian playwriter
who investigated the murder of the Romanoffs for more than 25 years, comes
to the conclusion that it must have happened this way. He hesitant takes
into consideration that Anastasia and Alexis might have survived the massacre,
but does not share this point of view. In fact he also blindly trusts the
report of Sokolov. Radzinsky had one problem: he was a Russian in Russia
and as such he was not trustworthy to any other Russian in Russia, never
mind how good his intentions were.
I'll start with the facts: Nicholas II
abdicates on March 16, 1917. The Imperial Family is placed under house
arrest in the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo. Some months later, on
July 31, 1917, they are deported to the city of Tobolsk in Siberia, where
their freedom of movement also is limited. The following persons volunteer
to be bannished with the Imperial Family: General Ilya Leonidovich Tatistcheff
(aide de camp), Prince Vasili (Valia) Alexandrovich Dolgorouky (marshall
of the court), Pierre Gilliard (governor of the children), Sydney Gibbes
(Alexis' English teacher), Evgeni Sergeevich Botkin (personal physician),
Anastasia Gendrikova (personal lady in waiting to the Tsaritsa), Ekaterina
Adolfovna Schneider (reading lady and former Russian teacher of the Tsaritsa)
and Countess Sophia Karlovna Buxhoeveden (lady in waiting).
Sokolov's disappeared boxFor years it was only known that Sokolov had smuggled his evidence to France. Only few knew who did the actual smuggling and where the contents of Sokolov's box ended up.General Yanin, the commander of the French military mission in Siberia, brought back a box and some suitcases with him to France, in which the files of investigator Sokolov and evidence regarding the investigation on the murder of the Imperial Family in Ekaterinburg, in 1918. All this material Sokolov entrusted to General Diterichs on March 19, 1920, when the General was about to leave from Harbin. In his book Ma mission en Sibérie (Paris 1933) Janin wrote, `He had gathered about 30 charred bone fragments, as well as some human tissue which was found in the stake, human hairs, a cut finger, which the experts recognized as a ring finger of the Tsaritsa, (...) some small icons, (...) the buckle of a belt that belonged to the Tsarevich, bullets of a revolver etcetera.' At the end of June 1920 Janin wrote a letter to Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich Romanoff, who was considered the spokesman of the Russian emigrants, in which he asked to whom he should entrust the evidence. On October 22, 1920 Janin was invited by the Grand Duke. Michel de Giers, the eldest former ambassador of Imperial Russia, was present. The jewelry and other objects of the victims were handed to Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna, who divided them among several members of the Imperial Family. The human remains were also entrusted to the Romanoffs. Nobody has seen anything of it ever since. It is quite remarkable that Sokolov, who lived in Paris since 1921, didn't try to have this evidence analyzed by the forensic scientists in the French capital. Today the Sokolov files are kept in the Houghton Library of Harvard University. Sokolov's Romanoff filesNicholas Alexeevich Sokolov (1882-1924), 36, was appointed examining magistrate of the district of Omsk (which was in the hands of the White Army), on February 7, 1919, by Admiral Kolchak, and as such his task was the continuing of the investigation on the murder of the following eleven persons: Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanoff, Alexandra Feodorovna Romanoff, Alexis Nikolaevich Romanoff, Olga Nikolaevna Romanoff, Maria Nikolaevna Romanoff, Anastasia Nikolaevna Romanoff, Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanoff, Dr. Evgeni Sergeevich Botkin, Alexis Trupp (lackey), Anna Stefanova Demidova (servant) and Ivan Kharitonov (cook).His conclusion that all of them were killed in the night of July, 16, 1918 in the basement of the House of Ipatiev, is based on five `facts': 1. A telegram was intercepted in which the bolsheviki confirmed that the entire Imperial Family was murdered. 2. Several eye-witnesses stated that they had seen that the Romanoffs and their people were dead. 3. The bodies were burned, and on the spot where this had happened were found several clothes, jewels and other personal possessions. 4. Near this spot, on the bottom of a mine, in which permanently was three feet of water, Sokolov found the carcass of Tatiana's dog, dentures and a finger. There wasn't any grave, he solumnly stated. 5. Nobody has seen the Romanoffs alive after this night. Numerous investigations of forensic scientists show that Sokolov's conclusions were extremely debatable and most of the time wrong. Professor Francis Camps, pathologist of the British Home Ministry, analyzed Sokolov's material during a month, and concluded that the examining magistrate did an ill service to history, and that Sokolov obviously loved the fine art of self-deception. Dr. Edward Rich of the American Military Academy West Point confirmed professor Camps' conclusions. `Sokolov's conclusions are based on a series of presuppositions and not accurate.' On June 25, 1919 Sokolov took a picture of the carcass of Tatiana's dog, which was the only recognizable corpse. Professor Keith Simpson, pathologist of the British Home Ministry, `If you look at the picture with a magnifyer, you see very little loss of fur. (...) It is impossible that this carcass at first has been in the water for two or three months. (...) No dog could have had so much fur after being in cold water for two of three months. After the frost period the dog would have been in the water for another two months, and this picture doesn't show that at all.' It's not just the contents of Sokolov's report which can be disposed of as improper, the things he does not mention are also food for thought regarding his meticulousness. Why for example didn't he mention the fact that during the investigation the substitute district attorney Magnitsky found five bodies of Austrian men in a nearby mine? This information was important, because the interior guard of the House of Ipatiev partly consisted of former Austrian prisoners of war. In April 1989 the Soviet Russian journalist
Geli Riabov wrote that he had found the place where the eleven victims
of the Ekaterinburg tragedy were burried. The mine that was discovered
by Sokolov was only used to store the victims temporarely. Subsequently
the human remains were brought to their definitive grave.
Another remarkable fact: In October 1918
the English Sir Charles Eliot inspected the House of Ipatiev thouroughly.
He found seventeen bullet wholes in the room in the basement . `There were
no signs of blood visible,' he reported. Carl Ackerman, a reporter of the
New York Times confirmed this. At the end of November 1918, when Sokolov
wasn't on the case yet, Ackerman wrote, `There are no signs of pools of
blood and I doubt it that seven persons (sic) died such a horrible, violent
death with leaving no more behind than some blood in the bullet wholes
and some bloodstains on the floor.'
Edvard Radzinsky is the only one who wrote that not eleven, but nine carcasses were found. Only recently it was announced that some of the carcasses belong to the Romanoffs and that the boy and one of the girls were missing, which fits with the theory that Alexis and Anastasia survived the murder. But my informer `Feodor' Romanoff told
me that the Romanoffs still have every reason to keep things quiet, because
there's still a considerable amount of money at stake, even though Anastasia
died in 1984. In September 1994 Russian scientists stated that one of the
skeletons found in the grave was Anastasia's, and that the remains of Alexis
and Maria were not found. This statement is good for the Romanoffs's financial
situation. Money talks, and there's no place where it talks better than
in Russia, where a scientist would be filthy rich with US$ 200 a month.
A. Russian Freemasons Who Escaped Abroad B. Last Resting Places C: Families of Rurik Stock |
