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Anna or Anastasia

March 18, 2020 by Hannah Leave a Comment

Anna or Anastasia? Part III

In this final episode of our three-part investigation and discussion of Anna Anderson, we discuss the true fate of the Romanov family, along with our affinity for Yul Brenner, and how we truly feel about Don Bluth’s adaptation of this story. 

Listen on Buzzsprout here!

When we last left the Romanov family, they were incarcerated in a house in the remote Russian town of Ekaterinburg. Accompanying them were their faithful retinue: Eugene Botkin, the family’s doctor, Anna Demidova, lady-in-waiting, Ivan Kharitonov, cook, and Alexei Trupp, footman.

Ipatiev House with the Romanovs inside, surrounded by a palisade.

After 78 days of captivity, Dr. Botkin was awoken around midnight on July 17th and told to gather the family and servants: they were about to be moved. They dressed and were escorted to a small cellar in the basement, which was decorated with striped wallpaper and lit by a single bulb. Here, they were told they would wait for a vehicle to arrive.

The family was arranged as if they were posing for a picture, with Alexei and Alexandra seated. When they were in position, Yurovsky informed Nicholas that due to continued efforts of his relatives to rescue them, the family was going to be executed. A confused Nicholas asked, “What?” and Yurovsky repeated himself, then shot him in the head.

The guards opened fire, but disorganization and the confined space made the rest of the killings a drawn-out ordeal. To add to the horror, the guards’ bullets were bouncing off the girls’ corsets, which were lined with diamonds and precious stones: the family’s financial cushion in case they were able to escape. Yurovsky and his men resorted to rifle butts and bayonets to finish the job.

The cellar room where the killings took place. Pieces of wall and floor were removed during the investigation as they contained blood and bullets.

After 30 minutes, the bodies of the whole family and their retinue lay still. Yurovsky checked the pulses of each one to make sure they were dead. However, as the bodies were being shifted onto sheets to be carried to a truck in the courtyard, one of the girls (either Maria or Anastasia) sat up, covered her face with her hands, and screamed. She was quickly set upon by the guards and killed.

Now came the task of disposing of eleven bodies. The bodies were loaded into a Fiat truck (the only one in town, which had arrived hours late.)

Fiat truck of the model likely used to transport the bodies from the Ipatiev House.

The truck was driven outside the city on a forest road to the Four Brothers Mine. After being stripped, the bodied were dumped down a mineshaft. However, it wasn’t deep enough to hide them, so they were pulled out and driven back down the road.

The mine where the bodies were initially disposed of.

When the truck stalled out in the middle of the road, Yurovsky decided complete the burial right there. He ordered his men to dig a shallow grave and throw the bodies in. In an attempt to confuse anyone who came looking for eleven bodies, Yurovsky pulled two of the corpses from the grave, burned them, and buried them separately 50 yards away. Returning to the main grave, he and his men poured sulphuric acid over the remains, covered them with soil, and laid railroad ties over the top, backing over them repeatedly to drive them into the mud and disguise what was hidden below.

Entrance to Old Koptyaki Road in 1919. The main gravesite lies beneath the boards.

The bodies would remain hidden for more than sixty years. However, the hiding place wasn’t a complete secret. A few people, either those who were involved in the killings or high in the Soviet ranks did know about the railroad ties on Koptyaki Road. In 1928, a poet named Vladimir Mayakovsky asked an official to visit the site and wrote a poem about the experience called “The Emperor”.

Past Iset –
the mines and cliffs
Past Iset –
the whistling wind, 
at verst Number Nine
the ispolkom driver
stopped, stood,
silent…
Here is a cedar,
axed over and over,
notches straight through the bark.
By the root of the cedar
a highway
and in it an Emperor –
buried.

In the mid-70’s, a local geologist named Dr. Alexander Avdonin began investigating the location of the remains. Using local legend and clues from those who were in the know (such as Mayakovsky’s poem), he was able to find the main gravesite in May of 1979. Avdonin kept the discovery under wraps for a long time out of fear of the Soviet government, but in 1991, nine sets of remains were exhumed from the main gravesite.

The next step was to determine whether the remains were in fact the Romanovs. The bullets and sulphuric acid containers found in the grave pointed to Ipatiev House, but they weren’t absolute proof. However, after craniofacial analysis, age assessment, and DNA testing performed by scientists from several different countries, it was confirmed: Nicholas, Alexandra, Tatiana, Olga, and another daughter (either Maria or Anastasia) had been found.

Reinterment of the Romanovs and their retinue.

All the remains were reinterred in 1998 at St. Petersburg Cathedral. But two spots were left open for the children who were still missing: Alexei and his sister. Then finally, in 2007, an amateur search group found bones in a clearing of birch trees. The search was over. Alexei and his sister were accounted for.

Today, the last two sets of Romanov remains are being housed in a research facility waiting to be interred with the family and retinue. The former gravesites on Old Koptyaki Road are marked with Orthodox crosses, and there is a cathedral on the site of the demolished Ipatiev House,

The entrance to Old Koptyaki Road as it looks today. The former gravesites are just beyond the trees.

In the second half of our episode, Allison took us on an amazing journey through media inspired by Anastasia (the real one and the fictional ones!) We discussed the road that led to the Don Bluth movie we all know and love, beginning in 1956 with a star-studded film!

Need I say more?

In the mid 90’s, Don Bluth and Gary Goldman signed a deal with 20th Century Fox for a new animated feature. Fox wanted to adapt a property they already owned, and Anastasia was the chosen one. With Angela Lansbury, a singing bat, and Allison’s pick for Greatest Villain Song of the Mid-90’s, it’s not one to miss!

The Royal Duchess Angela Lansbury, long may she reign.

More recently, a Broadway musical opened based on the animated movie. The plot is more down-to-earth (i.e. no more singing bats) but we have it on good authority that it’s still worth the watch. This plot features Gleb, a Bolshevik general assigned to kill Anastasia, in place of our favorite dancing wizard.

“A wizard did it.”
Not a singing bat it sight.

One bright spot to leave on: when the White Army entered Ekaterinburg shortly after the murders, they found a survivor from Ipatiev House: Alexei’s spaniel, Joy. Joy was taken to England and lived out the rest of his days as well-cared for dog, even being reunited with Sophie Buxhoeveden, who he greeted by ” leaping in the air and running to [her] with his forepaws, walking upright like a circus dog”.

Alexei and Joy.

Filed Under: Show Notes Tagged With: Anna Anderson, Anna or Anastasia, Media Wrap Up, Romanov

March 5, 2020 by Hannah Leave a Comment

Anna or Anastasia? Part II

Our second foray into the world of lost Russian royalty, in which Allison provides tea-pouring ASMR, Jillian takes us on a journey to the past, and Hannah betrays her true feelings for Nicholas Romanov’s soulful eyes. 

Listen on Buzzsprout here!

On February 27th, 1920, a woman was rescued from a Berlin canal after jumping from the Bendlerbrücke bridge. She arrived at the hospital with no papers and could not provide her name, so she was admitted as Fräulein Unbekannt: “Miss Unknown”.

Newspaper showing the bridge and a photograph of Miss Unknown labeled as the Grand Duchess.

Two years after her arrival, a fellow patient told tell a Russian émigré named Nicholas von Schwabe that she had shared a hospital with Tatiana Romanov. Intrigued, von Schwabe visited Miss Unknown and became convinced she was the Tsar’s daughter. At his request, Miss Unknown began to receive an increasing number of visitors.

Sophie Buxhoeveden, Russian baroness, lady of the Imperial Court, owner of fabulous hats.

Baroness Sophie, a former lady-in-waiting to Tsarina Alexandra, gave her opinion on the identity of Miss Unknown: she was too short to be the willowy and statuesque Tatiana. Miss Unknown replied, “I never said I was Tatiana.”

Miss Unknown and Grand Duchess Tatiana.

Within months, Miss Unknown had a growing following who believed her to be Anastasia. She moved into the home of a former Russian Poland police chief named Arthur von Kleist and began referring to herself as Anna (short for Anastasia) Tschaikovsky.

Miss Unknown and Grand Duchess Anastasia.

Meanwhile, a German police officer named Franz Grünberg was determined to get to the bottom of the claims. He arranged for her to stay at his estate and invited several members of the European aristocracy to identify Anna, including Tsarina Alexandra’s sister, Princess Irene. While Anna refused to see her, other visitors did manage to meet her in the coming years, including the Imperial family’s former tutor Pierre Gilliard and Tsar Nicholas’ sister Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna. None confirmed her as Anastasia.

Pierre Gilliard with Maria, Anastasia, and a great mustache.
L-R: Maria, Princess Victoria, Alexandra, Alexei, Olga, Anastasia, Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna, and Tatiana.

During the next few years, Anna spent time in hospitals and sanitoriums, funded by Anastasia’s great uncle, Prince Valdemar of Denmark. And when we say hospitals and sanitoriums, this is what we mean:

Not too shabby.

During her time at Oberstdorf, Anna received a visit that would mark a turning point in her life. Tatiana Melnik was the daughter of the Romanov’s physician, Eugene Botkin, who had remained with them after the Revolution and accompanied them in Ekaterinburg. Tatiana threw her support behind Anna, saying that her memory had been damaged by mental illness and providing her with details of the Romanov family and court life.

Doctor Botkin with Nicholas.

Around this time, Prince Valdemar stopped supporting Anna due to pressure from his family. Fortunately, funding came from another distant relative of the Romanovs, and Anna was transferred to Castle Seeon in Bavaria.

Also not too shabby.

By 1927, Anastasia’s extended family was running out of patience and wanted answers. Tsarina Alexandra’s brother Ernest, Grand Duke of Hesse, hired a detective to investigate. Within a short time, he returned with information: Anna Tschaikovsky was actually a Polish woman named Franziska Schanzkowska. She had been involved in a tragic accident at the munitions factory where she was employed, inadvertently dropping a grenade which had exploded, injuring her and killing a fellow worker. This caused a break in her mental health, and she had been committed to two asylums prior to going missing in Berlin.

Anastasia, Anna, and Franziska.

To confirm this new identity, the detective arranged for a meeting between Anna and Felix, Franziska Schanzkowska’s brother. Felix appeared to recognize his sister, but when the time came to sign the official documents, he would not give absolute confirmation. Later, he would state that he knew it was his sister, but lied in order to give her a better life.

Meanwhile, debate continued to rage amongst the royals of Europe. Felix Yusopov, nephew of Tsar Nicholas and one of the conspirators who killed Rasputin, wrote a scathing letter denouncing her claims.

Prince Felix: Notoriously handsome, assassin of monks, author of sick burns.

On the other side of the spectrum, Eugene Botkin’s son Gleb was fully on Anna’s side. He and another supporter arranged for Anna’s journey to America, where he hired a lawyer to set up a company with the goal of getting hold of Anastasia’s inheritance. This angered many of the relatives of the Romanovs, who believed Gleb was acting out of a desire for financial gain. Upon the death of Nicholas’s mother, who had never given up the belief that her son had survived, the closest remaining relations signed a document declaring their belief that Anna was an imposter. Gleb responded with an accusation that they were after financial gain.

Let’s not be glib, Gleb.

Anna’s life in America continued. For a while, she was the toast of New York society, but that came to a halt as her mental health broke down once more. After spending time in the Four Winds Sanitorium, she was sent back to Germany, where she lived in yet another psychiatric home. Upon her release, she was given housing by various supporters. At the time, the Nazi government had an interest in determining whether they had a former member of the Russian royal family on their hands, so they arranged one more meeting between Anna and the Schanzkowskas. However, upon being told that Anna would be imprisoned if discovered to be a fraud, the family refused to sign any affidavits against her.

Anna settled in a house on the borders of the Black Forest, but sadly, mental illness struck again. She eventually had to be removed from her home, which was in disrepair and filled with 60 cats. At this point, she took Gleb Botkin up on his offer of financing her return to America.

Gleb in 1960, the image of his father, with debatably less integrity.

Anna moved to Charlottesville, Virginia and married history professor John Eacott Manahan, a friend of Gleb’s with a deep interest in Russian history. Though it was probably motivated by necessity (it took place just before Anna’s visa expired), John loved the thought of being married to a lost Grand Duchess and called himself the “Grand-Duke-in-waiting”. On the whole, this slightly strange marriage seems to have been a happy one.

Anahan. We ship it.
Maria Rasputin (L) and Anna (R). Jackie Kennedy has not yet arrived for tea.

Anna faced a number of health problems in her twilight years, at one point requiring the removal of a tumor and portions of her intestine (bookmark that!) She was placed in a nursing home in 1983, but was quickly “rescued” by her husband, who took her on a Bonnie-and-Clyde style tour of the Virginia countryside fueled by convenience store snacks.

Included on Queen’s 1982 album Hot Space, Under Pressure was Anna and John’s road trip song of choice.*

After a brief stint on the run, Anna was returned to her care facility, where she passed away on February 12th, 1984. Her body was cremated; some of the ashes were interred at Castle Seeon and some with her husband after his death in 1990. Her claims, however, did not die with her. Join us next time for the conclusion to our three-part series, where we will discuss answers to the mysteries surrounding Anna and the Romanov family.

*This claim has no historical basis whatsoever.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Anna Anderson, Anna or Anastasia, Romanov

February 26, 2020 by Hannah Leave a Comment

Anna or Anastasia? Part I

Welcome to the first episode of our show! We kick things off by sharing fun facts about ourselves, saying mean things about Andrew Lloyd Webber, and discussing the lead-up to the Russian Revolution.

Listen on Buzzsprout here!

Our story begins with the House of Romanov, a dynasty which had ruled in Russia since 1613. After a brief synopsis of The Man In The Iron Mask, we sketch a quick portrait of the dangerous political climate by 1894: a class system that was being rapidly left behind by the rest of the world, a deep divide between the monarchy and the Russian people, and a new Tsar and Tsarina with an unshakeable faith in absolute power and none of the skills required to hold on to it.

Nicky and Alix, showing the enthusiasm that would characterize their reign.

By 1904, 10 years and four daughters into Nicholas’ reign, Alexandra had at last given birth to the male heir Russia had been waiting for since their marriage. However, joy quickly turned into horror as persistent bleeding revealed that their son had hemophilia, a blood clotting disorder inherited from Alexandra’s grandmother.

Alix’s very-casual-and-not-at-all-memorable grandmother, wearing the not-amused expression that would characterize her reign.

At the time, hemophilia was incurable and always fatal. Periods of wellness and seeming health could turn in an instant to unstoppable bleeding, internal hemorrhage, and terrible pain. The trauma of watching their son suffer, coupled with the pressure of hiding his condition from their country, made Alix and Nicky desperate for a cure. Enter Rasputin.

Good lord, look at those eyes. Would those eyes lie to you?

Rasputin was a villager from Siberia who had followed a winding path to monk-ness involving a forced pilgrimage, a very long beard, and a religious sect called the Khlysty (link below) to create the persona of what we’ve dubbed a “mystical, sexual hermit”.

The official Rasputin theme song.

He also seemed to have healing abilities that helped Alexei during his bleeding episodes, making him absolutely indispensable to the desperate Nicky and Alix. Unfortunately, the Russian people had no idea of the circumstances. What they saw was an heir who was barely there, an out-of-touch Tsar who was leading them in an ill-advised war with Japan, and a Tsarina who kept inappropriate company with a deviant mystery monk. The monarchy was living on borrowed time.

The Romanov family, 1913.
L-R: Olga, Maria, Nicholas, Alexandra, Anastasia, Alexei, and Tatiana.

The beginning of the end came with the assassination of Rasputin in December of 1916. It was a morbid affair (and a story for another podcast) that foreshadowed what was soon to come for Russia itself. By February, discontent had escalated and boiled over in the February Revolution. Riots took place in bread lines, troops deserted, and the capital was in a state of anarchy. Nicholas was forced to abdicate on a train 400 miles from St. Petersburg. Alexandra was trapped in the Alexander Palace, abandoned by the palace guard and caring for her children, who were sick with the measles.

Factory workers protest during the February Revolution.
Students and soldiers fire on the Tsar’s police.

After Nicholas returned home, the family was placed under house arrest at the Alexander Palace by the new Provisional Government. Their captivity was overseen by Alexander Kerensky, who attempted to make arrangements for their departure from the country. Eventually, though, these leaders were overthrown by the Bolshevik Party, and life became much more difficult for the Romanovs. They were transported further and further away from the capital, and were eventually moved to a small town in the Ural Mountains called Ekaterinburg.

There, they were confined to the Ipatiev House, the former residence of a wealthy merchant that was now being referred to ominously as “The House of Special Purpose”. From this remote location, all trace of them was lost.

The Ipatiev House. When the Romanovs were there, it was surrounded by a palisade to block it off from the outside.

We’ll be back soon to pick up the thread of the Romanov family with the story of Anna Anderson, a woman with a mysterious past and a tale to tell.

Resources:

To see pictures of the family, Rasputin, and locations mentioned in this episode, head over to our “Anna or Anastasia” board on Pinterest! You can also check out book, article, and media recommends in our Library or Den.

Learn about the Khlysty sect in this wiki article. It is debated to what extent these practices influenced Rasputin’s teachings.

To try the tea we drank while recording this episode, follow this link! There are a few different varieties, but we chose “Anastasia”.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Anna or Anastasia, Rasputin, Romanov

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