Knowledge (XXG)

Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia

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854: 795:, Peter de Malama wrote that his cousin, Dmitri Yakovlevich Malama, an officer in the Imperial Russian Cavalry, met Tatiana when he was wounded in 1914. De Malama claimed that Dmitri was appointed an equerry to the court of the Tsar at Tsarskoye Selo, where he developed a romantic relationship with Tatiana. In September 1914, Dmitri gave Tatiana a French bulldog, which she named "Ortipo". On 30 September 1914, she wrote to her mother, "Forgive me about the little dog. To say the truth, when he asked should I like to have it if he gave it to me, I at once said yes. You remember, I always wanted to have one, and only afterwards when we came home I thought that suddenly you might not like me having one. But I really was so pleased at the idea that I forgot about everything." When Ortipo died, Dmitri gave her another puppy. Tatiana took it with her to Yekaterinburg, where it died with the rest of the family. Eighteen months after he gave Ortipo to Tatiana, Dmitri paid the Imperial family a visit. On 17 March 1916, the Tsarina wrote to Nicholas that "my little Malama came for an hour yesterday evening...Looks flourishing more of a man now, an adorable boy still. I must say a perfect son in law he w(ou)ld have been – why are foreign P(rin)ces not as nice!" In August 1919, Malama was killed while commanding a unit of the White Russians fighting the civil war against the 399: 988:
had released from the walls. After allowing the haze to clear for several minutes, the gunmen returned. Dr Botkin was killed, and a gunman named Ermakov repeatedly tried to shoot Tsarevich Alexei, but failed because jewels sewn into the boy's clothes shielded him. Ermakov tried to stab Alexei with a bayonet but failed again, and finally Yurovsky fired two shots into the boy's head. Yurovsky and Ermakov approached Olga and Tatiana, who were crouched against the room's rear wall, clinging to each other and screaming for their mother. Ermakov stabbed both young women with his 8-inch bayonet, but had difficulty penetrating their torsos because of the jewels that had been sewn into their chemises. The sisters tried to stand, but Tatiana was killed instantly when Yurovsky shot her in the back of her head. A moment later, Olga too died when Ermakov shot her in the head.
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professional photographer, directed the family to take different positions as a photographer might. Alexandra, who had requested chairs for herself and Alexei, sat to her son's left. The Tsar stood behind Alexei, Dr. Botkin stood to the Tsar's right, Tatiana and her sisters stood behind Alexandra along with the servants. They were left for approximately half an hour while further preparations were made. The group said little during this time, but Alexandra whispered to the girls in English, violating the guard's rules that they must speak in Russian. Yurovsky came in, ordered them to stand, and read the sentence of execution. Tatiana and her family had time only to utter a few incoherent sounds of shock or protest before the death squad under Yurovsky's command began shooting. It was the early hours of 17 July 1918.
767: 384:, and 'Tan'ka' in some notes from her sister, Anastasia Nikolaevna. According to one story, Tatiana kicked her lady-in-waiting Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden for addressing her as "Your Imperial Highness" during a committee meeting, and she hissed, "Are you crazy to speak to me like that?" When she was 14, Tatiana called Chebotareva at her home on the telephone, and she spoke first to Chebotareva's 16-year-old son. Unaware of her identity, Gregory asked her to identify herself. She replied, "Tatiana Nikolaevna". He could not believe that he was speaking to a grand duchess, and he repeated his question. Again, Tatiana did not claim the imperial title of Grand Duchess and replied that she was "Sister Romanova the Second". 582: 882:
mother, asked her friend Margarita Khitrovo in a letter on 8 May 1917 why their fellow nurses did not write to Tsarina Alexandra directly. Chebotareva wrote in her journal that, while she pitied the family, she could not write directly to the Tsarina because she blamed her for the Revolution. "If anyone wishes to write us, let them write directly," Tatiana wrote to "my dear dove" Chebotareva on 9 December 1917, after expressing concern for fellow nurses and a patient they had once treated together. Chebotareva's son, Gregory P. Tschebotarioff, noted the grand duchess's "firm, energetic handwriting" and how the letter "reflected the nature which endeared her so much to my mother."
195: 313: 942: 620:, to the nursery so that she could too meet Rasputin. Tatiana and her siblings all wore their long white nightgowns, and they were comfortable in Rasputin's presence. In February 1909, Rasputin sent the Imperial children a telegram, advising them to "Love the whole of God's nature, the whole of His creation in particular this earth. The Mother of God was always occupied with flowers and needlework." In one letter, 11-year-old Tatiana asked Rasputin to visit her and lamented that she found it difficult to see her mother ill. "But you know because you know everything," she wrote. 930:, the family was forbidden from fraternizing with the guards and the rules of their confinement became more strict. Tatiana, still the family leader, was often sent by her parents to question the guards about rules or what would happen next to the family. She also spent a great deal of time sitting with her mother and ill brother, reading to her mother or playing games to occupy the time. At the Ipatiev House, Tatiana and her sisters were required to do their own laundry and make bread. Her nursing skills were called upon at the end of June 1918 when she gave an injection of 975:, must gather his things and go to a family member. The boy had actually been sent to a hotel across the street because the guards did not want to kill him along with the rest of the Romanov party. The family, unaware of the plan to kill them, was upset and unsettled by Sednev's absence. Tatiana went that evening to Yurovsky's office, for what was to be the last time, to ask for the return of the kitchen boy who kept Alexei amused during the long hours of captivity. Yurovsky placated her by telling her the boy would return soon, but the family was unconvinced. 558: 803: 65: 1021:
fifteen years at the time of his death and of a young woman who was roughly between the ages of fifteen and nineteen years old. Anastasia was seventeen years, one month old at the time of the assassination, while her sister Maria was nineteen years, one month old and their brother Alexei was two weeks shy of his fourteenth birthday. Olga and Tatiana were twenty-two and twenty-one years old at the time of the assassinations. Along with the remains of the two bodies, archaeologists found "shards of a container of
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down on their hands and knees to help the women and whispered to them when the guards weren't looking. All four young women wore long black skirts and white silk blouses, the same clothing they had worn the previous day. Their short hair was "tumbled and disorderly". They told the women how much they enjoyed physical exertion and wished there was more of it for them to do in the Ipatiev House. On the afternoon of 16 July 1918, the last full day of her life, Tatiana sat with her mother and read from the Biblical
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When her lady-in-waiting sent a carriage without an attendant, Tatiana and Olga decided to go shopping for the first time. They ordered the carriage to stop near a group of shops and went into one of the stores. The shopkeepers did not recognize them because they wore nurses' uniforms. They left the shop without buying anything, because they didn't carry money with them and had no idea how to use it. The next day, they asked Chebotareva how to use money.
997: 443: 918: 4385: 853: 763:. Tatiana was fiercely patriotic. On 29 October 1914, she apologized to her mother for disparaging the German in her presence; she explained that she thought of her mother as only Russian and that she had forgotten that the Tsarina was born in Germany. The Tsarina responded that she was offended by the Russian people's gossip about her German connections because she considered herself as completely Russian. 472: 333:, Major-General of His Imperial Majesty's Own Convoy, wrote that "the prettiest of the Grand Duchesses was Tatiana, the Tsar's second daughter. In her physical appearance and her serious and ardent nature, she most resembled her mother. Slender with auburn hair and clear gray eyes, she was strikingly good looking and enjoyed the attention her beauty commanded." According to 926:
duchesses an off-color joke. The shocked Tatiana ran from the room, "pale as death", and her younger sister Maria scolded the guards for their bad language. She "would be pleasant to the guards if she thought they were behaving in an acceptable and decorous manner," recalled another of the guards in his memoirs. Later, when a new commander was placed in charge of the
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out, but was roughly pushed back into the carriage by the sentry. I came back to the window. Tatiana Nikolayevna came last carrying her little dog and struggling to drag a heavy brown valise. It was raining and I saw her feet sink into the mud at every step. Nagorny tried to come to her assistance; he was roughly pushed back by one of the commisars ..."
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creature, always yearning for the ideal, and dreaming of great friendships which might be hers." Chebotareva loved the "sweet" Tatiana as if she were her daughter, and she claimed that Tatiana would hold her hand when she was nervous. "I am so terribly embarrassed and frightened – I do not know whom I greeted and whom not," Tatiana told Chebotareva.
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way to her own capricious impulses." On 13 March 1916, Alexandra wrote to Nicholas that Tatiana was the only one of their four daughters who "grasped it" when she explained her way of looking at things. Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden wrote that Tatiana "was closest in sympathy to her mother" and "the definite favorite of both her parents."
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mistakes. If love is strong—the lovers happy. Nature herself and the Lord give them happiness. One must ask the Lord that he teach to love the luminous, bright, so that love be not torment, but joy. Love pure, Love luminous is the Sun. The Sun makes us warm, and Love caresses. All is in Love, and even a bullet cannot strike Love down."
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exhumed in 1991. The remaining conspiracies hinged on the fact that two bodies were missing, Tsarevich Alexei and one of the four grand duchesses, generally thought by Russians to be Grand Duchess Maria and by Americans to be Grand Duchess Anastasia. For example, author Michael Occleshaw made the claim in his 1995 book
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Alexei, who had had another attack of haemophilia, could not be moved. It was Tatiana who persuaded her mother to "stop tormenting herself" and make a decision to go with her father and leave Alexei behind. Alexandra decided that level-headed Tatiana must be left behind to manage the household and look after Alexei.
487:. She weighed 3.9 kg at birth, and Dr. Ott used forceps in her birth. When she regained consciousness from the chloroform used during the delivery, Alexandra saw the "anxious and troubled faces" around her and wept: "My God, it is again a daughter. What will the nation say, what will the nation say?" 925:
At Yekaterinburg, Tatiana occasionally joined her younger sisters in chatting with some of the guards over tea, asking them questions about their families and talking about her hopes for a new life in England when they were released. On one occasion one of the guards forgot himself and told the grand
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During the month of separation from their parents and sister, Tatiana, Olga, Anastasia, and ladies in waiting busied themselves sewing precious stones and jewelry into their clothing, hoping to hide them from their captors, since Alexandra had written she, Nicholas and Maria had been heavily searched
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In his memoirs, A.A. Mordvinov reported that all four grand duchesses were "cold and visibly terribly upset" by Rasputin's death. According to him, they sat "huddled up closely together" on a sofa when they received the news. He wrote that they seemed to sense the political upheaval that was about to
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stood nude in the background. Much to the Tsarina's displeasure, Nicholas ordered Rasputin to leave St. Petersburg, and Rasputin went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. The Imperial family's association with Rasputin continued until his murder in 1916. On 6 December 1916, the Tsarina wrote to Nicholas
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Only her closest friends and family were aware of her introspective side. "With her, as with her mother, shyness and reserve were accounted as pride, but, once you knew her and had gained her affection, this reserve disappeared and the real Tatiana became apparent," Dehn recalled. "She was a poetical
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Like her mother, Tatiana was deeply religious. She read her Bible frequently, studied theology, and struggled with the meaning of "good and evil, sorrow and forgiveness, and man's destiny on earth". She decided that "one has to struggle much because the return for good is evil, and evil reigns." A.A.
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On 14 July 1918, local priests at Yekaterinburg conducted a private church service for the family and reported that Tatiana and her family, contrary to custom, fell on their knees during the prayer for the dead. The final entry in Tatiana's final notebook at Yekaterinburg was a saying she had copied
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Pierre Gilliard later recalled his last sight of the imperial children at Yekaterinburg. "The sailor Nagorny, who attended to Alexei Nikolaevitch, passed my window carrying the sick boy in his arms, behind him came the Grand Duchesses loaded with valises and small personal belongings. I tried to get
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When she was 13, an ill Tatiana begged her mother to permit her to leave her bed so that she could watch a soldier, with whom she was infatuated. On 20 April 1911, she wrote to the Tsarina, "I would like so much to go the review of the second division as I am also the second daughter and Olga was at
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On 15 August 1915, Tatiana wrote to her mother that she wished she could do more to support Russia during the war: "I simply can't tell you how awfully sorry I am for you, my beloved ones. I am so sorry I can in no way help you or be useful. In such moments I am sorry I'm not a man." As Tatiana grew
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All accounts agree that Rasputin had an innocent relationship with the children, but Nicholas did ask Rasputin to avoid going to the nurseries in the future. Grand Duchess Xenia was horrified by Tyutcheva's story. On 15 March 1910, she wrote in her diary that she could not understand why her brother
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Tatiana was closer to her mother than any of her sisters, and many considered her to be Alexandra's favorite daughter. "It was not that her sisters loved their mother any less," recalled her French tutor Pierre Gilliard, "but Tatiana knew how to surround her with unwearying attentions and never gave
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Tatiana was the most sociable of the four sisters. According to Sophie Buxhoeveden, "friends would have been welcome, but no young girls were ever asked to the Palace." Vyrubova noted that Tatiana was the most famous of the sisters in their lifetimes because of her vivacious personality and sense of
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reflected that "Tatiana was, to my mind, prettier than her sisters. She was taller than her mother, but so thin and so well built that her height was not a hindrance to her attractiveness. She had beautiful, regular features, and resembled some of the famous beauties among her royal relatives, whose
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Preliminary testing indicated a "high degree of probability" that the remains belonged to the Tsarevich Alexei and to one of his sisters, Russian forensic scientists announced on 22 January 2008. On 30 April 2008, Russian forensic scientists announced that DNA testing proved that the remains belong
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According to the diary of Valentina Ivanovna Chebotareva, Tatiana was fond of an officer named Vladimir Kiknadze, whom she cared for when he was wounded in 1915 and 1916. She claimed that Tatiana sat beside "Volodia" at the piano as he played a tune with one finger and talked to her in a low voice.
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that he visited Olga and Tatiana before them, spoke to them, and "caressed" them. The sisters hid Rasputin's presence from Tyutcheva, and they were afraid to talk to their governess about him. Tatiana was aware of the tension and feared her mother's reaction to Tyutcheva's actions. On 8 March 1910,
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Like her sisters, Tatiana was unworldly and naive. When she was young, she was shocked to learn that her governess Margaretta Eagar was paid for taking care of her. When Eagar told her that "you have seen me get my money every month," Tatiana replied that "I always thought it was a present to you."
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The initial round of gunfire killed only the Emperor, the Empress and two male servants, and wounded Grand Duchess Maria, Dr Botkin and the Empress' maidservant, Demidova. At that point the gunmen had to leave the room because of smoke and toxic fumes from their guns and plaster dust their bullets
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Late that night, on the night of 16 July, the family was awakened and told to come down to the lower level of the house because there was unrest in the town at large and they would have to be moved for their own safety. The family emerged from their rooms carrying pillows, bags, and other items to
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for the world's sins is immeasurable, join your grief to his, in it you will find consolation." The following day, on 15 July, Tatiana and her sisters appeared in good spirits as they joked with one another and moved the beds in their room so visiting cleaning women could scrub the floor. They got
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Tatiana's English tutor, Sydney Gibbes, recalled that Tatiana had grown razor thin in captivity and seemed "haughtier" and more inscrutable to him than ever. In April 1918 the Bolsheviks moved Nicholas, Alexandra and Maria to Yekaterinburg. The remaining children remained behind in Tobolsk because
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without work," wrote her fellow nurse Valentina Chebotareva after receiving a letter from Tatiana on 16 April 1917. "It is strange to sit in the morning at home, to be in good health and not to go to the change of bandages!" Tatiana wrote Chebotareva. Tatiana, apparently trying to advocate for her
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delivered a letter to Tsar Nicholas in which King Peter expressed a desire for his son to marry one of the Grand Duchesses. Nicholas replied that he would allow his daughters to decide whom to marry, but he noticed that the Serbian prince Alexander often gazed upon Tatiana during family dinners on
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There were malicious rumors that Rasputin had seduced the Tsarina and the four grand duchesses. Rasputin had released the letters that the Tsarina and the grand duchesses had sent to him; although they were innocent in nature, they fueled the rumors about his alleged affairs. Pornographic cartoons
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On 23 August 2007, a Russian archaeologist announced the discovery of two burned, partial skeletons at a bonfire site near Yekaterinburg that appeared to match the site described in Yurovsky's memoirs. The archaeologists said the bones are from a boy who was roughly between the ages of twelve and
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Maria Ivanovna Vishnyakova, another nurse for the royal children, initially thought well of Rasputin, but she became disillusioned with him. In the spring of 1910, she claimed that Rasputin raped her, but the Tsarina refused to believe her because she saw Rasputin as holy. The Tsarina insisted to
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reported that Maria, Tatiana's younger sister, hemorrhaged during an operation to remove her tonsils in December 1914. The operating doctor was so alarmed that the Tsarina needed to urge him to continue. Olga Alexandrovna claimed that all four of her nieces bled more than was normal and that they
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Tatiana was a practical, nurturing leader. Her sisters gave her the nickname "The Governess" and sent her as their group representative when they wanted their parents to grant a favour. Olga was 18 months older than Tatiana, but she uncomplainingly allowed Tatiana to be the leader of their group.
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For decades, conspiracy theorists suggested that one or more of the family somehow survived the slaughter. The theories were reduced in scale, but still persisted, when the bodies of most of the family were found and identified from a mass grave discovered in the forest outside Yekaterinburg and
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mother bear and cubs that stood on the landing, perhaps as a sign of respect for the dead. Nicholas told the servants and family "Well, we're going to get out of this place." They asked questions of the guards but did not appear to suspect they were going to be killed. Yurovsky, who had been a
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Tatiana kept a notebook in which she recorded Rasputin's sayings: "Love is Light and it has no end. Love is great suffering. It cannot eat, it cannot sleep. It is mixed with sin in equal parts. And yet it is better to love. In love one can be mistaken, and through suffering he expiates for his
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Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden recalled that "It was Tatiana Nicolaevna who took care of the little ones, and who was a constant help to the Household, always willing to help them in arranging that their official duties should not clash with their private engagements."
257:. She was considered to be the most beautiful of all her sisters and the most aristocratic in appearance. She was known amongst her siblings as "the governess" for her domineering but also maternal ways. Tatiana was the closest of all the children to her mother ( 844:
insisting he was impressed by her beauty and the way she tended to her younger brother. She was too young for her parents to seriously consider her marriage when potential suitors first surfaced, and negotiations ended due to the outbreak of World War I.
755:, who worked with her at the hospital, described in her journal how she planned to boil silk while Tatiana was otherwise occupied, fearing that Tatiana would be too tired to help her. But Tatiana guessed what Chebotareva was doing. "Why can you breathe 411:
wrote that Tatiana was talented in embroidery and crocheting and that she could dress her mother's hair as well as a professional hair stylist. Sophie Buxhoeveden remembered that Tatiana once dressed her hair when her hairdresser was unavailable.
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Coble, Michael D.; Loreille, Odile M.; Wadhams, Mark J.; Edson, Suni M.; Maynard, Kerry; Meyer, Carna E.; Niederstätter, Harald; Berger, Cordula; Berger, Burkhard; Falsetti, Anthony B.; Gill, Peter; Parson, Walther; Finelli, Louis N. (2009).
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Tatiana was interested in fashion. According to Sophie Buxhoeveden, "Tatiana Nicolaevna loved dress. Any frock, no matter how old, looked well on her. She knew how to put on her clothes, was admired and liked admiration." Her mother's friend
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Tatiana was close to her father. Lili Dehn wrote that "the Emperor loved her devotedly they had much in common." She recalled that "the sisters used to laugh, and say that, if a favour were required, "Tatiana must ask Papa to grant it.""
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gave the instructions on how to deal with the 'medicines', a predetermined code name for the jewels. The concealments were successful, as the Bolsheviks were never aware of the jewels in the clothes until after the executions.
1017:, who hinted at the successful liberation of a Grand Duchess, allegedly Tatiana. However, historians discounted this claim and continued to say that all of the Romanovs, including Tatiana, were assassinated at Yekaterinburg. 573:, told her that the sickly child was Olga, four-year-old Tatiana cried bitterly and protested that the pale, thin child couldn't be her beloved older sister. Eagar had difficulty persuading Tatiana that Olga would recover. 602:
were carriers of the hemophilia gene. Symptomatic carriers of the gene are not hemophiliacs, but they can have symptoms of hemophilia, including an abnormally low blood clotting factor that can lead to heavy bleeding.
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or "holy man", and she credited his prayers with saving the ailing Tsarevich. Tatiana and her siblings viewed Rasputin as "Our Friend" and confided in him. In the autumn of 1907, Tatiana's father escorted his sister,
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Bokhanov, Alexander, Knodt, Dr. Manfred, Oustimenko, Vladimir, Peregudova, Zinaida, Tyutyunnik, Lyubov, translator Xenofontova, Lyudmila, The Romanovs: Love, Power, and Tragedy, Leppi Publications, 1993, pp.
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Grand Duchesses Tatiana (left) and Olga Nikolaevna (far right) with their mother, Tsarina Alexandra (center), in captivity at Tobolsk. This is one of their last known photos before their death in July 1918.
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Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna that she had investigated Vishnyakova's claim but that "they caught the young woman in bed with a Cossack of the Imperial Guard." In 1913, the Tsarina dismissed Vishnyakova.
353:, wrote that "the flower of the flock, as far as looks are concerned ... is Grand Duchess Tatiana." Nicholas wrote that Tatiana was "a very beautiful child" and he often remarked that she reminded him of 337:, "when Tatiana grew up, she was the tallest and most graceful of all the Grand Duchesses, beautiful and romantic. Many officers fell in love with Tatiana, but there were no appropriate suitors for her." 391:
Gilliard wrote that Tatiana was reserved and "well balanced" but less open and spontaneous than Olga. She was less naturally intelligent than Olga, but she was more hard-working and dedicated. Colonel
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the 12-year-old Tatiana wrote to her mother, "I am so afr(aid) that S.I. can speak ... about our friend something bad. I hope our nurse will be nice to our friend now." Alexandra dismissed Tyutcheva.
4559: 265:) trained to become a nurse. She tended to wounded soldiers on the grounds of Tsarskoye Selo from 1914 to 1917. Her time as a nurse came to an end with her family's arrest in 1917 after the first 655:
Allegedly, Tatiana was present at the site of Rasputin's murder, "disguised as a lieutenant of the Chevaliers-Gardes, so that she could revenge herself on Rasputin who had tried to violate her".
626:, one of the sisters' governesses, was horrified that Rasputin was permitted access to the nursery when they were in their nightgowns and requested that he be banned from the household. She told 811:
She claimed that Tatiana and Olga made excuses to come to the hospital to see Volodia. She feared that the grand duchesses' flirtations with the wounded officers would damage their reputations.
288:. Tatiana and all her siblings were soon rumored to have survived the murder, and dozens of impostors claimed to be surviving Romanovs; author Michael Occleshaw speculated that a woman named 569:
and was confined to the nursery for several weeks. When she began to recover, Tatiana was permitted to see her older sister for five minutes but didn't recognize her. When her governess,
194: 4544: 3867: 4524: 324:, gray eyes, and fine features. Many viewed her as the most beautiful of the four grand duchesses and the one who resembled their mother most. Her mother's lady-in-waiting Baroness 751:. According to Vyrubova, "Tatiana was almost as skillful and devoted as her mother, and complained only that on account of her youth she was spared some of the more trying cases." 565:
In their household, Tatiana and Olga were known as "The Big Pair". They shared a bedroom and were very close to each another from early childhood. In the spring of 1901, Olga had
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described her beauty as "almost mystical." Alexander Mossolov, head of the Imperial Chancellery, wrote that Tatiana was "the best-looking of all the sisters." Her paternal aunt
4279: 554:. She and her sisters slept on camp beds without pillows, took cold baths in the morning, and embroidered and knitted projects to be given as gifts or sold at charity bazaars. 4459: 698:
Tatiana enjoyed the company of soldiers, but she was often shocked by their behavior. On 11 July 1911, a group of officers aboard the Imperial yacht gave Olga a portrait of
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family portraits decorated the walls of the palace.. She had dark hair, a rather pale complexion, and wide-apart eyes, that gave her a poetic far-away look."
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Mosolov claimed that Tatiana's reserved nature gave her a "difficult" character with more spiritual depth than that of her sister, Olga. Her English tutor,
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and I can't?" she asked Chebotareva and insisted on helping her with the work. In September 1914, she was named patron of a war aid committee called the
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Bokhanov, Alexander and Dr. Knodt, Manfred and Oustimenko, Vladimir and Peregudova, Zinaida and Tyutyunnik, Lyubov; Xenofontova, Lyudmila (translator);
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GA RF (State Archives of the Russian Federation) 651-1-66. Letters of Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna to her sister Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna.
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Bokhanov, Alexander, Knodt, Dr. Manfred, Oustimenko, Vladimir, Peregudova, Zinaida, Tyutyunnik, Lyubov, editors; Xenofontova, Lyudmila, translator;
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that "Our Friend is so contented with our girlies, says they have gone through heavy 'courses' for their age and their souls have much developed."
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claimed that Tatiana longed for friends of her own age but that her high rank and her mother's distaste for society restricted her social life.
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The private world of the last Tsar, in the photographs and notes of General Count Alexander Grabbe. Boston : Little, Brown & Co. p. 63
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A forensic facial reconstruction of Grand Duchess Tatiana by S.A. Nikitin, 1994, based on the conclusion that Skeleton 5 belonged to Tatiana
4019: 3973: 1588: 1441: 1345: 1257: 877:. The drastic change in circumstances and the uncertainty of captivity took its toll on Tatiana as well as on the rest of her family. "She 733: 484: 354: 258: 227: 261:), often spending many hours reading to her. During World War I, she chaired many charitable committees and (along with her older sister, 3576: 3571: 3032: 4469: 4345: 1526: 1104: 659:, the French ambassador to Russia, wrote that Tatiana had witnessed Rasputin's castration, but he doubted the credibility of the rumor. 1832:
Alexander Mossolov, At the Court of the Last Tsar: Being the Memoirs of A. A. Mossolov, Head of the Court Chancellery, 1900–1916, p. 63
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Despite her high status, Tatiana did not use her Imperial title and her friends, family, and servants called her by her first name and
4434: 3547: 3536: 3452: 3312: 2618: 380:, Tatiana Nikolaevna. The only nicknames that can be found for her using primary sources are 'Tanechka' in a postcard from her cousin 1919:
GA RF (State Archives of the Russian Federation) 651-1-75 Letters of Princess Irina Alexandrovna to Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna.
4519: 3673: 3515: 3494: 3466: 3424: 3409: 3395: 3381: 3367: 3340: 3326: 3298: 3256: 3243: 3215: 3180: 3142: 3096: 2822: 2634: 2435: 1961: 1736: 593:. Tatiana, her mother, and her three sisters were all potential carriers of the hemophilia gene; the Tsarina was a granddaughter of 581: 710:, "Olga laughed at it long and hard. And not one of the officers wishes to confess that he has done it. Such swine, aren't they?" 4539: 4509: 3650: 349:
wrote that she was "a very pretty child, remarkably like her mother, but delicate in appearance." In 1900, the British magazine,
3447:
Rappaport, Helen. "The Romanov Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Daughters of Nicholas and Alexandra." St. Martin's Griffin, 2014.
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that Tatiana might have been rescued and transported to England, where she married a British officer and lived under the name
941: 4474: 2139: 1620: 1132: 1080: 752: 967:, Alexandra noted in her diary. Later, mother and daughter sat and just talked. As the family was having dinner that night, 4419: 3826: 1500: 1467: 312: 219: 31: 721:. On 14 July 1911, she wrote to Olga, "How funny if they might have children, can (she) be kissing him? What foul, fie!" 4325: 4215: 3989: 3749: 912: 589:
Tatiana doted on her younger brother, Tsarevich Alexei. However, the long-awaited heir had frequent, severe attacks of
273: 3542:
Fleming, Candace. "The Family Romanov: Murder, Rebellion, and the Fall of Imperial Russia." Schwartz & Wade, 2014.
4574: 4484: 971:, the head of the detachment, came in and announced that the family's kitchen boy and Alexei's playmate, 14-year-old 4355: 4225: 3126: 3069: 254: 173: 2555: 1956:
Gilliard, Pierre (1970). "Thirteen Years at the Russian Court", Ayer Company Publishers Incorporated, pgs. 74–76,
4504: 4200: 3780: 1029:
to the Tsarevich Alexei and to one of his sisters. With this result, all of the Tsar's family are accounted for.
824: 4569: 4534: 1881: 1788: 1010: 802: 718: 623: 292:
might have been Tatiana. However, the deaths of all the last Tsar's family, including Tatiana, at the hands of
153: 4210: 3759: 1319: 1225: 1144: 1086: 1064: 921:
Grand Duchesses Tatiana and Anastasia and the dog Ortipo in captivity at Tsarskoe Selo in the spring of 1917
285: 108: 64: 3348: 2213: 557: 4335: 4179: 1787:
Sophie Buxhoeveden, The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna, Chapter 16: The Empress and her Family,
1199: 1153:
The bodies of Tsar Nicholas II, Tsarina Alexandra, and three of their daughters were finally interred at
4144: 4013: 3009: 1283: 1014: 747:
nurse with her mother and Olga. They cared for wounded soldiers in a private hospital on the grounds of
736:, that the event had upset both girls. Tatiana sobbed and both of them had trouble sleeping that night. 480: 425: 223: 163: 656: 511:. All of the children were close to one another and to their parents up until the end of their lives. 4414: 4409: 4139: 3595: 2932: 2572:
Draft letter to the Tsar, written by hand Pasic, in Russian. Documents Nikola Pasic, Serbian Archive.
2128:
Zeepvat, Charlotte, The Camera and the Tsars: A Romanov Family Album, Sutton Publishing, 2004, p. 153
703: 439:
French tutor Pierre Gilliard wrote that Tatiana and Olga were "passionately devoted to one another."
663:
be unleashed. On 21 December 1916, Tatiana attended Rasputin's funeral. Rasputin was buried with an
3692: 2649: 2110:
Zeepvat, Charlotte, The Camera and the Tsars: A Romanov Family Album, Sutton Publishing, 2004, xiv
979:
make Alexandra and Alexei comfortable. The family paused and crossed themselves when they saw the
806:
Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna wearing a Red Cross nursing uniform and Dmitri Yakovlevich Malama
4259: 4255: 4159: 2628: 1116: 862: 325: 266: 4350: 828: 368: 304: 17: 4370: 4265: 4134: 3631: 3613: 3543: 3532: 3511: 3490: 3462: 3448: 3437: 3420: 3405: 3391: 3377: 3363: 3336: 3322: 3308: 3294: 3252: 3239: 3211: 3176: 3092: 3040: 2960: 2818: 2614: 2589: 2431: 2425: 2060:
Sophie Buxhoeveden, The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna, The Empress and her Family,
1957: 1732: 1038: 951: 895: 820: 775:
into adulthood, she undertook more public appearances than her sisters and headed committees.
760: 535: 402:
Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia and Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia in 1914
392: 183: 3086: 4174: 4169: 4004: 3621: 3603: 3203: 2950: 2940: 1682: 833: 729: 606: 570: 346: 235: 211: 3584:"Mystery Solved: The Identification of the Two Missing Romanov Children Using DNA Analysis" 3199: 2921:"Mystery Solved: The Identification of the Two Missing Romanov Children Using DNA Analysis" 1821: 345:
said that "Tatiana and her mother are like as two peas in a pod!.... so pretty." Her nanny
4365: 4149: 4075: 3429: 3352: 2978: 996: 964: 837: 358: 338: 231: 87: 3471:
Shevchenko, Maxim. "The Glorification of the Royal Family", a 31 May 2000 article in the
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the first so now it is my turn...Yes, Mama, and at the second division I will see whom I
3599: 3305:
Correspondence of the Russian Grand Duchesses: Letters of the Daughters of the Last Tsar
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The Complete Wartime Correspondence of Nicholas and Alexandra: April 1914 – March 1917
2518:
The Complete Wartime Correspondence of Nicholas and Alexandra: April 1914 – March 1917
597:, who had passed down the hemophilia gene to her descendants. Tatiana's paternal aunt 4403: 4304: 4299: 4294: 4205: 4065: 4060: 2061: 1157:
in St. Petersburg on 17 July 1998, eighty years to the day after they were murdered.
1108: 1022: 972: 935: 927: 891: 870: 756: 648: 647:
depicted Rasputin having sexual relations with the Tsarina and her four daughters as
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Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna as honorary Colonel of the 8th Vosnesenski Lancers
277: 2583: 3608: 3560: 2945: 724:
In 1911, Tatiana and Olga witnessed the assassination of the government minister
706:, cut out from a newspaper. Indignant, the 14-year-old Tatiana wrote to her aunt 4309: 841: 740: 321: 3958: 1851: 857:
Olga, Alexei, Anastasia and Tatiana in Alexander Park, Tsarskoye Selo, May 1917
491:
wrote that "everyone was very disappointed as they had been hoping for a son."
442: 4330: 4289: 4269: 2427:
The Romanov Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Daughters of Nicholas and Alexandra
955: 796: 590: 320:
Tatiana was a famous beauty. She was tall, slender, and elegant. She had dark
35: 3617: 4097: 3642: 3400:
Maylunas, Andrei and Mironenko, Sergei, Galy (editors); Darya (translator).
2042:
Gilliard, Pierre (1970), "Thirteen Years at the Russian Court", pgs. 74 – 76
1882:
https://www.theromanovfamily.com/grand-duchess-tatiana-nikolaevna-of-russia/
1789:
https://www.theromanovfamily.com/grand-duchess-tatiana-nikolaevna-of-russia/
980: 551: 417: 293: 3635: 3480:
Russia: My Native Land: A U.S. engineer reminisces and looks at the present
2964: 2588:. Istorijsko-memoarska dela. Beograd: Beogradski izdavaÄŤko-grafiÄŤki zavod. 2097:
Maylunas, Andrei, and Mironenko, Sergei, editors; Galy, Darya, translator,
479:
Tatiana was born on 10 June 1897. She was the second child and daughter of
471: 3529:
Tatiana Romanov, Daughter of the Last Tsar: Diaries and Letters, 1913–1918
2324:
Maylunas, Andrei and Mironenko, Sergei, editors; Galy, Darya, translator,
2245:
Maylunas, Andrei and Mironenko, Sergei, editors; Galy, Darya, translator,
2199:
Maylunas, Andrei and Mironenko, Sergei, editors; Galy, Darya, translator,
1013:. Occleshaw based this claim on studying the diaries of the British agent 865:
and imprisoned first at Tsarskoye Selo and later at private residences in
467:
Grand Duchesses Tatiana, Maria and Olga in a formal portrait taken in 1900
4245: 1880:
Helen Azar, Tatiana Romanov: Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia,
931: 377: 1701:
Starting in 1900, Tatiana's birthday was celebrated on 11 June new style
428:, claimed that Tatiana viewed religion as a duty rather than a passion. 2585:
Kralj Petar I Karađorđević, život i delo: u otadžbini 1903-1914. godine
2559: 878: 874: 866: 688: 611: 531: 148: 43: 3801:
Catherine Mikhailovna, Duchess George Augustus of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
3088:
Born to Rule: Five Reigning Consorts, Granddaughters of Queen Victoria
1136: 1098: 832:
his recent trips to St. Petersburg. There were also reports that the
770:
Grand Duchesses Tatiana and Olga Nikolaevna of Russia as nurses, 1916
692: 636: 3582:
Coble, Michael D.; Loreille, Odile M.; et al. (11 March 2009).
890:
upon arrival in Yekaterinburg, and items confiscated. A letter from
518:
Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna at her brother’s christening, 1904.
667:
signed on its reverse side by Tatiana, her mother and her sisters.
463: 4284: 995: 940: 916: 852: 801: 765: 678: 580: 556: 513: 470: 462: 441: 397: 367: 311: 303: 691:
and assigned a regiment of soldiers, the Vosnesensky (Ascension)
3786:
Alexandra Nikolaevna, Princess Frederick William of Hesse-Cassel
3345: 2221: 664: 222:
29 May] 1897– 17 July 1918) was the second daughter of
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The Romanov Conspiracies: The Romanovs and the House of Windsor
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The Romanov Conspiracies: The Romanovs and the House of Windsor
1007:
The Romanov Conspiracies: The Romanovs and the House of Windsor
526:
recorded in his diary that Nicholas II had named Tatiana as an
3565: 3208:
Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe
2538:
Extracts from the journal of Valentina Ivanovna Chebotareva,
276:
by Communist revolutionaries on 17 July 1918 resulted in her
4550:
Burials at Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral, Saint Petersburg
3837:
Anastasia Mikhailovna, Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
1850:
Margaretta Eagar, Six Years at the Russian Court, Chapter 1,
732:. On 10 September 1911, Nicholas later wrote to his mother, 687:
As a young teenager, Tatiana was given the rank of honorary
585:
Photo taken of Grand Duchess Tatiana, 1914 by Eugene Fabergé
3863:
Elena Vladimirovna, Princess Nicholas of Greece and Denmark
3740:
Elena Pavlovna, Hereditary Princess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
3402:
A Lifelong Passion: Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story
3268:
De Malama, Peter. "The Romanovs: The Forgotten Romance" in
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A Lifelong Passion: Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story
2247:
A Lifelong Passion: Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story
2201:
A Lifelong Passion: Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story
2099:
A Lifelong Passion: Nicholas and Alexandra: Their Own Story
1892:
Pierre Gilliard, Thirteen Years at the Russian Court, p. 20
2979:"Suspected remains of tsar's children still being studied" 2792:
Bokhanov, Knodt, Oustimenko, Peregudova, Tyutynnik, p. 311
2736:
Bokhanov, Knodt, Oustimenko, Peregudova, Tyutynnik, p. 310
2396:
Bokhanov, Knodt, Oustimenko, Peregudova, Tyutynnik, p. 123
1997:
Bokhanov, Knodt, Oustimenko, Peregudova, Tyutynnik, p. 127
954:: "Your grief is indescribable, the Savior's grief in the 950:
from the words of a well-known Russian Orthodox holy man,
635:
and his family regarded Rasputin, whom she saw as only a "
3248:
Christopher, Peter, Kurth, Peter, and Radzinsky, Edvard.
2814:
Christopher, Peter, Kurth, Peter, and Radzinsky, Edvard.
2727:
Fall of the Romanovs, Steinberg and Krustalev, pp. 359–62
1993: 1991: 550:
Like the other Romanov children, Tatiana was raised with
3858:
Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna, Mrs. Nikolai Kulikovsky
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https://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/olgabuchannan.php
1175:
Ancestors of Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia
713:
On 14 July 1911, Tatiana laughed at her distant cousin
823:
wanted Tatiana as a bride for his younger son, Prince
3868:
Maria Pavlovna, Princess Sergei Mikhailovich Putiatin
3745:
Maria Pavlovna, Grand Duchess of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach
2302:
Christopher, Peter; Kurth, Peter; Radzinsky, Edvard,
1783: 1781: 1779: 1777: 4560:
Eastern Orthodox people executed by the Soviet Union
4280:
Anti-religious campaign during the Russian Civil War
3822:
Maria Alexandrovna, Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
3117: 3115: 1940: 1938: 1936: 1934: 296:
have since been established by scientific evidence.
4318: 4238: 4188: 4117: 4110: 4084: 4053: 4003: 3996: 3919: 3876: 3845: 3809: 3768: 3735:
Archduchess Alexandra Pavlovna, Palatina of Hungary
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Kellogg Durland, Royal Romances of To-day, p. 196-7
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She and Olga inspected the soldiers regularly. 3948:title granted by Grand Duke Vladimir Cyrillovich 3508:The Camera and the Tsars: A Romanov Family Album 1810:http://www.alexanderpalace.org/russiancourt2006/ 316:Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia, 1915 3942:title granted by Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich 3080: 3078: 2718:Last Days of the Romanovs, Robert Wilton, p.30. 524:Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia 4545:Christian female saints of the Late Modern era 3250:Tsar: The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra 2816:Tsar: The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra 2698:Tsar: The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra 2304:Tsar: The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra 827:. In January 1914, the Serbian prime minister 561:Formal portrait of Grand Duchess Tatiana, 1910 4525:Russian saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church 3974: 3658: 3568:—A media library of the last Imperial Family. 791:In the December 2004 edition of the magazine 8: 4040:Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia 3527:Azar, Helen & Nicholson, Nicholas B.A.; 2744: 2742: 1985:Sophie Buxhoeveden, Before The Storm, p. 299 1902: 1900: 1898: 1852:https://www.alexanderpalace.org/eagar/I.html 3362:. Carroll and Graf Publishers, Inc., 1998, 2088:Helen Rappaport, The Romanov Sisters, p. 43 1871:Helen Rappaport, The Romanov Sisters, p. 46 1862:Helen Rappaport, The Romanov Sisters, p. 53 1711: 1709: 1707: 4460:19th-century women from the Russian Empire 4114: 4030:Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia 4000: 3981: 3967: 3959: 3827:Olga Konstantinovna, Queen of the Hellenes 3688:Anna Petrovna, Duchess of Holstein-Gottorp 3665: 3651: 3643: 3166: 3164: 2507:, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2003, p. 312. 1750: 1748: 1746: 1744: 1404:Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia 1180: 1171: 1042: 204:Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia 122:Peter and Paul Cathedral, Saint Petersburg 63: 54: 4495:People executed by Russia by firing squad 3776:Maria Nikolaevna, Duchess of Leuchtenberg 3625: 3607: 3194: 3192: 2954: 2944: 2709:Christopher, Kurth, and Radzinsky, p. 180 2315:Christopher, Kurth, and Radzinsky, p. 116 2072:Lili Dehn, "The Real Tsarista," Chapter 4 799:in Ukraine, according to Peter de Malama. 708:Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia 618:Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia 599:Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia 4035:Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia 3796:Elizabeth Mikhailovna, Duchess of Nassau 3750:Catherine Pavlovna, Queen of WĂĽrttemberg 2378:, Leppi Publications, 1993, pp. 198–199. 1976:, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2003, p. 48 372:Grand Duchess Tatiana in a costume, 1916 4045:Alexei Nikolaevich, Tsarevich of Russia 4025:Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia 3904:Maria Kirillovna, Princess of Leiningen 3760:Anna Pavlovna, Queen of the Netherlands 3033:"The Glorification of the Royal Family" 2648:Timofeeva, Anastasia (20 August 2018). 2241: 2239: 1731:Dehn, Lili, 1922. "The Real Tsaritsa", 1694: 1139:. In 2000, Tatiana and her family were 4490:Victims of Red Terror in Soviet Russia 4361:Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia 3333:Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson 3236:The Romanovs: Love, Power, and Tragedy 2626: 2376:The Romanovs: Love, Power, and Tragedy 1727: 1725: 1563:Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha 1542: 1421: 1417: 1407: 1299: 1189: 1185: 1167:Descendants of Christian IX of Denmark 715:Prince Ioann Konstantinovich of Russia 130: 4500:Executed people from Saint Petersburg 3781:Olga Nikolaevna, Queen of WĂĽrttemberg 3577:Hemophilia A (Factor VIII Deficiency) 3572:The Glorification of the Royal Family 3210:. London: Little, Brown. p. 34. 3145:. The Danish Monarchy. Archived from 3006:"DNA confirms IDs of czar's children" 2650:"Tatiana Nikolaievna | World History" 2550: 2548: 1841:Swezey, Nicholas and Alexandra, p. 66 1618: 1608: 1604: 1592: 1586: 1576: 1560: 1550: 1546: 1530: 1524: 1514: 1498: 1488: 1484: 1472: 1465: 1455: 1439: 1429: 1425: 1401: 1391: 1375: 1365: 1361: 1349: 1343: 1333: 1317: 1307: 1303: 1287: 1281: 1271: 1255: 1245: 1241: 1229: 1223: 1213: 1197: 1193: 605:The Tsarina relied on the counsel of 489:Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich 361:said that she "was prettier than her 226:, the last monarch of Russia, and of 7: 3910:Kira Kirillovna, Princess of Prussia 3817:Grand Duchess Alexandra Alexandrovna 3436:. 2008. St. Martin's Griffin. 2008. 1589:Princess Alice of the United Kingdom 1442:Prince Charles of Hesse and by Rhine 1258:Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine 1127:In 1981 Tatiana and her family were 4346:Church of All Saints, Yekaterinburg 3291:Thirteen Years at the Russian Court 3175:. Clearfield Company. p. 717. 2479:The Romanovs: The Forgotten Romance 2450:Maylunas and Mironenko, pp. 406–407 2430:. St. Martin's Press. p. 235. 2337:Maylunas and Mironenko, pp. 508–509 2284:, Carroll and Graf Publishers, 1998 1527:Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine 1053:Saint, Grand Duchess and Martyr or 861:The family was arrested during the 793:Royalty Digest: A Journal of Record 3899:Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna 3360:Elizabeth: Grand Duchess of Russia 3091:. St. Martin's Press. p. 10. 3085:Gelardi, Julia P. (1 April 2007). 2582:Ĺ˝ivojinović, Dragoljub R. (1990). 2282:Elizabeth: Grand Duchess of Russia 609:, a Russian peasant and wandering 577:Relationship with Grigori Rasputin 241:Tatiana was the younger sister of 90:, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire 25: 4565:20th-century executions by Russia 4440:Children of Nicholas II of Russia 4430:House of Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov 216:Великая Княжна Татьяна Николаевна 4450:Russian people of German descent 4445:Russian people of Danish descent 4384: 4383: 3927:Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna 3889:Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna 3853:Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna 3122:Alexander III, Emperor of Russia 2140:"Six Years at the Russian Court" 1676: 193: 58:Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna 18:Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna 3791:Grand Duchess Maria Mikhailovna 3719:Grand Duchess Natalia Alexeevna 3388:The Romanovs: The Final Chapter 2906:The Romanovs: The Final Chapter 2880:The Romanovs: The Final Chapter 2609:Welsh, Frances (14 June 2018). 2405:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 344. 2006:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 370. 1757:"Memories of the Russian Court" 1378:Princess Louise of Hesse-Kassel 675:Young adulthood and World War I 493:Grand Duke George Alexandrovich 4555:Nurses from the Russian Empire 3894:Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna 3698:Grand Duchess Natalia Petrovna 3531:. Westholme Publishing, 2015. 3317:King, Greg and Wilson, Penny. 3277:Six Years at the Russian Court 2494:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 404 2468:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 342 2459:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 432 2355:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 511 2346:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 507 2262:, Doubleday, 2000, pp. 129–130 2051:Maylunas and Mironenko, p. 460 1621:Victoria of the United Kingdom 1133:Russian Orthodox Church Abroad 1081:Russian Orthodox Church Abroad 753:Valentina Ivanovna Chebotareva 475:Baby Tatiana in a bonnet, 1898 331:General Count Alexander Grabbe 1: 4530:Eastern Orthodox royal saints 4465:20th-century Christian saints 4455:Daughters of Russian emperors 4425:People from Petergofsky Uyezd 3884:Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna 3501:Memories of the Russian Court 3434:The Last Days of the Romanovs 3272:. December 2004, p. 184. 2849:The Last Days of the Romanovs 2836:The Last Days of the Romanovs 2803:The Last Days of the Romanovs 2772:The Last Days of the Romanovs 2633:: CS1 maint: date and year ( 1501:Princess Elisabeth of Prussia 1468:Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse 446:Tatiana with her mother, 1914 32:Eastern Slavic naming customs 4480:Russian women in World War I 3990:Murder of the Romanov family 3609:10.1371/journal.pone.0004838 3478:Tschebotarioff, Gregory P., 3238:. Leppi Publications, 1993. 2946:10.1371/journal.pone.0004838 2882:, Random House, 1995, p. 147 2757:Greg King and Penny Wilson, 2503:Greg King and Penny Wilson, 1972:Greg King and Penny Wilson, 1155:St. Peter and Paul Cathedral 1145:Russian Orthodox Church as a 992:Romanov graves and DNA proof 913:Murder of the Romanov family 819:Allegedly, the Serbian king 788:see ... you know whom ...". 743:broke out, Tatiana became a 728:during a performance at the 3755:Grand Duchess Olga Pavlovna 3065:Nicholas II, Tsar of Russia 2483:Digest: A Journal of Record 836:wanted to marry her to the 382:Princess Irina Alexandrovna 308:Grand Duchess Tatiana, 1914 208:Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanova 139:Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanova 69:Grand Duchess Tatiana, 1914 4591: 4470:20th-century Russian women 4356:Romanov Family Association 3171:Willis, Daniel A. (2002). 3031:Shevchenko, Maxim (2000). 1536: 1419: 1346:Princess Dagmar of Denmark 1293: 1187: 1164: 1036: 910: 863:Russian Revolution of 1917 509:Tsarevich Alexei of Russia 357:When she was 8, her tutor 300:Appearance and personality 174:Alix of Hesse and by Rhine 30:In this name that follows 29: 4435:Grand duchesses of Russia 4379: 3936: 3674:Grand Duchesses of Russia 2424:Rappaport, Helen (2014). 2024:Tschebotarioff, pp. 59–60 1606: 1598: 1570: 1548: 1544: 1508: 1486: 1478: 1449: 1427: 1423: 1385: 1363: 1355: 1327: 1305: 1301: 1265: 1243: 1235: 1207: 1191: 952:Father Ioann of Kronstadt 938:to ease his kidney pain. 815:Negotiations for marriage 215: 138: 129: 62: 4520:Murdered Russian royalty 3351:30 December 2019 at the 3335:, Back Bay Books, 1983, 3319:The Fate of the Romanovs 3286:. Greenwood Press, 1999. 3008:. Yahoo!. Archived from 2759:The Fate of the Romanovs 2556:"Почетна — Arhiv Srbije" 2505:The Fate of the Romanovs 2138:Eagar, Margaret (1906). 1974:The Fate of the Romanovs 639:", as "almost a saint". 624:Sofia Ivanovna Tyutcheva 245:and the elder sister of 154:Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov 4540:Eastern Catholic saints 4510:Executed Russian people 4211:Mikhail Medvedev-Kudrin 3127:Encyclopædia Britannica 3070:Encyclopædia Britannica 2860:King and Wilson, p. 303 2783:King and Wilson, p. 276 2748:King and Wilson, p. 242 2520:, Greenwood Press, 1999 2485:, December 2004, p. 184 2271:Radzinsky, pp. 129–130. 1320:Christian IX of Denmark 1226:Alexander III of Russia 1065:Eastern Orthodox Church 286:Russian Orthodox Church 251:Grand Duchess Anastasia 109:Russian Soviet Republic 27:Grand Duchess of Russia 4515:Executed Russian women 4336:List of Russian saints 4180:Yevgeni Preobrazhensky 3487:The Last Grand Duchess 3374:Nicholas and Alexandra 2687:Tschebotarioff, p. 195 2678:Tschebotarioff, p. 192 2669:Tschebotarioff, p. 191 2170:The Last Grand Duchess 2015:King and Wilson, p. 48 1908:Nicholas and Alexandra 1717:Nicholas and Alexandra 1200:Alexander II of Russia 1047:Saint Tatiana Romanova 1001: 946: 922: 858: 807: 779:Romances with soldiers 771: 684: 586: 562: 519: 476: 468: 447: 403: 373: 317: 309: 4475:Female wartime nurses 4145:Alexander Beloborodov 4014:Nicholas II of Russia 2414:Tschebotarioff, p. 59 1944:Tschebotarioff, p. 60 1284:Nicholas II of Russia 1037:Further information: 1015:Richard Meinertzhagen 999: 956:Gardens of Gethsemane 944: 920: 911:Further information: 856: 805: 769: 734:Dowager Empress Maria 682: 584: 560: 517: 474: 466: 445: 401: 371: 315: 307: 164:Nicholas II of Russia 4420:People from Petergof 4140:Filipp Goloshchyokin 4020:Alexandra Feodorovna 3561:Alexander Palace.org 3506:Zeepvat, Charlotte. 3415:Occleshaw, Michael, 3282:Fuhrmann, Joseph T. 3004:Eckel, Mike (2008). 2895:, Orion, pp. 146–150 2516:Furhmann, Joseph T. 1683:Biography portal 218:; 10 June [ 124:, Russian Federation 3600:2009PLoSO...4.4838C 3473:Nezavisemaya Gazeta 3461:. Doubleday. 2000, 3457:Radzinsky, Edvard. 3404:. 1997, Doubleday, 3037:Nezavisemaya Gazeta 2937:2009PLoSO...4.4838C 2891:Michael Occleshaw, 2613:. Short Books Ltd. 2258:Radzinsky, Edvard, 2224:on 30 December 2019 2190:Massie, pp. 199–200 2144:alexanderpalace.org 1761:alexanderpalace.org 1087:Moscow Patriarchate 628:Grand Duchess Xenia 481:Emperor Nicholas II 416:duty. Vyrubova and 247:Grand Duchess Maria 4575:Daughters of dukes 4485:World War I nurses 4260:October Revolution 4256:Russian Revolution 4160:Nikolay Tolmachyov 3386:Massie, Robert K. 3372:Massie, Robert K. 3289:Gilliard, Pierre. 2878:Robert K. Massie, 2869:Rappaport, p. 190. 2611:Imperial Tea Party 2477:De Malama, Peter, 1715:Massie, Robert K. 1002: 947: 923: 859: 840:, with the future 808: 772: 685: 657:Maurice PalĂ©ologue 587: 563: 520: 477: 469: 448: 404: 374: 326:Sophie Buxhoeveden 318: 310: 267:Russian Revolution 263:Grand Duchess Olga 243:Grand Duchess Olga 230:. She was born at 4397: 4396: 4371:Romanov impostors 4266:Russian Civil War 4234: 4233: 4135:Felix Dzerzhinsky 4106: 4105: 3956: 3955: 3693:Empress Elizabeth 3459:The Rasputin File 3442:978-0-312-60347-2 3303:Hawkins, George. 3275:Eagar, Margaret. 3263:The Real Tsaritsa 3204:Maclagan, Michael 3043:on 24 August 2005 2770:Helen Rappaport, 2595:978-86-13-00494-3 2529:De Malama, p. 184 2260:The Rasputin File 1820:Meriel Buchanan. 1666: 1665: 1662: 1661: 1125: 1124: 1061:Venerated in 1039:Romanov sainthood 896:Alexandra Tegleva 761:Tatiana Committee 717:'s engagement to 536:Alexander Pushkin 485:Empress Alexandra 393:Eugene Kobylinsky 259:Tsarina Alexandra 228:Tsarina Alexandra 201: 200: 184:Russian Orthodoxy 143: 142: 107:, Yekaterinburg, 16:(Redirected from 4582: 4505:Executed royalty 4387: 4386: 4175:Gavril Myasnikov 4170:Fyodor Lukoyanov 4115: 4001: 3983: 3976: 3969: 3960: 3667: 3660: 3653: 3644: 3639: 3629: 3611: 3499:Vyrubova, Anna. 3430:Rappaport, Helen 3222: 3221: 3196: 3187: 3186: 3168: 3159: 3158: 3156: 3154: 3139: 3130: 3119: 3110: 3109: 3107: 3105: 3082: 3073: 3062: 3053: 3052: 3050: 3048: 3039:. 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Index

Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna
Eastern Slavic naming customs
patronymic
family name

Peterhof Palace
Ipatiev House
Russian Soviet Republic
Peter and Paul Cathedral, Saint Petersburg
House
Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov
Nicholas II of Russia
Alix of Hesse and by Rhine
Russian Orthodoxy
Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna's signature
Russian
O.S.
Tsar Nicholas II
Tsarina Alexandra
Peterhof Palace
Saint Petersburg
Grand Duchess Olga
Grand Duchess Maria
Grand Duchess Anastasia
Tsarevich Alexei
Tsarina Alexandra
Grand Duchess Olga
Russian Revolution
murder
canonization

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