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Nicholas II (Russian: Николай II, Николай Александрович Романов, tr. Nikolay II, Nikolay Alexandrovich Romanov) (18 May [O.S. 6 May] 1868 – 17 July 1918) was the last Czar of Russia, Grand Duke of Finland, and titular King of Poland. His official title was Nicholas II, Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias and he is currently regarded as Saint Nicholas the Passion-Bearer by the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church. Nicholas II ruled from 1894 until his abdication on 15 March 1917. His reign saw Imperial Russia go from being one of the foremost great powers of the world to an economic and military disaster. Critics nicknamed him Nicholas the Bloody because of the Khodynka Tragedy, Bloody Sunday, and the anti-Semitic pogroms that
occurred during his reign. As head of state, he approved the Russian
mobilization of August 1914 which marked the first fatal step into World War I and thus into the demise of the Romanov dynasty less than four years later. Nicholas II abdicated following the February Revolution of 1917 during which he and his family were imprisoned first in the Alexander Palace at Tsarskoye Selo, then later in the Governor's Mansion in Tobolsk, and finally at the Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg. Nicholas II, his wife, his son, his four daughters, the family's medical doctor, the Tsar's valet, the Empress' lady-in-waiting and the family's cook were all killed in the same room by the Bolsheviks on
the night of 16/17 July 1918. This led to the canonization of Nicholas
II, his wife the Empress and their children as martyrs by various
groups tied to the Russian Orthodox Church within Russia and, prominently, outside Russia. Nicholas was the son of Emperor Alexander III and Empress Maria Feodorovna of Russia, the latter was born "Princess Dagmar of Denmark". His paternal grandparents were Emperor Alexander II and Empress Maria Alexandrovna of Russia, the latter was born "Princess Marie of Hesse". His maternal grandparents were King Christian IX of Denmark and Princess Louise of Hesse-Kassel.
Nicholas
often referred to his father nostalgically in letters after Alexander's
death in 1894, though as a child, he was jealous of his father's
physical strength, demonstrated when his father had lifted a 60 pound
stone with one hand. He was also very close to his mother, revealed in
their published letters to and from one another. Nicholas had three younger brothers (Alexander [1869-1870], George [1871-1899], and Michael [1878-1918]) and two younger sisters (Xenia [1875-1960] and Olga [1882-1960]). Since his father's cousin, Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich,
shared the same first name, the Grand Duke was often known within the
Imperial Family as "Nicholasha" to distinguish him from the future
Czar. Maternally, Nicholas was the nephew of several monarchs, including King George I of Greece, King Frederick VIII of Denmark, Alexandra, Queen consort of the United Kingdom, and The Crown Princess of Hanover. Nicholas, Nicholas's wife, and Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany were all first cousins of George V,
king of Great Britain. Nicholas' mother, the Empress Marie, born
Princess Dagmar of Denmark, was the sister of Queen Alexandra, the
consort of Edward VII, and the mother of George V. The Empress
Alexandra was the daughter of Princess Alice, herself a daughter of
Queen Victoria, thus making Edward VII her Uncle, and cousin to the
Emperor Wilhelm, on her mother's side; and equally a direct decendant of
Queen Victoria. The Emperor Wilhelm was a son of Queen Victoria's
eldest daughter, also named Victoria, who married Crown Prince
Frederick of Germany. Nicholas and Wilhelm were not each other's first
cousin, but they were third cousins, once removed, as each descended
from Frederick William III, King of Prussia. On 13 March 1881, following the assassination of his grandfather, Alexander II, Nicholas became Tsarevich and his father became Tsar Alexander III. Nicholas and other family members witnessed this event while staying at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg, but for security reasons, the new Czar and his family relocated their primary residence to the Gatchina Palace outside the city. A
long trip for educational purposes became an important part of training
for the state activity of the members of the Russian Imperial house. In
1890 Emperor Alexander III of Russia decided to establish the Trans-Siberian Railway and
his heir Tsarevich Nicholas took part in the opening ceremony, and from
there he was obliged to make a journey around the world, which became
known as the Eastern Journey. Although Nicholas attended meetings of the Imperial Council,
his obligations were limited until he acceded to the throne, which was
not expected for many years, since his father was only forty-five. While he was Tsarevich, Nicholas had an affair with the ballet dancer Mathilde Kschessinska. Against the initial wishes of his parents, Nicholas was determined to marry Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt, the fourth daughter of Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse and Princess Alice of the United Kingdom, second eldest daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. His parents intended a more politically beneficial arrangement with Princess Hélène, daughter of Philippe, comte de Paris, pretender to the French throne, hoping to cement Russia's new alliance with France, but eventually yielded to their son's insistence. Nicholas became engaged to Alix of Hesse in
April 1894. Alix was hesitant to accept the engagement due to the
requirement that she convert from Lutheranism to Russian Orthodoxy and
renounce her former faith. An exception was made for Alix where she
could convert without renouncing her Lutheran faith and convert with a
clear conscience. Nicholas and Alix became formally engaged on 8 April
1894. Alix converted to Orthodoxy in November 1894, and took the name
Alexandra Fedorovna, also in attempt to be more accepted by the People
of Russia. Nicholas and Alexandra were related to each other along
multiple ancestral lines. Nicholas
took the throne in 1894 at the age of 26 following Alexander III's
unexpected death. Throughout 1894, Alexander's health rapidly declined
and at 49, he died of kidney disease. Because Alexander had expected to
live and rule for another 20 or 30 years, Nicholas did not have as much
political training or imperial experience as perhaps necessary. It is
said that Nicholas felt unprepared for the duties of the crown asking
his cousin, "What is going to happen to me and all of Russia?" Finance Minister Sergei Witte,
however, recognized the need to train Nicholas early, suggesting to
Alexander that Nicholas act as chairman of the Siberian Railway
Committee. Alexander
argued that Nicholas was not mature enough to take on serious
responsibilities, to which Witte replied that if he was not introduced
to state affairs Nicholas would never be ready to understand them. Nicholas
also acted as chairman of the Special Committee on Famine Relief,
established after the devastating famines and droughts of 1891-1892,
and he served on the Finance Committee and State Military Council
before his coronation. Perhaps
underprepared and unskilled, Nicholas was not altogether untrained for
his duties as Tsar. Throughout his reign, Nicholas chose to maintain
the conservative policies favored by his father. While Alexander had
concentrated on the formulation of general policy, Nicholas devoted
much more attention to the details of administration. Nicholas
and Alix's wedding was originally scheduled for the following spring,
however it was moved forward at Nicholas' insistence. Staggering under
the weight of his new office, he had no intention of allowing the one
person who gave him confidence to leave his side. The
wedding took place on 26 November 1894. Alexandra wore the traditional
dress of Romanov brides, and Nicholas a Hussar's uniform. Each holding
a lighted candle Nicholas and Alexandra faced the Palace priest; a few
minutes before one in the afternoon, they were married. Despite a visit to the United Kingdom before his accession, where he observed the House of Commons in debate and seemed impressed by the machinery of democracy, Nicholas turned his back on any notion of giving away any power to elected representatives in Russia. Shortly after he came to the Throne, a deputation of peasants and workers from various towns' local assemblies (zemstvos) came to the Winter Palace proposing court reforms, such as the adoption of a constitutional monarchy, and reform that would improve the political and social life of the peasantry. Although
the addresses they had sent in beforehand were couched in mild and
loyal terms, Nicholas was angry and ignored advice from an Imperial
Family Council by saying to them: "... it has come to my knowledge that
during the last months there have been heard in some assemblies of the
zemstvos the voices of those who have indulged in a senseless dream
that the zemstvos be called upon to participate in the government of
the country. I want everyone to know that I will devote all my strength
to maintain, for the good of the whole nation, the principle of absolute autocracy, as firmly and as strongly as did my late lamented father." On 14 May 1896, Nicholas' formal coronation as Tsar was held in Uspensky Cathedral located within the Kremlin. In celebration on 18 May 1896, a large festival with food, free beer and souvenirs was held in Khodynka Field outside
Moscow. Khodynka was chosen as the location as it was believed to be
the sacred centre of the Russian Empire and would therefore demonstrate
Nicholas' legitimacy as Tsar and ties to the old autocracy. Khodynka
was also used as a military training ground and the field was uneven
with trenches. When food and drink were handed out, the crowd rushed to
get their share and individuals were tripped and trampled. Of the approximate 100,000 in attendance, it is estimated that 7,000 individuals died and another 9,000 to 20,000 were injured. The Khodynka Tragedy was
seen as a bad omen and in addition to his conservative policies,
Nicholas found gaining popular trust difficult from the beginning of
his reign. The first years of his reign saw little more than continuation and development of the policy pursued by Alexander III. Nicholas allotted money for the All-Russia exhibition of 1896. In 1897 restoration of gold standard by Sergei Witte, Minister of Finance, completed the series of financial reforms, initiated fifteen years earlier. By 1902, the Great Siberian railway was
nearly completed; this helped the Russian trade in the Far East but the
railway still required huge amounts of work (England and France
railways completed in 1930s). A
clash between Russia and Japan was almost inevitable by the turn of the
20th century. Russia had expanded in the East, and the growth of her
settlement and territorial ambitions, as her southward path to the
Balkans was frustrated, conflicted with Japan's own territorial
ambitions on the Chinese and Asian mainland. War began in 1904 with a
surprise Japanese attack on the Russian fleet in Port Arthur,
without formal declaration of war. The Russian Baltic fleet traversed
the world to balance power in the East, but after many misadventures on
the way, was almost annihilated by the Japanese in the Battle of the Tsushima Strait. On land the Russian army experienced logistical problems. While commands and supplies came from St. Petersburg,
combat took place in east Asian ports with only the Trans-Siberian
Railway for transport of supplies as well as troops both ways. The
6,000-mile track between St. Petersburg and Port Arthur was one-way,
with no track around Lake Baikal, allowing only gradual build-up of the
forces on the front. Besieged Port Arthur fell to the Japanese, after nine months of resistance. In mid-1905, Nicholas II accepted American mediation, appointing Sergei Witte chief plenipotentiary for the peace talks. War was ended by the Treaty of Portsmouth. Nicholas's
stance on the war was something that baffled many. Nicholas approached
the war with confidence and saw it as an opportunity to raise Russian
morale and patriotism, paying little attention to the finances of a
long-distance war. Shortly
before the Japanese attack on Port Arthur, Nicholas held strong to the
belief that there would be no war. Despite the onset of the war and the
many defeats Russia suffered, Nicholas still believed in, and expected,
a final victory. Many people took the Tsar's confidence and
stubbornness for indifference; believing him to be completely impervious.
As Russia continued to face defeat by the Japanese, the call for peace
grew. Nicholas's own mother, as well as his cousin, Kaiser William,
urged Nicholas to open peace negotiations. Despite the efforts for
peace, Nicholas remained evasive. It was not until 27 March-28 and the
annihilation of the Russian fleet by the Japanese, that Nicholas
finally decided to pursue peace.
The administration of Nicholas II published anti-Semitic propaganda that encouraged people to riot in various parts of the Pale of Settlement, resulting in the pogroms of 1903-1906. The Kishinev newspaper "Bessarabets", which published anti-Semitic materials, received funds from Viacheslav Plehve, Minister of the Interior. These publications served to fuel the Kishinev pogrom. With
the defeat of Russia by a non-Western power, the prestige of the
government and the authority of the autocratic empire was brought down
significantly. Defeat
was a severe blow and the Imperial government collapsed, with the
ensuing revolutionary outbreaks of 1905-1906. In hope to frighten any
further contradiction many demonstrators were shot in front of the
Winter Palace in St. Petersburg; the Emperor's Uncle, Grand Duke Sergei,
was killed by a revolutionary's bomb in Moscow as he left the Kremlin.
The Black Sea Fleet mutinied,
and a railway strike developed into a general strike which paralyzed
the country. Tsar Nicholas II, who was taken by surprise by the events,
mixed his anger with bewilderment. A few days prior to the Bloody Sunday (9 (22) January 1905), the leader of the initiative himself, a priest named George Gapon,
informed the government of the forthcoming procession to the Winter
Palace to hand a petition to the Tsar. On the evening before, on
Saturday, 8 (21),
the ministers convened to consider the situation. There was never any
thought that the Tsar, who had left the capital for Tsarskoye Selo on
the advice of the ministers would actually be asked to meet Gapon; the
suggestion that some other member of the Imperial family receive the
petition was rejected. Finally informed by the Prefect of Police that
he lacked the men to pluck Gapon from among his followers and place him
under arrest, the newly appointed Minister of the Interior, Prince Sviatopolk-Mirsky,
and his colleagues decided to bring additional troops into the city for
control. That evening Nicholas wrote in his diary, "Troops have been
brought from the outskirts to reinforce the garrison. Up to now the
workers have been calm. Their number is estimated at 120,000. At the
head of their union is a kind of socialist priest named Gapon. Mirsky
came this evening to present his report on the measures taken." At Tsarskoye Selo, Nicholas was stunned when he heard what had happened. On Sunday, 9 (22) January 1905, Gapon began his march. Locking arms, the workers marched peacefully through
the streets. Some carried religious icons and banners, as well as
national flags and portraits of the Czar. As they walked they sang
religious hymns and the Imperial anthem, 'God Save The Tsar'. At 2PM
all of the converging processions were scheduled to arrive at the
Winter Palace. There was no single confrontation with the troops.
Throughout the city, at bridges on strategic boulevards, the marchers
found their way blocked by lines of infantry, backed by Cossacks and
Hussars; and the soldiers opened fire on the crowd. The official number
of victims was ninety-two dead and several hundred wounded. Gapon
vanished and the other leaders of the march were seized. Expelled from
the capital, they circulated through the empire, increasing the
casualties, possibly into thousands.
That day, which became known as "Bloody Sunday", was a turning point in
Russian history. It shattered the ancient, legendary belief that the
Tsar and the people were one. As bullets riddled their icons, their
banners and their portraits of Nicholas, the people shrieked, "The Tsar
will not help us!" Outside Russia, the future British Labour Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald attacked the Tsar calling him a "blood-stained creature and a common murderer". From
his hiding place, Father Gapon issued a letter. He stated, "Nicholas
Romanov, formerly Tsar and at present soul-murderer of the Russian
empire. The innocent blood of workers, their wives and children lies
forever between you and the Russian people ... May all the blood which
must be spilled fall upon you, you Hangman. I call upon all the
socialist parties of Russia to come to an immediate agreement among
themselves and bring an armed uprising against Tsarism." Under pressure from the attempted Russian Revolution of 1905, on 5 August 1905 Tsar Nicholas II issued a manifesto about the convocation of the State Duma,
initially thought to be an advisory organ. Minister
of the Court Count Fredericks commented, "The Deputies, they give one
the impression of a gang of criminals who are only waiting for the
signal to throw themselves upon the ministers and cut their throats. I
will never again set foot among those people." The Dowager Empress noticed "incomprehensible hatred." In the October Manifesto, the Tsar pledged to introduce basic civil liberties,
provide for broad participation in the State Duma, and endow the Duma
with legislative and oversight powers. However, determined to preserve
"autocracy" even in the context of reform, he restricted the Duma's
authority in many ways—not least of which was an absence of
parliamentary control over the appointment or dismissal of cabinet
ministers. Nicholas's relations with the Duma were not good. The First Duma, with a majority of Kadets,
almost immediately came into conflict with him. Scarcely had the 524
members sat down at the Tauride Palace when they formulated an 'Address
to the Throne'. It demanded universal suffrage, radical land reform,
the release of all political prisoners and the dismissal of ministers
appointed by the Tsar in favour of ministers acceptable to the Duma. Although Nicholas initially had a good relationship with his relatively liberal prime minister, Sergei Witte, Alexandra distrusted him (because he instigated an investigation of Rasputin),
and as the political situation deteriorated, Nicholas dissolved the
Duma. The Duma was populated with radicals, many of whom wished to push
through legislation that would abolish private property ownership,
among other things. Witte, unable to grasp the seemingly insurmountable
problems of reforming Russia and the monarchy, wrote to Nicholas on 14
April 1906 resigning his office (however, other accounts have said that
Witte was forced to resign by the Emperor). Nicholas was not ungracious
to Witte and an Imperial Rescript was published on 22 April creating
Witte a Knight of the Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky,
with diamonds (the last two words were written in the Emperor's own
hand, followed by "I remain unalterably well-disposed to you and
sincerely grateful, for ever more Nicholas."). A
second Duma met for the first time in February 1907. The leftist
parties including the Social Democrats and the Social Revolutionaries
which had boycotted the First Duma, had won two hundred seats in the
Second, more than a third of the membership. Again Nicholas waited
impatiently to rid himself of the Duma. After the Second Duma resulted in similar problems, the new prime minister Pyotr Stolypin (whom
Witte described as 'reactionary') unilaterally dissolved it, and
changed the electoral laws to allow for future Dumas to have a more
conservative content, and to be dominated by the liberal-conservative Octobrist Party of Alexander Guchkov.
Stolypin, a skillful politician, had ambitious plans for reform. These
included making loans available to the lower classes to enable them to
buy land, with the intent of forming a farming class loyal to the
crown. Nevertheless, when the Duma remained hostile, Stolypin had no
qualms about invoking Article 87 of the Fundamental Laws, which
empowered the Tsar to issue 'urgent and extraordinary' emergency
decrees 'during the recess of the State Duma'. Stolypin's most famous
legislative act, the change in peasant land tenure, was promulgated
under Article 87. The
third Duma remained an independent body. This time the members
proceeded cautiously. Instead of hurling themselves at the government,
opposing parties within the Duma worked to develop the body as a whole.
In the classic manner of the British Parliament, the Duma reached for
power grasping for the national purse strings. The Duma had the right
to question ministers behind closed doors as to their proposed
expenditures. These sessions, endorsed by Stolypin, were educational
for both sides, and, in time, mutual antagonism was replaced by mutual
respect. Even the sensitive area of military expenditure, where the
October Manifesto clearly had reserved decisions to the throne, a Duma
commission began to operate. Composed of aggressive patriots no less
anxious than Nicholas to restore the fallen honour of Russian arms, the
Duma commission frequently recommended expenditures even larger than
those proposed. With
the passage of time, Nicholas also began to have confidence in the
Duma. "This Duma cannot be reproached with an attempt to seize power
and there is no need at all to quarrel with it" he said to Stolypin in
1909. Unfortunately
Stolypin's plans were undercut by conservatives at court. Reactionaries
such as Prince Vladimir Orlov never tired of telling the Tsar that the
very existence of the Duma was a blot on the autocracy. Stolypin, they
whispered, was a traitor and secret revolutionary who was conniving
with the Duma to steal the prerogatives assigned the Tsar by God. Witte
also engaged in constant intrigue against Stolypin. Although Stolypin
had had nothing to do with Witte's fall, Witte blamed him. Stolypin had
unwittingly angered the Empress. He had ordered an investigation into
Rasputin and presented it to the Czar. Stolypin, on his own authority,
ordered Rasputin to leave St. Petersburg. Alexandra protested vehemently
but Nicholas refused to overrule his Prime Minister, who had more influence with the Emperor. By the time of Stolypin's assassination by Dmitry Bogrov,
a student (and police informant) in a theatre in Kiev on 18 September
1911, Stolypin had grown weary of the burdens of office. For a man who
preferred clear decisive action, working with a sovereign who believed
in fatalism and mysticism was frustrating. As an example, Nicholas once
returned a document unsigned with the note: "Despite most convincing
arguments in favour of adopting a positive decision in this matter, an
inner voice keeps on insisting more and more that I do not accept
responsibility for it. So far my conscience has not deceived me.
Therefore I intend in this case to follow its dictates. I know that
you, too, believe that "a Tsar's heart is in God's hands". Let it be
so. For all laws established by me I bear a great responsibility before
God, and I am ready to answer for my decision at any time." Alexandra, believing that Stolypin had severed the bonds that her son depended on for life, hated the Prime Minister. In
March 1911, in a fit of anger stating that he no longer commanded the
imperial confidence, Stolypin asked to be relieved of his office. In
1912, a fourth Duma was elected with almost the same membership as the
third. "The Duma started too fast. Now it is slower, but better, and
more lasting." stated Nicholas to Sir Bernard Pares. The First World War was
a complete and utter disaster for Russia. By late 1916, among the
Romanov family desperation reached the point of which Grand Duke Paul
Alexandrovich, younger brother of Alexander III and the Czar's only
surviving uncle was deputed to beg Nicholas to grant a constitution and
a government responsible to the Duma. Nicholas sternly refused,
reproaching his uncle for asking him to break his coronation oath to
maintain autocratic power intact for his successors. In the Duma on 2
December 1916, Purishkevich, a fervent patriot, monarchist and war
worker denounced the dark forces which surrounded the throne in a
thunderous two hour speech which was tumultuously applauded.
"Revolution" he warned "and an obscure peasant shall govern Russia no
longer". Further complicating domestic matters was the matter of the succession. Alexandra bore Nicholas four daughters, the Grand Duchess Olga in 1895, the Grand Duchess Tatiana in 1897, Grand Duchess Maria in 1899, and Grand Duchess Anastasia in 1901, before their son Alexei was born on 12 August 1904. The young heir was afflicted with hemophilia,
a hereditary disease that prevents blood clotting properly, which at
that time was untreatable and usually led to an untimely death. As a
granddaughter of Queen Victoria, Alexandra carried the same gene mutation that afflicted several of the major European royal houses such as Spain and Prussia. Hemophilia therefore became known as "the royal disease".
Alexandra had passed it on to her son. As all of Nicholas and
Alexandra's daughters perished with their parents and brother in
Yekaterinburg in 1918, it is not known whether any of them inherited
the gene as carriers. Because
of the fragility of the autocracy at this time, Nicholas and Alexandra
chose not to divulge Alexei's condition to anyone outside the royal
household. In fact, there were many in the Imperial household who were
unaware of the exact nature of the Tsarevich's illness. They knew that
he suffered from some serious malady; however, the exact nature of his
suffering was not revealed to all. At first Alexandra turned to Russian
doctors and medics to treat Alexei; however, their treatments generally
failed, and Alexandra increasingly turned to mystics and holy men or starets as they were called in Russian. One of these, an illiterate Siberian, Grigori Rasputin,
appeared to have some success. Rasputin's influence over Empress
Alexandra, and consequently the Czar, had grown stronger ever since
1912, when the Tsarevich nearly died from an injury whilst the family
was on vacation at the hunting lodges at Bialowieza and Spala (now part
of Poland). The bleeding went unstopped and grew steadily worse until
it was assumed that the Tsarevich would not survive, and the Last
Sacrament was administered on 10 October 1912. Desperate, Alexandra
called Rasputin as a last resort, and the reply came, "God has seen
your tears and heard your prayers. Do not grieve. The Little One will
not die. Do not allow the doctors to bother him too much." Miraculously
it seemed to Alexandra, the hemorrhage stopped the next day and the boy
began to recover. Alexandra took this as a sign that Rasputin was a starets and
that God was with him; for the rest of her life she would defend him
and turn her wrath against anyone who dared to question his moral
character.
Following the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne by Gavrilo Princip, a member of the Serb nationalist association known as the Black Hand, in Sarajevo on
28 June 1914, Nicholas vacillated as to Russia's course of action. The
outbreak of war was not inevitable, but leaders, diplomats and
nineteenth-century alliances created a climate for large-scale
conflict. The concept of Pan-Slavism and
ethnicity allied Russia and Serbia in a treaty of protection, and
Germany and Austria were similarly allied. Territorial conflict created
rivalries between Germany and France and between Austria and Serbia,
and as a consequence alliance networks developed across Europe. The Triple Entente and Triple Alliance networks
were set before the war. The assassination of Ferdinand tripped these
alliance networks bringing each country into conflict with one another
as each independently declared war. Nicholas wanted neither to abandon Serbia to the ultimatum of Austria-Hungary, nor to provoke a general war. In a series of letters exchanged with Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany (the so-called "Willy and Nicky correspondence")
the two proclaimed their desire for peace, and each attempted to get
the other to back down. Nicholas took stern measures in this regard,
demanding that Russia's mobilization be only against the Austrian
border, in the hopes of preventing war with the German Empire. The
Russians had no contingency plans for a partial mobilization, and on 31
July 1914 Nicholas took the fateful step of confirming the order for a
general mobilization. Nicholas was strongly counselled against
mobilization of the Russian forces but chose to ignore such advice.
Nicholas put the Russian army on "alert" on
July 25. Although this was not mobilization, it threatened the German
and Austrian borders and looked like a military declaration of war. On
28 July, Austria formally declared war against Serbia, bringing Russia
and Germany into conflict as protectorates, and France and Britain and
Russian allies. Count Witte told the French Ambassador Paleologue that
from Russia's point of view the war was madness, Slav solidarity was
simply nonsense and Russia could hope for nothing from the war. On
31 July Russia completed its mobilization, but still maintained that it
would not attack if peace talks were to begin. Germany then replied
that Russia must demobilize within the next twelve hours. In Saint Petersburg, at 7PM, with the ultimatum to Russia expired, the German ambassador to Russia met with the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Sazonov,
asked three times if Russia would not reconsider and then with shaking
hands delivered the note accepting Russia's war challenge and declaring
war. The outbreak of war on 1 August 1914 found Russia grossly
unprepared. Russia and her allies placed their faith in her army, the
famous 'Russian steamroller'. Its
pre-war regular strength was 1,400,000; mobilisation added 3,100,000
reserves and millions more stood ready behind them. In every other
respect, however, Russia was unprepared for war. Germany had ten times
as much railway track per square mile and whereas Russian soldiers
travelled an average of 800 miles (1,290 km) to reach the
front, German soldiers travelled less than a quarter of that distance.
Russian heavy industry was still too small to equip the massive armies
the Tsar could raise and her reserves of munitions were pitifully
small. With the Baltic Sea barred by German U-boats and the Dardanelles
by the guns of her former ally Turkey, Russia could receive help only
via Archangel which was frozen solid in winter, or Vladivostock, which
was over 4,000 miles (6,400 km) from the front line. The
Russian High Command was moreover greatly weakened by the mutual
contempt between Vladimir Sukhomlinov, the Minister of War, and the redoubtable warrior giant Grand Duke Nicholas Nicolaievich who commanded the armies in the field. In spite of all of this, an immediate attack was ordered against the German province of East Prussia. The Germans mobilized there with great efficiency and completely defeated the two Russian armies which had invaded. The Battle of Tannenberg where
an entire Russian army was annihilated cast an ominous shadow over the
empire's future. The loyal officers lost were the very ones needed to
protect the dynasty. The Russian armies later had moderate success
against both the Austro-Hungarian armies and against the forces of the Ottoman Empire. They never succeeded against the might of the German army. Gradually a war of attrition set in on the vast Eastern Front,
where the Russians were facing the combined forces of the German and
Austro-Hungarian Empires, and they suffered staggering losses. General
Denikin, retreating from Galicia wrote, "The German heavy artillery
swept away whole lines of trenches, and their defenders with them. We
hardly replied. There was nothing with which we could reply. Our
regiments, although completely exhausted, were beating off one attack
after another by bayonet .... Blood flowed unendingly, the ranks became
thinner and thinner and thinner. The number of graves multiplied. Total losses for the spring and summer of 1915 amounted to 1,400,000 killed or wounded, while 976,000 had been taken prisoner. On
5 August with the army in retreat, Warsaw fell. Defeat at the front
bred disorder at home. At first the targets were German and for three
days in June shops, bakeries, factories, private houses and country
estates belonging to people with German names were looted and burned.
Then the inflamed mobs turned on the government declaring the Empress
should be shut up in a convent, the Tsar deposed and Rasputin hanged.
Nicholas was by no means deaf to these discontents. An emergency
session of the Duma was summoned and a Special Defence Council
established, its members drawn from the Duma and the Tsar's ministers. In July 1915, King Christian X of Denmark, first cousin of the Tsar, sent Hans Niels Andersen to
Tsarskoye Selo with an offer to act as a mediator. He made several
trips between London, Berlin and Petrograd and in July saw the Dowager
Empress Maria Fyodorovna. Andersen told her they should conclude peace. Nicholas chose to turn down King Christian's offer of mediation. The energetic and efficient General Alexei Polivanov replaced Sukhomlinov as Minister of War, which failed to improve the strategic situation. In the aftermath of The Great Retreat and the loss of the Kingdom of Poland, Nicholas assumed the role of commander-in-chief after dismissing his cousin, Nikolay Nikolayevich,
in September 1915. This was a fatal mistake, as he came to be
personally associated with the continuing losses at the front. He was
also away at the remote HQ at Mogilev,
far from the direct governance of the empire, and when revolution broke
out in Petrograd he was unable to prevent it. In reality the move was
largely symbolic, since all important military decisions were made by
his chief-of-staff General Michael Alexeiev, and Nicholas did little more than review troops, inspect field hospitals, and preside over military luncheons. The
Duma was still calling for political reforms and political unrest
continued throughout the war. Cut off from public opinion, Nicholas
could not see that the dynasty was in decline. With Nicholas at the
front, domestic issues and control of the capital were left with his
wife Alexandra, however Alexandra's relationship with Grigori Rasputin
and her German background further discredited the dynasty's authority.
Nicholas had been repeatedly warned about the destructive influence of Grigori Rasputin but
had failed to remove him. Wild rumours and accusations about Alexandra
and Rasputin appeared almost daily. Alexandra was even brought under
allegations of treason and undermining the government due to her German
roots. It was during the war that St. Petersburg was symbolically
renamed Petrograd, the Slavic equivalent, in response to increasing
war-time Germanophobia. Anger
at Nicholas's failure to act and the extreme damage that Rasputin's
influence was doing to Russia's war effort and to the monarchy led to
his (Rasputin's) murder by a group of nobles, led by Prince Felix Yusupov and Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich, a cousin of the Tsar, on 16 December 1916. As the government failed to produce supplies, there was mounting hardship
creating massive riots and rebellions. With Nicholas away at the front
in 1915, authority appeared to collapse (Empress Alexandra ran the
government from Saint Petersburg from 1915), and Saint Petersburg was
left in the hands of strikers and mutineering conscript soldiers.
Despite efforts by the British Ambassador Sir George Buchanan to
warn the Tsar that he should grant constitutional reforms to fend off
revolution, Nicholas continued to bury himself away at the Staff HQ
(Stavka) 400 miles (600 km) away at Moghilev, leaving his
capital and court open to intrigues and insurrection. By early 1917,
Russia was on the verge of total collapse. The army had taken 15
million men from the farms and food prices had soared. An egg cost four
times what it had in 1914, butter five times as much. The severe winter
dealt the railways, overburdened by emergency shipments of coal and
supplies, the final blow. Russia began the war with 20,000 locomotives;
by 1917 9,000 were in service, while the number of serviceable railway
wagons had dwindled from half a million to 170,000. In February 1917,
1,200 locomotives burst their boilers and nearly 60,000 wagons were
immobilised. In Petrograd supplies of flour and fuel all but
disappeared. War-time
prohibition of alcohol was enacted by Nicholas in order to boost
patriotism and productivity, but instead damaged the treasury and
funding of the war. On
23 February 1917 in Petrograd (as the capital had been renamed) a
combination of very severe cold weather allied with acute food
shortages caused people to start to break shop windows to get bread and
other necessaries. In the streets, red banners appeared and the crowds
chanted "Down with the German woman! Down with Protopopov! Down with
the war!" Police
started to shoot at the populace from rooftops which incited riots. The
troops in the capital were poorly-motivated and their officers had no
reason to be loyal to the regime. They were angry and full of
revolutionary fervor and sided with the populace. The Tsar's Cabinet
begged Nicholas to return to the capital and offered to resign
completely. Five hundred miles away the Tsar, misinformed by Protopopov
that the situation was under control, ordered that firm steps be taken
against the demonstrators. For this task the Petrograd garrison was
quite unsuitable. The cream of the old regular army lay in their graves
in Poland and Galicia. In Petrograd 170,000 recruits, country boys or
older men from the working-class suburbs of the capital itself,
remained to keep control under the command of wounded officers
invalided from the front, and cadets from the military academies. Many
units, lacking both officers and rifles, had never undergone formal
training. General Khabalov attempted to put the Tsar's instructions
into effect on the morning of Sunday, 11 March 1917. Despite huge
posters ordering people to keep off the streets, vast crowds gathered
and were only dispersed after some 200 had been shot dead, though a
company of the Volinsky Regiment fired into the air rather than into the mob, and a company of the Pavlovsky Life Guards shot
the officer who gave the command to open fire. Nicholas, informed of
the situation by Rodzianko, ordered reinforcements to the capital and
suspended the Duma. It was all too late. On 12 March the Volinsky Regiment mutinied
and was quickly followed by the Semonovsky, the Ismailovsky, the
Litovsky and even the legendary Preobrajensky Guard, the oldest and
staunchest regiment founded by Peter the Great. The arsenal was
pillaged, the Ministry of the Interior, Military Government building,
police headquarters, the Law Courts and a score of police buildings
were put to the torch. By noon the fortress of Peter and Paul with its
heavy artillery was in the hands of the insurgents. By nightfall 60,000
soldiers had joined the revolution. Order broke down and members of the Parliament (Duma) formed a Provisional Government to
try to restore order but it was impossible to turn the tide of
revolutionary change. Already the Duma and the Soviet had formed the
nucleus of a Provisional Government and decided that Nicholas must
abdicate. Faced with this demand, which was echoed by his generals,
deprived of loyal troops, with his family firmly in the hands of the
Provisional Government and fearful of unleashing civil war and opening
the way for German conquest, Nicholas had no choice but to submit. At
the end of the "February Revolution" of 1917 (February in the Old Russian Calendar), on 2 March (Julian Calendar)/ 15 March (Gregorian Calendar) 1917, Nicholas II chose to abdicate.
He firstly abdicated in favour of Tsarevich Alexei, but swiftly changed
his mind after advice from doctors that the heir would not live long
apart from his parents who would be forced into exile. Nicholas drew up
a new manifesto naming his brother, Grand Duke Michael, as the next
Emperor of all the Russias. Grand Duke Mikhail declined
to accept the throne until the people were allowed to vote through a
Constituent Assembly for the continuance of the monarchy or a republic.
The abdication of Nicholas II and the subsequent Bolshevik revolution
brought three centuries of the Romanov dynasty's rule to an end. The
fall of autocratic Tsardom brought joy to Liberals and Socialists in
Britain and France and made it possible for the United States of
America, the first foreign government to recognise the Provisional
government, to enter the war early in April fighting in an alliance of
democracies against an alliance of empires. In Russia, the announcement
of the Tsar's abdication was greeted with many emotions. These included
delight, relief, fear, anger and confusion. In August 1917, the Kerensky government evacuated the Romanovs to Tobolsk in
the Urals, allegedly to protect them from the rising tide of
revolution. There they lived in the former Governor's Mansion in
considerable comfort. In October 1917, however, the Bolsheviks seized
power from Kerensky's Provisional Government; Nicholas followed the
events in October with interest but as yet no alarm. He continued to
underestimate Lenin's importance but already began to feel that his
abdication had done Russia more harm than good. In the meantime he and
his family occupied themselves with keeping warm. Conditions of
imprisonment became more strict, and talk of putting Nicholas on trial
grew more frequent. The Tsar was forbidden to wear epaulettes and
the sentries scrawled lewd drawings on the fence to offend his
daughters. On 1 March 1918, the family was placed on soldier's rations,
which meant parting with ten devoted servants and giving up butter and
coffee as luxuries. What kept the family's spirits up was the belief
that help was at hand. The
Romanovs believed that various plots were underway to break them out of
captivity and smuggle them to safety. But on 30 April 1918 they were
transferred to their final destination: the town of Yekaterinburg, where they were imprisoned in the two-story Ipatiev House,
the home of the military engineer Nikolay Nikolayevich Ipatiev. On the
night of 16/17 July 1918, the royal family was awakened around 2:00 am,
told to dress, and led down into a half-basement room at the back of
the Ipatiev house; the pretext for this move was the family's safety -
that anti-Bolshevik forces were approaching Yekaterinburg, and the
house might be fired upon. Present with Nicholas, Alexandra and their
children were their doctor, and three of their servants, who had
voluntarily chosen to remain with family - the Tsar's personal physician Eugene Botkin, his wife's maid Anna Demidova, and the family's chef, Ivan Kharitonov, and footman, Alexei Trupp.
A firing squad had been assembled and was waiting in an adjoining room,
composed of seven Communist soldiers from Central Europe, and three
local Bolsheviks, all under the command of Bolshevik officer Yakov Yurovsky (the
soldiers are often described as Hungarians; in his account, Yurovsky
described them as "Latvians"). Nicholas was carrying his son; when the
family arrived in the basement, the former empress complained that
there were no chairs for them to sit in. Yurovsky ordered chairs
brought in, and when the empress and the heir were seated, the
executioners filed into the room. Yurovsky announced to them that they
had been condemned to death by the Ural Soviet of Workers' Deputies. A
stunned Nicholas asked, "What? What?" and turned toward his family.
Yurovsky repeated the order. One witness among the several who later
wrote accounts of Nicholas's last moments reported that the Tsar said,
"You know not what you do," paraphrasing Jesus's words on the cross. The
executioners drew revolvers and the shooting began. Nicholas was the
first to die; Yurovsky shot him multiple times in the head and chest.
Anastasia, Tatiana, Olga, and Maria survived the first hail of bullets;
the sisters were wearing over 1.3 kilograms of diamonds and precious
gems sewn into their clothing, which provided some initial protection
from the bullets and bayonets. They were stabbed with bayonets and then shot at close range in the head. An
official announcement appeared in the national press two days later,
announcing the killing of the Tsar, but not of his family, in
Yekaterinburg. It declared that the monarch had been executed on the
order of the Presidium of the Ural Regional Soviet, because the
approach of the anti-Bolshevik Czechoslovak Legions in the area posed a danger that the Romanovs might be freed. In
1979, the bodies of Tsar Nicholas II, Tsarina Alexandra, three of their
daughters, and those of four non-family members killed with them, were
discovered near Yekaterinburg by amateur archaeologist Alexander Avdonin.
In January 1998, the remains excavated from underneath the dirt road
near Yekaterinburg were officially identified as those of Nicholas II
and his family (excluding one of the sisters, and Alexei). The
identifications by separate Russian, British and American scientists
using DNA analysis concur and were found to be conclusive. After the testing the remains were finally interred at St. Peter and Paul Cathedral in Saint Petersburg on 17 July 1998, eighty years after they were murdered. In
July 2007, 46-year-old builder Sergei Pogorelov (part of a team from an
amateur history group who spent free summer weekends looking for the
lost Romanovs) said that after stumbling on a small burned area of
ground covered with nettles near Yekaterinburg he had discovered bones
that belonged to "a boy and a young woman roughly the ages of Nicholas’
13-year-old hemophiliac son, Alexei, and a daughter whose remains also
never have been found." On
23 August 2007, acting on standard procedures, prosecutors reopened the
investigation surrounding the deaths of the Imperial Family. On
30 April 2008, DNA tests performed by a U.S. laboratory proved that
bone fragments exhumed in the Ural Mountains belonged to two members of
the Imperial Family, Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich and Grand Duchess
Maria, according to Russian news agencies. That same day it was announced by Russian authorities that the remains of the entire family had been identified. On
1 October 2008, Russia's Supreme Court ruled that Nicholas II and his
family were victims of political repression and should be rehabilitated. In
March 2009, results of the DNA testing were published, confirming that
the two bodies discovered in 2007 were those of Alexei and his sister
Maria. |