Jump to content

Anna Anderson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ferrymansdaughter (talk | contribs) at 13:02, 2 June 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Anna Anderson
File:Annaan.JPG
Born26 December 1896
DiedFebruary 12, 1984(1984-02-12) (aged 87)
Cause of deathPneumonia
Other namesFranziska Schanzkowska, Anastasia Tschaikovsky, Anastasia Manahan
SpouseJohn Eacott Manahan

Anastasia Manahan, usually known as Anna Anderson[1][2] (26 December 1896 – 12 February 1984), was an impostor [3] [4] who claimed to be Grand Duchess Anastasia, the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II, the last autocratic ruler of Imperial Russia, and his wife Tsarina Alexandra. Hardly any relatives of Grand Duchess Anastasia believed Anderson was the Grand Duchess, who was born on 5 June 1901 [5], and was murdered with her family on the night of July 17, 1918, by Bolsheviks in Ekaterinburg, Russia. [6] [7] Remains from all seven members of the Imperial family, including two sets of remains that had been missing until August 2007, have now been identified through DNA testing. Scientists announced in July 2008 that the results have been independently verified by laboratories such as the University of Massachusetts Medical School in the United States. This confirms that all members of the Romanov party were murdered. [8]

It is widely accepted that Anderson was Franziska Schanzkowska, a Kashubian factory worker.[9][10] Most historians accept this identity, and major news agencies such as The Associated Press and United Press International state as a fact in their reporting that Anderson was Schanzkowska[11][12] As early as the 1920s, a private detective investigation had tried to identify Anderson as Schanzkowska, who was born on 26 December 1896, in Pomerania (then in Prussia but now in Poland).[13] In 1927, based on information from that investigation, the Berlin Police officially accepted the identification of the "Unknown" as Schanzkowska.[14] Anderson's mitochondrial DNA is a match to the Schanzkowska family, which indicates that she was Schanzkowska.[9][15] Years after the original testing was done, Dr. Terry Melton stated that the DNA sequence tying Anderson to the Schanzkowska family was still unique though the database of DNA patterns has grown much larger, leading to increased confidence she was indeed Franziska Schanzkowsa.[16]

Anderson's body was cremated upon her death in 1984 her ashes subsequently buried in the churchyard at Castle Seeon, Germany.[17] Ten years later, DNA tests were conducted on samples of her tissue that had been stored at a Charlottesville, Virginia hospital following a medical procedure. The DNA tests showed that Anderson's DNA did not match in any way the Romanov remains or Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (a great-nephew of Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna), but was consistent with the mitochondrial DNA profile of Karl Maucher, a great-nephew of Franziska Schanzkowska.[9][15]

The remains of Grand Duchess Anastasia were brought by plane from Ekaterinburg and buried on 17 July 1998 in the Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral St. Catherine's Chapel, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation along with those of Nicholas II, Alexandra Feodorovna, Olga Nikolaevna and Tatiana Nicolaevna by order of the Russian government. [18]

First appearance of Anderson

Anderson's claim was controversial due to the confusion in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution and the conflicting stories about the fate of the Imperial family coming out of Russia. It has since been proved that all of the family, including seventeen-year-old Anastasia, were murdered and their deaths verified by eyewitness testimonies.[19] Yakov Yurovsky, the Cheka operative and commissar who oversaw the execution of the Romanovs confirmed the killings in a detailed account.[20][21] [22]


Rumours spread that members of the Tsar's family might have survived. These have all been proven to be false.[23][24] [25] One came from the Viennese tailor Heinrich Kleibenzetl who testified at one of the German trials regarding the identity of Anderson. He claimed his landlady, Anna Baoudin, who lived in a building directly opposite the Ipatiev House had identified a wounded Anastasia being treated immediately following the murders at Ekaterinburg. [19] Finally a Red Guard, the same man who had brought her, came to take her away. Kleibenzetl knew no more about her fate .[26] It is fact that Anastasia Romanov never left the cellar of the Ipatiev House alive since her remains have been identified by extensive DNA testing.[8] .[9][15]

Thomas Hildebrand Preston, who was British Consul-General in Ekaterinburg in 1918, rejected its validity, reporting that Kleibenzetl had delivered clothing to the Ipatiev House and seen the grand duchesses walking in the home's enclosed courtyard but had never spoken to any of them. [26] Preston declared that if such activities had been true, he would have been informed, and gave his reason for why the entire episode would have been impossible:

"On the night of the murder a curfew had been imposed, forbidding anybody to appear in the streets after 8 p.m. on pain of death, a regulation which nobody who valued his life would have dared to disobey. In these circumstances we are asked to believe that Svoboda 'and his friend' were able to produce a horse and cart, to (enter) the House Epatiev, identify and bring out the wounded Anastasia (whom they had never seen before), and take her to a house nearby when every house in the vicinity was under the strictest surveillance of the ubiquitous agents of the Tcheka."[27]

Anderson's first claim to be the Grand Duchess Anastasia occurred after her failed suicide attempt in Berlin in 1920, although it was not until 1922 that her claim became famous. Anderson claimed she had traveled by train and walked across borders to Berlin to seek out her "aunt" Princess Irene, sister of Tsarina Alexandra. Once she reached the palace, she claimed no one would recognize her or that they would discover she had borne an illegitimate child. In shame, she attempted to take her life by jumping off a bridge into the Landwehr Canal.[28]

File:Anna1922berlin.jpg
'Fräulein Unbekannt' in 1922.

Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna, the younger sister of Tsar Nicholas II, commented that the suicide attempt "is probably the only indisputable fact in the whole story."[29]

Anderson was rescued by a passing official and since no one could be found who knew her and she refused to answer questions, as an attempted suicide, she became a ward of the state in a mental hospital in Dalldorf. According to doctors at the asylum, the young woman was covered with half a dozen bullet wounds and lacerations, including a trough-like indentation behind her ear and a star shaped scar on her foot. The doctors originally believed this injury led to her original loss of memory.[29] Anderson rarely spoke and refused to provide hospital staff with any information about herself. The nurses named her Fräulein Unbekannt (Miss Unknown). Anderson remained in the asylum for two years until Clara Peuthert, a fellow psychiatric patient, claimed she recognized Anderson to be the Grand Duchess Tatiana, based upon photos of the Grand Duchesses she saw in the magazine Berliner Illusrietre. The Oct. 23, 1921 issue featured photos of the family with the headline "The Truth about the Murdered Tsar", and a caption under a photo of the Grand Duchesses read "Is one of the Tsar's daughters alive?"[30] This started her claim and visits by Russian emigres'. However, Anna Chemnitz, nee Malinovski, who was a nurse at the asylum testified for the trials that the copy of "Berliner Illustrierte that AA "showed to me was NOT the one bearing the headline, "Lebt eine Zarentochter?" She said it dated from before the war. : Testimony Anna Chemnitz 17 December 1958, in Berlin

A friend of the Romanov family, Zina Tolstoy, visited Miss Unknown and accepted her as Tatiana, declaring "she had the eyes of the Tsar."[31] This was ironic, considering that of all the Imperial sisters, Tatiana's eyes were not blue but famously dark, described by Anna Vyrubova as having "eyes so darkly gray that in the evening they seemed quite black."[32]

At Tolstoy's insistence, Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden, a former lady of waiting to Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna,[33] paid a visit to the asylum to determine if Anderson's claim to be a daughter of Tsar Nicholas II was legitimate. The Baroness attempted to get Anderson to speak. Upon refusing the Baroness pulled Anderson up off the bed and claimed that she was "too short to be Tatiana."[34] The Baroness declared in her official statement : "I tried to attract the young woman's attention as I caressed her hair and speaking to her in English while using the types of phrases I would have used while speaking with the Grand Duchesses, but I did not refer to her by any name other than 'Darling'. She did not reply and I saw that she did not understand a word of what I had said, for when she raised the cover after a certain period of time, and I saw her face, there was nothing in her eyes which showed she had recognized me. The eyes and forehead showed some resemblance to the Grand Duchess Tatiana Nicolaievna, resemblance that disappeared, nevertheless, as soon as her face was not covered. I had to remove the cover by force, and I saw that neither the nose, the mouth, nor the chin were formed like that of the Grand Duchess."[35] She left believing Anderson a fraud. [36]

After this denouncement, Anderson declared she was not Tatiana, but Anastasia, the only Grand Duchess to share her height of 5'2". Tolstoy had no problem switching her acceptance from "Tatiana" to "Anastasia"[37] Marianne Nilov, widow of the royal yacht commander, based her identification on a perceived family resemblance in the eyes.[38] Buxhoevedon heard Anderson had changed Grand Duchesses and stated "I later learned that she supposes that she is the Grand Duchess Anastasia, but she does not physically resemble her in the least. She has none of the special characteristics that would allow any one who knew the Grand Duchess Anastasia well to identify her."[39]

The myth of her 'rescue'

In May 1922, Anderson left the mental asylum in Berlin. She was taken in by Baron von Kleist, a Russian émigré who believed her claim. Anderson began calling herself Anastasia Tschaikovsky and the details of her 'rescue' by Alexander Tchiakovsky began to emerge, and change. She told confidantes a Russian soldier rescued her, married her, and eventually fathered her son. She claimed that as the shooting began in the Ipatiev House cellar that she was shielded by the body of her sister, Tatiana. Alexander Tschaikovsky and his brother, supposedly part of the clean-up squad, noticed she was still alive amongst the corpses after the execution and were able to sneak her out of the building past the armed guards. After her 'rescue', she was brought to Bucharest by Alexander, his brother Serge, their sister Veronica, and their mother. She claimed to have married Tschiakovsky and had his child in Bucharest. Anderson claimed that Tschaikovsky died in a street brawl.[40]

It is now possible to accurately name the 10 men who formed the execution squad plus the names of the guards at the Ipatiev House.[41] None of them had the name of Tschaikovsky. [42][43] There isn't any evidence that the alleged rescuers even existed.

Many were skeptical about Anderson because she made no contact her mother's first cousin, Queen Marie of Romania, during her alleged time in Bucharest. Marie knew Anastasia and her parents. They met before the Great War. [44]

Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna, Anastasia's paternal aunt, commented on the claim by Anderson, "In 1918 or 1919, Queen Marie would have recognised her on the spot ... Marie would never have been shocked at anything, and a niece of mine would have known it ... My niece would have known that her condition would have indeed have shocked [Princess] Irene."[45]

It must be noted that before the 'final' version we see today was perfected by Anderson and her supporters. The story of her 'escape' and how she came to be in Berlin went through various incarnations; some rather absurd. According to one of Von Kleist's signed statements, Anderson allegedly told him:

"She received, from an intermediary, this person who died in Romania, a device (apparatus), that she used on her face and succeeded a little in changing the form of her nose and mouth."

In another version of her story, written to Princess Irene by Clara Peuthert, Anderson went first to Paris, but was followed by unnamed enemies:

"When those who followed her discovered the hideout of her family to Bucharest, she had to flee again. She tried to loose their track leaving first to Paris where she knows a Baron Taube. From Paris, she came to Berlin. She was scarcely there for eight days when someone recognized her. One evening, in an automobile, she was drugged to sleep, they removed her clothes for her and put on others, and she was thrown, still totally drugged, in a lake by the zoo. When she was drug out, it was believed that she had tried to commit suicide, and was driven to the Elisabeth hospital."[46]

This contradicts the version the claimant allegedly told Baron Von Kleist in June 1922:

'I arrived in Berlin in the middle of the month of February 1920, I do not remember the exact date. I arrived here alone, coming from Russia and having gone through Romania. Immediately in Berlin, I changed clothing, in order not to be recognized, for it seemed to me that I was followed. I no longer know what with that which I changed clothing. I was free for less than a week, for I was first placed in the Elizabeth Hospital, where I spent six weeks, then I was transferred to the Dalldorf asylum."[47]

In later versions, the mysterious adversaries who had been 'following' her had, apparently, vanished, or were written out of the drama. According to Rathlef, the "official" version of the escape was written down by Police Inspector Grünberg of the Berlin Police,[48]

There are also several different versions of the birthdate, conception and abandonment of the alleged child, either left with her rescuer's family or in a Romanian orphanage, [49] but no evidence of the child has ever been found. Though it is clear from her letters, published in Gilliard's book, that Clara Peuthert was a major influence from the start, some suspect that von Kliest himself had a hand in inventing Anderson's escape story. Others find his motives suspicious because he had put together an agreement stating that he would receive 50,000 crowns upon the claimant's recognition by the Dowager Empress.[50]

The story never stopped changing. In 1974, she declared 'there was no massacre...I cannot tell the rest.'[51] Anderson changed her story again when relaying what she called 'these truths' to her chosen biographer James Blair Lovell. This time, she abandoned her whole original story and told one which tied in with the Perm stories, that the women were taken away separately from the men, whom they never saw again. She claimed to have escaped, been recaptured, raped, and beaten, before meeting up with Tchiakovsky and his cart in a different place under totally different circumstances. [52]

Princess Irene

While Anderson was staying with Inspector Grünberg, Empress Alexandra's sister, Princess Irene of Hesse and by Rhine, came to visit her under an assumed name. Princess Irene failed to recognise Anderson as her niece.[53] Peter Kurth, a long time supporter of Anna Anderson, asserts that Princess Irene's son, Prince Sigismund later sent Anderson a list of questions that he said only Anastasia could know how to answer. It is claimed that Anderson answered every question correctly, though it took her five days to finish them[54] In addition to Anderson, Sigismund also backed Magda Boots, a woman claiming to be Grand Duchess Olga [55] Princess Irene herself was not impressed:

"I saw immediately that she could not be one of my nieces. Even though I had not seen them for nine years, the fundamental facial characteristics could not have altered to that degree, in particular the position of the eyes, the ear, etc. .. At first sight one could perhaps detect a resemblance to Grand Duchess Tatiana."[56]

"At this time I already had the conviction that she was not my niece, but, at the desire of the Dr Grunberg, I went up to her room, and approached her bed. I addressed her in vain with words in the language that we habitually used, recalled situations from the past, spoke the nicknames or the names of persons we knew: she did not react to anything. She still did not reply when I prayed for her to say a word or to make a sign that she had recognized me; even when -in order to not neglect anything - I said to her: "Do you not know your Aunt Irene?"

To the big disappointment of the Grunbergs, who were so well intentioned, I left with the firm conviction that this unknown one is not my niece; I no longer kept the least doubt in this respect. We had lived, formerly, in such intimacy, that it would have sufficed for a small sign or an unconscious movement to awaken in me a familial feeling to convince me."[57]

During dinner Anderson had reportedly simply left the table and gone to her bedroom. She later claimed her departure was not to do with social pressures but because she realized she had been tricked: she had not been told that her aunt was to be among her fellow guests.[58]

In her biography, Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna commented that this meeting was unsatisfactory. However, Anderson's supporters claimed that Princess Irene had not known her niece very well, which is completely untrue.[59] Her supporters persisted in trying to gain Irene's support, and finally her husband, Prince Heinrich, sent von Kleist a letter emphatically declaring their disbelief in his protegee and asking him to leave them alone.[60]

1925 hospital visits - Grand Duchess Olga, Gilliard, Tegleva

In 1925, Anderson developed a staph infection in her arm, aggravating her condition of tuberculosis of the bones. She was again placed in a hospital. Sick and near death, she lost a lot of weight.[61] It was during this time that Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia, the younger sister of Tsar Nicholas II and Anastasia’s aunt, who had survived the Revolution and settled in Denmark, came to Berlin to see the woman who claimed to be her niece. She spent several days with the patient and exchanged letters with her for a time.

Artist and sculptor Harriet von Rathlef (author of Anastasia, A Woman's Fate as a Mirror of the World Catastrophe, serialised in a 1928 Berlin newspaper[62]), claimed that Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna appeared conflicted about Anderson's identity, as were Imperial tutor Pierre Gilliard and Gilliard's wife, Alexandra Tegleva, who had been Anastasia's nanny.[63] This claim was never correct. Rathlef claimed Tegleva declared the claimant's feet, reminded her of Anastasia's, since both suffered from a condition called hallux vagus [64] There is no evidence from any that Rathlef mentioned to concur with this. In fact in January 1926, Shura wrote to Harriet Rathlef: "Though I have not found anything in her features or her ways that remind me of Anastasia Nikolaievna, I am ready to help you in your researches" and that "the letter of the invalid is touching and has moved me but I have not found in it Anastasia Nikolaievna."[65]

After much consideration, the fact she couldn't speak or read Russian, English or French at the time, unlike all the Tsar's daughters, was sufficient proof for Gilliard to decide that Anderson was an impostor. Gilliard commented about Anderson:

"The patient had a long nose, strongly turned up at the end, a very large mouth, thick and fleshy lips; the grand duchess, on the other hand, had a short, sharp nose, a much smaller mouth and fine lips .... Apart from the colour of the eyes, we could find nothing to make us believe that this was the grand duchess."[66]

Supporters of Anderson have long alleged that both Olga and Gilliard initially accepted Anderson, but later denied her for ulterior motives. There is no evidence to support this speculation. Certainly Gilliard and Grand Duchess Olga were concerned at Anderson's pitiful state. At the time of their visit, the patient was feverish, delirious, and had shrunk to a skeletal thinness. Her arm was a 'shapeless mass.' Gilliard had said that the most important thing to do was to keep her alive, and that they would return when her condition improved.[67]

Gilliard denounced Anderson as being "a cunning psychopath."[62] Grand Duchess Olga Alexandra noted that Anderson "greatly disliked M. Gilliard" although "little Anastasia had been devoted to him."[68]

According to Coryne Hall, author of "Little Mother of Russia", Grand Duchess Olga discussed Anderson with her mother, Dowager Empress Marie. Exactly what she told her mother is unknown but the Empress made it plain that she did not believe the woman's claim and would have rushed to her granddaughter's side if she had believed the claimant was Anastasia. The Empress was angry with Grand Duchess Olga for traveling to Berlin.[69][70]

In her biography, Grand Duchess Olga stated she made gifts out of pity because Anderson looked so "wretched."[71] Anderson received a photo album, a silk shawl and a knitted sweater. While she admitted to being 'fond of her, whoever she is', she felt 'she is not the one she believes'[72]

In January 1926, a Danish newspaper published an article quoting Olga as saying she and the other visitors could not find the slightest resemblance between the invalid and Anastasia. In December 1926, she wrote a letter to Princess Irene declaring the claimant's supporters had warned her of her visit, and had made too much of her sympathy.[73] In a later letter, Olga told Irene supporters had 'stuffed her head with our stories..showed her a large number of photographs..until soon she was able to amaze people with her memories'. She also explained how she discovered Anderson had found out about the nickname she had always called Anastasia from an earlier visit by an emigre' who had been on the royal yacht. These reports and letters, not long after her visit, prove that even that early, Olga did not believe Anderson was her niece, and was certain she was getting her information from Russian emigres.'[74]

In Olga's authorized biography, "The Last Grand Duchess", Olga related to her biographer Ian Vorres what happened during her visit: "When Olga entered the room, the woman lying on a bed asked a nurse: “Ist das die Tante?” [Is this the Aunt?]“That”, confessed Olga, “at once took me aback. A moment later I remembered that the young woman having spent five years in Germany, would naturally have learnt the language, but then I heard that when she was rescued from that canal in 1920, she spoke nothing but German – when she spoke at all - which was not often. I readily admit that a ghastly horror experienced in one’s youth can work havoc with one’s memory but I have never heard of any ghastly experience endowing anyone with a knowledge they had not had before it happened. My nieces knew no German at all. Mrs Anderson did not seem to understand a word of Russian or English, the two languages all the four sisters had spoken since babyhood. French came a little later, but German was never spoken in the family”.[29]

Olga continued,

"My beloved Anastasia was fifteen when I saw her for the last time in the summer of 1916. She would have been twenty four in 1925. I thought Mrs Anderson looked much older than that. Of course, one had to make allowances for a very long illness and the general poor condition of her health. All the same, my niece’s features could not possibly have altered out of all recognition. The nose, the mouth, the eyes were all different."[59]

The Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna remarked that the interviews were made all the more difficult by Anderson’s attitude. "She would not answer some of the questions, and looked angry when those questions were repeated. Some Romanov photographs were shown to her, and there was not a flicker of recognition in her eyes. The Grand Duchess had brought a small icon of St Nicholas, the patron saint of the imperial family. Mrs Anderson looks at it so indifferently that it was obvious the icon said nothing to her.[68]

"That child was as dear to me as if she were my own daughter. As soon as I sat down by that bed in the Mommsen Nursing Home, I knew I was looking at a stranger… I had left Denmark with something of a hope in my heart. I left Berlin with all hope extinguished.[68]

Olga Alexandrovna offered an explanation and clarification of one of Anderson's alleged 'memories':

"The mistakes she made could not be all attributed to lapses of memory. For instance, she had a scar on one of her fingers and she kept telling everybody that it had been crushed because of a footman shutting the door of a landau too quickly. And at once I remembered the incident. It was Marie, her elder sister, who got her hand hurt rather badly, and it did not happen in a carriage but on board the imperial train. Obviously someone, having heard something of the incident, had passed a garbled version of it to Mrs Anderson.[68] Shura, however, remebered the incident well, as did officer Sablin from the Standart who was present when it happened. [75] Franziska Schanzkowska's former landlady, Mrs. Wingender, stated that her tenant's stiff finger occurred as a result of "a cut sustained while washing crockery". The cut was on the ring finger on the right hand,just under the nail, while Anna Anderson's scar was at the root of the middle finger of the left hand.[76]

Supporters and opponents

Gleb Botkin and his sister Tatiana Botkina, nephew and niece of Serge Botkin, who was head of the Russian Refugee office in Berlin, and son and daughter of the Imperial Family's personal physician Dr Eugene Botkin who perished with his imperial patients in the Ipatiev House in 1918, were two of Anderson's greatest supporters. Both Botkins spent much of their youth near the Imperial Family. Serge Botkin came to the aid of Anderson. There has been considerable speculation by many, including John Godl, that the Botkins were the brains behind the whole charade, helping her with 'memories', in exchange for fame and financial gain should the claim pay off. Both Botkins made considerable money writing books about Anderson.[77]

Anderson supporter Peter Kurth, believed that the Botkins were sincere in their belief that Anderson was Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia.

Frances Welch author of "A Romanov Fantasy: Life at the Court of Anna Anderson" depicts the Botkins as misguided in their hope/belief that Anderson was their long lost playmate the Grand Duchess Anastasia.

Tatiana Botkin was convinced of Anderson's authenticity when she first saw her up close, a conviction which was strengthened when Anderson allegedly recalled something that occurred between the Grand Duchesses and Tatiana's father Evgeny Botkin. Very few people were aware of this information that Tatiana Botkin claimed she verified. Gleb Botkin met Anderson in May 1927, and declared instantly she was Anastasia. He claimed to have recognized her immediately, and said she could distinguish drawings he had done before the Revolution from those after, and was able to provide information as to who the drawings were about. Considering that both Botkins made money out of Anderson through publications their recognition would seem to be based on financial motives. Certainly they must have had an ulterior motive as the real Anastasia was dead. [8]

John Godl wrote that "Few of Anna Anderson's supporters were more cunning, knowledgeable or influential than Gleb Botkin; nephew of Serge Botkin and son of the Imperial Family's personal physician Dr Eugene Botkin who perished with his royal patients in the Ipatiev House in 1918. Gleb Botkin had an intimate knowledge of palace life, having spent much of his youth near the Imperial Family. As such it's impossible he was deceived by Anderson, he must have known she was a fraud and used her for his own aims. Botkin was one of many sources of obscure information Anderson would recount as "memories" to astound friend and foe alike"[78]

Anderson had problems in Germany. Gleb Botkin helped her get to New York where he made money providing articles on Anderson to newspapers. In an effort to prevent her deportation, Botkin attacked the sisters of Nicholas II and the Romanov family in general after the publication of the "Copenhagen Statement". Although no immediate relation of Nicholas II believed Anderson's claims, the continued saga was, for many, like salt being rubbed in an open wound.

The Romanovs believed Gleb Botkin and his accomplices were seeking monies, which they did not possess. Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna commented, “My own conviction is that all of it started with some unscrupulous people who hoped they might lay their hands on at least a share of the fabulous and utterly non-existent Romanov fortune.”[79]

Grand Duchess Olga's claim can be supported by the fact that the Dowager Empress relied on a pension from her nephew King George V, and her daughter, Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna, lived in a grace and favour house also provided due to the kindness of the King.[80] They believed that the Botkins wanted to use the money for their own ends and treated him with contempt.[81] Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna commented, "Most malicious rumours about that "fortune" began floating about soon after Mrs. Anderson's appearance in Berlin in 1920. I heard that it ran into astronomical figures. It was all fantastic and terribly vulgar. Would my mother have accepted a pension from King George V if we had any money in England? It does not make sense."[82]

Grand Duke Andrei Vladmirovich, first cousin of Nicholas II, who had some contact with Anastasia before the revolution, met Anderson in 1928 before she set out to New York. He wrote to his cousin Grand Duchess Olga,"There is for me no doubt; she is Anastasia.[83] In 1928, Olga wrote to a friend that he must have 'vile motives' to side against them.[84]

Gleb Botkin alienated Grand Duke Andrei with his notorious letter to the Romanovs. The Grand Duke wrote to Tatiana Botkin, "Does he realise what he has done? He has completely ruined everything.[85]

Tatiana Botkin wrote, "Grand Duke Andrew also remarked that the case was beginning to take on the aspect of an intrigue for the tsar's fortune, .... This profoundly disgusted the grand duke and he did not further wish to involve his name in it.[85]

One of Anderson's strongest supporters, who gave her a home at Castle Seeon, was Duke George Leuchtenberg. As he told his family, 'If she is the Grand Duchess, it would be a crime not to help her and if she is not the Grand Duchess, I do not commit a crime by giving shelter to a poor, sick, persecuted woman, while making investigations regarding her identity." From the notes of the Duke of Leuchtenberg, according to Anderson supporter Harriet Rathlef: In the eleven months of her stay with us, I and my whole household have confirmed the following: 1. That the German she speaks is so faulty that it must be clear to everyone that German cannot be her mother tongue. 2. That she understands Russian excellently well, and could also speak Russian if she were not suffering from an inhibition. 3. That she not only understands English, but also reads, writes, and speaks English. 4. That she neither speaks nor understands a word of Polish.[86] At Easter, the invalid made her confession and received the Sacrament, and our most cultured and judicious priest said to me after the confession that she was whithout doubt a member of the Orthodox Church. [87]

Leuchtenberg's son, Dmitri, was completely certain Anderson was an imposter. In a letter to Olga Alexandrovna's biographer, Ian Vorres, he listed his reasons: First, when she arrived at Castle Seeon in 1927, she spoke no Russian, English or French, all languages the Imperial children knew well, and used only "German with a North German accent", a language he said the children did not speak. He stated she knew no English before taking lessons at Lugano before coming to live with them. He also said she was not familiar with Russian Orthodox rites, and acted as a Roman Catholic (the religion of Franziska's family) He also noted that he was present when Anderson met Felix Schanskowsky, Franziska's brother, it was clear the two recognized each other and he admitted he recognized her, but later, after speaking with Anderson out of earshot, he came back and denied her, refusing to sign a statement to claim her. Dmitri said it was not to spoil her 'career' as Anastasia, since it would leave her better financial support than her family. Young Mr. Leuchtenberg went onto say that those who knew Anastasia well did not recognize Anderson as the Grand Duchess, and in his opinon a lot of other White Russians accepted her out of wishful thinking."[88]

It is very revealing that when first told she would be welcome at the home of these people, Anderson replied "What are the Leuchtenbergs?" and refused to go unless Tatiana Bokin accompanied her. [89]

Lord Louis Mountbatten, a first cousin of the Romanov children, told the BBC not to patronize Anderson by doing a television program on her. "I can assure you that there is not the remotest doubt that this woman is not my cousin. She was seen by all our closest mutual relations, all of whom declared there was no resemblance." He once told the BBC, strongly advising them against interviewing her and helping her supporters, who, he claimed, "simply wanted to get rich on the royalties of further books, magazine articles, plays, etc."[90] Mountbatten was one of Anderson's fiercest lifelong opponents and helped fund later legal battles against her.

Charles Sydney Gibbes, English tutor to the Imperial children, met Anderson in Paris and denounced her as well. He was certain she was a fraud. [91]

"If that's Grand Duchess Anastasia," Gibbes exclaimed, "I'm a Chinaman."[92] Gibbes put his views more formally in an affidavit: "She in no way resembles the true Grand Duchess Anastasia that I had known .... I am quite satisfied that she is an impostor.[93]

Prince Felix Yussopov, husband of Princess Irina of Russia, daughter of Grand Duchess Xenia, wrote to Grand Duke Andrei about Anderson, "I claim categorically that she is not Anastasia Nicolaievna, but just an adventuress, a sick hysteric and a frightful playactress. I simply cannot understand how anyone can be in doubt of this. If you had seen her, I am convinced that you would recoil in horror at the thought that this frightful creature could be a daughter of our Tsar ... These false pretenders ought to be gathered up and sent to live in a house somewhere."[94]

The Tsar’s former mistress, who married Grand Duke Andrei after the revolution, Mathilde Kschessinska met Anderson towards the end of her life, in the late 1960s, out of curiosity, and remarked that "she had the eyes of the Tsar.".[95] It should be noted Mathilde had never met the Tsar's children when they were alive.

Prince Christopher of Greece, first cousin of Nicholas II, wrote about her in his memoirs:“Dozens of people who had known the Grand Duchess Anastasia were brought to see the girl in the hope that they might be able to identify her, but none of them could come to any definite conclusion. ... The poor girl was a pathetic figure in her loneliness and ill health, and it was comprehensible enough that many of those around her let their sympathy over-rule their logic. But at the same time there was little real evidence to substantiate her story. Even when the Grand Duchess Olga, the favourite aunt of the Tsar's children, was brought to see her, she gave no sign of recognition and could not remember the pet name by which she was always known in the family."[96]

When asked by Gleb Botkin about Grand Duchess Olga's attitude to the case, Botkin alleged Prince Christopher stated, "Of course Olga knows better than anybody that she is Anastasia." [97] There is only Gleb Botkin's word for this. It shoudl be noted that Prince Christopher never met Anna Anderson.

It is interesting to note that, according to Faith Lavingon, when presented with photos from the Livadia Palace, published in an American newspaper and shown to her with all captions removed, she recognized them instantly and named each room correctly. [98] Prince Christopher of Greece corrected this misinformation stating, "She was unable to recognize people whom the Grand Duchess Anastasia had known intimately, her descriptions of rooms in different palaces and of other scenes familiar to any of the Imperial Family were often inaccurate." [99]

Anderson supporter, Harriet Rathelf-Keilmann wrote serialised articles about Anderson which eventually became a book. Rathlef, a Jewish convert to Christianity, is alleged by some to be a follower of the Rudolf Steiner Anthroposophy movement. Other German Anthroposophist and Anderson supporters believed Anderson was a victim of the psychic upheaval caused by the Russian Revolution and it was their duty to help her.[100][101] Rathelf, who moved Anderson to a better hospital to dominate Anna's bedside. Alexei Volkov, valet to the Tsar, commented that "the conduct of the people who surrounded Madame Tchiakovsky seemed to me very suspect. They intervened all the time, completed her inadequate answers, and excused all her errors under the pretext she was 'ill.'" He also gave an interview with a Russian newspaper declaring she was not Anastasia.[102]

Anderson supporter Peter Kurth notes that Lili Dehn, friend of Tsarina Alexandra, did not see Anderson until 1957. Much time had passed since she had met the real Anastasia. Kurth says Dehn accepted Anderson 'from signs that do not deceive' and declared she 'waved goodbye like my Empress'. Kurth also quotes Dehn as denying Anderson had gotten her information from books. Dehn stayed with Anderson for a week, and claimed that "she never made a mistake.[103]

It is curious that Anna Vyrubova, closest friend and confidante of Tsarina Alexandra, was never asked her opinion on the claimant. It was mentioned by Tatiana Botkin that since she was a "disciple of Rasputin" association with her was not welcome, but a more likely reason is that Anna, more than anyone else left alive, could have exposed the claimant as a fraud, and having become an Orthodox nun, her testimony in court would be harder to discount than the others framed as liars by Anderson's supporters.[104]

The Romanov Family's position

After the DNA tests proved her an imposter, [8] a member of the Romanov family explained their position over the years, and why they usually kept silent on the subject. Prince Michael Romanov, (Grandson of Xenia and Sandro by their son Andrew), born in 1920 in exile in France, stated that while growing up he heard quite a bit of discussion on the topic of Anderson, and that it was obvious that she was false and 'dubious' people were aiding her:

"From the very beginning of the affair it was obvious to my family Anna Anderson was an impostor," recalls Prince Michael, "that there were dubious people and motives behind her claims, but few would listen to our protestations at the time."

"We were a very close-knit family in exile and I remember as a youth listening to several conversations between my grandmother (Grand Duchess Xenia), relatives and friends. All were appalled by the claims being made by the hordes of impostors, there were just so many people claiming to be Ekaterinburg survivors. Several members of my family or representatives went to see Anna Anderson during the early days and dismissed her claims, and were amazed anyone could seriously believe a woman unable to speak Russian or answer specific questions about the lives of the Imperial Family could be the daughter of Nicholas II.

Over the years friends and acquaintances who had seen the movies or read the books on Anderson would lecture me on why she was genuine," Prince Michael recalls, "few would listen to or accept the other side of the argument. It was infuriating but after a while I just stopped arguing, what point was it?, how could I compete with the glamorous tales being created by the entertainment industry?

I remember the day I heard DNA tests had proven beyond conjecture Anna Anderson wasn't the Grand Duchess Anastasia, just another in a long and undistinguished like of fakes. Of course it came as no surprise!, it only validated what my family had been saying for 60 years and now people were finally paying attention.

My family looked upon Anderson and the three ringed circus which danced around her, creating books and movies, as a vulgar insult to the memory of the Imperial Family". [105]

Prince Rostislav Romanov, another grandson of Sandro and Xenia was quoted by the Associated Press saying upon learning of the 1994 DNA results, "I never had a shadow of a doubt. My father was raised with Anastasia, and this woman would never see him."[106]

Ernst Ludwig and Franziska Schanzkowska

When Anderson was suffering from yet another severe illness, she claimed that Alexandra's brother, Ernst Ludwig, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine, had been visiting Russia in 1916 during the First World War. The Romanov family believed the allegation, which would have been tantamount to treason, was revenge for the family's intense criticism and opposition to to Anderson.[107]

Of course the visit never occurred. The whole story was completely fabricated. There has never been proof; travel documents, photographs or any tangible evidence to support the allegation.[108] The only 'evidence' ever produced was witness testimony solicited by Anderson's legal teams, which was dismissed as unsubstantiated hearsay by the courts.[109]

The Grand Duke's "supposed" trip, and the incident has been flatly denied repeatedly by the Hessian royal family. Grand Duchess Eleonore, Ernst Ludwig's second wife, stated about Anderson that she was "an impostor, a lunatic, a shameless creature."[110]

It should be noted that German books existed at the time alleging the trip so the information was not at all unique to Anderson. One such book was "Im Angesicht der Revolution", 1922, Steeler, by B. Himmelstjerna. [111]

The diary of Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig places him in Verdun in France during the time of the "supposed trip".[112][113] The Hamburg Tribunal overseeing the Anderson case eventually ruled, "The trip did not take place".[114]

Ernst Ludwig hired a private investigator, Martin Knopf, to investigate her claims. It was strongly stayed that Anderson was missing Kashubian factory worker, Franziska Schanzkowska. Schankowska was reported to have received wounds from dropping a grenade in munitions factory where she worked. A foreman was eviscerated before her eyes[115] Such an injury would account for the body scarring of the claimant. This was supposedly denited by Schankowska's family. [116] Anderson claimed her scars were from the execution.

Seeing Miss Unknown's photo in the newspaper, Doris Wingender, daughter of Franziska Schanzkowska's former landlady, came forward and identified her as their missing boarder. Wingender explained that during Summer 1922, Schankowska had reappeared at her home, telling she had been living with Russian emigres who had mistaken her for someone else. According to Mrs. Grabitsch, Schankowska reappared in spring, but detective Knopf said it had to be August to coincide with Anderson's 3 day disappearance from the Kleist's. So they compromised and said "summer". Doris and Schankowska/Anderson had even allegedly exchanged clothing, and the von Kleists, according to the Nachtausgabe and Knopf, verified the attire in Wingender's possession as that of their guest.[117] In a meeting of the two women face to face after this accusation, the reporters present noticed that they obviously knew one another. The claimant became upset when she saw Wingender, shouting in German "That thing must get out!" [118] Faith Lavington, English nanny at Castle Seeon, wrote in her diary that her belief in Anderson was shaken after the meeting, since Anderson was obviously upset by the visit from Wingender. "Why would one treat an unknown person in such a way?"[119]

Rathlef Keilmann and her lawyer set up a meeting between Anderson and Franziska Schanzkowska's brother Felix. When Felix saw Anderson and asked who she was he declared "That is my sister Franziska". Felix, upon being asked to sign an affidavit, changed his mind and stated that he would not sign a false affidavit that could land him in jail. [120] "I will not sign it. That is definitely not my sister." He then pointed out several differences between his sister and Anna Anderson.[10][121] Dmitri Leuchtenberg, son of the Duke, was present at the meeting and later wrote that Felix did say she was his sister, but later, after the two talked alone out of earshot, he came back and denied her.[122] It must be considered that claiming such a sister would not have helped either of them, and would have caused numerous legal and financial woes for her, and possibly her relations, should it be revealed she filed a false claim.[123] Felix said to Dr. Völler that "it was totally clear to him that the lady had no idea who he was." [124]

Anderson had a final meeting with the Schankowski family in 1938. Gertrude Schankowska hammered her fists on the table and shouted, "You are my sister! You are my sister! I know it! You must recognise me!"[125] Felix Schanzkowski was later quoted by his daughter as saying "We left her to her 'career' as 'Anastasia.'"[126] Much consideration should be given to the family's 'denial' due to the fact that since the Nazi government had arranged the meeting to determine her identity, she would have been incarcerated if she had been accepted as Schanzkowska.[127]

Protocols from Dalldorf allege that Anderson spoke Russian with the nurses. Nurse Erna Buchholz testified under oath that she "spoke Russian like a native."[128] Later, Anderson refused to speak Russian. She would only respond in German. She explained her unwillingness to speak Russian by saying she was unwilling to use the language spoken by the people who murdered her family, as they were not allowed to speak any other language in the Ipatiev House.

Prince Christopher of Greece said "In the first place she was unable to speak Russian, which the Grand Duchess Anastasia, like all the Czar's children, had talked fluently, and would only converse in German.[9][129]

Though her supporters tried to embellish her Russian abilities, they frequently made excuses for her failures. Tatiana Botkin and Harriet Rathlef claimed "Anastasia" had 'forgotten' the languages after her injuries. "She has not only forgotten languages, but she has in general lost the power of accurate narration...even the simplest stories she tells incoherently and incorrectly; strung together in impossibly ungrammatical German." [130] It must be noted that Franzisca Schanzkowska was born in what was the German Empire.

In 1927, the Berlin police did officially accept Darmstadt's identification of the claimant as Schanzkowska [131] Franziska Schanzkowska was always the only possible suspect for the identity of Anna Anderson besides Anastasia. With the successful match of her mtDNA with that of Franziska's great nephew, Karl Maucher,[132] it is highly likely Knopf was right all along.

Anna Anderson vs. relatives of Grand Duchess Anastasia

Franziska Schanzkowska in 1916

Anderson's legal battle for recognition was the longest running case ever heard by German courts. As early as 1925, Anderson had allegedly claimed there was a large fortune awaiting the heir of the Tsar.[133] The first signs of trouble began in 1928, when 24 hours after the Dowager Empress's death, a statement signed by 12 Romanovs and three of Empress Alexandra Feodorovna's family was released making their views abundantly clear:

"It was their "unanimous conviction that the person currently living in the United States is not the daughter of the Tsar." The signatories were Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna; Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna, her six sons, and her daughter; Princess Irina, Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich; Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna; the Grand Duke of Hesse and his sisters Princess Irene of Prussia and Victoria, Dowager Marchioness of Milford-Haven.[107] Of these people, only Olga had actually seen Anna Anderson. To the end of his life in 1979, Lord Mountbatten[134] and other members of various royal families believed this to be the case.[135]

Gleb Botkin retaliated with the infamous insulting letter which forever drove a wedge between Anderson and her opponents:

"Your Imperial Highness!

Twenty four hours did not pass after the death of your mother when you hastened to take another step in the conspiracy against your niece...Before the wrong which Your Imperial Highness is committing, even the gruesome murder of the Emperor, his family and my father by the Bolsheviks pales! It is easier to understand a crime committed by a gang of crazed and drunken savages than the calm, systematic, endless persecution of one of your own family, the Grand Duchess Anastasia Nicholaevna, whose only fault is that, being the only rightful heir to the late Emperor, she stands in the way of her greedy and unscrupuous relatives."[136]

According to Gleb Botkin, the claimant had been told by Danish Ambassador Zahle that if she did not act soon, any money left in English banks in the names of the Imperial family after ten years would be given to Grand Duchess Xenia. Since the tenth anniversary of the deaths of the family was in the summer of 1928, it now became urgent for her backers to get some sort of legal claim going in order to fight them. Gleb Botkin secured the services of New York Attorney Edward Fallows to represent her interests.[137] Botkin and Fallows were the people who brought out the essentials of her monetary claims.[138] Fallows moved to block any of the rumored fortune in English banks from being paid out before AA was identified. [139]

Fallows was given Anderson's power of attorney and set up "Grandanor" (it stood for Grand Duchess Anastasia of Russia)Corporation to finance her case. It sold shares in the supposed fortune "Anastasia" stood to gain. Fallows himself was to receive one fourth of all monies obtained in her name under $400,000 and 10% thereafter.[140] Dr. Gunter Von Berenberg-Gossler, attorney for the opposition in the Anderson trials of the 1950s-60s, believed that although wishful thinking in Russian émigré circles played a part in the affair, money was the principal motivation behind Anderson's claims: the supposed lost fortune of the Tsar was estimated at US$80,000,000. “I believe it was at the beginning of the 1930's a corporation (Grandanor) came into existence," he says, "which sold certificates in proportion to tsarist gold rubles allegedly held by the Bank of England and redeemable if or when Anderson should "inherit" said funds. These papers were not worth anything. They served only to enrich the initiator." [141]

Anderson claimed Nicholas II had told her-as "Anastasia" in Siberia- that he had deposited five million rubles in the name of each of his daughters in The Bank of England. Gleb Botkin stated his father had told him he had heard the same.[142] Of course Anderson had never met Nicholas II or been in Russia. She later changed her story when no money was found there claiming had meant a bank in England.[143] By the end of 1929, the New York Times had run stories stating there was reason to believe large sums of money and gold, which had been hidden from the Tsar's enemies and totaling as much as in the thousands of millions, lay in banks in England, Paris, the US, and Canada.[144] This left no question, Anderson's claim had turned from 'recognition' to a fight for an 'inheritance.' which she had no right to.[145] From a letter to Mr. Kügelgen, July 8, 1928 from Grand Duke Andrew: "The second question is that of material interests being involved. Long before the "Unknown" appeared, I carefully investigated all the rumours concerning the existence of the millions alleged to have been left by the late Tsar; in every case these rumours proved to be unfounded, as I expected. Unfortunately it has to be borne in mind that this statement is being used as a means of throwing suspicion on all who took any part in my inquiries, by accusing them of being influenced by self-interest and speculative motives."[146]

In October 1935, Fallows wrote a letter to Adolf Hitler in an attempt to gather his support. Fallows addressed the Führer as 'Honored' and 'esteemed' sir, and used unkind comments about Jews, claiming they had killed "Anastasia's" family, while she had 'miraculously escaped'. Hitler never responded. [147]

In 1938, when several relatives of the Tsar and Tsarina were to collect a certificate of inheritance in German court to gain access to what funds of the Tsar were left in the Mendellsohn bank,(about $100,000 US) Anderson's lawyer petitioned the court to claim the money before it was handed out to relatives, who declared all the Imperial family to be dead.[148] Anderson’s lawyers claimed that Grand Duchess Anastasia was still alive.Her supporters fought for her claim. Later, once the money had been distributed to the Tsar's legal relatives, Anderson's lawyers decided to sue Barbara Mecklenburg, granddaughter of Anastasia's aunt Irene, for 'denying Anastasia's identity and spending her money', though it's thought she was chosen simply because she lived in Germany.[149]

Many witnesses appeared before the courts giving some 800 pages of testimony. German Courts heard a large number of handwriting experts, historians, and forensic scientists scrutinizing photographs and documents usually contradicting opposing depositions. Given that Anderson has been exposed as a fraud, .[8][15] the competency of her so-called 'experts' must be considered highly dubious. It should also be noted that Otto Reche, who declared Anderson to be identical to Anastasia, and Baron von Eickstedt, who who also identified her as the Grand Duchess, were Nazis who worked in racial eugenics for the Third Reich. Their methods have been disproven and Reche was discredited by his peers.[150][151][152] [153]

Anderson's opponents, including Anastasia's first cousin, Lord Mountbatten, nephew of Tsarina Alexandra and the Grand Duke of Hesse, fought just as hard, to prove she was the missing Kaschub factory worker, Franziska Schanzkowska. According to Dr. Gunter Berenberg-Gossler, opposing attorney in the Anderson case for twelve years, blood tests proved Anderson shared a blood type with the Schanzkowska siblings. [154]

The judgment came on May 15. "The claim is unfounded," read the verdict. The counterclaim had also been defeated - the claim that Anderson was actually the missing Franzisca Schanzkowska. The counterclaim was dismissed in the judgment merely on the grounds that it was "irrelevant," although the identity with Franziska, in the judges' opinion, was "eminently likely." [155]

The legal case continued until 1970, when the court determined that she had not provided sufficient proof to claim the identity of the Grand Duchess.[156] Her supporter Peter Kurth alleged that the death of Grand Duchess Anastasia had never been established as a historically proven fact.[157] Repeated DNA testing by independent laboratories on all the Romanov remains has since proved him completely wrong. [8][15]

Anderson's supporters fail to accept fact about the murderers of the Romanovs. Peter Voikov stated "The tsarina´s maid Anna Demidova and the youngest daughter Anastasia are still breathing. Two of the Letts from the Cheka ran forward to finish off Anna Demidova and the youngest daughter Anastasia. One of the Letts drove a bayonet through Anastasia´s face."[158] The Bolshevik Sukhorukov told the story of the burning of Alexei and Anastasia : "We decided to burn two corpses on the fire and did so. For our sacrificial altar we got the last heir. The second body was the youngest daughter Anastasia. After the corpses were burned, we scattered the ashes, dug a pit in the centre, shoveled in all the unburnt remainders, made a fire again on the same spot and finished the work"[159]

Dr. Von Berenberg-Gossler said that during Anderson's German court cases the press were always more interested in reporting her side of the story than the opposing side's less glamorous perspective. He claimed journalists ignored rebuttal evidence, which meant the public seldom received a complete picture of the evidence. presented.[160]

United States incidents

In 1928, Anderson lived for several months on Long Island, United States with Mrs. William B. Leeds (born Princess Xenia Georgievna Romanova of Russia), a daughter of Grand Duke George Mihailovich of Russia and Princess Maria Georgievna of Greece and Denmark, until she was asked to leave after quarreling.[161] Prince Christopher of Greece described the stay: "She stayed with my niece, ... who showed her the greatest kindness, Then her treatment of the Grand Duchess Xenia,[162] sister of the last Tsar, led to a quarrel with William Leeds, who turned her out of the house.[163] Prince Christopher was the stepfather of William Leeds.

Botkin claimed the reason for the break in relations with the Leeds was, that Anderson was offered a house "somewhere in Europe" and an allowance for life as long as she dropped her claim. Otherwise she was to leave the Leeds' estate within 24 hours. Anderson refused and left. [164]

Princess Xenia Georgievna, who had played with Anastasia when they were children, was of the opinion that Anderson was Anastasia and didn't change her mind even when she asked Anderson to leave her home. "One of the most convincing elements of her personality," Princess Xenia recalled later, "was a completely unconscious acceptance of her identity. She was herself at all times and never gave the slightest impression of acting a part. I am firmly convinced that the claimant is, in fact, Grand Duchess Anastasia of Russia."[165]

Gilliard pointed out that Princess Xenia had last seen her second cousin when Xenia was 10 and Anastasia was 12.[166]

It is important to note that Xenia responded that she didn't recognize Anastasia visually. She felt she was qualified to tell the difference between a member of the Romanov family and a "Polish peasant woman." and believed Anderson bore a strong family resemblance to Tsarina Alexandra's family and her moodiness and temper also reminded Xenia of her cousin Anastasia.[167] Xenia's sister, Nina, met Anderson for five minutes and came to no conclusion about her identity. Princess Nina did indicate that Anderson seemed to her to be a "lady of good society" who could speak Russian.[168]

Prince Dmitri, son of Grand Duchess Xenia wrote about what Princess Xenia had stated, "Xenia's irresponsible statement should be somehow refuted ... We know she left Russia in 1914 aged 10 years old, I also know that Nina (her sister) and Xenia never saw Uncle Nicky's family very often, and when they did see them that was when they were very young."[169]

The pianist Sergei Rachmaninov arranged for Anderson to live in a comfortable hotel suite at the Garden City Hotel on Long Island. She booked in as Mrs. Eugene Anderson to avoid the press. She never used the name Tschaikovsky again.[170]

In early 1929 she moved in with Annie B. Jennings, a wealthy Park Avenue spinster eager to have a daughter of the Tsar living under her roof. For 18 months she was the toast of New York society. Then a pattern of self-destructive behaviour began to occur culminating in her throwing tantrums and even on one occasion running naked back and forth on the roof. Finally Judge Peter Schmuck of the New York Supreme Court signed an order committing her to a mental hospital. She remained in the Four Winds Sanatorium for over a year.[171] In August 1932, Anderson returned to Germany accompanied by a private nurse in a locked cabin on the liner Deutschland. Her Park Avenue benefactress, Annie B. Jennings paid for this voyage, as she had paid $25,000 for the one year stay at the Four Winds Sanatorium, and as she would pay for an additional six months cure at Ilten psychiatric home near Hanover. At Ilten, she was at once told that she was free to go. [172]

Marriage and death

In 1949, Prince Frederick of Saxe-Altenburg settled Anderson in a former army barracks in the village of Unterlengenhardt, a small village on the edge of the Black Forest in Germany. She became a sort of tourist attraction in the area. [173] She rarely left the place. In 1968, Anderson arrived back from a visit to Mathilde Kschessinska. In her absence Prince Frederich had cleaned up the place and had her Irish Wolfhound, Baby, and 40 cats put to death. As a result she accepted Gleb Botkin's offer to move to the United States.[174]

In 1968, Anderson married an American supporter, John Eacott Manahan. Manahan enjoyed being Anderson's husband. He sometimes described himself as "Grand Duke-in-Waiting."[175] The couple lived in a house on University Circle in Charlottesville, Virginia, and also owned a farm near Scottsville. In 1969, her long term supporter Gleb Botkin died.

On 20 August, 1979, Anderson was rushed to Charlottesville's Martha Jefferson Hospital. Dr. Richard Shrum operated. He found obstruction and gangrene in the small intestine caused by attachment to an ovarian tumour. He removed almost a foot of the intestine, resectioned the bowel, and closed the wound. Dr. Shrum commented, "She remained reclusive, did not talk to people and smiled rarely. She would sit around with a handkerchief held up to her nose as if she were afraid of catching something."[176]

Anderson and her husband "Jack" Manahan became quite well known in the Charlottesville and Scottsville areas as eccentrics, driving around in a battered station wagon full of trash and dogs. Her mental illness had deteriorated so badly she suffered delusions of believing the KGB was trying to kill her. She set traps of trash all around her yard to catch them, and refused to eat out of anything metal in fear of being poisoned. Though Manahan was wealthy, he and Anderson lived in squalor with large numbers of dogs, cats, rats and garbage. Her husband made excuses saying "This is how Anastasia likes to live". When one of her pets died, Anderson would cremate it in the fireplace, believing it was a reincarnated friend, and would be reincarnated again. In her later years, she changed her 'escape' story several more times, one time claiming the entire family had escaped and been replaced by doubles.[177] In his book, James Lowell writes that Anderson told him different escape stories. She relayed that in the Ipatiev House, the entire Imperial family except the tsarevich had been repeatedly raped, all of them being forced to watch as each other was violated.[178]

In November 1983, Anderson was institutionalised. A few days later she was kidnapped by Manahan, and for 3 days they drove down Virginia backroads stopping to eat at convenience stores. A 13-state police alarm finally produced an arrest warrant and returned her to a psychiatric ward.[179]

On 12 February, 1984, Anderson died of pneumonia. Her body was cremated that afternoon and her ashes subsequently buried in the churchyard at Castle Seeon, Germany.[179]

Anderson exposed: the Romanov remains and repeated DNA tests

In 1991, the bodies of the royal family were exhumed, and it was discovered that the bodies of Alexei, and one of his sisters, identified as Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia by Russian scientists [180] and as Grand Duchess Anastasia by American scientists,[181] were not in the grave. The mitochondrial DNA of the bones unearthed from a forest grave, presumed to be those of Alexandra and three of her daughters, were compared to that of the Duke of Edinburgh, whose maternal grandmother Princess Victoria of Hesse and the Rhine was a sister of Alexandra. This proved to be a match.[15]

Anderson's tissue sample was later discovered stored at Martha Jefferson Hospital. Anderson’s DNA was compared with those of the Romanovs, at the suggestion of Marina Botkin Schweitzer, the daughter of Gleb Botkin. Anderson’s DNA sample did not match that of the Duke of Edinburgh or that of the bones, meaning that the tissue sample tested belonging to Anderson could not have belonged to Anastasia. At the press conference, Dr. Peter Gill stated,

If one accepts that this sample is from Anna Anderson, then it is almost impossible that she could have been Anastasia.[15]

He further stated,

the sample said to have come from Anna Anderson could not be associated with a maternal relative of the empress or Prince Philip. That is definite.[182]

Subsequent comparisons with DNA samples provided by Franziska Schanzkowska's great nephew Karl Maucher were a match, meaning he shared the same mitochondrial DNA profile as Anderson.[62] Dr. Gill stated about the Anderson tissue and Karl Maucher,

a one hundred per cent match, an absolute identity. This suggests that Karl Maucher may be a relative of Anna Anderson.[182]

There were also several strands of hair tested which produced the same mtDNA sequence as the tissue. The hair came from a woman who claimed she found the hair at a used bookstore in Chapel Hill, NC. Inside a book that belonged to Jack Manahan, there was an envelope which read "Anastasia's hair." Inside were several strands of hair that she gave to Anderson biographer Peter Kurth. He in turn gave them to a BBC reporter who in turn transferred them to Aldermaston for DNA testing. The hair did not match that of the Romanov remains.[183]

The DNA tests came as an unexpected shock to those involved with Anderson. Richard Schweitzer and his wife Marina Botkin Schweitzer as well as Brian Horan, a Connecticut lawyer were stunned.[184] In spite of the DNA evidence,[62] Anderson's supporters attempted to point out differences between Schanzkowska and Anderson, such as the languages they spoke and physical differences. In reality, there was no difference in the languages, because Anderson did not originally know English, Russian or French, and used German. Anastasia was fluent in Russian, English and French and knew little German. Franziska spoke Kashoub Polish and German.[185][186] Any physical differences were merely hearsay and rumor without proof.

Schweitzer commented,

I know one thing for certain. Anastasia was not a Polish peasant.[184]

The London Evening Standard newspaper described Schweitzer as

displaying the tireless enthusiasm of the sort which keeps the 'Flat Earth Society' in business.[187]

Sir Brian McGrath, spokesman for Prince Philip stated on the release of the DNA results,

Game, set, match! Anna Anderson is out![188]

Prince Rotislav Romanov declared,

It's over.[188]

while Prince Nicholas Romanov stated,

I've been vindicated.[188]

Anderson supporter Peter Kurth stated,

The DNA tests have won the hour, and will probably stand as the final word on the case that has left everyone who came near it, for or against, with a sense of tragedy and persisting, nagging doubts.[183]

He added,

No one doubted that whoever she was, she had been traumatised.[189]

The only surviving photograph of Schanzkowska was taken when she was 20, in 1916. Some have described her as an "attractive, bright eyed, intelligent young woman." Her childhood friends remembered her as pretentious, putting on airs and graces. One historian speculated that Schanzkowska must have taught herself etiquette and deportment, like socially ambitious girls of her class and generation, though such allegations do not account for Anderson's knowledge of the Imperial Family's intimate life, as related by Kurth. [62] Peter Kurth asserted in his Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson that the photo of Schanzkowska has been frequently retouched.[190]

It is worthwhile to look at what the real Grand Duchess Anastasia's aunt, the Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna had said about Anderson years earlier,

But the whole story is palpably false. I was convinced then, as I am now, that it is so from beginning to end. Just think of the supposed rescuers - vanishing into thin air, as it were! Had Nicky's daughter been really saved, her rescuers would have known just what it meant to them. Every royal house in Europe would have rewarded them. Why, I am sure that my mother would not have hesitated to empty her jewel-box in gratitude. There is not one tittle of genuine evidence in the story.[191]

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 10 and 13 years at the time of his death and of a young woman who was roughly between the ages of 18 and 23 years old. Anastasia was 17 years, one month old at the time of the assassination, while her sister Maria was 19 years, one month old, and her brother Alexei was two weeks shy of his 14th birthday. Anastasia's elder sisters Olga and Tatiana were 22 and 21 years old at the time of the assassination. Along with the remains of the two bodies, archaeologists found "shards of a container of sulfuric acid, nails, metal strips from a wooden box, and bullets of various caliber." The bones were found using metal detectors and metal rods as probes. Tests have been repeatedly and independently conducted on the remains to determine that they are the remains of the two missing Romanov children.[8][192]

Preliminary testing indicated a "high degree of probability" that the remains belong to the Tsarevich Alexei and to one of his sisters, Russian forensic scientists announced on January 22, 2008. The testing began in late December 2007 and was originally scheduled to be completed by February 2008. However, scientists with the Sverdlovsk Regional Medical Forensic Bureau and a Moscow laboratory were still conducting testing. One report indicated uncertainty about when the final report would be released.[193] The Yekaterinburg region's chief forensic expert Nikolai Nevolin indicated the results will be compared against those obtained by foreign experts and a final report could be issued by April or May 2008.[194] On April 30, 2008, The Associated Press, BBC, Reuters, CBS, CNN and other news organisations reported that the regional governor for the Ekaterinburg, Russia, area, officially announced that the DNA tests indeed proved that the fragments found in 2007 were those of the last two missing children, declaring

Now we have the whole family.[195]

Independent DNA testing carried out by the University of Massachusetts Medical School, USA, made public in July 2008, on the final two remains confirmed the earlier Russian findings that the last two remains were indeed members of the Romanov family murdered in the Ipatiev House in Ekaterinburg.[8] All members of Nicholas II's immediate family have now been accounted for officially. In March 2009, the complete scientific results on the DNA tests were published by Dr. Michael Coble of the US Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory, proving all four Grand Duchesses with four separate nuclear DNA profiles have been found and identified.[196] This is the final proof that Anderson and all other claimants were imposters.

In 1928, a film was made based very loosely on the woman who would one day be called "Anna Anderson". It was a silent film called Clothes Make the Woman.

In 1956 there was a film made about a figure based on Anna Anderson, Anastasia, starring Ingrid Bergman as Anna/Anastasia, and Yul Brynner; however, this film is highly fictionalised.

The 1997 animated film of the same name was based on the 1956 film, but is even more fictionalized; the only connection between that film and Anna Anderson is that her story inspired the earlier film. Indeed, in the 1997 film the title character (only known as "Anastasia" or "Anya", never "Anna") unbelievably turned out to be Grand Duchess Anastasia, even though that film was released after the discovery of the Romanov remains (though not the second gravesite) and the DNA tests on Anna Anderson's remains.

NBC ran a two-part fictionalised mini-series in December, 1986 titled "Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna" which starred Amy Irving and won her a Golden Globe nomination. It was based on Anna Anderson's biography, written by Peter Kurth.

Kevin Hearn of the band Barenaked Ladies wrote a song called "Anna, Anastasia" for his solo album H-Wing.

Tori Amos wrote a song titled 'Yes, Anastasia' for her Under the Pink album inspired by the spirit of Anna Anderson.

In 2006, Diana Norman, writing under the pseudonym Ariana Franklin, published a novel "City of Shadows," a fictionalised account of Anderson's time in Berlin from 1920 to 1933. In it she seems to accept that Anderson was in fact a fraud, but invents a colourful post-Revolution history for the Grand Duchess herself.

See also

References

  1. ^ Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess, p.19
  2. ^ Anastasia: The Mystery of Anna.1986.
  3. ^ Godl, J., (August 1998). Remembering Anna Anderson. "The European Royal History Journal", Issue VI: August 1998., Arturo Beeche, Publisher, Oakland,
  4. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.187
  5. ^ State Archive of the Russian Federation, fund 662, l.1.No 16, fol 135v
  6. ^ Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral and the Grand Ducal Burial Chapel, p.129
  7. ^ Vadim Znamenov, Nicholas II:The Imperial Family, p.119
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h DNA Confirms Remains Of Czar's Children
  9. ^ a b c d e Once A Grand Duchess: Xenia, Sister of Nicholas II, by John Van der Kiste & Coryne Hall, p.174
  10. ^ a b Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess, p.240
  11. ^ http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20417240/
  12. ^ http://www.upi.com/news/issueoftheday/2008/05/01/Romanov-mystery-finally-solved/UPI-19691209678305/
  13. ^ Kurth, Peter, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, 1983
  14. ^ Clarke, Lost Fortune of the Tsars, p.134
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Identification of the remains of the Romanov family by DNA analysis by Peter Gill, Central Research and Support Establishment, Forensic Science Service, Aldermaston, Reading, Berkshire, RG7 4PN, UK, Pavel L. Ivanov, Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, 117984, Moscow, Russia, Colin Kimpton, Romelle Piercy, Nicola Benson, Gillian Tully, Ian Evett, Kevin Sullivan, Forensic Science Service, Priory House, Gooch Street North, Birmingham B5 6QQ, UK, Erika Hagelberg, University of Cambridge, Department of Biological Anthropology, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, UK - http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/v6/n2/abs/ng0294-130.html
  16. ^ http://www.serfes.org/royal/rememberingAnnaAnderson.htm
  17. ^ name=Massie193
  18. ^ Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral and the Grand Ducal Burial Chamber, p.114
  19. ^ a b King and Wilson (2003), p. 314.
  20. ^ Radzinsky 373, 387-93
  21. ^ The executioner Yurovsky's account - Alexander Palace Time Machine
  22. ^ Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral and the Grand Ducal Burial Chamber, p.129
  23. ^ Radzinsky 373, 387-93
  24. ^ The executioner Yurovsky's account - Alexander Palace Time Machine
  25. ^ St. Peter and Paul Cathedral, p.129
  26. ^ a b Kurth (1983), p. 339
  27. ^ Preston, Vorres, pp. 244-245
  28. ^ Christopher, Kurth, and Radzinsky, Tsar, p.210
  29. ^ a b c Vorres, Ian, The Last Grand Duchess p.174
  30. ^ Romanov Fantasy, Welch, p. 102
  31. ^ Welch. p.103
  32. ^ http://www.alexanderpalace.org/russiancourt2006/vi.html
  33. ^ Massie, R., The Romanovs: The Final Chapter, p.163
  34. ^ Kurth p.25
  35. ^ La Fausse Anastasie, Pierre Gilliard
  36. ^ Little Mother of Russia by Coryne Hall, p.340
  37. ^ Welch p.110
  38. ^ Welch. p.109
  39. ^ ibid, Gilliard
  40. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p. 38
  41. ^ King and Wilson, The Fate of the Romanovs, pp.299-300
  42. ^ King Wilson The Fate Of The Romanovs
  43. ^ name=Massie165>Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.165
  44. ^ Marie Of Roumania Memoirs
  45. ^ Massie, R, p.165
  46. ^ La Fausse Anastasie, Gilliard
  47. ^ Gilliard
  48. ^ Harriet Rathlef Keilmann ... page number missing
  49. ^ Gilliard, Welch
  50. ^ Welch. p.107
  51. ^ The File on the Tsar, Summers and Mangold p.239
  52. ^ Lost Fortune of the Tsars, William Clarke, p.133
  53. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, pp. 51-52
  54. ^ "A Romanov Fantasy-Life at the Court of Anna Anderson",Frances Welch, Norton Pub., p.198
  55. ^ ibid.; Welch
  56. ^ A Romanov Fantasy, Welch, p.108
  57. ^ La Fausse Anastasie,Gilliard
  58. ^ ibid,Welch p.108
  59. ^ a b Vorres, I., The Last Grand Duchess, p.175
  60. ^ Welch p.110
  61. ^ Welch, p.110
  62. ^ a b c d e Anastasia: The Unmasking of Anna Anderson, "The European Royal History Journal", Issue VI: August 1998., Arturo Beeche, Publisher, Oakland, Ca. pp. 3-8.
  63. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p. 111
  64. ^ Massie p. 172
  65. ^ Frances Welch, "A Romanov Fantasy", p. 124, From Fallows collection, Houghton Libarary
  66. ^ Massie, R., The Romanovs: The Final Chapter p.175
  67. ^ massie p.172
  68. ^ a b c d Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess p.176
  69. ^ Coryne Hall, Little Mother of Russia, p.342
  70. ^ Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich, Always A Grand Duke, p. 212
  71. ^ Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess p.179
  72. ^ Massie p.174
  73. ^ Klier and Mingay,"Quest for Anastasia", p.102
  74. ^ Klier and Mingay, p.149
  75. ^ Harriet Rathlef Keilmann
  76. ^ Welch, Frances, A Romanov Fantasy: Life at the Court of Anna Anderson, p. 114. W. W. Norton & Company, 2007.
  77. ^ http://www.serfes.org/royal/annaanderson.htm
  78. ^ http://www.serfes.org/royal/annaanderson.htm
  79. ^ Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess, p.177
  80. ^ Once A Grand Duchess: Xenia, Sister Of Nicholas II, p.166
  81. ^ ibid, p.185
  82. ^ Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess, p.179
  83. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p.272
  84. ^ a personal letter of Olga Alexandrovna, February, 15th 1928, Hvidore, Denmark
  85. ^ a b Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.183
  86. ^ Harriet von Rathlef Keilmann p.178
  87. ^ Harriet von Rathlef Keilmann p. 155
  88. ^ Ian Vorres, "The Last Grand Duchess", p. 240
  89. ^ "A Romanov Fantasy-Life at the Court of Anna Anderson".Frances Welch, 2007, p.131
  90. ^ Mountbatten, Phillip Zeigler, p. 679
  91. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.187
  92. ^ Tsar by Peter Kurth, p.214
  93. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.187
  94. ^ Letter of Prince Felix Yussopov to Grand Duke Andrei, 19 September 1927
  95. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p.461
  96. ^ Prince Christopher's Memoirs p.218
  97. ^ Gleb Botkin: Anastasia, the Woman who rose again.
  98. ^ Rathhelf ... page number not provided
  99. ^ Prince Christopher's Memoirs p.218
  100. ^ Lovell p.183-185,199-200
  101. ^ Welch p.200
  102. ^ Klier and Mingay, p.100
  103. ^ Kurth p.288
  104. ^ Massie p. 187-88n
  105. ^ http://www.serfes.org/royal/rememberingAnnaAndersonii.htm
  106. ^ http://anomalyinfo.com/articles/sa00021b.php?page=MYST
  107. ^ a b Once A Grand Duchess: Xenia, Sister of Nicholas II, p.183
  108. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.177
  109. ^ Unmasking Anna Anderson by John Godl
  110. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.178
  111. ^ http://forum.alexanderpalace.org/index.php?PHPSESSID=ua54cevkc8ufbqhl5nrfo4qtb2&topic=3530.30
  112. ^ Ernst Ludwig: Grossherzog von Hessen und bei Rhein. Sein Leben und seine Zeit by Manfred Knopf
  113. ^ Ernst Ludwig, Grossherzog von Hessen und bei Rhein - Tagebuch, Hessiche Hausstiftung und Archiv, Homburg/Darmstadt
  114. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p. 364
  115. ^ Massie,"The Final Chapter" p.249
  116. ^ Harriet Rathlef Keilmann ... page number missing
  117. ^ Kurth p.167
  118. ^ Massie p.180
  119. ^ Francis Welch p.232
  120. ^ Dr. Völler Report
  121. ^ Notes of Frau von Rahlef, 19 June-4 July 1925
  122. ^ Vorres p. 240
  123. ^ Vorres
  124. ^ Dr. Völler's report.
  125. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.180
  126. ^ Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess, p.240 (letter from Duke Dmitri of Leuctenberg, son of Duke George of Leuchtenberg who hosted Anderson at Castle Seeon, Bavaria in 1927)
  127. ^ Klier and Mingay
  128. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p.35
  129. ^ Memoirs of HRH Prince Christopher of Greece, pp.217-218
  130. ^ Massie page 169
  131. ^ "Lost Fortune of the Tsars", William Clarke, p. 134, from Berlin police records, signed by Heinz Drescher
  132. ^ Massie p.238
  133. ^ "Lost Fortune of the Tsars", William Clarke, p.125
  134. ^ Christopher, Kurth, and Radzinsky, Tsar, p.213
  135. ^ A Royal Family, p.203
  136. ^ Massie, The Final Chapter, page 183
  137. ^ "Lost Fortune of the Tsars", William Clarke, p.127
  138. ^ ibid, Clarke,p.126
  139. ^ Gleb Botkin ...page number missing
  140. ^ "Lost Fortune of the Tsars", William Clarke, p.125
  141. ^ http://www.serfes.org/royal/rememberingAnnaAndersonii.htm
  142. ^ ibid.,Clarke p.127
  143. ^ ibid. Clarke p.128
  144. ^ Clarke p.129
  145. ^ Lost Fortune of the Tsars, William Clarke, p.125
  146. ^ Harriet Rathlef Keilmann ... no page number provided
  147. ^ Massie "The Final Chapter" page 184
  148. ^ Clarke p.130
  149. ^ Welch p. 229
  150. ^ MariusTurda and Paul Weindling, "Blood and Homeland", p. 23-29,33-36,44, 47-48
  151. ^ Gretchen Schafft, "From Racism to Genocide: Anthropology of the Third Reich"p.124
  152. ^ Kühl, Stefan. 1994. The Nazi Connection: Eugenics, American Racism, and German National Socialism. New York, NY: Oxford University Press;* Tucker 1994, p.69, 94
  153. ^ http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Racial-theories
  154. ^ http://www.serfes.org/royal/rememberingAnnaAndersonii.htm
  155. ^ Peter Kurth p.317
  156. ^ Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.190
  157. ^ Kurth (1983), pp. 289–358
  158. ^ The End of the Romanovs" by Viktor Alexandrov, page 232
  159. ^ Last Act of A Tragedy, V.V. Aleskeyev, p. 144
  160. ^ http://www.serfes.org/royal/rememberingAnnaAndersonii.html
  161. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter, p.181
  162. ^ Once A Grand Duchess: Xenia, Sister of Nicholas II, pp.183-184
  163. ^ Memoirs of HRH Prince Christopher of Greece, p.223
  164. ^ Gleb Botkin .. page number missing
  165. ^ name=Kurth215
  166. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p. 215
  167. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p. 216
  168. ^ Kurth, Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p. 217
  169. ^ Once a Grand Duchess: Xenia Sister of Nicholas II, p.233
  170. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.181-182
  171. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.182
  172. ^ Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.186
  173. ^ name=Massie186
  174. ^ Welch p.253
  175. ^ Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.192
  176. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.194
  177. ^ http://www.readthehook.com/stories/2007/07/05/COVER-jackManahan-I.rtf.aspx/
  178. ^ Lovell .. page number missing
  179. ^ a b Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.193
  180. ^ Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral, p.114
  181. ^ A Royal Family, p.203
  182. ^ a b Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.239
  183. ^ a b Christopher, Kurth, and Radzinsky, Tsar, p.218
  184. ^ a b Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.243
  185. ^ Vorres 240
  186. ^ Welch 231
  187. ^ Massie, R, The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.247
  188. ^ a b c Massie, R., The Romanovs The Final Chapter p.242
  189. ^ Tsar by Peter Kurth, p.212
  190. ^ Kurth (1983), Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson, p. 168
  191. ^ Vorres, I, The Last Grand Duchess p.177
  192. ^ Gutterman, Steve (2007). "Remains of czar heir may have been found". "Associated Press". Retrieved August 24. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  193. ^ Interfax (2008). "Suspected remains of tsar's children still being studied". "Interfax". Retrieved January 23. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  194. ^ RIA Novosti (2008). "Remains found in Urals likely belong to Tsar's children". "RIA Novosti". Retrieved January 23. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  195. ^ http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/04/30/russia.czar/index.html?section=cnn_latest
  196. ^ http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0004838

98.http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0004838

Books, Letters and Articles

  • Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral and the Grand Ducal Burial Chapel. St. Petersburg, Russia: The Cultural Committee of the Government of St. Petersburg/The State Museum of the History of St. Petersburg. 2006. p. 160. ISBN 5-902671-37-X. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Romanov, Alexander Mikhailovich, Grand Duke (1933). Always A Grand Duke. Cassell. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Greece, Christopher, Prince (1938). Memoirs of HRH Prince Christopher of Greece. London: The Right Book Club. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Hall, Coryne (1999). Little Mother of Russia - A Biography of Empress Marie Feodorovna. London: Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd. ISBN 0 85683 177 8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Van der Kiste, John (2002). Once A Grand Duchess: Xiena, Sister of Nicholas II. Phoenix Mill: Sutton Publishing. ISBN 0 7509 2749 6. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • King, Greg (2003). The Fate of the Romanovs. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Kurth, Peter (1995). Anastasia: The Life of Anna Anderson. Pimlico. ISBN 0-7126-5954-4. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Kurth, Peter (1997?). Anastasia: The Riddle of Anna Anderson. Back Bay. ISBN 0-316-50717-2. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Kurth, Peter (1995). Tsar. Toronto: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-50787-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Lovell, James Blair (1998). Anastasia: The Lost Princess. Robson. ISBN 0-86051-807-8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Lerche, Anna (2003). A Royal Family : The Story Of Christian IX And His European Descendants. Egmont Lademann A/S Denmark. ISBN 87-15-10957-7. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Klier, John (1999). The Quest for Anastasia: Solving the Mystery of the Lost Romanovs. Citadel. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Massie, Robert K. (1971). Nicholas and Alexandra. London: Pan Books. ISBN 0 330 02213 X. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Massie, Robert K. (1995). The Romanovs: The Final Chapter. Secaucus, NJ: Carol. ISBN 0-8065-2064-7. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Godl, John (1998). Remembering Anna Anderson. "The European Royal History Journal", Issue VI: August 1998., Arturo Beeche, Publisher, Oakland,. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  • Von Rahl, Frau (19 June-4 July 1925). The Notes of Frau Von Rahl. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Yussopov, Felix, Prince (19 September 1927). Letter of Prince Felix Yussopov to Grand Duke Andrei,. Hamburg. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Knodt, Manfred (1997). Ernst Ludwig: Grossherzog von Hessen und bei Rhein. Sein Leben und seine Zeit,. Darmstadt: Schlapp. ISBN 3-87704-006-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • von Hessen und bei Rhein, Ernst Ludwig, Grossherzog (1916). Ernst Ludwig, Grossherzog von Hessen und bei Rhein - Tagebuch,. Homburg: Hessiche Hausstiftung. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Vorres, Ian (2001 revised edition). The Last Grand Duchess. Key Porter Books. ISBN 13 978-1552633021. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Vorres, Ian (1985 3rd edition). The Last Grand Duchess. London: Finedawn Publishers. p. 256. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Znamenov, Vadim (2004). Nicholas II:The Imperial Family. St. Petersburg, Russian Federation: Abris Publishers. p. 120. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)

Template:Link FA