In the United States, there are several institutions which have invaluable source material on the period covered here, including the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, and the Houghton Library, Harvard University. At Columbia University, we had Michael’s war diaries 1915-1918 translated for the first time.
In Europe, given the amount of time that Michael spent there, the trail inevitably follows in his footsteps — Paris, Vienna, Cannes, Berlin, Copenhagen, Switzerland. A great many people helped in tracing him, not least Professor Dr Ferdinand Opll at the
Finally, I should pay tribute to Dr Vladislav Krasnov, born in Perm, but now a senior American academic, for his enthusiasm in promoting the memory of Michael in his home city and beyond. It was he and his committee who erected a memorial plaque to Michael on the walls of the hotel in Perm from which he was abducted in June, 1918 — still now much as it was then — and since then they have taken their cause to St Petersburg and Moscow. It is to their credit. No one loved his country more than Michael. If one day his country will come to embrace him also, then his brutal death in a dark wood might prove not to be the end of his story.
CHAPTER NOTES
MA = Michael
NS= Natasha
MA’ s diary — Michael’s diary 1915-1918
N = Nicholas II (letters) or in ‘N’s diary’
AF = Empress Alexandra
DE = Dowager Empress Marie Federovna
GAPO = State Archive Perm District
GARF = State Archive, Russian Federation, Moscow
LRA = Leeds Russian Archive, University of Leeds
PRO = Public Record Office, London
RA = Royal Archives, Windsor
Vienna SLA =
Dates are according to Russian calendar, unless shown in
1. Love and Duty
1. Vassili, p 105
2. Alexander,
3. Witte,
4. Alexander, p 80
5.
6. Nicholas II,
7. Vassili, p 105
8. Alexander p 161
9. Nicholas of Greece, p 181
10. Polovtsov, pp 126-7
11. Melgunov, p 229
12. Mossolov, p 95
13.
14. Grand Duke Konstantin K’s diary, February 26, 1904, cited Maylunas/Mironenko p 240
15. Dillon, p 41
16. Buxhoeveden, p 92
17. Mossolov, p 33
18. Witte, p 194
19.
20. Chavchavadze, p 107, Radziwill,
21. Sullivan, p 181
22. Gelardi, pp 91-3.115
23. Chavchavadze, p 235
24.
25. Radziwill,
26.
27. Kleinmichel, pp 66-8
28. N to DE , October 20, 1902, p 170
29. Vorres, p 115
30.
31.
2. A Scandalous Exile
1. State Archive of the Moscow Region, f. 2170-8-1-64;.
2. Natasha’s father was still registered as living in the Vozdvizhenka apartment eighteen years later in 1924
3. 13. MA to NS, November 3, 1909, GARF 622/12
4. MA to NS, July 28, 1909, GARF 622/09
5. Letter to Natasha’s granddaughter Pauline Gray, December 17, 1973, LRA MS 1363/136
6. Trubetskoi, 4, p 110
7. NS to MA, August 8, 1911, GARF 668/76
8. Radziwill,
9. Trubetskoi 4, p 110
10.
11. Majolier, p 35
12. Trubetskoi, 4, p 117
13. Okhrana report, September 6,1911, cited Maylunas/Mironenko, p 345
14.
15. MA to N, October 6, 1912, GARF 601/1301
16. MA to N, October 14, 1912, GARF
17. St Savva marriage register, No 35, 1912, Vienna SLA
18. Paleologue,
19. Marriage register, Vienna SLA
20.
21.