18 Grand Duke Nicholas: Pares, 501.

19 Grand Duke Dmitry: Time, March 16, 1941; Kschessinska, 150–60, 248.

20 The fate of the suite: Pares, 499

21 The ministers: Pares, 500. Prince Lvov: Kokovtsov, 545.

22 Alexeiev and Kornilov: Pares, 500. Brusilov and Polivanov, ibid., 501.

23 “The Poles are besieging Russian fortresses”: Vorres, 232.

24 Sukhomlinov: Escaped in a sailboat: Kokovtsov, 526. Dedicated his memoirs to the Kaiser: Tuchman, 63. Wife married a Georgian officer and was killed: Vyrubova, 191.

25 Buchanan: Buchanan, II, 93, 261.

26 Benckendorff: Benckendorff, vii, 166. Fredericks: Botkin, 40

27 Vyrubova, Polar Star: Vyrubova, 276–7. Gorky: ibid., 292–4.

28 Gilliard: from his obituary, Gazette de Lausanne, June 8, 1962.

29 Iliodor: New York Herald Tribune, July 5, 1933. Time, Feb. 11, 1952.

30 Maria Rasputin: Time, Dec. 4, 1939. In November, 1966, a circus poster advertising Mlle. Rasputin was on display in a collection of circus posters at the Lincoln Center Museum in New York City.

31 Kschessinska instructed Margot Fonteyn: Kschessinska, 237. Danced at Covent Garden, 238.

32 Yussoupov: The author attended the 1965 trial in its entirety.

33 Hemophilia. Alfonso and Gonzalo; McKusick, 94. The possibility that hemophilia will recur in this family is remote: Armand J. Quick, M.D. “International Forum on Hemophilia,” Spectrum, Vol. 10, No. 2, (March-April, 1962).

34 The legend of the Romanov gold. All Imperial properties taken: Benckendorff, 125–6. Nicholas’s capital on abdication: Benckendorff, 89. The relics buried near Paris: Vorres, 171. Marie’s jewels valued at $2 million: ibid., 183. Many appeared in Queen Mary’s possession: ibid., 184. Funds in Berlin: ibid., 179. Valued at $1,500: New York Herald Tribune, Nov. 18, 1965.

35 English deposits brought back to Russia: Vorres, 179.

36 “I see Buchanan tomorrow”: AF to N, 123, 125.

37 Sir Edward Peacock. Instructed by King George V: Vorres, 183. “I am pretty sure there never was any money”: ibid., 246.

38 The Tsar in London: Benckendorff, 146. In Rome: ibid., 147. Family on a ship in the White Sea: Bulygin, 272. Dozens of claimants: ibid., 271, 276–7.

39 Numerous Anastasias: Vorres, 201, 202. Mrs. Anderson and Grand Duchess Olga: ibid., 175–6. “Dear Aunt Olga”: ibid., 200. “My telling the truth does not help”: from a letter published in Life, Dec 30, 1963, written by Ian Vorres.

Bibliography

PRIMARY SOURCES

Nicholas II, Journal Intime. Translated by A. Pierre. Paris, Payot, 1925. (Cited in Notes as N’s Diary.)

The Letters of the Tsar to the Tsaritsa 1914–1917. London, Bodley Head; New York, Dodd, Mead, 1929. (Cited in Notes as N to AF.)

Letters of the Tsaritsa to the Tsar 1914–1916. Introduction by Sir Bernard Pares. London, Duckworth, 1923. (Cited in Notes as AF to N.)

The Secret Letters of the Last Tsar: The Confidential Correspondence Between Nicholas II and His Mother, Dowager Empress Marie Feodorovna. Edited by Edward J. Bing. New York, Longmans, Green, 1938. (Cited in Notes as N to MF or MF to N.)

Alexander, Grand Duke of Russia, Once a Grand Duke. New York, Garden City, 1932.

Benckendorff, Count Paul, Last Days at Tsarskoe Selo. London, Heinemann, 1927.

Botkin, Gleb, The Real Romanovs. New York, Revell, 1931.

Botkina, Tatiana Melnik, Vospominanya 0 Tsarskoy Sem’ye Belgrade, Stefanonivich, 1921.

Bovey, Kate Koon, Russian Coronation 1896. Minneapolis, privately printed, 1942.

Bruce Lockhart, R. H., British Agent. New York and London, Putnam, 1933.

Buchanan, Sir George, My Mission to Russia. 2 vols. London and New York, Cassell, 1923. (Cited in Notes as Buchanan.)

Buchanan, Meriel, The Dissolution of an Empire. London, Murray, 1932.

Bulygin, Paul, and Alexander Kerensky, The Murder of the Romanovs. Introduction by Sir Bernard Pares. London, Hutchinson, 1935.

Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, Left Behind: Fourteen Months in Siberia During the Revolution. New York and London, Longmans, Green, 1929.

_____, The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna, Empress of Russia.

New York and London, Longmans, Green, 1928. (Cited in Notes as Buxhoeveden.)

Bykov, P. M. The Last Days of Tsardom. London, Martin Lawrence [1934].

Dehn, Lili, The Real Tsaritsa. London, Thornton Butterworth, 1922.

Gilliard, Pierre, Thirteen Years at the Russian Court. New York, Doran, 1921.

Golovine, Lieutenant General Nicholas, The Russian Army in the World War. Yale and Oxford University Presses, 1931.

Hanbury-Williams, Major-General Sir John, The Emperor Nicholas as I Knew Him. London, Arthur L. Humphreys, 1922.

(Iliodor) Trufanoff, Sergei, The Mad Monk of Russia. New York, Century, 1918.

(Izvolsky) Iswolsky, Alexander, Memoirs. Edited and translated by Charles L. Seeger. London, Hutchinson, 1920.

Kerensky, Alexander, The Catastrophe. New York, Appleton, 1927.

_____, The Crucifixion of Liberty. New York, Day, 1934.

_____, Russia and History’s Turning Point. New York, Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1965.

_____, and Paul Bulygin, The Murder of the Romanovs. Introduction by Sir Bernard Pares. London, Hutchinson, 1935.

Knox, Major-General Sir Alfred, With the Russian Army, 1914–1917. New York, Dutton, 1921.

Kobylinsky, Colonel Eugene, Deposition in Robert Wilton, The Last Days of the Romanovs. London, Thornton Butterworth, 1920.

Kokovtsov, Count Vladimir N., Out of My Past: The Memoirs of Count Kokovtsov. Stanford University Press, 1935.

Kschessinska, Mathilde, Dancing in Petersburg. Translated by Arnold Haskell. Garden City, Doubleday, 1961.

Lloyd George, David, War Memoirs: 1916–17. Boston, Little, Brown, 1934.

Marye, George Thomas, Nearing the End in Imperial Russia, 1914–1916. Philadelphia, Dorance, 1929.

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