Princess Alix of Hesse and by
Rhine, who was christened “Alix Victoria Helena Louise Beatrice”, was the sixth
child and fourth daughter of Princess Alice of the U.K., the second daughter of
Queen Victoria, and Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse. She was born on June 6, 1872
at the New Palace in Darmstadt and was named after her mother and each of her
mother’s four sisters. She would be the youngest of Alice and Louis’s children
to survive to adulthood. Some of her older siblings were: Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine, Grand Duchess Elizabeth of Russia, Princess Irene of Prussia, and Grand Duke Ernest of Hesse.
Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine (1881) |
Alix was a cheerful and beautiful
child who was nicknamed “Sunny” by her mother for her lively disposition. She
was blessed with extraordinary good looks; she was a small girl with a slim yet
shapely figure, rosy lips, a clear and fair complexion, blue eyes, and waves of
dark auburn hair. The rest of her family called her “Alicky” to discern her
from her aunt-by-marriage, Alexandra of Denmark, who had married the future
Edward VII, then the Prince of Wales. Out of her many siblings, Alix was
particularly close to her older brother, Ernest, and the two shared a warm
relationship for the rest of their lives. Alix’s family lived quite modestly
for their royal statuses. Princess Alice made sure she taught her daughters the
importance of charity and humility, as the girls did household chores daily and
helped their mother in altruistic activities. Princess Alice raised her
children according to her native English fashion and Alix and her siblings
would frequently go to England to visit their “Grandmama”, Queen Victoria, who
they all adored immensely. Though the children were born German, they were
taught their mother’s English as their first language and their father’s German
as their second tongue. It was a known fact that hemophilia ran in Alice’s
family but it wasn’t apparent that Alice herself was a hemophilia carrier until
the birth of her second son, Prince Friedrich, in 1870. When little Frittie was
just years old, he died as a result of his hemophilia after suffering a brain
hemorrhage after a fall. His death occurred on May 29, 1873, when Alix was just
a year old, so she grew up never knowing the brother whose death affected her
family so immensely. But she was old enough to remember the tragic events of
late 1878, when she and every member of her family (except Elizabeth and
Princess Alice) fell ill with diphtheria. Elizabeth was immediately sent away
from the sick household to stay with her paternal grandmother while Alice
remained behind to nurse her other four daughters, son, and husband back to
health. Despite her efforts, Alice lost her youngest daughter, the four
year-old Marie, to the disease on November 16, 1878. Alice ultimately ended up
sacrificing her own life while caring for her family, as she soon fell ill
after Marie’s death and died on December 14, 1878. The six year-old Alix, her
sisters Victoria and Irene, her brother Ernest, and their father recovered but
the family remained in a state of grief for some time after the loss of little
Marie and their mother. Their grandmother, Queen Victoria, took over as the
Hesse children’s surrogate mother immediately after Alice’s untimely death.
Alix and her siblings would stay in England with their grandmother for some
time each year and were constantly under the Queen’s diligent and domineering
care.
Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine (1890) |
Queen Victoria was interested in
every single aspect of her grandchildren’s lives and controlled everything from
their education to their dress patterns. Her greatest concern above all was
their marital futures. Since she was especially fond of little Alix, she
planned to marry her to Prince Albert Victor, the eldest son of the Prince of
Wales and Alix’s first cousin. With this union, Alix would become the future
queen of the U.K., which was just what her matchmaking grandmother desired. But
Alix rejected her cousin’s proposal in 1890 in the face of intense pressure
from her relatives. The strong-minded Alix had no interest whatsoever in
marrying Albert Victor or even becoming a future queen, so Queen Victoria gave
in to her refusal. The truth of the matter was that Alix didn’t want to marry
her cousin because she had already fallen in love with another man who she
considered her true love – her second cousin, Tsarevich Nicholas of Russia. The
pair had met in 1884 when Alix traveled to Russia to attend her older sister
Elizabeth’s wedding to Nicholas’s uncle, Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich. Here,
the twelve year-old Alix captivated the sixteen year-old Russian heir to the
throne but it wasn’t until Alix went back to Russia for a visit in 1889 that
the two genuinely fell passionately in love with each other. Queen Victoria and
Nicholas’s father, Tsar Alexander III, were very aware of the couple’s
courtship but both were against the idea of a marriage between the two.
Alix of Hesse and her husband, Nicholas II (1894) |
Alexander III and his wife, Maria Feodorovna, were both fervently anti-German, even though they were both Alix’s
godparents. The Tsar wanted his son to marry a more suitable and respectable
prospect, like Princess Hélène of Orléans, the daughter of Philippe, Comte de
Paris and the pretender to the French throne, because Alix (as the daughter of
a Grand Duke of a small German territory) was not royal empress material.
Thankfully for Nicholas, Hélène would not marry him due to their conflicting
religions. But when Alexander III tried to match his son with Alix’s first
cousin, Princess Margaret of Prussia, Nicholas said outright that he would
become a monk before he married the Prussian princess (the match wouldn’t have
been doable anyway because Margaret, like Hélène, declined to convert from her
Protestant religion to Russian Orthodoxy). Meanwhile, Queen Victoria didn’t favor
the match of Alix and Nicholas because she though negatively of Russia’s
political past. The Queen was also concerned about Alix’s safety there, not to
mention that she wasn’t particularly fond of the gruff and stubborn Alexander
III. But when the Tsar’s health began to decline in 1894 and Nicholas remained
unmarried, he reluctantly agreed to allow his son to propose to the Hessian
princess. So, in April of 1894, when Alix’s older brother, Ernest Louis (who
had succeeded his father as the Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine in 1892 upon
Louis IV’s death), married his first cousin, Princess Victoria Melita of
Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, a large number of royal guests were present at the
wedding – including Alix and Nicholas (he was also a first cousin of Princess
Victoria Melita). A day after Nicholas came to Coburg, he immediately proposed
to Alix. But despite her love for him, Alix refused his offer of marriage
initially because she was worried about betraying her Lutheran faith and
converting to Russian Orthodoxy. Her relatives then stepped in to encourage her
to marry Nicholas, including her cousin Kaiser Wilhelm II, who informed her that
it was her “duty” to marry the Tsesarevich. It was actually her older sister
Elizabeth who convinced Alix to follow her heart and marry the man she loved.
Elizabeth, who was a Russian Grand Duchess after her 1884 marriage to
Nicholas’s uncle, had converted to Russian Orthodoxy seven years after her
wedding for sincere reasons. She told her hesitant sister about the
similarities between Lutheranism and Russian Orthodoxy, which prompted Alix to
agree to Nicholas’s second proposal.
Alexandra Feodorovna, Empress of Russia (Heinrich von Angeli, 1896-7) |
During the summer, Nicholas spent
some time in England with his betrothed while his father’s personal priest gave
her religious instruction. But in late autumn, when Alexander III’s health
began to decline further, he approved his son’s request to bring Alix to the
royal family’s Crimean palace of Livadia where the ailing Tsar met her in full
dress uniform and gave her his blessing. Ten days after Alix’s arrival, the
forty-nine year old Tsar Alexander III passed away from nephritis on November
1, 1894. With his death, Nicholas was the new Emperor of Russia at the age of
twenty-six. But unfortunately for the Russian Empire, their new ruler was
completely unprepared and entirely unwilling to sit on the throne. He was totally
ill equipped for his future position because since his father was only in his
forties at the time of his accession, it was believed that it would be quite
some time before Nicholas would inherit the crown. Alexander III himself did
not much faith in his son’s abilities; he viewed him as “not mature enough to
take on serious responsibilities” and he knew how inherently unskilled Nicholas
was to be the Emperor. The day after Nicholas was named Tsar Nicholas II, Alix
was received into the Russian Orthodox Church as “Grand Duchess Alexandra
Feodorovna”. Though the wedding between the couple was initially scheduled for
the following spring, it was moved up due to Nicholas’s unexpected accession.
So, on November 26, 1894 in the Grand Church of the Winter Palace, the
twenty-two year old Alix married her beloved “Nicky” in a grand and lavish
ceremony. Now, the naïve Hessian princess was the “Empress Consort of All the
Russians.” Although the couple would have an ultimately tragic ending, their
twenty-four years of marriage together would be full of passionate and intense
love that never faded in the slightest.
The Wedding of Emperor Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna (Laurits Tuxen, 1895) |
Nicholas II’s disastrous reign
was seemingly prophesized by the shocking Khodynka Tragedy on the day of the
Emperor and Empress’s coronation. While Nicholas and Alexandra were being
formally crowned as the rulers of Russia on May 26, 1896 in the Kremlin,
several thousand people were trampled to death at the Khodynka Field in Moscow
during public festivities for the royal event when a rumor erupted that there
wasn’t enough food for everyone at the field. After learning about the horrible
event, Nicholas and Alexandra didn’t want to go to the coronation ball that
night out of respect for the dead but several of Nicholas’s uncles persuaded
him to go. The public was shocked when they learned that the nobility,
including the Emperor and Empress, went to the ball in face of the tragedy. Their
subjects, who also saw the Khodynka Tragedy as a bad omen for Nicholas’s reign,
quickly perceived Nicholas and Alexandra as callous and shallow. The Russian
people, even those of the nobility, disliked Alexandra from the start because
they mistook her extreme shyness as arrogance and snootiness. She was
completely overshadowed by her sociable and immensely popular mother-in-law,
the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, who was never fond of her introverted
daughter-in-law. The nobility disliked Alexandra for her quiet and awkward
persona (it didn’t help that she barely spoke any Russian, not to mention that
she wasn’t a fan of Russian culture) and the common people detested her because
she was German. Poor Alexandra was in an unfamiliar land surrounded by
disapproving people. To top it all off, she was expected to be the perfect
empress although she had never been prepared for the daunting task. The only
one who provided her with any comfort was her beloved husband, for even
Nicholas’s family turned their noses up at her. Alexandra lived most married
life as a recluse, staying out of the public eye and becoming extremely private
in regards to herself and the lives of her family.
Empress Alexandra Feodorovna (1895-1900) |
A year after her wedding,
Alexandra gave birth to her first child, Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna. In the
next six years after Olga’s birth, Alexandra had three more girls – Tatiana,
Maria, and Anastasia. But although Nicholas and Alexandra loved their daughters
wholeheartedly, they still lacked an heir to the throne. The people were more
than eager to criticize Alexandra for her inability to produce a son, cementing
her extreme unpopularity that much further. Finally, Alexandra completed her
most important duty as a consort and gave birth to a son – Tsesarevich Alexei
Nikolaevich, in 1904. But Alexei’s birth was more upsetting for his mother than
celebratory, as it was quickly discovered that the infant prince was a
hemophilic. Alexandra’s worst nightmare had come true; she had become a
hemophilia carrier like her mother. Alexandra was blamed by the public for her
son’s infirmity, which haunted her for the rest of her life. She took to
extreme measures to protect her darling son from potential injury and death,
coddling him so intensely that he became a spoiled, controlling brat who was
used to always getting his own way. She also hid her children from the public
in such a severe manner that they grew up innocent, naïve, and unaware of the
world outside the palace walls.
Alexandra and Nicholas II’s
children:
- Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna (1895-1918) died at the age of 22 while in Soviet captivity
- Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna (1897-1918) died at the age of 21 while in Soviet captivity
- Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna (1899-1918) died at the age of 19 while in Soviet captivity
- Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna (1901-1918) died at the age of 17 while in Soviet captivity
- Tsesarevich Alexei Nikolaevich (1904-1918) died at the age of 13 while in Soviet captivity
The Family of Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna (1913-14) |
Alexandra’s health had never been
strong and after her recurrent pregnancies, her constitution floundered. Her
obsessive anxiety and nervous exhaustion over the health of her son sapped her
strength and she became semi-invalid in her later years. As she grew older, she
became more and more immobile and she began to spend most of her days in bed or
in a chair, complaining about severe pain in her back. But the Empress would
find solace, and her family’s downfall, in the form of the mystic faith healer,
Grigori Rasputin. She believed full heartedly that he had power to improve her
son’s health and soon the infamous “Mad Monk”, who was known for his vulgar
behavior and explicit sexuality with women, became a central figure in the
Russian Imperial family. Many historians today are certain that his close
relationship with the Emperor, Empress, and the royal children contributed
immensely to the collapse of the monarchy, as the people despised Rasputin for
his influence over their sovereigns. Rumors soon began to spread that he was
having sexual relations with the Empress herself and even her daughters, which
were believed as fact by the common people and even the aristocracy, though
they were untrue.
Alexandra Feodorovna, Empress of Russia (1905-14) |
Russia entered World War I in
1914 after Germany declared war on the Empire. The large kingdom suffered
defeat after defeat during the course of the conflict, along with the loss of hundreds
of thousands of troops. Alexandra was already disliked because of her German
roots but now she was completely hated by the Russian people because her
background made her the enemy. The war was going so badly for Russia that
Nicholas went to the front line in 1915 to take personal command of the Army.
He then made the horrible decision to name his wife as the regent of the Empire
in his absence. Alexandra was completely and utterly inexperienced in matters
of politics (just like her husband) and constantly fired inept ministers only
to replace them with more incompetent officials. This meant the government was
never steady or proficient, which didn’t improve the situation of the
undersupplied troops or the starving citizens. People believed that Alexandra
was a German spy, especially since she was completely under Rasputin’s thumb
and she turned to him for advice in literally everything she did. The Empire
began to completely fall apart; Nicholas was blamed for the horrible losses on
the battlefield, the economy was in free-fall, and mass shortages, famine, and
hunger reigned supreme in the streets. Even the nobility hated Alexandra and
her calamitous rule, so they decided to resort to extreme measures and brutally
murdered Rasputin on December 30, 1916 (his killers included Nicholas II’s
nephew-in-law and his first cousin). Rasputin’s death horrified the royal family,
especially Alexandra, who lost what little trust she had in her husband’s
family.
Alexandra Feodorovna, Empress of Russia (Jószef Arpád Koppay, 1900) |
Things reached a turning point
when the people and soldiers united to declare rebellion against the Crown in
March of 1917. Nicholas took little convincing to abdicate the throne for
himself and his son in favor of the Provisional Government. Alexandra, her
husband, and their children were placed under house arrest in Tobolsk, Siberia
until the Bolshevik Revolution broke out in October and Lenin’s Bolsheviks
(also known as “Soviets”) took control of the government. The family was then
moved to Yekaterinburg in 1918 at the Ipatiev House. Their captivity under the
Bolsheviks was much more hellish that it had been under the Provisional Government,
as they lost all freedom in the Ipatiev House and were constantly fearful of
their future…and their lives. They had good reason to worry, for Lenin decided
to execute the entire family to undermine the cause of the royalist White Army
in the ongoing Russian Revolution. In the early morning of July 17, 1918, the
entire royal family and their servants were brought down to the basement of the
house by their guards and executed by firing squad and bayonets. Their bodies
were then stripped and thrown down a disused mine shaft at Ganina Yama north of
Yekaterinburg. The guards then decided soon after to take the corpses out of
the shaft, smash their faces, dismember and disfigure their bodies with
sulfuric acid, and hastily bury them under railway sleepers (they buried two of
the children in a different location and the bodies of a daughter – either
Maria or Anastasia – and Alexei were not found until 2007). The remains of
Nicholas, Alexandra, and three of their daughters were found in the early
1990’s and properly buried in the St. Catherine Chapel of the Peter and Paul
Cathedral in St. Petersburg in 1998. In 2000, Alexandra and her family were
canonized as passion bearers by the Russian Orthodox Church along with her
sister, Grand Duchess Elizabeth, who was also killed by the Bolsheviks just a
day after her sister’s demise.
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