Trichome

Content deleted Content added
→‎Towards the February Revolution: left out one word, sorry
Line 312: Line 312:
On 28 February, at five in the morning, the Tsar left [[Mogilev]], (and directed also [[Nikolay Iudovich Ivanov]] to Tsarskoe Selo) but was unable to reach Petrograd as revolutionaries meanwhile controlled train stations around the capital. Around midnight the train was stopped at [[Malaya Vishera]], turned, and in the evening of 1 March Nicholas arrived in [[Pskov]].<!--(On 1 March the power came fully in the hands of the [[Petrograd Soviet]]?<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=MmqFAh69OUoC&lpg=PA65&ots=aucDqXLsJP&dq=rodzianko%20and%20the%20tsar&pg=PA120#v=snippet&q=rodzianko&f=false History of the Russian Revolution. By Leon Trotsky, Max Eastman]</ref>) Two rival institutions, the Duma and the [[Petrograd Soviet]], which had established itself in the [[Tauride Palace]] too, competed for power. On that day Rodzianko assured general [[Mikhail Alekseyev]] that the Duma leaders, rather than the Soviet ones, would form the new government in Petrograd. Rodzianko remained prime minister just for a few days. --> In the meantime the units guarding the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo "declared their neutrality" and thus abandoned the imperial family. The Provisional Committee declared itself the governing body of Russian Empire. <!--The Grand Dukes declared to support the Provisional Committee. The monarchy was deserted by all the élites of the old society, the landowners, the army officers, the industrialists, and politicians of the Duma. , but ''defacto'' competed for power with the Petrograd Soviet (until October). The Government of Golitzine as the Council of Ministers retreated to the [[Admiralty building, Saint Petersburg|Admiralty building]].{{fact}}--> Then the Provisional Committee agreed with the Petrograd Soviet to create the [[Provisional Government of Russia]]. On 28 February, Rodzianko invited the Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich and Kirill Vladimirovich to put their signatures to the drafting of the Manifesto, in which Emperor Nicholas II recommended to introduce in Russia the constitutional system. The Tsar accepted a responsible government, except the appointment of the Ministers of War, Marine and Foreign Affairs. In the evening of 2 March [[Nikolai Ruzsky]], [[Vasily Shulgin]] and Guchkov persuaded the Tsar, accompanied by [[Vladimir Freedericksz]], to resign,<ref>[http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/ndiaries1917.html Alexander Palace]</ref> which he did in favor of his brother [[Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia]]. [[Grand Duke Nicholas]] was reappointed as Commander-in-Chief, (a post he kept until 11 March).
On 28 February, at five in the morning, the Tsar left [[Mogilev]], (and directed also [[Nikolay Iudovich Ivanov]] to Tsarskoe Selo) but was unable to reach Petrograd as revolutionaries meanwhile controlled train stations around the capital. Around midnight the train was stopped at [[Malaya Vishera]], turned, and in the evening of 1 March Nicholas arrived in [[Pskov]].<!--(On 1 March the power came fully in the hands of the [[Petrograd Soviet]]?<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=MmqFAh69OUoC&lpg=PA65&ots=aucDqXLsJP&dq=rodzianko%20and%20the%20tsar&pg=PA120#v=snippet&q=rodzianko&f=false History of the Russian Revolution. By Leon Trotsky, Max Eastman]</ref>) Two rival institutions, the Duma and the [[Petrograd Soviet]], which had established itself in the [[Tauride Palace]] too, competed for power. On that day Rodzianko assured general [[Mikhail Alekseyev]] that the Duma leaders, rather than the Soviet ones, would form the new government in Petrograd. Rodzianko remained prime minister just for a few days. --> In the meantime the units guarding the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo "declared their neutrality" and thus abandoned the imperial family. The Provisional Committee declared itself the governing body of Russian Empire. <!--The Grand Dukes declared to support the Provisional Committee. The monarchy was deserted by all the élites of the old society, the landowners, the army officers, the industrialists, and politicians of the Duma. , but ''defacto'' competed for power with the Petrograd Soviet (until October). The Government of Golitzine as the Council of Ministers retreated to the [[Admiralty building, Saint Petersburg|Admiralty building]].{{fact}}--> Then the Provisional Committee agreed with the Petrograd Soviet to create the [[Provisional Government of Russia]]. On 28 February, Rodzianko invited the Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich and Kirill Vladimirovich to put their signatures to the drafting of the Manifesto, in which Emperor Nicholas II recommended to introduce in Russia the constitutional system. The Tsar accepted a responsible government, except the appointment of the Ministers of War, Marine and Foreign Affairs. In the evening of 2 March [[Nikolai Ruzsky]], [[Vasily Shulgin]] and Guchkov persuaded the Tsar, accompanied by [[Vladimir Freedericksz]], to resign,<ref>[http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/ndiaries1917.html Alexander Palace]</ref> which he did in favor of his brother [[Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia]]. [[Grand Duke Nicholas]] was reappointed as Commander-in-Chief, (a post he kept until 11 March).


[[File:Lesnoy SPb 000000328 1 m.jpg|thumb|200px|The boiler room of the [[Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University]] where Rasputin was (allegedly) cremated.<ref>[http://www.encspb.ru/object/2804023731?lc=en Rasputin G. E. (1869–1916)]. A.G. Kalmykov in the Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia.</ref><ref>[[#Nelipa|Nelipa]], pp. 454–455, 457–459.</ref><ref>[[#Moe|Moe]], p. 627.</ref><ref>[http://www.nlr.ru/petersburg/spbpcards/photos/lo000000328_1_m.jpg The boiler-building – Images of St Petersburg – National Library of Russia]</ref>]]
[[File:Lesnoy SPb 000000328 1 m.jpg|thumb|200px|The boiler room of the [[Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University]] where Rasputin was cremated.<ref>[http://www.encspb.ru/object/2804023731?lc=en Rasputin G. E. (1869–1916)]. A.G. Kalmykov in the Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia.</ref><ref>[[#Nelipa|Nelipa]], pp. 454–455, 457–459.</ref><ref>[[#Moe|Moe]], p. 627.</ref><ref>[http://www.nlr.ru/petersburg/spbpcards/photos/lo000000328_1_m.jpg The boiler-building – Images of St Petersburg – National Library of Russia]</ref>]]


On 4 March, the investigation on Rasputin was stopped by Kerensky and he extended an amnesty to the three main conspirators. <!--On 6 March, the British prime minister, [[David Lloyd George]], gave a cautious welcome to the suggestion of the Russian foreign minister, Pavel Milyukov, that the toppled Tsar and his family be given sanctuary in Britain (although, Lloyd George would have preferred that they go to a neutral country).--> On 8 March, all the movements of the imperial family were restricted as the grave of Rasputin had become a place of veneration for the Tsarina and her daughters.<ref>[[#Nelipa|Nelipa]], pp. 424–425, 430, 476.</ref> Rasputin's secret grave site was quickly discovered under a pile of rocks in the woods. The coffin was transported to the town hall, where a curious crowd gathered, and secured under guard over night. According to Moynahan:
On 4 March, the investigation on Rasputin was stopped by Kerensky and he extended an amnesty to the three main conspirators. <!--On 6 March, the British prime minister, [[David Lloyd George]], gave a cautious welcome to the suggestion of the Russian foreign minister, Pavel Milyukov, that the toppled Tsar and his family be given sanctuary in Britain (although, Lloyd George would have preferred that they go to a neutral country).--> On 8 March, all the movements of the imperial family were restricted as the grave of Rasputin had become a place of veneration for the Tsarina and her daughters.<ref>[[#Nelipa|Nelipa]], pp. 424–425, 430, 476.</ref> Rasputin's secret grave site was quickly discovered under a pile of rocks in the woods. The coffin was transported to the town hall, where a curious crowd gathered, and secured under guard over night. According to Moynahan:

Revision as of 20:45, 11 February 2017

Template:Eastern Slavic name

Grigori Rasputin
Born(1869-01-21)21 January 1869
Pokrovskoe, Siberia, Russian Empire
Died30 December 1916(1916-12-30) (aged 47)
Petrograd, Russian Empire
Cause of deathAssassination
Occupation(s)Peasant, pilgrim, healer, adviser
SpousePraskovia Fedorovna Dubrovina
ChildrenMikhail, Anna, Grigori, Dmitri, Matryona, Varvara, Paraskeva
ParentEfim Vilkin Rasputin & Anna Parshukova

Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin (Russian: Григорий Ефимович Распутин, IPA: [ɡrʲɪˈɡorʲɪj (j)ɪˈfʲiməvʲɪtɕ rɐˈsputʲɪn];[1] 21 January [O.S. 9 January] 1869 – 30 December [O.S. 17 December] 1916[2]) was a Russian peasant, an experienced traveler,[3] a mystical faith healer, and trusted friend of the family of Nicholas II, the last Tsar of the Russian Empire. He became an influential figure in Saint Petersburg, especially after August 1915 when Nicholas took command of the army fighting in World War I. Advising his wife, Alexandra Feodorovna, in countless spiritual and political issues, Rasputin became an easy scapegoat for Russian nationalists, aristocrats and liberals.

There is uncertainty over much of Rasputin's life and the degree of influence that he exerted over the extremely shy Tsar and the strong-willed Tsarina.[4] Accounts are often based on dubious memoirs, hearsay, and legend.[note 1] While his influence and position may have been exaggerated by society gossip and his own drunken boasting[8] his presence played a significant role in the increasing unpopularity of the Imperial couple.[9] Rasputin was murdered by monarchists who hoped to save Tsarism by ending his sway over the royal family.

Early life

Pokrovskoe, along the Tura River in 1912. Rasputin raised money for (the decoration of) the church [10] that was built c. 1906 and destroyed in 1950. Photo by Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky[11]

Grigori Rasputin was born the son of a well-to-do peasant and postal coachdriver (yamshchik) in the small village of Pokrovskoe, in the Tobolsk Governorate (now Yarkovsky District in the Tyumen Oblast) in the immense West Siberian Plain. The parish register contains the following entry for 9 January 1869 [O.S.][note 2]: "In the village of Pokrovskoe, in the family of the peasant Yefim Yakovlevich Rasputin and his wife,[note 3] both Orthodox, was born a son, Grigory."[12][13][14] The next day, he was baptized and named after St. Gregory of Nyssa, whose feast day is on 10 January.[15]

Grigori was the fifth of nine children, perhaps the only who survived.[16][17] He never attended school, as there was not one in the area.[18] (The first Russian Empire Census in 1897, registered 87.5 per cent of the Siberian population as illiterate.[19]) In Pokrovskoe, a village with 200 dwellings and roughly a thousand inhabitants, Grigori was regarded as an outsider, but one endowed with mysterious gifts. In those days, Rasputin acquired a reputation as a brawler and a libertine.[3] Having a rude attitude towards the district head, he was locked up in jail for two nights; according to D. Smith this is the only mention of Rasputin's criminal past.[20]

On 2 February 1887, Rasputin married Praskovia Fyodorovna Dubrovina (1865/6–1936) and they had three children: Dmitri, Matryona, and Varvara. Two earlier sons and a daughter died young.[note 4] In 1892 (according to D. Smith in 1897)[21] Rasputin left his village, his wife, children and parents and spent several months in a monastery in Verkhoturye,[22] Alexander Spiridovich suggested after the death of a child.[23] Maybe Rasputin was curious as the monastery was enlarged to receive more pilgrims.[24] Outside the monastery lived Starets Makary, a hermit, whose influence led him to give up tobacco, alcohol, and meat. When he returned to the village, he had become a fervent and inspired convert.[25][26][27] His children dreaded the long hours of enforced prayer and fasting "for which everything, anniversaries or penitence, served as an excuse."[28]

Turn to religious life

File:Makarij, Theofan of Poltava and Rasputin, 1909 03.jpg
Makary, Theophanes of Poltava and Grigori Rasputin
Alexander Nevsky Lavra
Bloody Sunday (1905). Shooting workers near the Winter Palace (1905). Painting by Ivan Vladimiriv

Rasputin's claimed vision of Our Lady of Kazan turned him towards the life of a religious mystic. Around 1897, he traveled to Mount Athos (St. Panteleimon Monastery), but left shocked and profoundly disillusioned, confronted with sodomy as he told Makary.[29][30] By 1900, Rasputin was identified as a strannik,[31] a religious wanderer, visiting holy places on foot and exchanging teaching for hospitality. However, he usually went home to help his family for sowing and the harvest. He is sometimes considered a yurodiviy ("holy fool"),[32] and a starets ("elder"), but he did not consider himself a starets,[22] as these lived in seclusion and silence. To label him as simple, holy fool is problematic, as Rasputin was often described as intelligent.

According to Oleg Platonov, Rasputin criticized the local priest who had a mechanical way of praying. In 1902, private gatherings in his house had to be abandoned because of all the attention that he received from locals.[33] Rasputin decided to spend some time in Kiev, almost 3,000 km (1,860 miles) from his village, where he visited the Monastery of the Caves. In Kazan, he attracted the attention of the bishop and members of the upper class.[34][35][36] His interpretations of the Scriptures were so keen and so original that even learned churchmen liked to listen to them.[37] Rasputin then traveled to the capital to meet with John of Kronstadt and acquire donations for the construction of the village church. He carried an introduction to Ivan Stragorodsky, the rector of the theological faculty.[38]

Spiridovich thinks that Rasputin arrived in St Petersburg in the middle of 1904; according to Sukhomlinov, he met with the tsarina when she was still pregnant.[39] Rasputin went to Alexander Nevsky Lavra to seek sustenance and lodgings. Theophanes of Poltava was amazed by his tenacious memory and psychological perspicacity, and he offered to allow Rasputin to live in his apartment. Either he or Countess Sophia Ignatieva introduced Rasputin to Milica of Montenegro and her sister Anastasia, who were interested in Persian mysticism,[40] spiritism, and occultism. On 1 November 1905, Milica presented Rasputin to Tsar Nicholas and his wife Alexandra who had settled in Peterhof Palace because of all the unrest in the capital.[41]

Prior to his meeting with Rasputin, the Tsar had to deal with the Russo-Japanese War, Bloody Sunday, the Revolution of 1905, bombs, and a ten-day general strike in October. In a city without light, street cars, and railway connections, the Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias was willing to sign the October Manifesto, to agree with a constitution and the establishment of the Imperial Duma. He gave up part of his unlimited autocracy. For the next six months, Sergei Witte, a reformist, was the first Russian Prime Minister, but by the end of the year, the real ruler of the country was Dmitri Trepov because of continuing bloody fighting against police and soldiers in the streets.[42] In April 1906 Witte was succeeded by the conservative Ivan Goremykin and the Russian Constitution of 1906 was introduced. The Tsar, regretting his 'moment of weakness', retained the title of autocrat and maintained his unique dominating position in relation to the Russian Church.[43] The supreme autocratic power remained in the hands of the Emoperor, who owned his authority to God alone.[44]

Healer to Alexei

Rasputin with his children
Alexandra Feodorovna with her children, Rasputin and the nurse Maria Ivanova Vishnyakova who later claimed that Rasputin had raped her, photo from McManus-Young Collection (1908)

On 13 October 1906, Rasputin paid a visit to the Imperial family and presented an icon. On request of the Tsar, he visited the next prime minister, Pyotr Stolypin. A few weeks before, 29 people had been killed on Aptekarsky Island in a bomb attack by the Maximalists and two of Stolypin's children were wounded. Rasputin was invited to pray.

On 6 April 1907, Rasputin was invited to Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo, this time to see Tsesarevich Alexei, the heir. The boy had suffered an injury which caused him painful bleeding. By then, it was not known that Alexei had a rare form of hemophilia,[note 5] a disorder due to the lack of just one protein.[45][46] The doctors could not supply a cure, and the desperate Tsarina invited Rasputin.[47] He was able to calm the parents and their son, standing at the foot of the bed and praying. From that moment, Alexandra believed Rasputin was Alexei's savior.

Pierre Gilliard,[48] the French historian Hélène Carrère d'Encausse,[49] and journalist Diarmuid Jeffreys speculated that Rasputin's healing practice included halting the administration of aspirin, a pain-relieving analgesic available since 1899.[50][51] Aspirin is an antiaggregant and has blood-thinning properties; the mechanism of action of aspirin is that it prevents clotting and promotes bleeding, which could have caused the hemarthrosis at the root of Alexei's joints swelling and pain.[52][53]

In September 1912, the Romanovs were visiting their hunting retreat in the Białowieża Forest; on 5 September, the careless Tsesarevich jumped into a rowboat and hit one of the oarlocks. A large bruise appeared within minutes. Within a week the hematoma reduced in size.[54] In mid-September, the family moved to Spała (then in Russian Poland). On 2 October, after a drive in the woods, the "juddering of the carriage had caused still healing hematoma in his upper thigh to rupture and start bleeding again."[55] Alexei had to be carried out in an almost unconscious state. His temperature rose and his heartbeat dropped, caused by a swelling in the left groin. A constant record was kept of the boy's temperature. On 10 October, a medical bulletin appeared in the newspapers,[56] and Alexei received the last sacrament. His condition improved at once, according to the Tsar. The positive trend continued throughout the next day.[57] According to Nelipa, Robert K. Massie was correct to recommend that psychological factors do play a part.[58]

It is not exactly clear on which day, either 9,[59] 10, or 11 October, the Tsarina turned to her lady-in-waiting and best friend, Anna Vyrubova,[60][61] to secure the help of the peasant healer, who at that time was out of favor. According to his daughter, Rasputin received the telegram on 12 October.[62] The next day he seems to have responded, with a short telegram, including the prophecy: "The little one will not die. Do not allow the doctors [c.q. Eugene Botkin and Vladimir Derevenko] to bother him too much."[63] If Maria Rasputin was right about the day her father replied "the longstanding claim that Rasputin had somehow alleviated Alexei's condition is simply fictitious".[64] On 19 October, Alexei's condition was considerably better and the hematoma disappeared, but he had to undergo orthopedic therapy to straighten his left leg.[65]

The court physician, Botkin, believed that Rasputin was a charlatan and his apparent healing powers arose from his use of hypnosis, but Rasputin was not interested in this practice before 1913 and his teacher Gerasim Papnadato was expelled from St. Petersburg in 1914.[66][67][68] Felix Yusupov, one of Rasputin's enemies, suggested that he secretly drugged Alexei[69] with Tibetan herbs which he had obtained from a "quack doctor", Peter Badmayev, but his three envelopes with powder were politely rejected by the court.[70][71] For Fuhrmann, these ideas on hypnosis[72] and drugs flourished because the imperial family lived such isolated lives.[73] (Since the Revolution of 1905 they lived almost as much apart from Russian society as if they were settlers in Canada.[73][74]) For Moynahan, "There is no evidence that Rasputin ever summoned up spirits, or felt the need to; he won his admirers through force of personality, not by tricks."[75] For Maria Rasputin and Vladimir Sukhomlinov, it was magnetism. For Shelley, the secret of his power lay in the sense of calm, gentle strength, and shining warmth of conviction.[76]

Controversy

Rasputin, Hermogen and Iliodor in 1906. Alexandra ordered Hermogen banished to a monastery after he beat Rasputin with a crucifix; Iliodor went into exile after the attack by Khioniya Guseva in June 1914.

Even before Rasputin's arrival, the upper class of St Petersburg had been widely influenced by mysticism. Individual aristocrats were obsessed with anything occult.[77][78] In those days, Imperial Russia was confronted with a religious renaissance, a widespread interest in spiritual-ethical literature and non-conformist moral-spiritual movements, an upsurge in pilgrimage and other devotions to sacred spaces and objects. The "God-Seeking" were shaping their own ritual and spiritual lives (e.g. Helena Blavatsky, George Gurdjieff, and Pyotr Ouspensky).

Alexandra worried a lot about herself, her son and his condition; she had invited her physician 42 times within two months.[79] Earlier Papus had visited Russia three times, in 1901, 1905, and 1906, serving the Tsar and Tsarina both as physician and occult consultant.[80] After the healer Nizier Anthelme Philippe died, Rasputin came into the picture.

In his religious views, Rasputin was close to the so-called Khlysts, an obscure Christian sect with strong Siberian roots, who affirmed "the existence of a perpetual warfare between flesh and spirit"[81] calling themselves "Men of God". In September 1907, the 'Spiritual Consistory' of Tobolsk accused Rasputin of spreading false doctrines: kissing and bathing with women.[82][83] According to Oleg Platonov: "The case was fabricated so clumsily that it ‘works’ only against its own authors. No wonder the documents were never published. Nothing but allusions were made to its existence."[10] In Summer 1908, Theofan traveled to Siberia and examined all the documents from the Tobolsk inquiry, but failed to find anything of interest.[84] According to Smith Rasputin usually welcomed his female followers with a kiss, even if he saw them for the first time.[85]

"On Sundays after Mass, he would usually meet people in the house of some aristocratic admirer and talk to them." Rasputin (left) and his daughter Maria (right) in 1914.

While fascinated by Rasputin in the beginning, the ruling class of St Petersburg began to turn against him as he had privileges no one else had, an easy access to the Imperial Family. On 8 December 1908, Rasputin brought his wife to Tsarkoe Selo.[47] In 1909, within four months, Rasputin had visited the Romanovs six times.[86] It seems Rasputin "knew how to amuse and enliven the little boy".[87] Alexandra was in conflict with her mother- and sister-in-law about her continuing patronage of Rasputin. In 1910, the press started a campaign against Rasputin. Nikolai Pavlovich Sablin and Charles Sydney Gibbes were sent to Rasputin to find out more.[88] Theofan lost his interest and Stolypin wanted to ban him from the capital.[note 6] When Rasputin arrived in St Petersburg, he returned within three weeks to his home village, according to Spiridovich.[89]

Early 1911, the Tsar instructed Rasputin to join a group of pilgrims.[90] Rasputin first visited the Pochayiv Lavra in the Ukraine. From Odessa, the pilgrims sailed to Constantinople, Smyrna, Ephesus, Patmos, Rhodes, Cyprus, Beirut, Tripoli, and Jaffa. Around Lent 1911, Rasputin arrived in Jerusalem and the Holy Land.[91] On his way back, he visited his right-wing friend Iliodor who gathered huge crowds in Tsaritsyn. When Vladimir Kokovtsov became prime minister, he asked the Tsar permission to authorize Rasputin's exile to Tobolsk, but Nicholas refused. "I know Rasputin too well to believe all the tittle-tattle about him."[92]

In 1912, Hermogen, who told Rasputin to stay away from the palace, repeated the rumours that Rasputin had joined the Khlysty. Iliodor, hinting that Rasputin was Alexandra's paramour, showed Makarov a satchel of letters, one by the Tsarina and four by her daughters written in 1909 and 1910.[93] The given[94] or stolen[95] letters were handed by Kokovtsov to the Tsar,[96][97] but using a hectograph the content was spread through the capital. Kokovtsov offered Rasputin 200,000 rubles, equaling $100,000, to leave the capital. He also ordered the newspapers not to mention Rasputin's name in connection with the Empress.

Ecstatic ritual of Khlysts ("radeniye"). In September 1907 Rasputin had to appear for the Ecclesiastical court of Tobolsk, accused of being a Khlyst. No evidence was found.[98]

There is little or no proof that Rasputin was a member of the Khlysty,[99] but he does appear to have been influenced by their practices,[100] accepting some of their beliefs, for example, those regarding sin as a necessary part of redemption.[101][102] Suspicions that Rasputin, a good dancer,[103][104] was one of the Khlysty tarnished his reputation right until the end of his life.[105][106][note 7] The Holy Synod frequently attacked Rasputin, accusing him of a variety of immoral or evil practices. Finally, Nicholas II accepted investigations on Rasputin. The new bishop in Tobolsk, Alexey V. Molchanov, started to investigate the case on 1 September 1912. Two months later the bishop concluded Rasputin was an "orthodox Christian ... who sought the truth"[110] and the investigations were stopped.[69][73][111] Rasputin had become one of the most hated people in Russia,[112] but after the Spała incident, Rasputin regained influence at court and also in church affairs.[113]

On 21 February 1913, Rodzianko ejected Rasputin from the Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan shortly before the celebration of 300 years of Romanov rule in Russia. He had established himself in front of the seats which Rodzianko, after great difficulty, had secured for the Duma.[114] Rasputin's behaviour was discussed in the Fourth Duma,[115] and in March 1913, the Octobrists, led by Alexander Guchkov, commissioned an investigation,[116][117] but "anyone bold enough to criticize Rasputin found only condemnation from the Tsarina."[118] The emperor and his wife referred to Rasputin as Grigori, our "Friend" or "Holy man", avoiding his last name.[note 8] Worried about the threat of a scandal, the Tsar asked Rasputin to leave for Siberia; but a few days later, at the demand of the Empress, the order was cancelled. Nicholas decided to criticize the politicians.[120] The Tsar dismissed Kokovtsov on 29 January 1914.[121] He was replaced by the decrepit and absent-minded Ivan Goremykin, and Pyotr Bark as Minister of Finance. According to Pavel Milyukov, in May 1914, Rasputin had become an influential factor in Russian politics.[122]

Assassination attempt

Rasputin in his salon among admirers early 1914, most likely on his birthday; his father is the 4th from the right. His telephone is visible on the wall. Photo by Karl Bulla.
Rasputin in the hospital

On 27/28 June, Rasputin arrived from the capital in Pokrovskoe.[123] Around 3:00 pm[124][125] on Sunday 12 July [O.S. 29 June] 1914,[82] Rasputin went out from the house in reply to a telegram he had received from the Tsarina on the threat of war.[126][127][128][129][130] At that moment, he was suddenly approached by what looked like a beggar. When Rasputin was checking his pockets for money, this woman, the 33-years old Khionia Guseva who had her face concealed with a black kerchief, pulled out a dagger.[131] She stabbed Rasputin in the stomach, just above the navel. Rasputin asserted that he ran down the street with his hands on his belly. Guseva claimed that she chased him, but Rasputin grabbed a stick from the ground and hit her.[124] Covered with blood, Rasputin was brought into his house. A doctor from a neighboring village gave first aid. The next day, Alexandr Vladimirov arrived from Tyumen and assessed the mesentery was scraped.[132]

On Thursday, Rasputin was transported by steamboat to Tyumen, accompanied by his wife and daughter. The Tsarina[133] sent her own physician, Roman Vreden[134] and after a laparotomy and more than six weeks in the hospital, where he had to walk around in a gown, unable to wear ordinary clothes, Rasputin recovered. On 17 August, he left the hospital;[135] by mid-September he was back in Petrograd. According to his daughter Maria Rasputin was never the same man afterwards and started to drink dessert wines.[136] [137] (N.B. Since the beginning of the war, the manufacture, and sale of vodka was forbidden. It is likely Rasputin drank sweet or semi-sweet Crimean or Georgian wine.[138]) Rasputin believed that Iliodor and Vladimir Dzhunkovsky had organized the attack.[139][140]

A few days later Iliodor, dressed as a woman, fled all the way around the Gulf of Bothnia to Christiania.[note 9] Guseva, a fanatically religious woman who had been his adherent in earlier years, "denied Iliodor's participation, declaring that she attempted to kill Rasputin because he was spreading temptation among the innocent."[142] On 12 October 1914, the investigator declared that Iliodor was guilty of inciting the murder, but the local procurator decided to suspend any action against him for undisclosed reasons.[143] Guseva was locked in a madhouse in Tomsk and a trial was avoided.[144] The Tsar ordered more measures to protect Rasputin's life.

Yar restaurant incident

The former Yar restaurant in 1910, photo by Adolph Erichson

From October 1914, Stepan Petrovich Beletsky, head of the police, exercised 24-hour surveillance of Rasputin and his apartment.[145] Two sets of detectives were attached to his person;[146] one was to act undercover.[147] From 1 January 1915 modified reports from Okhrana spies — the "staircase notes" — had to provide evidence about Rasputin's lifestyle.[148] They were given to the Tsar in an attempt to convince him to break with Rasputin.[149] In reading it, the Tsar observed that on the day and hour at which one of the acts mentioned in the document was alleged to have taken place, Rasputin had actually been in Tsarskoe Selo.[150][151]

On 25 March 1915, Rasputin left for Moscow by nighttrain. On the next day, he was followed by eight Okhrana policemen. On the evening, he is said, while inebriated, to have opened his trousers and waved his "reproductive organ" in front of a group of female gypsy singers in the Yar restaurant.[152][153] According to Smith in the original police report, there is "not one word about Rasputin being drunk, about any insulted Gypsy chorus girls, about indecent language, public exhibitionism, and most critically, about any arrest."[154] They were celebrating a business deal and had invited two journalists.[155][156] A few days later a waiter assessed the story as bunkum when talking to Gerard Shelley.[157] An unreliable report was presented in June; the police did not interview any singer or witness in the restaurant. The footballer and secret agent R. H. Bruce Lockhart mentioned he saw everything with his own eyes;[158] Smith proves he lied. The incident did not happen in Summer, and in April Lockhart stayed in Kiev.[159] Also for Bernard Pares, it was taken that the police were the enemies of Rasputin, and that the many stories which reached the public were simply their fabrications.[160]

World War I

Entrance of Gorochovaia 64 near the Tsarskoe train station. Rasputin's 5-room apartment, No. 20, paid by either the Empress,[161] Alexander Taneyev or the banker Dmitry Lvovich Rubinstein, was on the third floor and had a view into the courtyard.[162] From May 1914, he lived there with his housemaids Dunya and Katya Pecherkina, his niece Anna and his two daughters, who were students at one of Petrograd's private colleges. "There was no sign of luxury in the flat. Nothing but bare, painted boards, hard deal chairs and a simple table."[163]

After the First Balkan War, the Balkan allies planned the partition of the European territory of the Ottoman Empire among them. During the Second Balkan War, the Tsar tried to stop the conflict since Russia did not wish to lose either of its Slavic allies. Rasputin warned the Tsar not to become involved and promoted a peaceful policy in the "Petersburg Gazette".[164][165] Rasputin became the enemy of Grand Duke Nicholas, a panslavist, his brother Peter and their wives Milica and Anastasia of Montenegro, eager to go to war and push the Austrians out of the Balkans.[166][167]

On 25 July [O.S. 12 July] 1914, the Tsar received a formal appeal for help from the Serbs, the beginning of the July Crisis. The Council of Ministers decreed war preparations starting on the next day, and partial mobilisation as a precaution against the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[168] On the 26th, Rasputin spoke out against Russia going to war; he begged the Tsar to do everything in his power to avoid it.[169] On the 27th, Anna Vyrubova asked Rasputin to change his mind on the war, but he stuck to his position.[165] On the 28th, Austria declared war on the Kingdom of Serbia, leading to a partial mobilization of Russia. In the morning of the 29th, the wavering Tsar signed both a partial against Austria and a general mobilization with Austria and Germany. From the hospital, Rasputin sent several telegrams to the court through Vyrubova, expressing his fears for the future of the country. "If Russia goes to war, it will be the end of the monarchy, of the Romanovs and of Russian institutions."[170] "Such was his worry that his wound opened up and began to bleed again."

A flurry of telegrams between the Kaiser Wilhelm II and the Tsar[171] led to the cancellation of Russian general mobilization; the Tsar chose a partial mobilization in the evening.[172] As it would make a rapid general mobilization impossible, Nicholas II met with protests from Foreign Minister Sergei Sazonov. According to Samuel Hoare: "I believe myself that, had he not insisted upon general mobilisation on July 30th, the Emperor would have continued to hesitate, and Russian mobilisation … would never have been possible".[173] On the 31st Germany demanded that Russia stopped general mobilisation. [note 10][note 11] "On 1 August 1914, Germany declared war on Russia, turning the Third Balkan War into a continental and, within a few days, a world war."

Russia hoped that the war would last until Christmas, but at the end of 1914 the situation on the Eastern front had become disastrous. The size of the Russian army was enormous; neither the transport nor the armament production was sufficient.[179] In the big cities, there was a shortage of food and high prices and the Russian people blamed all on "dark forces". In the end of May shops and houses in Moscow, owned by Germans, were attacked.[180] The crowd called for the Empress, who had German roots, to be locked up in a convent.[181] In June, under pressure of public opinion, Sukhomlinov left on charges of abuse of power, inactivity, and high treason. When the German army occupied Warsaw in August 1915, the situation looked extremely grave because of a shortage in weapons and ammunition.[note 12] Nobody had expected according to Sukhomlinov the war would take so long. On August 9, 1915, Sazonov, foreign minister, announced: "The government hangs in mid-air, having support neither from above nor from below."[183] The situation was so serious that there were rumours of revolution and talk of a separate peace with Germany.[184] Lenin wrote an article for the Zimmerwald Conference, convened by anti-militarist socialist parties, calling for the defeat of the Russian government.[185] He rejected both the defense of Russia and the cry for peace; instead, he promoted a civil war. Trotsky declared: "The right of nations to select their own government must be the immovable fundamental principle of international relations."[186]

Ivan Goremykin. "Seventy-five years of age, a conservative, and a life-long bureaucrat, he was, in his own words, ‘pulled like a winter coat out of mothballs,’ to lead the government ..."[187]

On 23 August 1915, the Tsar Nicholas took supreme command of the Russian armies, and replaced not only Grand Duke Nicholas but also Nikolai Yanushkevich, hoping this would lift morale. As he was absolutely incompetent in military matters, his action disturbed the Entente Powers and delighted the Germans.[188] He was undoubtedly led to this fateful decision by the insistence of the Tsarina and of Rasputin[189][190] who were, according to Nikolay Maklakov, the Interior Minister the only ones who supported the Tsar in his decision. According to Sukhomlinov, the Tsar was unusually certain about his decision.[191] Probably, as he felt ‘the heavy burden of political leadership slipping from his shoulders with immense relief’.[192] However, his frequent absences from the Russian capital proved to be dire consequences for himself as well as for Russia. Nicholas's physical distance from the capital created a political vacuum. This void was filled, with the encouragement of her husband, by the empress.[193]

All the ministers, even Ivan Goremykin, realized that the change would put Alexandra and Rasputin in charge and threatened to resign.[194][195] Rodzianko expected his decision would harm the dynasty. All the Romanovs despised his decision; Duchess Maria Pavlovna wasn't the only one who feared the Empress would "be the sole ruler of Russia". The Progressive Bloc "announced that it was willing to work with the government if Nicholas would appoint ministers that enjoyed true popular support."[196] It demanded the forming of a "government of confidence", but the Tsar, unconvincable, rejected these proposals. The Imperial Duma was sent into recess on 3 September by an ukaze and would not gather again until 9 February 1916. (For the Tsarina: "Nobody needs their opinion – they rather will address the question of sewage".) On 26 September Nikolai Shcherbatov was replaced by Alexei Khvostov, a candidate from the extreme right. On 27 September, the Duma deputee Vasily Maklakov published his famous article in the Moscow Gazette, describing Russia as a vehicle with no brakes, driven along a narrow mountain path by a "mad chauffeur".[197] On 26 October Alexander Krivoshein who opposed the hasty dissolution of the Duma resigned as minister of State Property.

Rasputin and Alexandra

Alexandra Feodorovna in the Mauve Boudoir in the Alexander Palace at Tsarskoe Selo (ca 1909)

While seldom meeting with Alexandra personally after the debate in the Third Duma, Rasputin had become her personal adviser through daily telephone calls or weekly meetings with Vyrubova. According to D. Smith: She really thought that they needed somebody who was strong, who could guide Nicholas as he led the country.[198] Rasputin's personal influence over the Tsarina had become so great that it was he who ordered the destinies of Imperial Russia while she compelled her weak husband to fulfill them.[199] According to Pierre Gilliard, "her desires were interpreted by Rasputin, they seemed in her eyes to have the sanction and authority of a revelation."[200] According to Nicholas V. Riasanovsky:

"Thus a narrow-minded, reactionary, hysterical woman and an ignorant, weird peasant - who apparently made decisions simply in terms of his personal interest, and whose exalted position depended on the empress's belief that he could protect her son from hemophilia and that he had been sent by God to guide her, her husband, and Russia - had the destinies of an empire in their hands.[201]

On 19 August 1915, after an unsuccessful attempt to discredit Rasputin and the Tsarina in a newspaper, Prince Vladimir Orlov[69] and Vladimir Dzhunkovsky, the latter had fabricated the Yar incident, were discharged from their posts. The Tsar then pronounced the relationship between Rasputin and his wife to be a private one, closed to debate.[202][203][204][205]

Around 15 November 1915 Alexandra and Rasputin advised the Tsar in military strategies around Riga where the Germans and Austrians were stopped.[206] It seems the two also dominated the Holy Synod. When Samarin, a prominent critic of Rasputin, was appointed in the Holy Synod, Rasputin left for Siberia,[207] but Alexandra sent a cable telling him to return to the capital.[208]

On 6 December 1915 Rasputin was invited to see Alexei when the boy had returned from Stavka (in Mogilev) because of a cold, and nosebleeds.[209] According to Gaillard "The Imperatritsa once again attributed the improvement in the Tsesarevich's health to Rasputin's prayers, she remained convinced that the child had been saved thanks to his help."[210]

Government

Rasputin's awkward handwriting in a request to minister Khvostov. From: René Fülöp-Miller (1927) Rasputin: The Holy Devil. According to Shelley he was taught handwriting by the Tsarina.

Nicholas's hostility to parliamentarism emerged at the very beginning of his reign in 1894; to him, it would cause Russia to disintegrate.[211] According to S. Kulikov: "Nicholas was pursuing the entirely specific idea of gradually replacing absolutism with dualism, rather than with parliamentarism."[211] After Nicholas issued the October Manifesto in 1905 granting civil liberties and a national legislature, the Committee of Ministers was replaced with a Council of Ministers. On July 1, 1914, the Tsar suggested that the Duma - half of the deputees were nobles - should be reduced to merely a consultative body. On 24 August 1915 the Progressive Bloc, including the entire membership of the Duma, except the extreme right and the extreme left, was formed.[212] The deputies tried to bring the Council "uninterested in reform"[213] under control of the Duma,[214] but their demands for a "ministry of confidence" were not received by the Tsar."[215]

In late 1915, there was a shortage of food and of coal in the big cities; Alexander Trepov was appointed as crisis manager in the Minister of Railways. Five key ministries would gather on a more regular basis to solve the transport question.[216] In November 1915 Rasputin told Goremykin (or the obstinate Tsar) it was not right not to convene the Duma as all were trying to cooperate; one must show them a little confidence.[217] In January 1916, Rasputin was opposed to the plan to send the old Goremykin away.[218] who had persuaded the Tsar to reject the proposals of the Progressive Bloc for a government of confidence.

On 20 January 1916 Boris Stürmer was appointed as Prime Minister "to the surprise of everyone, and most of all Goremykin, who, as was usual with the Emperor, had never been given the idea that he was even in danger."[219] According to B. Pares, Stürmer was prepared to pose as a semi-liberal and would try in this way to keep the Duma quiet. The new chairman of the Council was not opposed to the convening of the Duma, as Goremykin had been, and he would launch a more liberal and conciliatory politic. The Duma gathered on 9 February, on the condition not to mention Rasputin.[220] The deputies were disappointed when Stürmer made his indistinct speech. For the first time in his life, the Tsar made a visit to the Taurida Palace, suggesting he was willing to work with the legislature. According to Milyukov Stürmer would keep his further dealings with the Duma to a minimum.[220]

The right-wing Alexei Khvostov, a cunning, ambitious young man

In the meantime, Khvostov and Beletsky had concocted a plan to kill Rasputin; the only way to get rid of him. What happened is hard to understand as every author has a different view on the intrigues between Khvostov, who was not appointed as Prime Minister,[221][222][223] and Beletsky who was keen to become minister of the interior himself,[224] or seems to have been fed up with his superior.[225] Khvostov was told to contact Iliodor and buy his manuscript, as he tried to bribe the Tsarina with publishing "The Mad Monk", his book on Rasputin.[226] Khvostov repeated the rumour which accused Rasputin of working for a separate peace and suggesting that Alexandra, Vyrubova, and Rasputin were German agents or spies.[227][228][229][230][231][232] [233][234] His plan to arrange the murder of Rasputin became public knowledge. Rather paranoid, Rasputin went to Alexander Spiridovich, head of the palace police, on 1 March. He was constantly in a state of nervous excitement. Khvostov, failing in protecting Alexandra and Rasputin, had to resign within three days and was banished to his estate.

Boris Stürmer was then appointed on the Ministry of Interior, the most powerful of all, which had under its control governors, police, and a Special Corps of Gendarmes, the uniformed secret police. He had risen to the status of virtual dictator.[235] In the same month, Minister of War Alexei Polivanov, who in his few months of office had brought about a recovery of the efficiency of the Russian army, was removed and replaced by Dmitry Shuvayev. According to Victor Chernov, the campaign of the party of the Empress and Rasputin was waged steadily against the eight ministers who "had resisted the removal of the commander in chief (Grand Duke Nikolai), and one after the other they were discharged."[236] According to Giles Milton:

British intelligence reports, sent between London and Petrograd in 1916, indicate that the British were not only extremely concerned about Rasputin's displacement of pro-British ministers in the Russian government but, even more importantly, his apparent insistence on withdrawing Russian troops from World War I. This withdrawal would have allowed the Germans to transfer their Eastern Front troops to the Western Front, leading to a massive outnumbering of the Allies and threatening their defeat. Whether this was actually Rasputin's intent or whether he was simply concerned about the huge number of Russian casualties (as the Tsarina's letters indicate) is in dispute, but it is clear that the British perceived him as a real threat to the war effort.[237]

By Spring 19116 the army had been boosted by another two million soldiers and equipment. On 18 March, at the request of France, the Russian army started the Lake Naroch Offensive, which was an utter failure. Rasputin met on Lake Ladoga with Gerard Shelley, whom he told he planned to go to the front,[238] though General Mikhail Alekseev refused to see him. He would resign immediately when Rasputin appeared at the front. In a letter dated 5 May 1916, the Tsar asked his wife not to tell Rasputin about his plans concerning the Brusilov Offensive as troops were sent from Riga to the south. Early July, Aleksandr Khvostov, Alexei's uncle, not in good health, was appointed as Minister of the Interior and Makarov as Minister of Justice. Foreign Minister Sazonov, decisive when the war started, pleaded for an independent and autonomous Russian Poland. He was demoted on 10 July and the office given to Stürmer. On 21 July, the minister of agriculture Naumov refused to participate any longer in the government. According to Vladimir Gurko, the Council of Ministers as a whole declined continually in importance.

Alexandr Protopopov and Kabinet in September 1916

Around 6 September, Alexander Protopopov had been invited as Minister of the Interior. Placing the vice-president of the Duma in a key post might improve the relations between the Duma and the throne.[239][240] Protopopov made himself ludicrious when he expressed his loyalty to the Imperial couple, and his contacts on peace and credit in Stockholm (without being authorized) became a scandal.[note 13] When Protopopov raised the question of transferring the food supply from the Ministry of Agriculture to the Ministry of the Interior, a majority of the zemstvo leaders announced that they would not work with his ministry. His food plan was universally condemned by the Council of Ministers.[218]

On 24 October (O.S), the Kingdom of Poland was established by its occupiers Germany and Austria. On 26 October, Sukhumlinov, who had been released from prison on instigation of Alexandra, Rasputin, and Protopopov, became her advisor on dealing with the Duma. On 29 October 57,000 workers were on strike.[248] The opposition parties decided to attack Stürmer, his government, and the "Dark forces".[249] A strongly prevailing opinion that Rasputin was the actual ruler of the country was of great psychological importance.[250]

Imperial Duma

Pavel Milyukov succeeded in firing the engines of radical protest in the country.[251]

On 1 November, the government under Boris Stürmer[252] was attacked by Pavel Milyukov in the Imperial Duma. In his speech "Rasputin and Rasputuiza" he spoke of "treachery and betrayal, about the dark forces, fighting in favor of Germany"[253] with the name of the Empress at the head of his list.[240] He highlighted numerous governmental failures, concluding that Stürmer's policies placed in jeopardy the Triple Entente. After each accusation, many times without basis and lying intentionally, he asked "Is this stupidity or is it treason?" and the listeners demonstrated their belief that it was treason.[254][255] His illegally printed speech was spread in flyers (according to Alexander Spiridovich by Puriskevich' hospital train) on the front and at the Hinterland.[256] Stürmer and Protopopov asked in vain for the dissolution of the Duma.[257] On 4 November Ivan Grigorovich and Dmitry Shuvayev declared in the Duma that they had confidence in the Russian people, the navy, and the army; the war could be won. Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich, his older brother George and younger brother Nikolai, all requested the Tsar to fire Stürmer and Aleksei Bobrinsky, the minister of agriculture (and a spokesperson for landed interest).[258] (Nikolai sent a letter to Nicholas II begging him to deprive Empress Alexandra of power and a sixteen-page tract on the misdeeds of the prime minister, Stürmer.[259] As a concession to the Duma Stürmer was succeeded by Alexander Trepov, the minister of Transport.The Duma sessions were postponed for a week to allow the new administration to review the situation and to draw some conclusions from the increasingly complicated situation.[254]

On 19 November Trepov tried three times to begin his speech in the Duma but he was drown out from the benches. The popular Vladimir Purishkevich held a two-hour speech, accusing the government of "Germanophilism" and stifling "public initiative." [260] The monarchy – because of what he called the "ministerial leapfrog" – had become "fully descredited".[261][262] The trouble was that the different ministries did not cooperate. (According to Sukhomlinov, the ministers were not allowed to cooperate directly, without contacting and approval of the Tsar.[263]) Purishkevich, a buffoon character, stated that Rasputin's murky influence over the Tsarina had made him a threat to the empire: "While Rasputin is alive, we cannot win".[264]

Rasputin and the Imperial couple. Anonymous caricature in 1916

Prince Felix Yusupov was impressed by the remarkable speech.[265] The next day, he visited Purishkevich, who quickly agreed to participate in the murder of Rasputin. Also, Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich received Yusupov's suggestion with alacrity, and his alliance was welcomed as indicating that the murder would not be a demonstration against the [Romanov] dynasty.[266] Yusupov then approached a young officer Sergei Mikhailovich Sukhotin (1887–1926), a friend of his mother. Sukhotin served the Life Guards Infantry Regiment,[267] but recuperating from injuries in Hotel Astoria, changed into a casino and hospital for (wounded) officers.[268]

At the beginning of November, the Progressive Bloc decided again to stress the demand for a responsible government,[269] that is, for a real parliamentary government."[215] According to Figes, there was practically no one ... who did not see the need for a fundamental change in the structure of the government.[251] Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich of Russia, Dmitri's father, tried to persuade Nicholas on his nameday (6 December) to change his policy[270] and accept a new constitution in order to save the monarchy.[note 14] [note 15] Also, Rodzianko told Nicholas the truth, after being urged by the Tsar's mother and sisters. To him, it was clear Alexandra should not be allowed to interfere in state affairs until the end of the war.

Alexander Guchkov, an Old Believer and strong opponent of Nichelas II, came "to the painful conclusion the situation could only improve when the Tsar was sent away",[274] Guchkov reported that five members of the Progressive Bloc, including himself, Kerensky, Nekrasov, Konovalov, and Tereschenko would consider a coup d'etat, to force the government to make concessions to the Duma.[275] Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich, probably one of the key players,[276][277] prince Lvov and general Mikhail Alekseyev, who believed secret strategic information had gone through the hands of Alexandra and Rasputin, attempted to persuade Nicholas to send the Empress away either to the Livadia Palace in Yalta or to England.[278] (For Paléologue, Alexandra Feodorovna was too impulsive, wrong-headed and unbalanced to imagine a political system and carry it out logically.) "Prince Lvov and General Alekseev made up their minds that the Tsarina's hold on the Tsar must be broken in order to end the pressure being exerted on him, through her, by the Rasputin clique."[279] Alexandra, who bombarded her husband with advises, suggested to her husband to expel Guchkov, Milyukov, Polivanov, and Prince Lvov to Siberia, to dismiss Trepov and Makarov and to send the Duma deputees home, at least until February.[280][281][282] Then the Duma would lose and Rasputin would gain influence. "To the Okhrana it was obvious by the end of 1916 that the liberal Duma project was superfluous, and that the only two options left were repression or a social revolution."[283]

Trepov and Protopopov

Alexander F. Trepov

On 10 November 1916 the bellicose Alexander Trepov had been appointed as the new prime minister, but he could not count on a favorable reception. He made the dismissal of the exceedingly nervous Alexander Protopopov, who never had "any effective proposal for the solution of any of the grave and critical problems",[284] an indispensable condition of his accepting the presidency of the Council. On 11 November Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich wrote a candid letter to his brother warning him that the political situation was tense:

The public hatred for certain people who allegedly are close to you and who are forming part of the present government has, to my amazement, brought together the right, the left and the moderate; and this hatred, along with the demands for changes are already openly expressed.[285]

The Tsarina tried to keep Protopopov appointed on his influential position carrying out the duties of the minister of the internal affairs.[286] Both Alexandra and Protopopov traveled to Stavka. The Tsar wrote to his wife: "Please, don't bring our Friend", but Rasputin and Vyrubova would send five telegrams to support her.[287][288] Trepov was furious and threatened to resign.

On 17 November, Nikolai Pokrovsky, pro-British like Trepov, was appointed as foreign minister. On 31 November , Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg tried to initiate a peace-making process[289] and to end the war on base of his Septemberprogramm (1914). On 2 December,[290] Trepov ascended the tribune in the Duma to read the government programme. The Prime-Minister wasn't allowed to speak and had to leave the rostrum three times. Being advised by Trepov, Pokrovsky said that Russia would never sign a peace treaty with the Central Powers which caused a storm of applause in the Tauride Palace.[291] According to Puriskevich, Alexandra managed Russia as her boudoir, and attacked Rasputin: "an illiterate moujik shall govern Russia no longer!"[292]

The 'peace offensive' was bound to fail;[293] the terms too vague to be taken seriously.[293][294][295] The allies refused an intermediation by president W. Wilson on 18 December [O.S. 5 December] 1916.[296] On the same day, Harold Williams (or John Hanbury-Williams) wrote to Lloyd George:

No one has the faintest idea what the Emperor will do. He has been at Tsarskoe Selo for some days, but the only thing that has been done is to appoint a Minister for Foreign Affairs, mainly I suppose because there had to be a minister to reply to the German peace proposals. The new Minister [Pokrovsky] is a very honest and hard working man, though he is not a diplomat. He will certainly not take any part in separate peace talk, and altogether I think that for the moment the idea of a separate peace is knocked on the head. But if Milyukov and the other Duma speakers had not smashed Stürmer God only knows what might have happened. On the whole the general feeling is cheerful. The country is united and absolutely determined. The gang is cornered, its intrigues are exposed, and it seems impossible that the fate of such a huge Empire should remain much longer at the mercy of the plotting of a hysterical woman with a depraved peasant.[297][298]

In 1908, Fräulein Anna Vyrubova "openly became his fanatical admirer, the driving force of his cult, and was at the head of his loyalists".[89] According to Stürmer, she was mesmerized by Rasputin; for Pierre Gilliard and Spiridovich Vyrubova had been "ignorant and devoid of common sense" when she entered the court.

On 7 December, the cabinet demanded that Protopopov should go to the Emperor and resign. At the request of the Tsar, his wife, Anna Vyrubova and Rasputin combined Protopopov, who had only asked for a temporarily sick leave, was kept in office. Trepov, having failed to eliminate Protopopov, tried to bribe Rasputin in the following days.[299][300] With the help of general A.A. Mosolov,[301] his brother-in-law, Trepov offered a substantial amount of money, a bodyguard and a house to Rasputin, if he would leave politics.[302][303][304] Rasputin refused and hardly left his house, except a visit to Vyrubova.

On 12 December, Trepov went to Stavka. The Tsar wrote to his wife:

Well now, about Trepov. He was quiet and submissive and did not touch upon the name of Protopopov. Probably my face was ungracious and hard, as he wriggled in his chair. He spoke of the American note, of the Duma, of the near future and, of course, of the railways. He, unfolded his plan concerning the Duma - to prorogue it on the 17th of December and reassemble it on the 19th of January, so as to show them and the whole country that, in spite of all they have said, the Government wish to work together. If in January they begin blundering and making trouble he is prepared to hurl thunders at them (he told me his speech in brief) and close the Duma finally.[305]

Rasputin suggested to keep the Duma closed till February; Alexandra and Protopopov supported him.[306] On Friday, 16 December Milyukov stated in the Duma: "... maybe [we will be] dismissed to 9 January, maybe until February", but in the evening the Duma was closed until 12 January, by a decree prepared on the day before.[307]

In the afternoon Rasputin returned from the "banya" at 3 p.m. Around 8 p.m., he told Anna Vyrubova, who presented him a small icon, signed and dated at the back by the Tsarina and her daughters,[308] of a proposed midnight visit to Yusupov in his palace. Protopopov, a late visitor who only stayed ten minutes, begged him not to go out that night.[309][310]

Nelipa thinks what happened next was intentionally timed; both Grand Duke Dmitry and Purishkevich, assisting at the front, had arrived in the city. Rasputin was murdered on the night after the Duma went into Christmas recess. According to Nelipa, "the forthcoming recess would eliminate the otherwise predictable uproar from any of the delegates at the Tauride Palace, had the murder been arranged a few days earlier."[311]

Murder

On the left side of the Moika Palace was Felix' apartment with the basement underneath

There are very few facts between the night Rasputin disappeared (Saturday, 17 December) and the following Monday when his corpse was dredged up from the river. "As far as the Yusupov Palace is concerned, the Police had no right to make inquiries unless invited to do so. The Director of Police was unable to ask the simplest of questions such as who was present at the palace on the night," and "nothing other than a cursory search was allowed inside."[312] So the murder of Rasputin has become something of a legend, some of it invented, perhaps embellished or simply misremembered.

Assassination

Felix Yusupov (1914) married Irina Aleksandrovna Romanova, the only niece of the Tsar.
Basement of the Yusupov Palace on the Moika in St Petersburg, where Grigori Rasputin was murdered

Yusupov, who had met Rasputin in the past six weeks for treatment, invited Rasputin to the Moika Palace, intimating his wife, Princess Irina, would be back from Koreiz and Rasputin could meet her after a housewarming party. (She later denied she was involved and sued MGM).[313] After midnight, Prince Felix went with Dr. Stanislaus de Lazovert to Rasputin's apartment. Yusupov did not use the regular stairs at this unseemly hour, but a stairwell for servants in the courtyard. After half an hour, they returned to the recently refurbished palace, where a sound-proof room, part of the wine cellar, had been specially prepared for the crime with carpets, stain-glass lamps, and furnuture. Four bottles, containing different kinds of sweet wine, were placed either in a window, a side-board or on a table. Waiting in his drawing room on another floor were the fellow conspirators: Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich, Purishkevich, his assistant Lazovert and Sukhotin. Perhaps some women were invited but Yusupov did not mention their names; Radzinsky suggested Dimitri's step-sister Marianne Pistohlkors and film star Vera Karalli.[314] Smith came up with Princess Olga Paley and Anna von Drenteln.[315] Somewhere in the building were a major-domo and a valet, waiting for orders.[316]

According to both Yusupov and Purishkevich, a gramophone in the study played interminably the Yankee Doodle when Rasputin came in.[317] Yusupov mentions in his unreliable memoirs, he then offered Rasputin tea and petit fours laced with a large amount of potassium cyanide. According to the diplomat, Maurice Paléologue, who in later years rewrote his diary, they discussed spirituality and occultism;[318] the antique dealer Albert Stopford wrote that politics was the issue.[319] Purishkevich, a teetotaler, mentions he could hear bottles were opened. Felix played his guitar and sang some gypsy ballads. After an hour or so, Rasputin was fairly drunk.[note 16] Yusupov went upstairs and came back with a revolver. Rasputin was shot at close quarters by Felix sitting left of him. The bullet entered the chest under the heart, it left the body on the right side.[321] It is supposed Rasputin fell onto a white bearskin.

According to Maria Rasputin, it went all very quick; no sweets, no guitar nor record playing. Rasputin would have become suspicious as Yusupov's wife never showed up.[322] According to Yusupov's protégé, Victor Contreras, Lazavert who was assigned to poison the wine and cakes for Rasputin, couldn’t do it. After the murder, Lazavert seems to have written a letter to Yusupov, where he reported that he, the doctor, who gave the oath of Hippocrates, found no strength to add the poison.[323]

Felix's private apartment was on the east side of the palace, Embankment 94. Between the basement and his rooms, halfway up, was a door opening onto a cobbled forecourt of the house adjoining. The photo shows the courtyard (belonging to Moika Embankment 92, also owned by the Yusupovs) and the secret door (between the first and second window on the right).[324][325]

However, Yusupov did not succeed in killing Rasputin. According to Maria Rasputin, the bullet wounds were slight. After a while, "Rasputin opened his eyes and became aware of his predicament."[326] He struggled up the stairs to reach the first landing, opening an unlocked door to the courtyard, which had been—not long before—used by the conspirators. Alarmed by the noise, Purishkevich went down and fired at Rasputin four times, missing three times. Only one bullet penetrated the right kidney and lodged into the spine.[327] Rasputin never reached the gate,[328] but fell into the snow. According to Nelipa, both shots were fatal; he would have died within 10–20 minutes, but when the body made a sudden movement, one of them placed his revolver on the forehead and pulled the trigger.[note 17] Then the body was carried back inside. A nervous Yusupov severely hit his victim in his right eye with his shoe.[332]

The conspirators had planned to burn Rasputin's possessions; Sukhotin put on Rasputin's fur coat, his galoshes, and gloves. He left together with Dmitri Pavlovich and Dr. Lazovert in Purishkevich's car,[333] to suggest that Rasputin had left the palace alive.[334] Because Purishkevich's wife refused to burn the fur coat and the rubber[335] galoshes[336] in her small fireplace in the ambulance train, the conspirators went back from the Warsaw station to the Moika palace with these large items.[337]

Pochtamtsky or Postoffice Bridge

Two city policemen on duty, who heard a "rapid fire" of gunshot sequence,[328] had also seen cars coming and leaving. They discussed the issue on the Pochtamtsky Bridge. One of them questioned Yusupov's butler for details, but was sent away.[338] Twenty minutes later, he was re-invited to the palace. Purishkevich boasted he had shot Rasputin, and asked the policeman, aware of his mistake, to keep it quiet for the sake of the Tsar.[339][340][341][342][343][344][345] However, this policeman told his superiors everything he had heard and seen.[333]

After the body was wrapped in a broadcloth, Dmitri and his fellow conspirators drove in the direction of Krestovsky island.[346] The sentry on the bridge was asleep which allowed the murderers to draw up quite close to the railing and throw the corpse into a hole in the ice of the Malaya Nevka River. They forgot to attach weights to the feet to make the body sink. They drove back without noticing that one of Rasputin's galoshes was stuck between the pylons of the bridge.

Days following

The wooden Bolshoy Petrovsky Bridge, from which Rasputin's body was thrown into the Malaya Nevka River
Rasputin's corpse on a sledge. "The body is that of a man of about 50-years old, of medium size, dressed in blue embroidered hospital robe, which covers a white shirt. His legs, in high leather boots, are tied with a rope, and the same rope ties his wrists.[347] The twine that had originally bound the hands had snapped allowing the hands to separate by the time the corpse was uplifted onto the ice. The corpse stiffened with raised arms."[348]

The next morning, around 8 a.m., Protopopov phoned, and asked Rasputin's daughters where their father was. At eleven, he still had not shown up. When the police arrived, they searched the apartment for compromising correspondence with the Tsarina.[349] In the meantime, Rasputin's disappearance was reported by Maria to Vyrubova.[350] When Vyrubova spoke of it to the Empress, Alexandra pointed out that Princess Irina was absent from Petrograd. When Protopopov mentioned the story reported by the policemen at the Moika, where Purishkevich boasted he had killed Rasputin, they all began to believe that he had been lured into an ambush.

On the Empress' orders, a police investigation commenced and traces of blood were discovered on the steps to the backdoor of the Yusupov Palace. When interrogated, Felix explained the blood with a story that by accident one of his sporting dogs was shot by Grand Duke Dmitri. In the early afternoon, traces of blood were detected on the parapet of the Bolshoy Petrovsky bridge and one of Rasputin's galoshes was found under the bridge.[351] Maria and her sister affirmed it belonged to their father. With twilight approaching the search had to be abandoned until the following morning. In the evening, Yusupov tried to leave the capital, and pay a visit to his wife, but he was stopped at the train station.

The next day, it was sunny, but the temperature dropped to -14 C. The river was frozen. The police concentrated upon the vicinity of the Petrovsky bridge. Then the Neva shores were explored by divers, but the ice seriously hampered their work which produced no result.[352]

When an Uhlenhuth test showed, the blood was of human origin they refused to tell where the body was. Felix and Dmitri were placed under house arrest in the Sergei Palace and without permission of her husband.[353] Felix and Dmitri both tried to gain access to the empress. The Tsarina refused to meet the two but said they could explain to her what had happened in a letter. Purishkevich assisted them writing and left the city at ten on Sunday evening, heading to the front.

On Monday morning, 19 December,[354] Rasputin's beaver-fur coat and the body were discovered close to the river bank, 140 meters west of the bridge.[355] The police and government officials arrived within 15 minutes. In the late afternoon, it was decided the frozen corpse had to be taken to the desolate Chesmensky Almshouse. On the next day, Makarov was fired, hindering a police investigation, as he had given Felix permission to leave for the Crimea. In the evening, an autopsy on the thawed corpse by Kosorotov, a forensic expert, in a poorly lit mortuary room[347][356] established that the cause of his instant death was the third bullet in his frontal lobe. (Kosorotov's official report is still missing.[357])

Chesmensky Almshouse[358]

On 21 December, Rasputin's body was taken in a zinc coffin from the Chesmensky Almshouse[359] to be buried in a corner on the property of Vyrubova [69] and adjacent to the palace.[360] "The weather was grey, with 12 frost". The burial at 8.45 in the morning was attended by the Imperial couple with their daughters, Vyrubova, her maid, and a few of Rasputin's friends, such as Lili Dehn, Protopopov and Colonel Loman. It is not clear whether Rasputin's two daughters were present, although Maria Rasputin claimed she was there.[361][362] On the 22nd, Irina's father, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich, wrote his brother to close the case. After a week and without an interrogation or a trial, the Tsar sent Grand Duke Dmitry Pavlovich, and Yusupov into exile.[363][364] He ensured that Rasputin's murder would never become a matter for the court to judge.[365] On Saturday, 24 December, Dmitri left at two in the morning for Qazvin in Persia, Felix for Rakitnoe, his estate near Belgorod; during the trip they were forbidden to talk, and also to send and receive telegrams. The police were ordered to stop their inquest.[366][367] Neither Puriskevich, nor Sukhotin, nor Lazavert was punished at all. On Sunday, 25 December, the Imperial family gathered with Rasputin's widow and children at Anna Vyrubova.[368]

Towards the February Revolution

On 27 December, a hesitating Nikolai Golitsyn became the successor of Trepov, who was dismissed. Golitsyn begged the Emperor to cancel his appointment, citing his lack of preparation for the role of Prime Minister. On 3 January Dmitry Shuvayev, who did not speak any foreign language, was succeeded by Mikhail Belyaev as Minister of War, likely at the request of the Empress.[369]

The abdication of Nicholas II on March 2, 1917. In the royal train: Minister of the Court Baron Fredericks, General N. Ruzsky, V.V. Shulgin, A.I. Guchkov, Nicholas II. (State Historical Museum)

"In the seventeen months of the `Tsarina's rule', from September 1915 to February 1917, Russia had four Prime Ministers, five Ministers of the Interior, three Foreign Ministers, three War Ministers, three Ministers of Transport and four Ministers of Agriculture. This "ministerial leapfrog", as it came to be known, not only removed competent men from power, but also disorganized the work of government since no one remained long enough in office to master their responsibilities."[261]

The Duma President Mikhail Rodzianko, Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna and British ambassador Buchanan joined calls for Alexandra to be removed from influence, but Nicholas still refused to take their advice.[370] Many people suddenly came to the conclusion that the problem was not Rasputin.[371] According to Rodzianko the Empress "exerts an adverse influence on all appointments, including even those in the army." On 14 January Georgy Lvov proposed to Grand Duke Nikolay Nikolaevich that he take control of the country. At the end of January/beginning of February major negotiations took place between the allied powers in Petrograd; unofficially they sought to clarify the internal situation in Russia.[372] On February 14th, police agents reported that army officers had, for the first time, mingled with the crowds demonstrating against the war and the government on Nevsky Prospekt. Kerensky took the opportunity in the Duma to attack the mediaeval regime. "Chief among them was the desire to bring the war to a successful conclusion in conjunction with the Allies; and the very cause of their opposition was the ever deepening conviction that this was unattainable under the present government and under the present regime.[240]

The February Revolution began as it seems on the 22nd when the Tsar had left for the front,[373] and strikes broke out in the Putilov workshops.[374] The next day (International Women's Day) women in Saint Petersburg joined the strike, demanding an end to Russian food shortages, the end of World War I and the end of autocracy. On the 25th the whole of St Petersburg came out into the streets. The Tsar ordered Sergey Semyonovich Khabalov, an inexperienced and extremely indecisive commander of the Petrograd military district to suppress the "impermissible" rioting by force.

General Kornilov and the head of the Provisional Government, Alexander Kerensky, with his guards in Tsarskoe Selo after they arrested the Empress Alexandra, on 8 March 1917

On the 26th the center of the city was fenced off. In the evening Rodzianko received an ukaze from his Majesty that he had decided to interrupt the Duma until April, leaving it with no legal authority to act.[note 18] According to Buchanan: "It was an act of madness to proroque the Duma at a moment like the present."[376] On Monday 27th, the Duma remained loyal, and “did not attempt to hold an official sitting”. Then some delegates decided to form a Provisional Committee of the State Duma, lead by Rodzianko and backed by major Moscow manufacturers and St. Petersburg bankers. Its first meeting was on the same evening and ordered the arrest of all the ex-ministers and senior officials.[377] In the Marinsky Palace the Council of Ministers of Russia held its last meeting and formally submitted its resignation to the Tsar. In the middle of the night Milyukov announced the Provisional Committee took over power.

On 28 February, at five in the morning, the Tsar left Mogilev, (and directed also Nikolay Iudovich Ivanov to Tsarskoe Selo) but was unable to reach Petrograd as revolutionaries meanwhile controlled train stations around the capital. Around midnight the train was stopped at Malaya Vishera, turned, and in the evening of 1 March Nicholas arrived in Pskov. In the meantime the units guarding the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo "declared their neutrality" and thus abandoned the imperial family. The Provisional Committee declared itself the governing body of Russian Empire. Then the Provisional Committee agreed with the Petrograd Soviet to create the Provisional Government of Russia. On 28 February, Rodzianko invited the Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich and Kirill Vladimirovich to put their signatures to the drafting of the Manifesto, in which Emperor Nicholas II recommended to introduce in Russia the constitutional system. The Tsar accepted a responsible government, except the appointment of the Ministers of War, Marine and Foreign Affairs. In the evening of 2 March Nikolai Ruzsky, Vasily Shulgin and Guchkov persuaded the Tsar, accompanied by Vladimir Freedericksz, to resign,[378] which he did in favor of his brother Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia. Grand Duke Nicholas was reappointed as Commander-in-Chief, (a post he kept until 11 March).

The boiler room of the Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University where Rasputin was cremated.[379][380][381][382]

On 4 March, the investigation on Rasputin was stopped by Kerensky and he extended an amnesty to the three main conspirators. On 8 March, all the movements of the imperial family were restricted as the grave of Rasputin had become a place of veneration for the Tsarina and her daughters.[383] Rasputin's secret grave site was quickly discovered under a pile of rocks in the woods. The coffin was transported to the town hall, where a curious crowd gathered, and secured under guard over night. According to Moynahan:

"The body was put into a packing case that once held a piano and was driven in secret to the imperial stables in Petrograd. The next day it was loaded onto a truck and taken out of Petrograd on the Lesnoe Road."[384]

Authors do not agree what happened on the night of 10 March after the truck drove on its way north in the direction of Piskarevka in the Vyborgsky District.[385] According to some, the truck broke down or the snow forced them to stop and the corpse was burned in a field.[386][387][388] It is more likely Rasputin's corpse and coffin were incinerated in the boilers of Saint Petersburg State Polytechnical University.

Contemporary evidence

Post-mortem photograph of Rasputin showing the bullet wound in his forehead

The official police report, with details gathered in two days, and stopped with the idea the murder was solved, is unconvincing. "Unfortunately, after the Soviets came to power, many of the documents that formed part of the official secret investigation have either been destroyed, or have disappeared."[389] What is left are the biased accounts of 19-year-old Maria Rasputin and the murderers, the 29-year-old Felix Yusupov and 47-year-old Vladimir Purishkevich, and others. The theatrical details of the murder given by Felix have never stood up to scrutiny. He changed his account several times; the statement given to the Petrograd police, the accounts given whilst in exile in the Crimea in 1917, his 1927 book, and finally the accounts given under oath to libel juries in 1934 and 1965 all differ to some extent.

"When asked [in 1965] by his attorney as to his motive killing Rasputin, he announced that he was motivated by his 'distaste for Rasputin's debaucheries.' This represented a major shift from his argument since 1917 that emphasized that he was motivated solely by patriotism for Russia."[390]

The second bullet came from Vladimir Purishkevich

His role in the murder has been called into question, being consumed by the thought that "not a single important event at the front was decided [during the war] without a preliminary conference" between Alexandra and Rasputin.[391] According to D. Smith: "People have just read Yusupov for almost 100 years now and assume he's telling the truth, when it's clearly a work meant to self-justify killing a man in cold blood."[392]

Concerning the details of the murder, not even the murderers could give consistent accounts. Differing opinions ranged from the colour of shirt he wore,[140][393] how many times Yusupov went up the stairs, to whose weapon or car was used[394] or even where he was finally wounded. Neither Purishkevich nor Yusupov mentioned the close quarter shot to the forehead.[395] Purishkevich said he fired at Rasputin from behind at a distance of twenty paces and hit Rasputin in the back of the head. Unfortunately there is no photo of the rear of Rasputin's head.[396]

The caliber of the weapon that was used cannot be measured.[397] "The hypothesis that the gunshot to the head was caused by an unjacketed bullet (of British origin) is not supported by the forensic findings or police forensic photographs."[398] Nelipa thinks it is not very likely a Webley .455 inch and an unjacketed bullet was used because its impact would have been different.

According to the 1916 autopsy report by Dmitri Kosorotov, two bullets had passed through the body, so it was impossible to tell how many people were shooting and to determine whether only one kind of revolver was used. "Kosorotov never stated that different caliber weapons were responsible."[399]

British Secret Intelligence Service

There were two officers of the British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) in Petrograd at the time. Lieutenant Oswald Rayner and Captain Stephen Alley, born in a Arkhangelskoye Palace near Moscow in 1876, where his father was one of the prince's tutors. Rayner knew Yusupov since they had met at University of Oxford.[400]

According to Sir Samuel Hoare, head of the British Intelligence Service in Russia: "If MI6 had a part in the killing of Rasputin, I would have expected to have found some trace of that".[401] "Hoare later came to the realization that in the days after the murder, Russian "rightists" had been trying to frame the British for the crime, and him, in particular.[402] Hoare, Rayner, and presumably the rest of the mission, knew of the plot ...[403] but "the archives of the British intelligence service (MI6) do not hold a single document linking Rayner, Hoare, or any other British agent or diplomat to the murder."[404]

Works

Perception

A strannik (Странник) by Vasily Perov
Everyone who met Rasputin remarked on his eyes and how hypnotic they were. His "shining steel-like" or "bright and brilliant" and "intelligent" eyes became legendary.[405] According to Shelley they seemed to emit soft, velvety rays, caressing one almost as one feels the caress of a melodious voice. According to Theofan, Paul Kurlov and Count Kokotsov he had "piercing" eyes;[406] to Yusupov his eyes were "phosphorescent"; to Tamara Karsavina he had the eyes of a maniac;[407] Elena Dzhanumova wrote in her diary, "What eyes he has! You cannot endure his gaze for long."[408]
Ergorov bathhouse ca. 1910 in St Petersburg
In 1992, the Museum of Grigory Rasputin in the selo of Pokrovskoye, Tyumen Oblast was set up

Rasputin was more multifaceted and more significant than the myths that grew up around him:

  • Rasputin was neither a monk nor a saint; he never belonged to any order or religious sect,[409] He was a strannik, who impressed many people with his knowledge and ability to explain the Bible in an uncomplicated way.[410] According to Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden, he was a "starets in making."[150]
  • According to Lili Dehn, Rasputin spoke an almost incomprehensible Siberian dialect.[69] According to Andrei Amalrik, Rasputin "never produced a clear and understandable sentence. Always something was missing: the subject, the predicate or both."[411] According to Gerard Shelley, he had a voice that once heard could never be forgotten.
  • It was widely believed that Rasputin had a gift for curing bodily ailments. "In the mind of the Tsarina, Rasputin was closely associated with the health of her son, and the welfare of the monarchy."[118] According to G. Shelley, he fitted in with their creed and plan for the regeneration and salvation of Russia.[412]
  • Brian Moynahan describes him as "a complex figure, intelligent, ambitious, idle, generous to a fault, spiritual, and – utterly – amoral." He was an unusual mix, a muzhik, prophet and [at the end of his life] a party-goer.[413] Many Russian cities have a strip club called Rasputin.[414]
  • "At first sight, Rasputin looks like a symbol of decadence and obscurantism, of the complete corruption of the imperial court in which he was able to float to the top. And so he has usually been treated in the history books. The temptation to wallow in the rhetoric of the lower depths in describing him is almost irresistible. And yet the truth is somewhat simpler: Rasputin was only able to play the part he did because of the dispersal of authority which very much deepened after Stolypin's death, and because of the bewildered and unhappy isolation in which the royal couple found themselves."[415]
  • "To the nobles and Nicholas's family members, Rasputin was a dual character who could go straight from praying for the royal family to the brothel [bathhouse] down the street."[416] "Rasputin actually attributed half the propaganda against him to Grand Duke Nicholas."[417] The myth about his dirty fingernails was just part of the campaign of the aristocracy against him.[72][418]
  • For Victor Chernov, Rasputin was an unwitting agent; people around Rasputin were interested in strategic information. The cases around Rubinstein and Manuilov were fabricated to harm Rasputin,[419] who never cared much about money and gave it away as soon he had received it.[420][421] He had built up a reputation of being at once a generous and a disinterested man. Besides alms Rasputin spent large sums in restaurants, cafes, music halls and in the streets ...[108]
  • In Summer 1916, Anna Vyrubova, Lili Dehn, and Rasputin went to Tobolsk, Verkhoturye and his home village. Most of the villagers were strongly against Rasputin's returning to Petrograd. This he refused to do. Even the Tsarina was wondering why Rasputin came back to the capital.[69]
  • The conspirators, who did not accept a peasant being so close to the Imperial couple, had hoped that Rasputin's removal would cause the Tsarina to retreat from political activities. They also believed that Rasputin was an agent of Germany, but he was more of a pacifist, and opposed to all wars.[252][422][423] The troubles of the country were attributed to him and the Tsarina.
  • Rasputin showed an interest in going to the front to bless the troops, but Grand Duke Nicholas, threatened to hang him if he dared to show up. It is mentioned in the Memoirs of Anton Denikin.[424]A similar story is connected with General Mikhail Alekseev, the successor of Grand Duke Nicholas, who refused to meet him in Spring 1916.[425]
  • Rasputin came to be seen on both the left and the right as the root cause of Russia's despair.[426] On the left, he was despised as an enemy of democracy while for many on the right he was damaging the monarchy. His eventual murderers were nobles who believed his disappearance would strengthen the throne.[427]
  • According to Shelley, in Britain, most were convinced that Rasputin was a dangerous person and that it would help the cause of the Allies if he was forcibly removed.[428]
  • For the Russian Morning, "The murder of Rasputin would change nothing, for he was never the reason for Russia's problems, only one of the symptoms. The reason lay in Russia's eternal "darkness born of irresponsibility and political arbitrariness."[429]
  • In August 1917, the Russian poet Alexander Blok started to work for the Extraordinary Commission of Inquiry for the Investigation of Illegal Acts by Ministers and Other Responsible Persons of the Czarist Regime,[430] established on 4 March 1917, to transcribe the interrogations of those who knew Grigori Rasputin.[431] Between 1924-1927, the report, "The fall of the Tsarist regime", was published.[432] In 1995, a missing part, the XIII section, a 500-page document, was on sale. It was bought by Mstislav Rostropovich on an auction and investigated by Edvard Radzinsky and [433] suggest that [some] accusations about Rasputin's sexual dissoluteness were false.[434]
  • "The damage inflicted by Rasputin was enormous, but he tried to work for the benefit of Russia and the dynasty," Gurko assessed "and not to harm them."[citation needed]
  • In March 1918, the new Bolshevik government took the highly controversial decision to sign the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany, which enabled the new Communist state to take Russia out of the War, to the evident alarm of Britain and her allies.[435]
  • In Russia, Rasputin is seen by many ordinary people and clerics, among them the late Elder Nikolay Guryanov, as a righteous man.[436] However, Alexy II of Moscow said that any attempt to make a saint of Rasputin, Josef Stalin and Ivan the Terrible would be "madness."[437][438]
  • In 1920, Maria Rasputin and her husband, Boris Soloviev, fled to Vladivostok and they settled in France. In 1935, she moved to the United States, where she worked as a tiger-trainer in the Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus. In her three memoirs – it is hard to find out which one is the most reliable,[439] probably the first one, certainly not the last one[440] – she painted an almost saintly picture of her father, insisting that most of the negative stories were based on slander and the misinterpretation of facts by his enemies.

Persistent errors

  • The date of Rasputin's death is sometimes recorded as being 16 December 1916 (Old Style), or 13 days later on 29 December 1916, using New Style,[note 19] but the murderers left after midnight for Rasputin's apartment when his guards were gone. The initial attempts to kill Rasputin began on the 17th and it is supposed he died within between 3:00 and 4:00 am.[441]
  • There was alcohol in his body, but no water found in his lungs[442][443] and no cyanide in his stomach according to Kosorotov.[444][445][446] Maria Rasputin asserts that her father did not like sweet things and avoided pastry;[447] after the attack by Guseva, he suffered from hyperacidity and avoided anything with sugar.[448] She and Simanovitch, doubted he was poisoned at all.[106][449][450] According to Douglas Smith, no one would have survived exposure to potassium cyanide as described in Yusupov's story.[451]
  • Also, the "drowning story" became a fixed part of the legend, but Rasputin was already dead when thrown into the water.[452] "There is no evidence that Rasputin swallowed water after being pushed into the Neva or that he had freed his arm to make the sign of the cross."[453]
  • Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated on Sunday, 28 June [O.S. 15 June] 1914; Rasputin was attacked in his home village two weeks later on Sunday, 12 July [O.S. 29 June] 1914, so it is not "one of the great coincidences of history".[454]

In popular culture

Drawing of Rasputin by Elena Nikandrovna Klokacheva in State Hermitage Museum
Anna Theodora Krarup Portrait of Rasputin, signed 13 XII 1916

After his death, the memoirs of those who knew Rasputin became a mini-industry. The basement where he died is a tourist attraction. Numerous film and stage productions have been based on his life. He has appeared as a fictionalized version of himself in numerous other media, as well as having several beverages named after him. More than 150 items on Rasputin-like bands, comics, and other products bear his name.

Notes

  1. ^ Colin Wilson said in 1964, "No figure in modern history has provoked such a mass of sensational and unreliable literature as Grigori Rasputin. More than a hundred books have been written about him, and not a single one can be accepted as a sober presentation of his personality. There is an enormous amount of material on him, and most of it is full of invention or willful inaccuracy. Rasputin's life, then, is not 'history'; it is the clash of history with subjectivity."[5] See also Wilson's book The Occult: a history (1971), where he writes on p. 433, "Rasputin seems to possess the peculiar quality of inducing shameless inaccuracy in everyone who writes about him." "Of the diabolical schemer portrayed by Sir Bernard Pares there is no sign." [1] According to Dominic Lieven, "more rubbish has been written on Rasputin than on any other figure in Russian history."[6][7]
  2. ^ All the dates are in Old style unless New Style is mentioned.
  3. ^ His parents were Efim Vilkin Rasputin (24 December 1841 – autumn 1916) and Anna Parshukova (1839/40 – 30 January 1906)
  4. ^ His children were Michael (29 September 1888 – 16 April 1893); Anna (29 January 1892 – 3 May 1896); Grigori (25 May 1894 – 13 September 1894); Dmitri (25 October 1895 – 16 December 1933); Matryona (26 March 1898 – 27 September 1977); Barbara (28 November 1900 – 1925); Paraskeva (11 October 1903 – 20 December 1903)
  5. ^ hemophilia B was widespread among European royalty, see Haemophilia in European royalty.
  6. ^ In 1911, Yeniseysk Governorate was designated as the place of exile for vagrants. In 1913, there were already 46.700 exiles living in the region.
  7. ^ The basis for the denunciation of Rasputin as a Khlyst was mixed bathing, a common custom among the peasants in many parts of Siberia.[107][108][109]
  8. ^ His enemies charged his name derived from the verb 'rasputnichat', which means "to lead a dissolute life" and "to be drunken and dissipated".[119] Others suggested the noun 'Rasputnik', a debauchee, 'Rasputitsa', spring and fall periods in which, because of heavy snow or rain, unpaved roads are impassable, 'Rasputye', a place where several roads part, 'rasput', a crossroads or "Rasputiny' meaning dissolute, lewd, wanton, lecherous, immoral, profligate.
  9. ^ The former monk Iliodor had written a book on Rasputin, entitling it "The Holy Devil" (1914). It was an appalling and libelous account alleging amorous ties between Grigori Rasputin and the Empress.[141] Maxim Gorki published his manuscript.
  10. ^ For more details on Causes of World War I see A.J.P. Taylor,[174] R.J. Evans[175] and James Joll (2007) "The origins of the First World War". In recent years academic historians have reassessed the exchange of the Willy–Nicky correspondence.[176][177][178] They paid special attention to the telegram of Nicholas II dated July 29, 1914
  11. ^ On 1 September [O.S. 19 August] 1914, St Petersburg by ukase changed its name to Petrograd, in order to remove the German words 'Sankt' and 'Burg'.
  12. ^ "For a period of time in 1915 up to 25% of the Russian soldiers were sent to the front unarmed, with instructions to pick up what they could from the dead."[182]
  13. ^ From 16 April till 20 June Milyukov, Protopopov and a delegation of 16 delegates (6 members of the State Council and the 10 members of the Duma) had visited France, and England.[241] Protopopov stayed behind and traveled to Sweden, where met the German industrialist and politician Hugo Stinnes, Knut Wallenberg, the Swedish Minister of Foreign Affairs,[242] Hellmuth Lucius von Stoedten, the former German ambassador to Russia, then in Sweden, and Fritz M. Warburg, a banker and member of the Warburg family on 23 June.[243][244][245][246] Protopopov was extremely open about his attempt. According to Chernov: "The Warburg interview opened up a career for Protopopov and made him acceptable as minister. Above all, it won him the favor of Rasputin and the Empress."[247] It seems that Berlin did not take such meetings seriously: seen the identity of the members, and the lack of any clear authority.
  14. ^ On the day of his coronation the Tsar swore to preserve the autocracy. He was convinced to keep it intact for his son. In the Russian Constitution of 1906 the Tsar retained an absolute veto over legislation, as well as the right to dismiss the Duma at any time, for any reason he found suitable. He was bound by law immediately to hold elections in order to summon a new one.[271]
  15. ^ Zinaida Yusupova, Alexandra's sister Elisabeth,[272] Grand Duchess Victoria, Prince Michael and the Tsar's mother tried to influence the Emperor or his stubborn wife[69] to remove Rasputin, but without success.[273] For years the Tsar's niece Duchess Marie was openly hostile to Alexandra.
  16. ^ Most sources say Yusupov offered Rasputin Madeira; it is possible he drank imported Malvasia Madeira, or Madeira from the Crimea.The Yusupov family owned a private vineyard in Massandra, near Yalta, where since 1892 sweet or semi-sweet fortified wines such as madeira, port, sherry, but also champagne were produced. His palace in Koreiz had two wine cellars.[320]
  17. ^ According to Nelipa the third gunshot will never identify Rasputin's killer in the manner Cook proposed.[329][330] Nelipa suggests Oswald Rayner was a silent partner.[331]
  18. ^ On February 8, 1917 on request of the Emperor N. Maklakov and Protopopov drafted the text of a manifesto to dissolve the Duma.[375]
  19. ^ This discrepancy arises due to the fact that the Gregorian calendar was not introduced into Soviet Russia until February 14, 1918, see Old Style and New Style dates & Adoption of the Gregorian calendar in Eastern Europe.

References

  1. ^ Искатели. Клад Григория Распутина – документальный фильм
  2. ^ Kerensky, p. 182.
  3. ^ a b F. Gaida (2012) "the DIARY of RASPUTIN"
  4. ^ Rappaport, H. (2014) "Four Sisters. The Lost lives of the Romanov Grand Duchesses, p. 129.
  5. ^ Wilson, pp. 11, 14, 16.
  6. ^ Lieven, p. 273.
  7. ^ Moe, p. 6.
  8. ^ Peeling, Siobhan: Rasputin, Grigoriĭ Efimovich, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, ed. by Ute Daniel, Peter Gatrell, Oliver Janz, Heather Jones, Jennifer Keene, Alan Kramer, and Bill Nasson, issued by Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 2014-10-08. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15463/ie1418.10325.[2]
  9. ^ Walter G. Moss (2003) A History of Russia Volume 1: To 1917. Anthem Press. p. 316. ISBN 1843310236
  10. ^ a b "Radio : The Christian Message from Moscow". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  11. ^ Fuhrmann, p. xiii.
  12. ^ Joseph T Fuhrmann (2012) Rasputin: The Untold Story. John Wiley & Sons. p. 35. ISBN 1118239857
  13. ^ Demystifying the life of Grigory Rasputin | Russia Beyond The Headlines. Rbth.ru (27 December 2012). Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  14. ^ Royal Russia News: Demystifying the life of Grigory Rasputin. Russia Beyond the Headlines via Angelfire.com. 27 December 2012.
  15. ^ Radzinsky (2000), pp. 25, 29.
  16. ^ Welch, pp. 30, 31
  17. ^ Smith, pp. 14, 15.[3]
  18. ^ Oleg Platonov () A life for the Tsar (The truth about Grigory Rasputin)
  19. ^ The History of Siberia by Igor V. Naumov
  20. ^ Douglas Smith (2016) Rasputin, p. 17
  21. ^ Smith, p. 21
  22. ^ a b Nelipa, p. 16.
  23. ^ *, p. 15.
  24. ^ Верхотурский Во Имя Святителя Николая Чудотворца Мужской Монастырь. Pravenc.ru. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  25. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 17
  26. ^ Moynahan, p. 31
  27. ^ Prokudin-Gorskii Collection
  28. ^ The Many Lives of Maria Rasputin, Daughter of the 'Mad Monk' by Hadley Meares
  29. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 22.
  30. ^ Moynahan, p. 32.
  31. ^ Nelipa, p. 17.
  32. ^ Spencer C. Tucker; Priscilla Mary Roberts (September 2005). The Encyclopedia of World War I: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO. pp. 967–. ISBN 978-1-85109-420-2.
  33. ^ Nelipa, p. 18.
  34. ^ Amalrik, A. (1988) Biografie van de Russische monnik 1863–1916, p. 45
  35. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 24
  36. ^ Moynahan, p. 43.
  37. ^ Gerald Shelley (1925) The Blue Steppes, p. 87.
  38. ^ "The Life And Death Of Rasputin". Orthodoxchristianbooks.com. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  39. ^ W.A. Suchomlinov (1924) Erinnerungen, p. 509
  40. ^ Radzinsky (2000), p. 57.
  41. ^ "Nicolas' diary 1905 (in Russian)". Rus-sky.com. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  42. ^ Memoirs of Count Witte, p. 315
  43. ^ Riasanovsky, N.V. (1977) A History of Russia, p. 453.
  44. ^ D.C.B. Lieven (1983) Russia and the Origins of the First World War, p. 50
  45. ^ Genotype Analysis Identifies the Cause of the "Royal Disease" Evgeny I. Rogaev, et al
  46. ^ Case Closed: Famous Royals Suffered From Hemophilia By Michael Price Science NOW Daily News 8 October 2009
  47. ^ a b M. Nelipa (2015) Alexei, p. 74
  48. ^ Le Précepteur des Romanov by Daniel Girardin
  49. ^ Encausse, H.C. d' (1996) Nicolas II, La transition interrompue, p. 147, (Fayard) [4]; Holy People of the World: A Cross-cultural Encyclopedia.
  50. ^ Diarmuid Jeffreys (2004). Aspirin: The Remarkable Story of a Wonder Drug. Bloomsbury Publishing.
  51. ^ Rappaport, p. 112.
  52. ^ "Aspirin: The Story of a Wonder Drug". BMJ. 329 (7479): 1408. doi:10.1136/bmj.329.7479.1408. PMC 535471.
  53. ^ Heroin® and Aspirin® The Connection! & The Collection! – Part II by Cecil Munsey
  54. ^ M. Nelipa (2015) Alexei. Russia's Last Imperial Heir: A Chronicle of Tragedy, pp. 76-77.
  55. ^ Rappaport, p. 179.
  56. ^ M. Nelipa (2015), p. 84.
  57. ^ M. Nelipa (2015) Alexei, Russia's Last Imperial Heir: A Chronicle of Tragedy. Chapter III, pp. 85-86.
  58. ^ Robert K. Massie (1967) Nicholas and Alexandra, p. 15?
  59. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 101.
  60. ^ Vyrubova, p. 94
  61. ^ Moe, p. 156.
  62. ^ M. Rasputin, The Real Rasputin, p. 72.
  63. ^ Fuhrmann, pp. 100–101.
  64. ^ M. Nelipa (2015) Alexei. Russia's Last Imperial Heir: A Chronicle of Tragedy, p. 90.
  65. ^ M. Nelipa (2015) Alexei. Russia's Last Imperial Heir: A Chronicle of Tragedy, p. 93.
  66. ^ Pares, p. 138.
  67. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 103.
  68. ^ Smith, p. 296
  69. ^ a b c d e f g Alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  70. ^ Nelipa (2015) Alexei, p. 83.
  71. ^ Rasputin, p. 33.
  72. ^ a b Lecture by J.T. Fuhrmann on Mary Washington University
  73. ^ a b c Bernard Pares (6 January 1927) Rasputin and the Empress: Authors of the Russian Collapse. Foreign Affairs. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  74. ^ Rappaport, p. 117.
  75. ^ Moynahan, p. 165.
  76. ^ G. Shelley (1925) The Speckled Domes. Episodes of an Englishman's life in Russia, p. 60.
  77. ^ Robert D. Warth, "Before Rasputin: Piety and the Occult at the Court of Nicholas II." Historian 47#3 (1985): 323-337.
  78. ^ "Grigory Rasputin – Russiapedia History and mythology Prominent Russians". Russiapedia.rt.com. Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  79. ^ Rappaport, p. 128.
  80. ^ Rob Moshein. Eyewitness Accounts – How Rasputin Met the Imperial Family. Alexanderpalace.
  81. ^ H.W. Williams, p. 166
  82. ^ a b "Распутин Григорий Ефимович — Биография". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  83. ^ Nelipa, pp. 31, 35.
  84. ^ Nelipa, p. 33.
  85. ^ Smith, p. 76
  86. ^ "Diaries of Nicholas II – Alexander Palace Time Machine". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  87. ^ V. Chernov, The Great Russian Revolution, p. 15.
  88. ^ Rappaport, p. 115-116.
  89. ^ a b "How Rasputin Met the Imperial Family – Alexander Palace Time Machine". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  90. ^ Moe, p. 167.
  91. ^ Grigori Efimovich Rasputin. My Ideas and Thoughts. Omolenko.com. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  92. ^ Rasputin, p. 70.
  93. ^ Out of My Past, p. 299
  94. ^ Iliodor, p. 116. Archive.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  95. ^ Rasputin, p. 66.
  96. ^ Pares, p. 150
  97. ^ Nelipa, p. 75.
  98. ^ "Royal Russia News: The Murder of Grigorii Rasputin: A Book Review by Charlotte Zeepvat". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  99. ^ Moynahan, pp. 37, 39.
  100. ^ Fuhrmann, pp. XXVII, 20, 53–54, 80.
  101. ^ Moynahan, p. 52.
  102. ^ Smith, p. 85
  103. ^ Rasputin, p. 90
  104. ^ Almasov, pp. 168–172.
  105. ^ NYTimes
  106. ^ a b "Rasputin's Death Reexamined – News". The Moscow Times. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  107. ^ Rasputin, p. 117.
  108. ^ a b Vyrubova, p. 388.
  109. ^ MIXED BATHING IN RUSSIA. In: Evening Post, Volume LXVIII, Issue 56, 3 September 1904, Page 13
  110. ^ Nelipa, p. 33-34
  111. ^ Pares, pp. 148–149.
  112. ^ Wilson, pp. 139, 147.
  113. ^ Smith, p. 550
  114. ^ Moe, p. 256.
  115. ^ Iliodor (1918). The Mad Monk of Russia. The Century Co., New York. p. 193.
  116. ^ Moynahan, pp. 169–170
  117. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 91.
  118. ^ a b King, p. 191.
  119. ^ The Complete Wartime Correspondence of Tsar Nicholas II and the Empress Alexandra. April 1914-March 1917, p. 354. By Joseph T. Fuhrmann, ed.
  120. ^ Out of My Past, p. 303
  121. ^ Out of My Past, p. 418.
  122. ^ Antrick, p. 37.
  123. ^ Fuhrmann, pp. 117–118.
  124. ^ a b BORODINA G.YU. DOCUMENTS OF THE CASE KHIONIA GUSEVA ATTEMPT ON GRIGORIY RASPUTIN IN 1914. Retrieved on 7 August 2014.
  125. ^ Colin Wilson (1971) Rasputin and the Fall of the Romanovs, chapter VIII [5]; Moe, p. 275.
  126. ^ Rigasche Rundschau. The European Library (1 July 1914). Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  127. ^ Assassination Attempt on Rasputin – 29 June 1914 | The British Newspaper Archive Blog. Blog.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  128. ^ FAVORITE OF TSAR STABBED BY WOMAN – Rasputin, Peasant Monk-Mystic, Said to be at the Point of Death. New York Times (14 July 1914). Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  129. ^ "Cymru 1914 - Wednesday, 15th of July, 1914". Cymru1914.org. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  130. ^ "(article 6425577)". The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA).
  131. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929). The Real Rasputin. p. 86
  132. ^ Nelipa, p. 45.
  133. ^ Spiridovich, p. 203.
  134. ^ The Tsar Sends His Own Physician to Attend the Court Favorite. New York Times. 15 July 1914
  135. ^ Radzinsky (2000), pp. 257–258.
  136. ^ Rasputin, p. 88.
  137. ^ Nelipa, pp. 85.
  138. ^ The Massandra Collection
  139. ^ Mon père Grigory Raspoutine. Mémoires et notes (par Marie Solovieff-Raspoutine) J. Povolozky & Cie. Paris 1923; Matrena Rasputina, Memoirs of The Daughter, Moscow 2001. ISBN 5-8159-0180-6 Template:Ru icon
  140. ^ a b Rasputin, p. 12.
  141. ^ Alexander Palace
  142. ^ On this day: Russia in a click. Russiapedia
  143. ^ Nelipa, p. 48.
  144. ^ Moe, p. 277.
  145. ^ Ruud, Charles A.; Stepanov, Sergei (1999). Fontanka 16: The Tsars' Secret Police. McGill-Queen's Press. pp. 297–. ISBN 978-0-7735-2484-2.
  146. ^ Rasputin, p. 34.
  147. ^ Nelipa, p. 49.
  148. ^ Nelipa, p. 52.
  149. ^ "Okhrana Surveillance Report on Rasputin". Alexanderpalace.org (from Soviet Krasnyi Arkiv).
  150. ^ a b "The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra – Chapter XV – A Mother's Agony – Rasputin". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  151. ^ Gilliard, Pierre. "Chapter 14: Death of Rasputin". Thirteen Years at the Russian Court. Alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  152. ^ Radzinsky (2010), p. 295
  153. ^ Figes, pp. 32–33.
  154. ^ Smith, p. 373/
  155. ^ Smith, p. 377.
  156. ^ Radzinsky (2010), p. 297
  157. ^ Gerald Shelley (1925) The Blue Steppes, p. 88.
  158. ^ R. H. Bruce Lockhart British Agent
  159. ^ Smith, p. 380
  160. ^ Pares, p. 139.
  161. ^ Nelipa, p. 515.
  162. ^ Петербургские квартиры Распутина. Petersburg-mystic-history.info. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  163. ^ Shelley (1925), pp. 61–62.
  164. ^ Moe, p. 261-262.
  165. ^ a b Douglas Smith (2016) "June 1914, Gregory Rasputin and the outbreak of the First World War" In: Historically Inevitable?: Turning Points of the Russian Revolution edited by Tony Brenton
  166. ^ Antrick, pp. 35, 39.
  167. ^ Vyrubova, p. 173.
  168. ^ July 1914: Countdown to War by Sean McMeekin
  169. ^ Thirteen Years at the Russian Court – Chapter Eight – Journeys to the Crimea and Rumania – Poncaire's Visit – War. Alexanderpalace. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  170. ^ Victor Alexandrov (1966) The End of the Romanovs, trans. William Sutcliffe. Little, Brown, and Company, Boston, p. 155.
  171. ^ The Willy Nicky Telegrams
  172. ^ The Origins of the First World War by James Joll
  173. ^ The Fourth Seal by Samuel Hoare, p. 229
  174. ^ "AJP Taylor railway timetables and mobilisation plans". YouTube. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  175. ^ Richard J. Evans on "The Road to Slaughter" by Sean McMeekin in The New Republic
  176. ^ Hew Strachan. The First World War, Vol I: To Arms, 2001, p. 85
  177. ^ Richard F. Hamilton, Holger H. Herwig. Origins of World War One. Cambridge University Press, 2003 (p. 514)
  178. ^ Andrei Zubov (ed.) History of Russia. XX Century (Volume I, 1894-1939). Moscow: AST Publishers, 2010 (p. 291)
  179. ^ J. Joll, p. 193
  180. ^ Antrick, pp. 59–60.
  181. ^ Nelipa, p. 88.
  182. ^ N.V. Rianasanovky, p. 464
  183. ^ Cherniavsky, p.88
  184. ^ SSEES, John Hanbury-Williams’ Diary, 18 Aug. 1915.In: Claire McKee (2014) British Perceptions of Tsar Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Fedorovna 1894-1918
  185. ^ V. Lenin (1915) Socialism and War The Attitude of the Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party Towards the War
  186. ^ Leon Trotsky (1915) The War and the International (The Bolsheviks and World Peace)
  187. ^ Cherniavsky, p. 7.
  188. ^ Viktor Chernov, p. 17
  189. ^ Letters from Tsar Nicholas to Tsaritsa Alexandra – AUGUST 1915. Alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  190. ^ Moe, p. 332.
  191. ^ W.A. Suchomlinov (1924) Erinnerungen, p. 393
  192. ^ Richard Pearson, The Russian Moderates and the Crisis of Tsarism 1914-1917, p. 55.In: Claire McKee (2014) British Perceptions of Tsar Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Fedorovna 1894-1918
  193. ^ Fuhrmann, Wartime Correspondence, p. 600
  194. ^ Fuhrmann, pp. 148–149
  195. ^ Moe, pp. 331–332.
  196. ^ Smith, p. 483
  197. ^ Figes, p. 27; Smith, p. 484.
  198. ^ [6]
  199. ^ King, p. xi.
  200. ^ Alexanderpalace. Alexanderpalace. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  201. ^ Riasanovsky, N.V. (1977) A History of Russia, p. 467
  202. ^ "1917 Interrogation of Count Freedericks – Alexander Palace Time Machine". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  203. ^ Figes, p. 34
  204. ^ Moynahan, p. 169
  205. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 129.
  206. ^ The tsarina's letters exerting pressure on the tsar (1915–16)
  207. ^ Antrick, p. 62.
  208. ^ Thirteen Years at the Russian Court – Chapter Eleven – Retreat – Tsar Head of the Army – Influence of the Tsarina. Alexanderpalace. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  209. ^ HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE. Russia's Imperial Blood: Was Rasputin Not the Healer of Legend by John M.L. Kendrick. In: American Journal of Hematology. Volume 77, Issue 1, Version of Record online: 11 AUG 2004
  210. ^ M. Nelipa (2015) Alexei, p. 151-152
  211. ^ a b Sergei V. Kulikov (2012) Emperor Nicholas II and the State Duma Unknown Plans and Missed Opportunities, p. 48-49. In: Russian Studies in History, vol. 50, no. 4
  212. ^ Figes, pp. 270, 275.
  213. ^ Porter, T. (2003). Russian History, 30(3), 348-350. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/24660814
  214. ^ Antrick, p. 79, 117.
  215. ^ a b P.N. Milyukov (1921) The Russian Revolution. Vol I: The Revolution divided, p. 15
  216. ^ The PENULTIMATE PRIME Minister of the RUSSIAN EMPIRE A. F. TREPOV by FEDOR ALEKSANDROVICH GAIDA (2012)
  217. ^ The Complete Wartime Correspondence of Tsar Nicholas II and the Empress Alexandra. April 1914-March 1917, p. 317. By Joseph T. Fuhrmann, ed.; Smith, p. 485.
  218. ^ a b Frank Alfred Golder (1927) Documents of Russian History 1914–1917. Read Books. ISBN 1443730297.
  219. ^ https://archive.is/9BDbb
  220. ^ a b P.N. Milyukov (1921), p. 16
  221. ^ Nelipa, pp. 63-64
  222. ^ Rasputin, p. 104
  223. ^ Moe, p. 386
  224. ^ Smith, p. 501.
  225. ^ The Magician from Siberia by Colin Wilson
  226. ^ Mad Monk of Russia, Iliodor: Memoirs and Confessions of Sergei Michailovich Trufanoff, Iliodir
  227. ^ Smith, p. 534
  228. ^ Kerensky, p. 160
  229. ^ Nelipa, p. 63, 163–164, 505
  230. ^ Vyrubova, pp. 289–290
  231. ^ Moe, p. 387.
  232. ^ "The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra – Chapter XXIII – Before the Storm". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  233. ^ King, p. 258
  234. ^ Pares, p. 400.
  235. ^ Peeling, Siobhan: Shti︠u︡rmer, Boris Vladimirovich, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, ed. by Ute Daniel, Peter Gatrell, Oliver Janz, Heather Jones, Jennifer Keene, Alan Kramer, and Bill Nasson, issued by Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 2014-12-16. DOI: [7].
  236. ^ V. Chernov, p. 21
  237. ^ Giles Milton, Russian Roulette: A Deadly Game: How British Spies Thwarted Lenin's Global Plot, Hachette UK, 2013, p. 29.
  238. ^ Shelley, p. 90-94.
  239. ^ The Complete Wartime Correspondence of Tsar Nicholas II and the Empress Alexandra. April 1914-March 1917, p. 5. by Joseph T. Fuhrmann, ed.
  240. ^ a b c P.N. Milyukov (1921), p. 19
  241. ^ Moe, p. 438.
  242. ^ Spencer C. Tucker (2013) The European Powers in the First World War: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 549. ISBN 1135506949
  243. ^ Der Zar, Rasputin und die Juden, p. 39
  244. ^ Moe, p. 471.
  245. ^ George Buchanan (1923) My mission to Russia and other diplomatic memories [8]
  246. ^ Leonid Katsis and Helen Tolstoy (2013) Jewishness in Russian Culture: Within and Without. BRILL. p. 156. ISBN 9004261621
  247. ^ THE GREAT RUSSIAN REVOLUTION BY VICTOR CHERNOV, p. 20
  248. ^ H. Rappaport (2016) Caught in the Revolution Petrograd 1917, p. 22. Hutchinson Penquin Random House UK
  249. ^ Gytis Gudaitis (2005) Armeen Rußlands und Deutschlands im 1. Weltkrieg und in den Revolutionen von 1917 und 1918 : ein Vergleich. Thesis. Katholische Universität Eichstätt-Ingolstadt. p. 142 [9]; Nelipa, p. 132.
  250. ^ Vladimir I. Gurko (1939) "Features and Figures of the Past", p. 10. [10]
  251. ^ a b Figes, p. 287.
  252. ^ a b Thirteen Years at the Russian Court – Chapter Thirteen – Tsar at the Duma – Galacia – Life at G.Q.H. – Growing Disaffection. Alexanderpalace.org (15 March 1921). Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  253. ^ [11]
  254. ^ a b P.N. Milyukov (1921), p. 20
  255. ^ V. Gurko, p. 582
  256. ^ Smith, p. 565.
  257. ^ Pares, p. 392.
  258. ^ The Fall of the Russian Empire: The Story of the Last of the Romanovs and ... by Edmund A. Walsh
  259. ^ Sergey Mironenko (2017), p. 146
  260. ^ "Governments, Parliaments and Parties (Russian Empire)". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  261. ^ a b Figes, p. 278.
  262. ^ Maureen Perrie; Dominic Lieven; Ronald Grigor Suny (2006). The Cambridge History of Russia: Volume 2, Imperial Russia, 1689–1917. Cambridge University Press. pp. 668–. ISBN 978-0-521-81529-1.
  263. ^ W.A. Suchomlinov (1924) Erinnerungen, p. 461-465
  264. ^ Tatyana Mironova. Grigori Rasputin: Belied Life – Belied Death. Whenthekidstakeoverthekingdom.wordpress.com (17 May 2010). Retrieved on 15 July 2014. Archived 10 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  265. ^ Letters of Felix and Zenaida Yussupov – Alexander Palace Time Machine. Alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  266. ^ Pares, p. 402.
  267. ^ "Latest posts of: rudy3". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  268. ^ Nelipa, pp. 130, 134.
  269. ^ Harold Whitmore Williams (1919) The Spirit of the Russian Revolution, p. 3. Russian Liberation Committee, no. 9, 173 Fleet Street. London
  270. ^ Edmund A. Walsh, p. 121
  271. ^ D.C.B. Lieven (1983) Russia and the Origins of the First World War, p. 51
  272. ^ "The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra – Chapter XXIV – Warning Voices". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  273. ^ Robert Paul Browder; Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kerensky (1961). The Russian Provisional Government, 1917: Documents. Stanford University Press. pp. 18–. ISBN 978-0-8047-0023-8.
  274. ^ Raymond Pearson (1964) The Russian moderates and the crisis of Tsarism 1914–1917, p. 128.
  275. ^ Куликов С.В. Центральный военно-промышленный комитет накануне и в ходе Февральской революции 1917 года // Российская история. – 2012. – № 1. – С. 69-90.
  276. ^ The Murder of Grigorii Rasputin; a Conspiracy That Brought Down the Russian Empire. Amazon.com. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  277. ^ J.H. Cockfield (2002) White Crow, p. 178.
  278. ^ Kerensky, p. 150.
  279. ^ A. Kerensky, Russia and History's Turning Point, New York 1965, p. 150.
  280. ^ Wartime Correspondence, p. 675-678
  281. ^ Pares, p. 398.
  282. ^ The Fall of the Russian Empire: The Story of the Last of the Romanovs and ... by Edmund A. Walsh
  283. ^ Figes, p. 811.
  284. ^ Bernard Pares (1939) The Fall of the Russian Monarchy. A Study of the Evidence. Jonathan Cape. London, p. 382.
  285. ^ Letter from Michael to Nicholas, 11 November 1916, State Archive of the Russian Federation, 601/1301, quoted in Crawford and Crawford, p. 234
  286. ^ Wartime Correspondence, p. 679
  287. ^ Romanian Operations 1916. WarChron. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  288. ^ Moe, p. 473.
  289. ^ David F. Burg, L. Edward Purcell (2010). Almanac of World War I. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0813137713.
  290. ^ Official Statements of War Aims and Peace Proposals, December 1916 to November 1918 By James Brown Scott. Questia.com. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  291. ^ Speech of Minister of foreign Affairs N. N. Pokrovsko
  292. ^ Robert Paul Browder; Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kerensky (1961). The Russian Provisional Government, 1917: Documents. Stanford University Press. pp. 17–. ISBN 978-0-8047-0023-8.
  293. ^ a b Holger H. Herwig (2014). The First World War. A&C Black. ISBN 1472508858.
  294. ^ French & German Public Opinion on Declared War Aims: 1914–1918. Stanford University Press. p. 62. ISBN 080471486X.
  295. ^ David Fromkin (2010). A Peace to End All Peace. Macmillan. p. 254. ISBN 1429988525.
  296. ^ Hans Fenske (2013) "Der Anfang vom Ende des alten Europa. Die alliierte Verweigerung von Friedensgesprächen 1914–1919. Olzog Verlag, Berlin, pp. 41–43.
  297. ^ C. Alston (2004) Russian Liberalism and British Journalism: the life and work of Harold Williams (1876-1928)
  298. ^ Lords, E/59/3, Major General Sir John Hanbury Williams to Lloyd George, 18 Dec. 1916 [12]
  299. ^ Massie, p. 361
  300. ^ Moe, p. 458.
  301. ^ Aleksandr Mosolov (1935). At the court of the last tsar: being the memoirs of A. A. Mossolov, head of the court chancellery, 1900–1916. Methuen. pp. 170–173.
  302. ^ Pares, p. 395
  303. ^ Radzinsky (2010), p. 597
  304. ^ van der Meiden, p. 70.
  305. ^ Wartime Correspondence, p. 673
  306. ^ Wartime Correspondence, p. 681
  307. ^ The decrees of the governing Senate
  308. ^ Nelipa, pp. 99, 223, 399.
  309. ^ Rasputin, p. 109
  310. ^ Nelipa, p. 224.
  311. ^ Nelipa, pp. 133–134.
  312. ^ Nelipa, p. 122.
  313. ^ Nelipa, p. 308
  314. ^ E. Radzinsky (2000) The Rasputin File. Doubleday, pp. 476–477
  315. ^ D. Smith, p. 624.
  316. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929), p.129
  317. ^ Purishkevich, p. 97.
  318. ^ Maurice Paléologue (1925).Ch. V. "December 25, 1910 – January 8, 1917" in An Ambassador's Memoirs. Vol. III. George H. Doran Company, New York.
  319. ^ The Russian diary of an Englishman, Petrograd, 1915–1917
  320. ^ Massandra winery
  321. ^ Nelipa, p. 309.
  322. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929) The real Rasputin, p. 134.
  323. ^ son Felix Yusupov was put up for sale the collection of Prince and his documents
  324. ^ "Lost Splendor – Felix Yussupov – Chapter XXIII". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  325. ^ R.C. Moe, p. 484, 509, 524.
  326. ^ Nelipa, p. 315.
  327. ^ Nelipa, p. 382.
  328. ^ a b Nelipa, p. 318.
  329. ^ Nelipa, p. 320-324.
  330. ^ To Kill Rasputin, by Andrew Cook. A review by Greg King. Directarticle.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  331. ^ Nelipa, p. 121, 197.
  332. ^ Nelipa, p. 322.
  333. ^ a b O.A. Platonov Murder. Omolenko.com. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  334. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 211.
  335. ^ Treugolnik
  336. ^ Alexander Palace
  337. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929) The real Rasputin, p. 136.
  338. ^ "Full text of "The Russian diary of an Englishman, Petrograd, 1915–1917"". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  339. ^ Almasov, pp. 189, 210–212.
  340. ^ F. Yusupov (1952) Lost Splendor, Ch. XXIII "The Moika basement – The night of December 29".
  341. ^ Spiridovich, p. 383
  342. ^ A. Simanowitsch (1928) Rasputin. Der allmächtige Bauer. p. 270
  343. ^ Purishkevich, p. 110
  344. ^ Radzinsky (2000), p. 458.
  345. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929) The real Rasputin, p. 138.
  346. ^ The Great Petrovsky Bridge (Saint Petersburg). Wikimapia. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  347. ^ a b Rasputin's Murder. Forum.alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  348. ^ Nelipa, p. 102, 354, 529.
  349. ^ http://www.hrono.ru/libris/lib_we/vasilev11.html
  350. ^ "Memories of the Russian Court – an online book on Romanov Russia – Chapter XIII". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  351. ^ Nelipa, p. 254-255, 338–340.
  352. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929) p. 146
  353. ^ Sergey Mironenko (2017) Romanov family tensions on the even of th first world war and the Revolution, p. 145. In: 1917 Romanovs & Revolution. The End of the Monarchy. Amsterdam 2017
  354. ^ Hoare, p. 152.
  355. ^ Nelipa, p. 529.
  356. ^ Hoare, p. 154
  357. ^ Nelipa, p. 372; Smith, p. 609
  358. ^ Saint Petersburg State University of Aerospace Instrumentation
  359. ^ Alexanderpalace. Forum.alexanderpalace.org. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  360. ^ Places connected with the murder. Petersburg-mystic-history.info. Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  361. ^ Rasputin, p. 16
  362. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929), p. 149-150
  363. ^ The Russian diary of an Englishman, Petrograd, 1915–1917, The Russian diary of an Englishman, Petrograd, 1915–1917, Almasov, p. 214
  364. ^ Pares, p. 146.
  365. ^ Nelipa, p. 478.
  366. ^ Almasov, pp. 193, 213.
  367. ^ Nelipa, p. 467.
  368. ^ H. Azar, The Diary of Olga Romanov: Royal Witness to the Russian Revolution, p?; Smith, p. 613
  369. ^ The last war Minister of the Russian Empire by Evdokimov, A.V.
  370. ^ Crawford and Crawford, pp. 247–251
  371. ^ P.N. Milyukov (1921), p. 21
  372. ^ Dmitry Lyubin (2017) For the Faith, the Tsar and the Fatherland.'The Romanovs in the First World War, p. 103. In: 1917 Romanovs & Revolution. The End of the Monarchy. Amsterdam 2017
  373. ^ Alexander Palace
  374. ^ Curtis 1957, p. 30.
  375. ^ Ф.А. Гайда, к.и.н., исторический факультет МГУ им. М.В. Ломоносова Министр внутренних дел Н.А. Маклаков: политическая карьера русского Полиньяка
  376. ^ H. Rappaport (2016) Caught in the Revolution Petrograd 1917, p. 84. Hutchinson Penquin Random House UK
  377. ^ Orlando Figes (2006) A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution: 1891–1924, p. 328-329.
  378. ^ Alexander Palace
  379. ^ Rasputin G. E. (1869–1916). A.G. Kalmykov in the Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia.
  380. ^ Nelipa, pp. 454–455, 457–459.
  381. ^ Moe, p. 627.
  382. ^ The boiler-building – Images of St Petersburg – National Library of Russia
  383. ^ Nelipa, pp. 424–425, 430, 476.
  384. ^ Moynahan, pp. 354–355.
  385. ^ The Russian diary of an Englishman, Petrograd, 1915–1917
  386. ^ Spiridovich, p. 421.
  387. ^ Figes, p. 291.
  388. ^ Radzinsky (2000), p. 493.
  389. ^ Nelipa, p. 2.
  390. ^ Moe, p. 666.
  391. ^ Fuhrmann, pp. 197, 200.
  392. ^ How author Douglas Smith discovered the real Rasputin
  393. ^ Reveals Scandals Of Old Russian Church. Ottawa Citizen. (28 November 1930).
  394. ^ Nelipa, pp. 141–143.
  395. ^ Alexanderpalace. Forum.alexanderpalace.org (17 July 1918). Retrieved on 15 July 2014.
  396. ^ "To Kill Rasputin: The Life and Death of Grigori Rasputin" by Andrew Cook. Rulit.net.
  397. ^ Nelipa, pp. 387–388.
  398. ^ Nelipa, p. 390.
  399. ^ Nelipa, p. 306.
  400. ^ "Lost Splendor – Felix Yussupov – Chapter XXIV". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  401. ^ Spy secrets revealed in history of MI6 | UK news. The Guardian. 21 September 2010.
  402. ^ Smith, p. 629
  403. ^ Smith, p. 630
  404. ^ Smith, p. 632
  405. ^ Fuhrmann, pp. 11, 24, 29, 47, 58, 90, 204.
  406. ^ Out of My Past: Memoirs of Count Kokovtsov. Stanford University Press. 1935. p. 297. ISBN 9780804715539.
  407. ^ "Rasputin". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  408. ^ "Grigory Rasputin – Russiapedia History and mythology Prominent Russians". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  409. ^ Rasputin, p. 23.
  410. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 28.
  411. ^ Amalrik, A. (1988) Biografie van de Russische monnik 1863–1916, p. 15.
  412. ^ Shelley, p. 69.
  413. ^ Moynahan, Preface.
  414. ^ "Rasputin: Between Virtue & Sin". RT. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  415. ^ Hosking, pp. 208–209.
  416. ^ On this day: Russia in a click. russiapedia.rt.com. The article uses a wrong date. It should be 12 July 1914.
  417. ^ Shelley, p. 63.
  418. ^ Shelley, p. 57.
  419. ^ Smith, p. 544
  420. ^ Moe, p. 272
  421. ^ Maurice Paléologue (1925). Ch. X. "April 1 – June 2, 1915" in An Ambassador's Memoirs. Vol. I. George H. Doran Company, New York.
  422. ^ Pares, pp. 188, 222.
  423. ^ Nelipa, pp. 83, 85.
  424. ^ P. V. Multatuli (2002) Lord bless my decision... the Emperor Nicholas II at the head of the army and the conspiracy of the generals, p. 255
  425. ^ The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Russian Turmoil, by Anton Ivanovich Denikin
  426. ^ Nelipa, p. 147.
  427. ^ Nelipa, p. 506.
  428. ^ Shelley, p. 94.
  429. ^ Smith, p. 636
  430. ^ The Rasputin File by Edvard Radzinsky
  431. ^ The Mad Monk by ROBERT V. DANIELS, published in NYT, June 11, 2000
  432. ^ Wikisource
  433. ^ 'Rasputin' book at Edvard Radzinsky' home page (in Russian)
  434. ^ Распутин: лживый миф о гиганте русского секса. Ruskline.ru. 20 November 2003.
  435. ^ Steve Woodbridge (2016) Eyewitnesses to Revolution: British writers in Russia in 1917
  436. ^ Elder Nikolay Guryanov's testament for Russia (in Russian)
  437. ^ Andrei Zolotov, Jr. (5 February 2003) Orthodox Church Takes On Rasputin. Moscow Times.
  438. ^ Russia Igor Torbakov Uppsala University, Sweden, p. 163
  439. ^ van der Meiden, p. 84.
  440. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 236.
  441. ^ The Guardian Rasputin killed by Tsar's nephew?. Theguardian.com. 3 January 2013.
  442. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 217
  443. ^ Nelipa, p. 379; Platonov, O.A. (2001) Prologue regicide.
  444. ^ Spiridovich, p. 402
  445. ^ Moynahan, p. 245.
  446. ^ Fuhrmann, p. 221.
  447. ^ Maria Rasputin (1929), p. 133.
  448. ^ Rasputin, pp. 12, 71, 111.
  449. ^ A. Simanowitsch (1928) Rasputin. Der allmächtige Bauer. p. 37.
  450. ^ Radzinsky (2000), pp. 477–478
  451. ^ Smith, p. 595
  452. ^ Moe, p. 569.
  453. ^ King, p. 275.
  454. ^ "Stabbing of Rasputin in 1914". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  455. ^ Ronald Bergan. "Obituary: Elem Klimov". the Guardian. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  456. ^ "BBC Radio 4 – Great Lives, Series 29, Grigori Rasputin". Bbc.co.uk. 4 January 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  457. ^ "Rasputin, Ripples to Revolution – Home". Rasputinthemusical.weebly.com. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  458. ^ "Leonardo di Caprio set to play Rasputin". The Guardian. 10 June 2013.
  459. ^ "RASPUTIN". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  460. ^ "Григорий Р. (2014) смотреть онлайн бесплатно". Retrieved 27 December 2014.

Bibliography

Portrait of Grigori Rasputin (1910)
  • Almasov, Boris (1924). Rasputin und Russland. Amalthea Verlag, Zürich. OCLC 604661189.
  • Antrick, Otto (1938). Rasputin und die politischen Hintergründe seiner Ermordung. E. Hunold, Braunschweig.
  • Buchanan, George (1923). My mission to Russia and other diplomatic memories. Cassell and Co., Ltd., London, New York.
  • Cook, Andrew (2007) To Kill Rasputin: The Life and Death of Grigori Rasputin. History Press Limited.
  • Cullen, Richard (2010) Rasputin: Britain's Secret Service and the Torture and Murder of Russia's Mad Monk.
  • Figes, Orlando (1996). A People's Tragedy. The Russian Revolution 1891–1924. Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0-224-04162-2.
  • Fuhrmann, Joseph T. (2013). Rasputin, the untold story (illustrated ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 978-1-118-17276-6.
  • Joseph T. Fuhrmann, ed. (1999). The Complete Wartime Correspondence of Tsar Nicholas II and the Empress Alexandra. April 1914-March 1917. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-30511-0. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  • Hoare, Samuel (1930). The Fourth Seal. William Heinemann Limited.
  • Hosking, Geoffrey Alan (1973). The Russian constitutional experiment. Government and Duma, 1907–1914. CUP Archive. ISBN 0521200415.
  • Kerensky, Alexander (1965). Russia and History's turning point. Duell, Sloan and Pearce, New York. OCLC 237312.
  • King, Greg (1994). The Last Empress. The Life & Times of Alexandra Feodorovna, tsarina of Russia. A Birch Lane Press Book. ISBN 1559722118.
  • Lieven, Dominic (1993). Nicholas II: Twilight of the Empire. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0312143796.
  • Massie, Robert K (2004) [originally in New York: Atheneum Books, 1967]. Nicholas and Alexandra: An Intimate Account of the Last of the Romanovs and the Fall of Imperial Russia (Common Reader Classic Bestseller ed.). United States: Tess Press. ISBN 1-57912-433-X. OCLC 62357914.
  • Meiden, G.W. van der (1991). Raspoetin en de val van het Tsarenrijk. De Bataafsche Leeuw. ISBN 9067072788.
  • Miliukov, Paul N. (1978). The Russian Revolution, Vol. I. The Revolution Divded: Spring 1917. Academic International Press.
  • Moe, Ronald C. (2011). Prelude to the Revolution: The Murder of Rasputin. Aventine Press. ISBN 1593307128.
  • Moynahan, Brian (1997). Rasputin. The saint who sinned. Random House. ISBN 0306809303.
  • Nelipa, Margarita (2010). The Murder of Grigorii Rasputin. A Conspiracy That Brought Down the Russian Empire. Gilbert's Books. ISBN 978-0-9865310-1-9.
  • Out of My Past: Memoirs of Count Kokovtsov. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-1553-9.
  • Pares, Bernard (1939). The Fall of the Russian Monarchy. A Study of the Evidence. Jonathan Cape. London.
  • Purichkevitch, Vladimir (1923). "Comment j'ai tué Raspoutine". J. Povolozky & Cie. In English: [13]
  • Radzinsky, Edvard (2000). Rasputin: The Last Word. St Leonards, New South Wales, Australia: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-529-4. OCLC 155418190. Originally in London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  • Rappaport, Helen (2014). Four Sisters. The Lost lives of the Romanov Grand Duchesses. Pan Books..
  • Rasputin, Maria (1934). My father.
  • Shelley, Gerard (1925). The Speckled Domes. Episodes of an Englishman's life in Russia. Duckworth London.
  • Smith, Douglas (2016). Rasputin. MacMillan, London. ISBN 978-1-4472-4584-1.
  • Spiridovich, Alexander (1935). Raspoutine (1863–1916). Payot, Paris.
  • Vyrubova, Anna (1923). Memories of the Russian Court. [14]
  • Welch, Frances (2014). Rasputin: A Short Life. Croydon, South London, Great Britain: Short Books and CPI Group (UK) Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78072-153-8.
  • Wilson, Collin (1964). Rasputin and the Fall of the Romanovs.

External links

Leave a Reply