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Although she was permitted to get up, she preferred to stay in bed as long as possible. This is how I found her. After asking my companions to move away from the bed a little, I tried to attract the young woman's attention as I caressed her hair and speaking to her in
English while using the types of phrases I would have used while speaking with the Grand Duchesses, but I did not refer to her by any name other than 'Darling'. She did not reply and I saw that she did not understand a word of what I had said, for when she raised the cover after a certain period of time, and I saw her face, there was nothing in her eyes which showed she had recognized me. The eyes and forehead showed some resemblance to the Grand Duchess Tatiana Nicolaievna, resemblance that disappeared, nevertheless, as soon as her face was not covered. I had to remove the cover by force, and I saw that neither the nose, the mouth, nor the chin were formed like that of the Grand Duchess. The hair was lighter in color, some of her teeth were missing-and the remaining ones were not like those of the Grand Duchess ... Her hands were also completely different, the fingers were longer and the nails narrower. I wanted to measure her height, but she refused, and I found it impossible to get an exact measurement without force. We judged roughly that in any case, she was smaller than me, while the Grand Duchess Tatiana was more than ten centimeters taller than me. I have been able to verify this, thanks to the patient's official measurement at the time of her arrival at the hospital and that corresponded exactly with the one which was taken in my presence.
506:"I tried to awaken the memory of the young woman by all the possible means; I showed to her an 'icon', with the date of the Romanov jubilee, that the emperor had given to some persons of the suite, after that a ring that had belonged to the empress; the latter had been given to her in the presence of the Grand Duchess Tatiana. But none of these things seemed to evoke in her the slightest recognition. She remained completely indifferent, she whispered some incomprehensible words into Ms. Peuthert's ear. Although I noted a certain similarity in the upper part of the face with the unknown -currently Mrs. Tschaikovski- with the Grand Duchess Tatiana, I am sure that she is not her. I later learned that the she supposes that she is the Grand Duchess Anastasia, but she does not physically resemble her in the least. She has none of the special characteristics that would allow any one who knew the Grand Duchess Anastasia well to identify her.
480:, author of historically disproven books, having married her to gain the trust of Rasputin supporters who were financing a plot to rescue the Romanovs. It was he who betrayed the family, and attempted to cast doubt on others. Soloviev really was involved in a scheme to defraud the family of the money sent by supporters to rescue them, and betray the rescuers to the Bolsheviks. The maid Anna Romanova was an accomplice of Soloviev. Romanova, said by some to have joined Buxhoeveden in the alleged 'betrayal' over the jewels and was supposedly interrogated in on the subject in Ekaterinburg, actually never even made the trip and stayed in Tobolsk.
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daughters had bodices made up of diamonds and other precious stones that served not just as a receptacle for valuables but as protective armor. This is why neither bullets nor bayonets yielded results during the shooting and bayonet blows..there turned out to be eighteen pounds of such valuables." One of the large diamonds that had been carefully covered and concealed in a button was never discovered by the
Bolsheviks, and was later found by the Whites trampled into the mud at the grave site after they took Ekaterinburg. The diamond was identified by two former servants who had helped the Grand Duchesses sew the jewels into the clothing.
360:, they had to travel across China to avoid unsafe parts of Siberia. Upon reaching Vladivostok, she described it as "Vladivostok, being the base of the Allied forces, was full of foreigners. There was the military element as well as representatives of the various Red Cross units, some Canadian detachments that had never gone any farther, as well as civilians and diplomats." She also described seeing the Pacific coast for the first time in her life, and expressed her sadness as she sailed away from her native country:
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353:, who got her safe passage on a military train. While in Omsk she had a surprise reunion with Joy, Alexei's spaniel, who had been rescued by Colonel Paul Rodzianko. Though now almost blind, the dog seemed to recognize her. Joy had been traumatized by the loss of the family, and was heartbroken. It was a sad but bittersweet reunion for her too; seeing the dog brought back vivid memories of the Tsarevich.
417:, who warned Victoria that "Isa" was not to be trusted. The truth of the matter was revealed through a statement made in March 1958 by Grand Duchess Xenia that she believed in her. "Isa" died in England in grace and favor rooms granted to her by the Queen, the drawers chests were crammed with mementos of the family, photo albums and pieces of
291:, but witnessed his miracles first-hand and was baffled by his powers. Alexandra would have liked her to accept Rasputin as a holy man, but knew Buxhoeveden's opinion was not likely to be changed. The fact she kept her negative opinion to herself was appreciated by the Empress, who knew Buxhoeveden would say nothing to discredit her.
373:"Everything in America seemed to me on such a monumental scale that it dwarfed every bit of European scenery I had ever seen before, or have ever seen since. What were the Norwegian fjords, or even the Alps, after the Rocky Mountains? What are the largest buildings of other towns after those in San Francisco and New York?"
492:, was reportedly claiming to be a Romanov Grand Duchess. It was said that she was Grand Duchess Tatiana. She claimed, however, according to nurse Thea Malinovski to be Grand Duchess Anastasia in the fall of 1921. Baroness Buxhoeveden went to Berlin to visit the woman and pronounced her "too short" to be Tatiana.
382:"Was this to be the last time that they would hear that hymn? The Empire had been wiped out, the Emperor was no more, our great country had lost even its name. In the notes of our anthem was the echo of one of the world's greatest tragedies. It seemed to set a seal on a past that for us was gone... gone forever."
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It is fact that
Yurovsky explained that while the truck was stuck in the forest, "some of Yermakov's people started to pull at the girls' blouses, where they discovered the valuables.".."Things that had been sewn into the daughters' clothing were discovered when the bodies began to be undressed..The
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stated "They shot the daughters but nothing happened, then
Yermakov set the bayonet in motion and that didn't help; then they were finally finished off by being shot the head. Only in the forest did I discover what hampered the shooting of the daughters." According to King and Wilson, Yurovsky wrote
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After her death she left a number of items that had belonged to the
Russian imperial family to Grand Duchess Xenia including, "a green enamel Fabergé pencil given to me by Empress Alexandra ... a white china cup with a pattern of cornflowers and the mark NII used by the Emperor at Tobolsk .. a small
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In her youth, she was a part of the social life of St. Petersburg. Buxhoeveden was chosen as an honorary Lady in
Waiting to the Tsarina in 1904, and became an official Lady in Waiting in 1913. She was nicknamed "Isa" by the Tsarina and her four daughters and, during World War I, was often chosen by
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It was after that
Anderson mentioned Buxhoevden's alleged treachery and betrayal of the family to the Bolsheviks, claiming that was why she denied her. Except among diehard supporters, this vicious counter-attack did little to cushion the blow of having been flatly rejected by someone who was very
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She was in bed close to the wall, she was turned facing against the window, in full sunlight. When she heard us enter the room, she hid herself under the cover to hide herself from our stares, and we were not able to get her to show us her face....The unknown one spoke German with Miss
Peuthert.
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supporters, have accused her of betraying the family by taking money from them and later informing their guards that the
Romanov children had sewn jewels into their clothing. This was based on a claim by Anderson that Buxhoeveden, after she denounced Anderson as a fraud pretending to be
235:, Sophie describes a side of old Russia seldom seen elsewhere, a family in the old-fashioned provincial country life of the gentry in the years before the revolution. As a child, Sophie shared picnics and mushroom hunts with other famous players in the story such as
469:. Others said that Sophie's apparent poverty, as described by Gilliard and Gibbes, is proof she never had any money and certainly had not stolen anything from anyone. At her own admission, Sophie's rooms had been searched, and nothing of value had been found.
364:"I was leaving Russia. Would I ever see my country again, and in what condition would I find it if I ever returned? Who among my friends and relations would have survived the storm? The Russia I had known, the old Russia, disappeared slowly from view."
520:, who claimed to be Grand Duchess Anastasia. She wrote about Smith, "I found no likeness whatsoever to the Grand Duchess physically .... Although a total stranger, she is sympathetic on the whole, but seemed to be labouring under a mental delusion."
442:, had betrayed the family. She allegedly told Rodionov that "The buttons on her coat aren't buttons, they are diamonds; the aigrette of that hat conceals a diamond from the shah of Persia; and that belt there – underneath it are ropes of pearls.
306:) and assumed she was a foreign national. The Bolsheviks did not imprison foreign nationals in fear of reprisals from other nations. Sophie spent many months on the run across Siberia, with other members of the royal household, including
377:
When she finally arrived in
Denmark at the home of her father, she told of seeing the Dowager Empress in Copenhagen, and how melancholy it was to hear "God Save the Tsar" played, knowing what had happened to the country she had loved.
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After she passed through Japan and Hawaii, regretting not having more time to see these places, her ship landed in San Francisco, where she took a train across the United States. She marveled at the sights she had never seen before:
346:, the British consul, discussing all possible options. She and her two companions even made personal representations to the Ural Soviet on behalf of the Romanovs. These attempts failed and they were forced to leave Ekaterinburg.
318:. She was only allowed safe passage out of Russia when she made it to Omsk, which was then under the control of the Russian White Army and the British Military. Her experiences can be read in her book "Left Behind."
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to escape Russia. It is claimed she told him she would return the money, but never did. "I knew she was greedy, but I never knew she'd go that far!" Gibbes allegedly wrote to the French tutor
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Following many long months of fleeing across Siberia in fear for her life, Buxhoeveden was finally able to leave Russia with the help of the British military, namely General
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in his 1922 memoirs about "the damn valuables and jewels we knew they had concealed in their clothes when they arrived, which caused troubles to no end."
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The life and tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna, empress of Russia, a biography by Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden; with an introduction by J. C. Squire
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Such a proposition has been completely disproven since the Bolsheviks had no idea the jewels were in the clothes until after the execution.
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The Baroness wrote three books that are considered to give one of the best accounts of the Romanov family's life and final days. They were
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413:. It is quite incorrectly claimed, without any historical verification, that the Baroness was not trusted by the Tsar's sister,
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After being refused permission to join the family in the Ipatiev house, Sophie, along with the foreign tutors,
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close to the Imperial family. Sophie Buxhoeveden never wavered in her view that Anderson was an impostor.
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409:, Baroness Buxhoeveden faithfully performed lady-in-waiting services for the late Tsarina's older sister
864:"The Fall of the Romanovs", By Mark D. Steinberg and Vladimir M.Khrustalev, Yale University Press 1995,
618:"Gilbert's Books (Publisher) – Books on the Romanovs – Before the Storm by Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden"
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228:. She was the author of three memoirs about the imperial family and about her own escape from Russia.
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According to her memoirs, Buxhoeveden's father, Baron Karlos Matthias Konstantin Ludwig Otto von
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643:"The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna :: New Introduction :: New Introduction"
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Baroness Buxhoeveden was also involved in disproving another Romanov claimant, this time
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Robert K. Massie, "Nicholas and Alexandra"p.464-467 old hardback, p.489-492 new softback
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wooden Ikon .. with a few words of prayer written by the Empress at Tobolsk ... ".
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with her father, then at Hemmelmark in northern Germany, the estate owned by
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Lady in waiting to Tsarina Alexandra; author of memoirs about life at court.
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One source of the allegations blaming her with theft from the family was
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the Tsarina to accompany the four grand duchesses to official duties.
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King, Greg, and Wilson, Penny, "The Fate of the Romanovs, p. 143.
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Baroness von Buxhoeveden (right) with her mother Lyudmila (left)
710:"Left Behind – Chapter XV – Onboard the British Military Train"
664:"Left Behind – Chapter XV – Onboard the British Military Train"
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Left Behind: Fourteen Months in Siberia During the Revolution,
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803:"Countess Sophie Buxhoeveden – Alexander Palace Time Machine"
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Noble Corporations 1935 – XX.1.1. Sophia (Isa) Buxhoeveden
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She followed the family to exile in Siberia following the
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In 1922, in Berlin, a woman, later known to the world as
213:; September 6, 1883 – November 26, 1956), also known as
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Emigrants from the Russian Empire to the United Kingdom
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King and Wilson allege that Buxhoeveden borrowed 1,300
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394:, younger brother of Kaiser Wilhelm II, and his wife,
731:"Left Behind – Chapter XVI – The Parting of the Ways"
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974:, London, Shepheard-Walwyn (Publishers) Ltd. 1999;
919:"Left Behind – Chapter VI – The Long Arm of Moscow"
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49:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
688:Last Days of the Romanovs: Tragedy at Ekaterinburg
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782:Once a Grand Duchess: Xenia Sister of Nicholas II
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476:, the true guilty party. He was the husband of
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187:Karlos von Buxhoeveden and Lyudmila Osokina
415:Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia
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1074:Ladies-in-waiting from the Russian Empire
784:, Phoenix Mill, Sutton Publishing, 2002,
263:(1856-1935), was the Russian minister in
109:Learn how and when to remove this message
530:Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Feodorovna
484:Involvement in the Anna Anderson affair
429:Allegations of betrayal of the Romanovs
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991:Pierre Gilliard, "La Fausse Anastasie"
780:Van der Kiste, John and Hall, Coryne,
411:Victoria, Marchioness of Milford Haven
599:from the original on 23 February 2007
890:Steinberg and Khrustalev, p. 361-362
47:adding citations to reliable sources
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1026:Genealogy of the Buxhoeveden family
271:. Her mother was Lyudmila Petrovna
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959:"Last Days of the Romanovs," p.125
461:from the Romanov children's tutor
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645:. Alexanderpalace.org. 1913-11-20
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845:The Fate of the Romanovs,
202:София Карловна Буксгевден
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752:"Left Behind – Epilogue"
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1002:Little Mother of Russia
971:Little Mother of Russia
908:King and Wilson, p. 505
536:published in 1929; and
440:Grand Duchess Anastasia
322:Exile, death and legacy
125:Sophie von Buxhoeveden
921:. Alexanderpalace.org
805:. Alexanderpalace.org
754:. Alexanderpalace.org
733:. Alexanderpalace.org
712:. Alexanderpalace.org
666:. Alexanderpalace.org
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532:, published in 1928;
463:Charles Sydney Gibbes
247:and the sons of poet
1016:Sophie Buxhoeveden,
855:, pp. 68–69, 141–143
287:She had no time for
58:"Sophie Buxhoeveden"
43:improve this article
1034:Genealogy handbook
593:alexanderpalace.org
1084:Buxhoeveden family
249:Konstantin Romanov
980:978-0-85683-229-1
870:978-0-300-07067-5
624:on March 29, 2005
538:Before the Storm.
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336:Alexandra Tegleva
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173:(1956-11-26)
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99:January 2023
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41:Please help
36:verification
33:
1059:1956 deaths
1054:1883 births
1031:(in German)
401:Finally at
351:Alfred Knox
269:World War I
261:Buxhoeveden
1048:Categories
925:2011-11-12
809:2011-11-12
758:2011-11-12
737:2011-11-12
716:2011-11-12
670:2011-11-12
649:2011-11-12
628:2011-11-12
603:2007-02-25
543:References
388:Copenhagen
300:Bolsheviks
265:Copenhagen
255:Early life
149:1883-09-06
69:newspapers
184:Parent(s)
982:, p. 340
597:Archived
569:Freiherr
563:Baroness
524:Writings
447:Yurovsky
316:Gilliard
217:, was a
1036:of The
872:, p.359
792:, p.233
419:Fabergé
273:Osokina
198:Russian
178:England
83:scholar
1022:, 1928
978:
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690:, p.34
557:Freiin
459:rubles
407:London
314:, and
308:Gibbes
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1038:Oesel
356:From
90:JSTOR
76:books
976:ISBN
866:ISBN
849:ISBN
786:ISBN
358:Omsk
338:and
330:and
168:Died
143:Born
62:news
405:in
206:tr.
45:by
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