Paul Goble
Staunton,
July 23 – In the century since the Bolsheviks murdered Nicholas II and his
immediate family in the basement of the Ipatyev House in Yektarinburg, some 230
pretenders have come forward with claims that they miraculously survived that
crime, claims that many credulous people and some unscrupulous ones have been
all too willing to accept.
But
despite the legend, most famously presented in the classic 1956 movie Anastasia starring Ingrid Bergman and
Yul Brenner, none have withstood close examination and all have been rejected
by other members of the extended Russian Imperial Family and by those with
direct knowledge of the last Russian court.
Now
that yet another investigation has concluded that the remains found near the
site of the brutal murder are in fact those of the members of Nicholas, his
wife, children and immediate servants, this sad chapter in Russian history may
finally be closing. But as it closes, it may be worth remembering just how
large a cottage industry it involved.
Such
pretenders began appearing immediately after the murders, Igor Kiyan of Versiya says. Perhaps the first was a
young man who claimed to be the Tsarevich Aleksey. He showed up at the
headquarters of anti-Bolshevik leader Admiral Kolchak in Biisk but was quickly
unmasked (versia.ru/za-rasstrelyannyx-nikolaya-ii-i-chlenov-ego-semi-vydavali-sebya-230-samozvancev).
In the next
decade, 28 women came forward to claim they were the Grand Duchess Olga, 33 to
say they were the Grand Duchess Tatyana, 53, Maria, 34 Anastasia, and 81 the
Tsarevich Aleksey. Few tried to present themselves as the tsar – his visage was
too well-known – and even fewer as the Tsarina Aleksandra perhaps because she
was hated even among monarchists.
The most famous of these were Margo
Bodts who claimed to be Olga and attracted a certain following in Europe in the
1920s and Anna Anderson who gained even more attention not only then but until
her death in Virginia in 1984 because of her long-running legal battle to gain
not only recognition but also to get access to tsarist funds abroad that did
not in fact exist.
Less well-known in the West are cases
like the man in Ukraine who in 1928 organized an underground anti-Soviet
movement in the name of the tsar and then claimed to be the ruler himself. That
played into a long history of Russian fascination with hidden rulers and he
lasted for a time until Soviet security police arrested him.
With the passage of time, the number
of possible “survivors” has dwindled to insignificance. Now anyone doing so
would be well over 100. But a certain uptick has occurred among people who
claim that their parents or grandparents were grand duchesses or even the tsar
himself.
The most interesting of those
concerns claims of supposed descendants of the Russian Imperial Family who
turned up 20 years ago in the Republic of Georgia. They claimed that the family
had not been executed because the tsarist powers that be had inserted doubles
and that the real Romanovs had fled into hiding in Abkhazia.
Moreover, one of the descendants
claimed that she was Anastasia and knew where trillions of dollars in tsarist
money was held in the West. She even suggested that this money was the basis of
the US Federal Reserve System and that taking it back would allow Russia to
“defeat America.”
Immediately in Moscow was formed an
International Foundation of the Grand Duchess Anastasia Romanova. It was led by
Yury Dergausov, then an assistant to speaker of the Duma; and both he and other
members wrote articles and gave press conferences at which they demanded the
return of the tsarist “gold” from America.
Unfortunately for their cause,
Sergey Mironenko, then head of the Russian State Archive, offered proof that
there was no such tsarist hoard in the US or anywhere else. Now, Russian
government experts that the remains found near Yekaterinburg were those of the
Imperial Family.
It would seem that the end of this
story has been reached; but the inventiveness of some and the willingness of
others to believe them may mean that someone will come up with yet another
conspiracy story for another generation.
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