The Alexander Palace Time Machine Discussion Forum
 
 User Info & Key Stats   
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
May 21, 2013, 09:42:28 AM
449345 Posts in 8707 Topics by 8186 Members
Latest Member: shvic300
News: We think Pallasart is the best web design company in Austin and for good reason - they make this forum possible! Looking for a website? Call them at 512 469-7454.
+  The Alexander Palace Time Machine Discussion Forum
|-+  Discussions about the Imperial Family and European Royalty
| |-+  Alexandra Feodorovna (Moderators: LisaDavidson, BobAtchison, Forum Admin)
| | |-+  Alexandra as Empress and Mother
  0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. « previous next »
Pages: 1 ... 16 17 [18] 19 20 Go Down Print
Author
Topic: Alexandra as Empress and Mother  (Read 48955 times)
Reply #255
« on: July 27, 2009, 07:51:39 AM »
Alixz
Guest

Sarushka - merging complete.

To everyone who comes here to read - please go back to page one of this thread.  There is indeed at lot of great information on Alexandra as both Empress and Mother.
Logged
Reply #256
« on: July 27, 2009, 10:37:41 AM »
Grand Duchess Valeria Offline
Graf
***
Posts: 270

View Profile

Shandroise,
yes, it was the view of Marie of Romania. Though I did not really know a lot about Alix' educational methods this comment represented my impression I had. It was barely victorian age but I've red a lot of people find her education too oldstyled and compared her with Alexandra of England who - correct me if I am wrong - kept one of her daughters doggedly by her side because she could not accept that times have changed. Maybe Alexandra would have done so with Tatiana or maybe Anastasia as her youngest. But this is just my speculation :-)
Logged

And when he shall die, // Take him and cut him out in little starres, // And he will make the Face of heaven so fine, // That all the world will be in Love with night, // And pay no worship to the Garish Sun.
Reply #257
« on: July 27, 2009, 10:47:27 AM »
Grand Duchess Valeria Offline
Graf
***
Posts: 270

View Profile

I really wonder if Alix would have prevent a love or even a marriage between OTMA and any man which would not have met her expectations or had a low social rank even if  the daughter would be really in love with him. If she would have accept that her daughters were unhappy...
Logged

And when he shall die, // Take him and cut him out in little starres, // And he will make the Face of heaven so fine, // That all the world will be in Love with night, // And pay no worship to the Garish Sun.
Reply #258
« on: July 27, 2009, 02:45:18 PM »
imperial angel Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
Posts: 4609

View Profile

Shandroise,
yes, it was the view of Marie of Romania. Though I did not really know a lot about Alix' educational methods this comment represented my impression I had. It was barely victorian age but I've red a lot of people find her education too oldstyled and compared her with Alexandra of England who - correct me if I am wrong - kept one of her daughters doggedly by her side because she could not accept that times have changed. Maybe Alexandra would have done so with Tatiana or maybe Anastasia as her youngest. But this is just my speculation :-)

Yes, Alexandra of England did keep one of her daughters by her side, Toria. But it wasn't so much because she couldn't accept that times had changed, it was because as a mother she really clung to her children and kept them by her side, that's true not just of Toria- one of her other daughters, Maud didn't get married for a long time, and Alexandra and her son George V's letters when he was a young man show she regarded her children as children long after they were adults, that was just her way of being a mother. Alix of Russia I don't think would have clung to her daughters as much, although I'm sure she would done so to Alexei, as he was the hemophiliac heir.
« Last Edit: July 27, 2009, 02:48:18 PM by imperial angel » Logged
Reply #259
« on: July 27, 2009, 03:47:36 PM »
Sarushka Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
May I interest you in a grain of salt? Posts: 6309

View Profile WWW

Maybe Alexandra would have done so with Tatiana or maybe Anastasia as her youngest. But this is just my speculation :-)

Good luck pulling that off with Anastasia -- I'm betting neither mother nor daughter would have enjoyed that arrangement much. IMO, Tatiana's personality was much more suited to that type of relationship.
Logged

THE LOST CROWN: A Novel of Romanov Russia -- now in paperback!
"A dramatic, powerful narrative and a masterful grasp of life in this vanished world." ~Greg King
Reply #260
« on: July 27, 2009, 05:01:46 PM »
imperial angel Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
Posts: 4609

View Profile

Indeed, Tatiana was her favorite daughter or the one who was a good companion for her. I think Alix and her parenting was different than Alexandra in England though. What books say Alix and Alexandra's parenting was alike?
Logged
Reply #261
« on: July 27, 2009, 07:06:59 PM »
Sarushka Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
May I interest you in a grain of salt? Posts: 6309

View Profile WWW

Indeed, Tatiana was her favorite daughter or the one who was a good companion for her. I think Alix and her parenting was different than Alexandra in England though. What books say Alix and Alexandra's parenting was alike?

I think a brief comparison was made either in Rappaport or King & Wilson. I'm looking...
Logged

THE LOST CROWN: A Novel of Romanov Russia -- now in paperback!
"A dramatic, powerful narrative and a masterful grasp of life in this vanished world." ~Greg King
Reply #262
« on: July 27, 2009, 07:32:06 PM »
Sarushka Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
May I interest you in a grain of salt? Posts: 6309

View Profile WWW

FOTR, pg 49:
"With Tatiana, the empress mirrored the behavior of her own aunt, Queen Alexandra, and had treated her daughter Princess Victoria like 'a glorified maid,' according to Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna."

That statement, in turn, is attributed to page 53 of Ian Vorres's The Last Grand Duchess:
'I grew very fond of Uncle Bertie and Aunt Alix, but I felt so very sorry for their daughter, Princess Victoria. Poor Toria was just a glorified maid to her mother!'

Just to be perfectly clear: the comparison of Tatiana and Toria is made by King & Wilson, not Olga A.
Logged

THE LOST CROWN: A Novel of Romanov Russia -- now in paperback!
"A dramatic, powerful narrative and a masterful grasp of life in this vanished world." ~Greg King
Reply #263
« on: July 27, 2009, 08:32:36 PM »
Georgiy Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
Slava v vyshnikh Bogu Posts: 1964

View Profile

I rather get the picture that Alexandra felt the adult Tatiana was a kind of confidante - look at what happened in Tobolsk, it was tatiana who told her mother that she needed to make some kind of decision about whether to go with the Tsar or stay with Alexei. I don't think Tatiana would have standed being a kind of 'glorified' maid - from all accounts, it seems to me that she was somewhat business like and liked to organise people and things (e.g. her Refugee Committee), rather than be organised by others.
Logged
Reply #264
« on: July 27, 2009, 11:57:25 PM »
Grand Duchess Valeria Offline
Graf
***
Posts: 270

View Profile

According to the other statement...do YOU think Alix would have prevent a marriage with one of her daughters and a - in her eyes - nonsuitable man? Even to accept the unhappiness of the daughter? Undecided
Logged

And when he shall die, // Take him and cut him out in little starres, // And he will make the Face of heaven so fine, // That all the world will be in Love with night, // And pay no worship to the Garish Sun.
Reply #265
« on: July 28, 2009, 05:21:57 AM »
Sarushka Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
May I interest you in a grain of salt? Posts: 6309

View Profile WWW

According to the other statement...do YOU think Alix would have prevent a marriage with one of her daughters and a - in her eyes - nonsuitable man? Even to accept the unhappiness of the daughter? Undecided

That's a difficult question. As a mother, it's clear from her wartime letters to Nicholas that Alexandra hoped for love matches for her daughters. But as the empress, I'm not sure how she would have reacted to a 'nonsuitable' man if push came to shove. Alexandra's behavior after the revolution, which was described as "haughty" and "arrogant" by the guards from Tsarskoye Selo to Ekaterinburg, tells me she was very conscious of proper respect for rank.
Logged

THE LOST CROWN: A Novel of Romanov Russia -- now in paperback!
"A dramatic, powerful narrative and a masterful grasp of life in this vanished world." ~Greg King
Reply #266
« on: July 28, 2009, 12:24:34 PM »
imperial angel Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
Posts: 4609

View Profile

Thanks Sarushka for looking that up. I agree with Georgiy, I don't think Tatiana was the type to be a glorified maid. But I also think that Alexandra wasn't the type of mother to have treated one of her daughters like a glorified maid, nor one I feel who would have forced or encouraged one of her daughters to stay with her unmarried against their will, so the issue might never have come up. Had any one his daughters stayed with her, it would likely have been Tatiana, but even had she stayed with her mother, I don't think she would have been treated like Toria. Nicholas and Alexandra and their children were a close knit family, unusually so for royals of the time, so maybe one of the daughters would have stayed. Queen Victoria tried to force Beatrice her youngest daughter to stay, but Beatrice had other plans and married against her mother's will, so Queen Victoria didn't speak to her for months during her engagement while they lived under the same roof, etc. I don't know whether Alexandra would have done that. I think of all her children, it was not daughters she clung to, but instead, the heir Alexei.
Logged
Reply #267
« on: July 28, 2009, 10:18:35 PM »
Grand Princess Shandroise Offline
Velikye Knyaz
****
Can't come back yet... Posts: 1927

View Profile

There's also a possibility that Anastasia could voluntarily stay with her mother. She has the personality which doesn't get easily attracted to men. I assume that would make her single forever and prefer to tend her mother. The other girls also had love interests at their early adult life which gives a possibility that they will marry before or after they reach 25.

Alexandra also wasn't bad to dictate on her children who they will marry as she herself didn't like that idea on an early age. She is so religious a person and for sure, she knows the saying "Do unto others what you want others to do unto you".

Logged


As human beings, our greatness lies not so much in being able to remake the world;
 it is in being able to remake ourselves.—Mohandas Gandhi
Reply #268
« on: July 29, 2009, 06:58:11 AM »
jehan Offline
Graf
***
Posts: 252

View Profile

There's also a possibility that Anastasia could voluntarily stay with her mother. She has the personality which doesn't get easily attracted to men. I assume that would make her single forever and prefer to tend her mother. The other girls also had love interests at their early adult life which gives a possibility that they will marry before or after they reach 25.



I find it odd that anyone could say that a girl who died at 17, and lived the last 18 months of her life imprisoned (making her 15 when she was last "free") as having a defined personality that "isn't attracted to men".  How does anyone who never  knew her  at all know something like that?  She may have been a late bloomer.  I wasn't interested in boys until I was in my late teens (and married at 24). She may have had facets of her personality that were still developing and changing- in fact she almost certainly did.  And she certainly was more complex than people here give her credit for- none of us can be as easily defined or stereotyped as the GDsses are by some of the board members here.

Anastasia would have been a young woman in the 1920s and 30s.  Times were changing and I doubt it would have been easy to keep her at her mother's side in those changing times.  And I'm sure she would have found such a life stultifyingly boring and would have made her own way eventually.  But then I don't know her any better than anybody else on this board.
Logged

Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in. 
(leonard Cohen)
Reply #269
« on: July 29, 2009, 11:21:36 AM »
Alixz
Guest

I remember reading that Alexandra and Nicholas were both kindly disposed to a match between Olga and Dmitri.  After the murder of Rasputin, even without proof of who actually killed Rasputin, Alexandra immediately became opposed to any match.  I believe that she would have never allowed her daughters to marry for love if she did not like the suitor.

She may have dreamed of love matches for her daughters, but only on her terms and with her approval.

And remember, she was very conscious of rank and I doubt that she would have approved of any "unequal" marriages either.  

Logged
Pages: 1 ... 16 17 [18] 19 20 Go Up Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS! Website by Pallasart - Austin Web Design