Many thanks for your reply. Forgive me for not responding immediately, I had hoped there might be one or two more postings.
You are of course quite right. Church records are not the only method of accurately reckoning the date of a marriage; family bibles and letters can also be used. But that’s precisely the nature of the problem – they are not necessarily accurate and all give different dates! That’s why I wanted to get an unequivocal record from the day itself in the church.
Deciding on the reason for the marriage in order to determine the parameters for the marriage date seems a bit like putting the cart before the horse. You are again quite right about Michael’s motives for the marriage: they are explicitly laid out in his letters to his brother. But none of them give the actual marriage date. By your own reasoning Michael would have wanted to pre-empt the situation, not wait until Alexei was already ill. Is it not equally likely that it was his nephew's serious health crisis at Spała which precipitated THE ANNOUNCEMENT of the fact of his marriage rather than the marriage itself? This would fit in with a marriage prior to 1912 and with other known facts, namely :-
Appearing in Edvard Radzinsky, The Last Tsar, p. 111 et seq., are the following:
A coded telegramme to all Russian embassies in 1911:
The bearer of this, Major-General of Gendarmes A. V. Gerasimov, is commanded at His Highness’s behest to travel abroad with the assignment of taking all possible measures to avert the marriage abroad of Mrs. Wulfert and Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich.
A telegramme dated 3rd September 1911 from the Russian embassy in Paris:
According to information received, the sovereign emperor’s aide-de-camp appeared in Cannes to inform the grand duke in the name of his highness that he was prohibited to enter Russia…the grand duke is very depressed and does not go out anywhere.
An encoded telegramme from Gerasimov in 1911:
In conducting my investigation, I have the honour to report the circumstances of and specific time at which the ceremony in which his ImperialHighness entered into marriage took place…On 29th October he told his companions that he was going out with Mrs. Wulfert in his automobile through Switzerland and Italy to Cannes, and the individuals and servants accompanying them would travel by train through Paris to Cannes…That day, 29th October, they rode in the automobile only as far as Wuerzburg, where they boarded a train continuing on to Vienna, where His Imperial Highness arrived on the morning of 30th October…That same day in four hours and by midday the grand duke and Mrs. Wulfert drove to the Serbian church of St. Sava, where they performed the marriage ceremony…For those individuals surrounding the grand duke and Mrs. Wulfert, their trip remained utterly secret…During the grand duke’s sojourn, foreign secret service agents accompanied him everywhere in a special car.
According to Radzinsky the news was received by the Tsar during a bout of illness by his son.
The School of East Slavonic Studies Library, University of London (
http://www.ssees.ac.uk/archives/brs.htm) states:
In 1910 their son was born, Cheremtevskaia later obtained a divorce from Wulfurt and in 1911 she married the Grand Duke. As a result of their morganatic marriage the couple were banished from Russia by the Tsar and. spent two years in exile.
Its Library holds the Brasova Collection of photographs (
http://www.ssees.ac.uk/archives/brs/brsitema.htm) dating from precisely this period. The album BRS/9 entitled ‘XII Travels Abroad Autumn year 1911’ commences August 1911 and contains photos of their travels in Western Europe including visits to Paris, Cannes and the south of France, stating:
It was probably during this holiday that the Grand Duke and Brasova were secretly married in Vienna.
The next two Albums BRS/10 & 11 entitled ‘XIV/XV Summer year 1912 Gatchina’ contain photographs taken at the Grand Duke and Brasova's home in the military garrison town of Gatchina near St Petersburg, stating:
Although the title of this album dates it to summer 1912, in fact the Grand Duke and Brasova were banished from Russia in early 1912 by the Tsar in disaproval of their marriage and these photographs could not have been taken after Easter 1912.
All of this is at odds with the Crawfords’ date of the marriage on 16/29th October 1912 which I cited in my posting [Gerasimov states it occurred 17/30th October 1911]. The Crawfords are not infallible; equally neither is Radzinsky or the SEES. There is a puzzle here and either could be right.
I still do not know the date of the marriage but to discover it one can only deal with the factual rather than the circumstantial – hence my original posting. The St. Sava website is under reconstruction and its e-mail address is no longer valid. Short of any definitive answer on this forum I’ll write to St. Sava to get the solution and post its answer here.