Searches of Former Members of the Romanov Imperial House in Crimea in April 1917
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
St Petersburg State University
Abstract
By the end of March 1917, 20 out of 65 members of the Romanov Imperial House gathered on the
estates Ai-Todor, Diul’ber, and Chair near Yalta in the Crimea. There were among them: a widow of Alexander III
Maria Fedorovna; sisters of Nicholas II Xenia and Olga; Grand Dukes Nicholas Nikolaevich, Alexander Mikhailovich,
Peter Nikolaevich. On April 26, 1917, representatives of the Sevastopol Soviet, with the support of the forces
of the Black Sea Fleet, conducted massive searches in the places of residence of the relatives of the former
tsar in order to identify a possible counter-revolutionary conspiracy. On the basis of the published sources, as
well as previously unused materials from the Russian State Archive of the Navy, including inspection protocols,
the article reconstructs the circumstances of this only search of the Romanovs in the Crimea. The names of the
main participants in the events are restored, the key role of Lieutenant Colonel A. I. Verkhovsky is described, who
at that time was a deputy chairman of the Sevastopol Soviet. A. I. Verkhovsky has been underestimated until now
as a participant in the revolutionary events in Russia between the February and October revolutions. At the end of
August 1917, he became the last Minister of War of the Russian Empire in the rank of Major General. The search
in estates on the southern coast ended with the Sevastopol City Council taking charge of the protection of the
“Crimean group of the Romanovs”. Afterwards, despite the fact that the Red Terror did not bypass the Crimean
peninsula, Sevastopol sailors and representatives of local Councils helped save the lives of the relatives of the
former tsar who ended up in the Crimea. All of them emigrated in 1919.
Description
Citation
Karushkina N. V. ‘Searches of Former Members of the Romanov Imperial House in Crimea in April 1917’, Modern History of Russia, vol. 13, no. 2, 2023, pp. 305–321. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu24.2023.203 (In Russian)