Short History Of... - The Romanovs
Episode Date: May 18, 2025Throughout their centuries-long dynasty, the Romanovs oversaw the transformation of Russia from a fragmented medieval state, into a vast empire. Despite their power though, the period of the Romanovs ...was plagued by violence, assassinations, and the heavy hand of autocratic rule. Then, in 1917, the course of Russian history took an irreversible turn, and the fate of the Romanovs was changed forever. So what do we know of the lives of the Romanov family? Was it possible for monarchs such as Catherine the Great to balance Enlightenment ideals with absolute power? And did any of the family survive the infamous assassination of 1918? This is a Short History Of The Romanovs. A Noiser production, written by Nicola Rayner. With thanks to Russell E. Martin, Distinguished Professor of History at Westminster College, Pennsylvania, and author of The Tsar’s Happy Occasion: Ritual and Dynasty in the Weddings of Russia’s Rulers. Get every episode of Short History Of a week early with Noiser+. You’ll also get ad-free listening, bonus material, and early access to shows across the Noiser network. Click the Noiser+ banner to get started. Or, if you’re on Spotify or Android, go to noiser.com/subscriptions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
There are very few things that you can be certain of in life.
But you can always be sure the sun will rise each morning.
You can bet your bottom dollar that you'll always need air to breathe and water to drink.
And of course, you can rest assured that with Public Mobile's 5G subscription phone plans,
you'll pay the same thing every month.
With all of the mysteries that life has to offer, a few certainties can really go a long
way.
Subscribe today for the peace of mind you've been searching for.
Public Mobile.
Different is calling.
It is the dead of night on March 13th, 1613.
Around 200 miles northeast of Moscow, the little town of Kostroma is sleeping.
All is quiet within the walls of the Ipatiev Monastery.
A peaceful rural refuge on the banks of the Kostroma River.
But the arrival of some unexpected visitors is about to break the tranquility.
A 16-year-old boy, Michael Romanov, starts up in bed, at a sudden knocking at the door.
His mother is up before him, rushing to answer it.
In the corridor, a flickering candle lights the anxious face of a monk, who explains that
a delegation has arrived from the capital demanding to speak with them.
Michael cows behind his mother, the tick in his eye triggered by this sudden disturbance.
She is fiercely protective of her sickly son who has already lived through so much.
It is a dangerous time to be in line for the throne.
Amid never-ending battles over succession, Michael's father is being held in captivity in Poland, and several of his uncles have been murdered.
While the pair live in this monastery as fugitives, death squads are hunting for them.
At the very least, her son needs sleep, so she dispatches the monk with a message that
they will meet with the visitors in the morning.
But the following hours bring little rest.
At dawn, they rise and dress for the freezing temperatures outside, with Michael in formal
fur-lined robes and a sable-trimmed hat.
His legs even more unsteady than usual, they make their way through the candle-lit corridors of the monastery and out onto the snow-covered courtyard.
But waiting for them at the gates is no death squad, but a formal procession.
As the group of nobles known as boyars and orthodox bishops
reach them, they bow low at Michael's feet.
One of them addresses him as sovereign lord
and explains that an assembly of the land
has picked him to be czar and grand prince of all Russia.
Tsar and Grand Prince of all Russia. There is a moment of uncomfortable silence.
Michael glances at his mother, who wipes away angry tears, her face pale with fear.
She has already seen what the throne of Russia can do to men. In a voice that trembles with fury, she says
that her son has no wish to be Tsar.
Before the group of men has time to respond, she church, closing the door firmly behind them.
By now, the priests have begun their matins, and Michael and his mother take a moment to pray.
In this gloomy refuge,
his gaze falls upon the golden glow of the Altus icons.
Young though he is, he understands that respite will only be brief.
The throne of Russia is not an offer one can refuse.
But what he can't know is that when he does accept,
he will be the first of eighteen Romanov tsars
who will reign over the land for the next 300 years, in a saga of dramatic highs,
brutal lows, and ultimately tragic destruction.
In their centuries-long dynasty, the Romanovs oversaw the transformation of Russia from a fragmented medieval state into a vast empire.
Though the reign began with a reluctant teenage Tsar chosen to end the time of troubles, it
reached its zenith under rulers such as Catherine the Great.
Theirs was a period plagued by violence, assassinations, and their heavy hand of autocratic rule.
And by 1917, the course of Russian history took an irreversible turn,
changing the fate of the Romanovs forever.
But what do we know of how their lives were lived, and how did they compare with the lives of ordinary Russians under their rule? Was it possible for monarchs such as Catherine the Great
to balance Enlightenment ideals with absolute power?
And did any of the family survive the assassination in 1918?
I'm John Hopkins, and from the Noiser Network,
this is a short history of the Romanovs.
The Russia of Michael Romanov's ancestors is a society of deep social division. While the Orthodox Church stands as a unifying force deeply woven into the national identity,
the country's rigid feudal
system keeps the underclass of serfs bound to the land with little personal
freedom, leaving the noble families who profit from them to vie for power.
In 1584, the death of Ivan the Terrible leaves the country in a state of turmoil
and uncertainty. Though his brutal reign expanded the Russian state,
his oppressive policies and erratic rule also weakened its stability.
And though it will be some time until they emerge as the ruling dynasty,
the Romanoff's connection to the crown can be traced to Ivan's wife.
Russell E. Martin is distinguished professor of history at Westminster College in New Wilmington, Pennsylvania
and author of several books including The Tsar's Happy Occasion,
Ritual and Dynasty in the Weddings of Russia's Rulers.
The Roanobes were a very old distinguished servitor family inside the Moscow principality
getting back really to the 14th century, even
a little bit before. But their real beginning, the real launching pad for the Romanovs was
in 1547 when Anastasia, one of the members of this lineage, becomes the first wife of
Ivan the Terrible and the mother of his children, including the last Tsar of the Old
Dime Steppe.
Soon after Ivan's death, Russia spirals into what becomes known as the Time of Troubles.
Marked by political chaos, famines, and foreign invasions, it's a period that almost brings the nation to collapse.
Until at last, Zemskysobor, the assembly of the land, elects Michael Romanov as Tsar in 1613.
But when the delegation arrives at the Ipatiev monastery,
Michael's protective mother responds with a firm, Niet.
The protective mother responds with a firm, Njet.
The accounts really say that
she was the one who
expressed reservations.
Michael 16, he doesn't play
much of a visible role in this moment
yet.
She is the one who has
an awareness of the dangers that
every Tsar that has come and God has not
ended well. And why would
I want my son to do this?
Being czar may be great, but remaining czar is tough.
And she thought that she needed to say no.
But at the end of the day, she's prevailed upon
after several attempts, and Michael
is received as the new czar.
received as the new Tsar.
Despite his mother's initial reservations, Michael I manages to restore order to Russia.
But it is his grandson, Peter the Great,
who transforms Russia from a traditional medieval state
into a modern European power.
from a traditional medieval state into a modern European power.
Born in 1672, Peter is just 10 years old when his father dies.
But as his late father's son from his second marriage,
his path to the throne is not straightforward.
The boyars have to make a decision about who will succeed.
Peter or his older half brother, Ivan.
Ivan has disabilities, learning disabilities, and the boyars sitting around in the court realize this and
decide to jump over him and pick Peter instead. The problem is, and this is interesting, Alexei has married twice and his first wife's family has a faction and the second wife's family has a faction and they're really at
odds with each other. And so to pick Peter is not just to pick the more healthy son, it's to pick a different faction.
And that fact produces a kind of revolt inside the city of Moscow.
At the height of the revolt, a mob storms into the Kremlin, led by the Streltsy, or
Musketeers, the military corps that provide the Tsar's bodyguard.
Peter's mother is forced to come out to meet the rebels, holding the hands of the
brothers to prove that both are still alive.
This calms things, but only temporarily.
In a second wave of violence, the rebels seize the family's closest advisors and throw them over the palace stairs,
where they are impaled on raised pikes.
It is a scene that leaves Peter with a loathing of Moscow and the Streltsy for a long time.
Eventually it is decided that the boys will become co-rulers, Peter I and Ivan V.
Ivan V, the family of the first wife, has a very, very powerful, influential, able sister
whose name is Sophia, and she manipulates things.
She becomes the regent and she stands behind Ivan V.
And she really doesn't know what to do with Peter, so what she decides at length is to send him off
into a town near Moscow, basically an honorable exile. He's dragged back to Moscow whenever he
needs to appear and then sent right back. And the idea would be to have Ivan V have children and then
remove Peter altogether from the scene.
From 1682 to 1689, Peter and his mother live outside Moscow. But rather than proving a punishment, Peter makes use of the freedom to pursue his own interests. An intelligent, vigorous child, he enjoys mathematics,
carpentry, metalwork, and printing.
A model fortress is built for his amusement,
and he creates military games, recruiting his friends,
the sons of various Russian nobles,
into his make-believe troops.
In January 1683, aged 11, Peter orders uniforms, banners, and wooden cannons for his toy army
from the government.
Later that year, the wooden cannons are replaced with real ones.
He begins playing army.
He's the Tsar, so he gets real live ammunition.
And it's an amazing spectacle.
He brings in foreigners from the German quarter to
teach him how to run and organize a modern, in his day, army. So in a way, what might have been
the beginning of his end turns out to be the very thing that makes who he is,
and therefore leads to the transformation of Russia itself.
and therefore leads to the transformation of Russia itself.
These armies become the basis of the Semyonovsky and Priabazhensky guards, the latter taking its name from Peter's village home.
Over time, both regiments will become the nucleus of a new Russian army.
But, as Peter will later proclaim,
a ruler with only an army has one hand,
but he who has a navy has both.
The discovery of an abandoned sailboat in a shed
wets the Tsar's lifelong appetite for seafaring.
Although Russia is territorially a huge power, it doesn't have a major seaport.
Peter determines to change that.
Peter has to be looked at as this strapping young man.
He grows up to be six feet, seven inches tall, very vital, very healthy, smart, energetic,
inexhaustible, everything he does, and ruthless. He has ideas
about what he wants to do.
Podcasts are great because they help us make the most out of our routine. We learn about
the fall of the Ottoman Empire while we drive, keep up with news while we
take the dog for a walk, or turn folding laundry into a comedy show.
Make the most out of your time with the PC Insider's World's Elite MasterCard, a credit
card that can get you unlimited free grocery delivery and the most PC optimum points on
everyday purchases.
The PC Insider's World's Elite MasterCard. The card for living unlimited.
Conditions apply to all benefits.
Visit pcfinancial.ca for details.
When does fast grocery delivery through Instacart matter most?
When your famous grainy mustard potato salad
isn't so famous without the grainy mustard.
When the barbecue's lit, but there's nothing to grill.
When the in-laws decide that, actually,
they will stay for dinner.
Instacart has all your groceries covered this summer, so download the app and get delivery
in as fast as 60 minutes.
Plus enjoy zero dollar delivery fees on your first three orders.
Service fees exclusions and terms apply.
Instacart.
Groceries that over-deliver.
In 1689, at just 17, Peter uses the troops he has drilled since childhood and the boyars
who have had enough of Sophia's rule to overthrow her, banishing her to a convent.
When Ivan dies in 1696, Peter takes full control.
He now embarks on what becomes known as his Grand Embassy, a gap year in Western Europe.
He studies shipbuilding in the Netherlands, military tactics in Prussia, and government
structures in England.
In London, he hangs out with shipbuilders in Deptford, where he develops a taste for
pepper-flavoured brandy and wheelbarrow racing.
Though he's the owner of a keen mind and voracious curiosity about the world,
Peter never tames his wilder side.
But his European adventure comes to an abrupt halt
when he is called back by an emergency at home.
A group of Streltsy soldiers have plotted against him with the alleged aim of restoring
Sophia to power.
Peter crushes the rebellion with an iron fist, executing thousands of the Streltsy whom he
has never forgiven for the vicious murders he witnessed as a child.
The threat quelled for now.
Peter puts what he has learned on his travels into action.
He reorganizes Russia's military and, hiring European shipbuilders, creates a modern navy,
for which he soon finds a purpose.
In 1700, he launches the Great Northern War against Sweden, seeking that long-desired access to the Baltic Sea.
The military base he establishes will become known as St. Petersburg, a grand new city.
It is reforms that create a new administrative structure,
provincial structure inside of the Russian Empire. And perhaps in the most glittering way,
the city of St. Petersburg itself,
which is a showcase of monarchy,
it's a showcase of all the best parts and worst parts of what Russia is.
This city of palaces and churches and broad straight boulevards,
of theaters, museums, canals.
And at the same time, we know that it was built
on the bones of the people that were dragged there to build it.
St. Petersburg becomes Russia's new capital,
the official home for the future Romanovs.
Peter also now commissions the Grand Peterhof Palace outside the city,
modeling it on the French Louis XIV's Palace of Versailles.
And his fondness for all things European doesn't stop there.
After divorcing his first Russian wife, with whom he has a son, Alexei,
he weds a Prussian woman from modern-day Germany, with whom he has a son, Alexei, he weds a Prussian woman from modern-day Germany with whom he has several more children.
Soon his adoption of Western values even make it into the Russian wardrobe. The
traditional Russian robes or kaftans are abandoned in favor of shorter coats,
wigs and tricorn hats. He even introduces a beard tacks to encourage men to move towards a more European, clean,
shaven look.
He was actually fascinated by science, technology, and the cultural fashions, the cultural ways
of the West.
He gets to dress like a Westerner, groom like a Westerner, and he
forces those people around him or invites them, they're going to do talking about, to
follow him in these Western ways. He is unlike any other ruler, I think, that you
could find in the history of Monarchy. He transforms Russia and the monarchy in fundamental ways.
But he also upsets the aristocratic status quo with his introduction of a table of ranks,
allowing individuals to rise based on merit rather than noble birth.
Though his policies face resistance, he firmly enforces them, determined to pull Russia into a
new era. Some say that this clash between the old and the new lies at the heart of Peter's fallout with his eldest son.
Alexei opposes his father's reforms and seeks support among conservative nobles
and foreign allies.
Fearing rebellion, Peter forces his first-born son
to renounce his claim to the throne.
In 1716, Alexei flees to Vienna, but Peter has him captured and returned
to Russia with assurances he won't be punished. But it's a promise he will soon break.
After a brutal interrogation and alleged torture, Alexei is convicted of treason and dies in prison,
likely from his injuries.
It marks one of the darkest moments of Peter's reign.
Despite this nadir in his personal life, Peter's time as Tsar tends to be seen as successful, and when the war against Sweden is finally won in 1721,
Russia emerges as a dominant force in Europe.
Peter is declared imperata or emperor by the Senate and becomes known by the title by which history will more commonly know him that of Peter the Great. But with Alexei gone,
Peter has to consider the delicate issue of succession before his own death.
has to consider the delicate issue of succession before his own death. One of the most important consequences of the whole Alexei episode was that in 1722
Peter promulgates the Russia's very first law of succession.
And it really was a non-law.
Because what it says is that Tsar, he himself, or any of his successors have the
right to pick who the next Tsar, or by this point I really should say emperor, who the
successor is going to be. Doesn't have to be Romanov, he could be anyone. It really
does explode the entire notion of a dynasty.
When he dies in 1725, Russia is no longer an isolated kingdom, but a major European power with a strong military, a thriving economy, and a new capital.
But his law of succession also opens the door for newcomers, even foreigners, to take the throne.
Russia once again experiences a period of instability, until Peter's daughter Elizabeth becomes Empress in 1741.
Though she has no children of her own, Elizabeth is keen for her nephew, Peter, next in line to the throne to marry well.
Soon the perfect candidate is found.
Born in what is now Poland, Sophie Friedricha Augusta von Anhalt-Zebst is daughter of a
minor German prince.
After being received into the Russian Orthodox Church for her marriage in 1745, she changes her name to Catherine.
Today, she's better known as Catherine the Great.
Catherine is one of the most interesting people in world history.
She was born a German princess,
the daughter of the ruling prince of Anhalt-Sarabst,
which is in central Germany, and she was the
second cousin of her eventual husband, Peter III, who was the grandson of Peter the Great.
Catherine was born something of a tomboy, known as a strong personality even in her
youngest years. Well-educated and earmarked by her father
for a very advantageous marriage,
he saw in his daughter a very appealing addition
to the European royal marriage mark.
And so the Russian marriage was more
than he really could hope for.
But she was brought to Russia in 1744
to marry the man who would be Tsar,
not to be the Empress herself.
Predigiously intelligent and a voracious reader,
Catherine throws herself into learning Russian
and understanding the people, religion, culture, and history of her adopted country.
The young princess also has a keen interest in enlightenment philosophy,
particularly the ideas emerging from France.
At a time when Voltaire, Rousseau, and others are promoting the ideals of reason and
progress and challenging traditional systems of authority, Catherine
finds inspiration in their work. An interesting position for the wife of the future czar.
At court she uses her charm to make friends and find lovers, though throughout her life
her sexual appetite, and particularly certain notorious rum about a horse are exaggerated or fabricated
entirely. Though her marriage to Peter is far from a happy one, she gives birth to a
new Romanov heir, Paul, in 1754, despite the rumors that another of Catherine's lovers
is the father.
When Empress Elizabeth dies in 1762, Catherine feels vulnerable.
With her husband already having taken a mistress, the risk of being sent away is no small consideration,
especially as Catherine herself is becoming increasingly popular among certain factions
at court.
Conversely, Peter's own reforms are met with somewhat mixed approval.
His efforts to modernize the army with Prussian-style drills, uniforms, and organizational structures
are largely hated by the military itself.
And his decision to exempt the nobility from military service does him no favors among
those who don't directly benefit.
Tensions between him and his clever wife reach boiling point.
With the help of her lover Grigori Orlov, a Russian officer, she begins to make plans
to usurp her husband.
And with Peter out of town, the arrest of one of her co-conspirators forces her to seize the moment.
It is 6 a.m. on June 28, 1762.
In the palace of Peterhof near St. Petersburg, the 33-year-old Catherine II is dressing rapidly
all in black.
A small woman with striking auburn hair and piercing blue eyes, she hurries down the steps
of the palace to her awaiting carriage.
Its driver whips the horses to make haste to St. Petersburg.
It's only part way through the journey that Catherine realizes she's still wearing her
night cap.
She tears it off.
There is just time to stop briefly to pick up her French hairdresser who immediately
gets to work.
It's important to look your best when overthrowing your husband, the Tsar.
Close to the city, the carriage stops again to hand Catherine over to another vehicle,
bearing her lover, Grigori Olof.
Together they reach the barracks of the Izmielovsky Guards, and Olof offers his hand to his mistress
as she gets out of the vehicle.
It's still quiet.
There are just twelve soldiers and a drummer.
But they are delighted to see Catherine.
One by one they pledge their loyalty, kissing Catherine's hands and feet, and touching the
hem of her dress.
Before long, other regiments arrive and pay similar tribute to their new leader, until
the place is packed with loyal soldiers.
Next, Catherine returns to her carriage to make her way to the Winter Palace nearby.
Inside she finds dozens of senators and generals already assembled to issue a manifesto in
support of her.
She glances it all off.
It's happening.
Picking her way through the packed corridors, she thanks her supporters for their loyalty.
By the time she reaches the balcony, word has spread and a crowd has gathered outside
to prove that she now has the support of the people as well as the troops.
From her elevated position, Catherine can see that some of the soldiers on duty have
shed the hated new Prussian-style uniforms introduced by her husband and are instead
wearing their old-style Russian tunics.
She asks for a uniform of her own and is given one of the dark green coats of the Praiobrazhensky
guards before ordering the men to assemble in the palace square for their march
against Peter.
Doing up the last of the buttons of her uniform,
Catherine strides out into the square
and mounts her gray thoroughbred brilliant.
She surveys the mass of troops whose ranks have swollen
from 12,000 to 12,000.
It is time to march against her husband.
As Catherine's army advances through the night, a couple of horsemen are sent ahead to arrest
Peter.
Not long afterwards, a messenger returns with his signed abdication.
With minimal bloodshed, the coup has been a resounding success.
Peter is imprisoned in Roptshia, a village near St. Petersburg, but not long afterwards
he is strangled under mysterious circumstances. It seems likely that Orlov's brother, a man known as Scarface, is involved,
and though not ordered by Catherine, his death conveniences her greatly.
Seeking to quell the rumors of assassination,
she issues a report announcing death by Emma Roidel Collick.
Among the more cynical of her subjects, the term swiftly
becomes a euphemism for political murder.
Aware that she is a Romanoff by marriage rather than birth, Catherine quickly arranges a formal
coronation to seal her legitimacy. She has a new crown and orb designed for the ceremony, and her robes sport the double-headed
eagle, the emblem of Imperial Russia.
An avid supporter of the arts, literature, and education, Catherine oversees the opening
of the Hermitage Museum, which houses part of her personal art collection. Female artists flourish under her rule,
and the Smolny Institute for Noble Girls opens,
the first state-sponsored educational institution
for female students in Russia.
At some personal risk, in 1768, during a smallpox outbreak,
Catherine personally undergoes inoculation, a relatively new and
therefore risky precursor to vaccination.
By having her son, Paul, inoculated too, she leads by example, an enlightened monarch embracing
science and reason to better the lives of her people. In efforts to modernize Russia, it's around this time that Catherine convenes the Legislative
Commission, comprising representatives from various social groups, to discuss legal and
political reform.
Catherine presents the Commission with her remarkably liberal vision of the ideal government, which includes the abolition of torture and more protection for serfs.
But these ideas proved too radical for Russia's nobility, and the outbreak of war against
the Ottoman Empire provides an opportunity to disband the project.
One of Catherine's most significant military engagements, the war results in Russian victory
over the Ottomans, securing Crimea and strengthening Russia's presence in the Black Sea.
In total, during her reign, Catherine the Great extends the borders of the Russian Empire
by over 200,000 square miles.
In addition to the annexation of Crimea, she also secures large parts of Belarus, Lithuania,
and Ukraine.
One can talk about the territorial gains that happened under Catherine, particularly the
Crimea, which has relevance today.
But in a way, one can also talk about the corrections and fixes that Catherine introduces to the
political system she inherited coming out of the Great Reign. And she does improve the
way taxation, local administration, army training, the Navy. She goes back and re-thinks some
of the reforms that Peter introduced.
Sometimes wiping the clean from the chalkboard
and introducing something new that worked better.
But in 1774, a revolt throws a spanner
in the works of Catherine's enlightened plans.
Led by a Cossack claiming to be her late husband, Peter III,
what becomes known as the Pugachev Rebellion marks a major turning point in her reign,
demonstrating a deep social unrest.
Though it is extinguished by the Russian army with some brutality,
it causes Catherine to realize how heavily she relies on the nobility to control the country.
She puts her more radical ideas aside.
The Pugachov Rebellion sealed the fate of these ideas
because what it showed to her, what it convinced her,
is that Russia wasn't ready for these reforms.
She gets afraid of what might happen if you give freedom to people that, as she saw in
the Kupchov Rebellion, might just turn their pitchforks against her. And that was just too
much to contemplate. And as a result, an opportunity is lost.
an opportunity is lost.
Forced to revise her policies, Catherine becomes increasingly aligned with the interests of the nobility.
In 1785, a charter solidifies their position
as a separate and privileged estate within Russian society,
guaranteeing them significant rights and protections.
Those early concerns for the serf's suffering seem now to be dismissed,
and their status and rights continue to deteriorate under her rule.
Catherine dies from a stroke in St. Petersburg on November 17, 1796, aged 67. But despite her extraordinary achievements in strengthening the empire, her efforts to
fully realize her progressive goals ultimately fell short.
When her son, Paul, ascends to the throne, the Tsardom returns to a Romanov by blood,
rather than marriage.
But he inherits an empire on the brink of major changes.
Paul I's unpopular reign is marked by instability and paranoia, and comes to an abrupt end in 1801 with his assassination,
orchestrated by a group of Russian nobles and military officers.
By now, the system of male primogeniture,
the passing of the throne to the firstborn son, has been restored.
Paul's son Alexander proves more popular.
Tall and handsome.
He has the charm of his grandmother
Catherine the Great and similar interests too.
Alexander is a man of cultural contrasts too, like his grandmother. He was raised by his
grandmother Catherine to know what the West was thinking.
He read the philosophies as she had.
He had traveled to the West and fought Western armies.
And yet, he was also convinced, like his grandmother and father, that Russia could be explosive
if allowed to be, needed to be a lid kept on what they assumed was a kind of festering revolutionary impulse.
Despite conversations early in his reign about the abolition of serfdom, Alexander is mindful of challenging the nobility,
who are unwilling to lose the workers on whom their wealth and comfort depend.
unwilling to lose the workers on whom their wealth and comfort depend.
It is not a problem that is going to go away.
But before too long, affairs abroad become more immediately pressing for the young Tsar, whose reign will come to be defined by the challenges of the Napoleonic Wars.
After the French Revolution destabilized France, Napoleon Bonaparte seized control in 1799
through a coup d'etat.
And now he is setting his sights on the rest of Europe.
In 1805, Alexander joins the Third Coalition against Napoleon, which includes Britain,
Austria and Russia.
However, the alliance is defeated at the Battle of Ostalets in December of that year, where
Russian forces suffer a decisive loss.
In 1807, after another defeat, Alexander is forced into an uneasy alliance with Napoleon
through the Treaty of invades Russia.
Alexander leads his forces into a conflict in which the harsh winter and the Russians
scorched earth tactics contribute to the destruction of Napoleon's army.
After their retreat, Alexander becomes a key
figure in the Sixth Coalition, which defeats Napoleon and forces his exile to
Elba in 1814. Alexander the First, in a way, is the
defeater of Napoleon. His armies participate in some of the most
important battles of the war, most importantly, the last of them. In many ways, the most important battles of the Napoleonic wars are after the Battle of
the Nations and when Napoleon is attempting to keep the Allies out right before his first
abdication.
And it's the Russians who reach that wall of defense and capture Paris. But it was during his reign that many of these great noble families
who had experienced Paris,
had read the French Enlightenment literature,
had fought Napoleon,
and come back for Russia that didn't fit their worldview.
They had changed, Russia hadn't,
and Alexander, because he was the great victor
of Napoleon, Alexander was the one who kept the lid on.
By the end of his reign, in 1825, the situation has become increasingly volatile.
The lid, many fear, won't stay on much longer.
After Alexander I's sudden death, his brother Nicholas I rules with an autocratic style,
particularly after the suppression of the De the Decemberist revolt, an attempted coup
by liberal reformists in 1825.
Conversely, his son, Alexander II, who takes the throne in 1855, becomes known as the Tsar
Liberator for his Emancipation Edict, which abolishes serfdom.
Yet to his more revolutionary subjects, his reforms don't go far enough,
and he is assassinated in 1881. His immediate successor, Alexander III, reverts to conservative
policies and autocracy, but it will be his son, Nicholas II, who will be faced with the Romanoff's greatest challenges yet.
A deeply religious and family-oriented man, Nicholas II is devoted to his wife, Alexandra, the German-born granddaughter of Queen Victoria.
But Nicholas is also an indecisive and politically inexperienced ruler,
too easily swayed by advisors and resistant to the reforms that are becoming increasingly urgent in Russia.
His reign begins inauspiciously.
As part of the celebrations for his coronation, a grand public gathering is
planned in which free food, drinks, and
commemorative gifts are to be distributed to the people.
When rumors spread that there might not be enough gifts for everyone, a massive crowd
of around 500,000 arrives early in the morning.
In the stampede that follows, around 1,300 people lose their lives, and many more are
injured.
Though disturbed by the tragedy, Nicholas attends a lavish ball at the French Embassy
that evening.
It is not a good look.
The event is seen as a bad omen for his reign, and things unravel further in the years that
follow. Eager to secure Russia's place in the competition for colonial territories, Nicholas pushes
for expansion into Manchuria, a region in northeast China.
But Japan also has designs on the territory, and in 1904 the two sides go to war.
Russia suffers a humiliating, costly defeat and discontentment
at home spreads, leading to strikes and riots. One day in January 1905, soldiers in St. Petersburg
open fire on protesters demanding reforms, a day that becomes known as Bloody Sunday.
As opposition to the Tsar intensifies, Nicholas is forced to grant a constitution it becomes known as Bloody Sunday.
As opposition to the Tsar intensifies, Nicholas is forced to grant a constitution and establish
a parliament, the Duma.
This empowers the middle classes and gives more people a say in government.
But Nicholas offers only limited reforms, tightening voting laws to exclude radicals, while allowing the
secret police to crush dissent.
When World War I erupts in 1914, the monarchy temporarily regains support, with Russia standing
alongside France and Britain against Austria-Hungary and Germany.
But in 1915, Nicholas makes a catastrophic decision. He assumes
direct command of the Russian armies. He hopes to inspire his troops and boost morale,
but his lack of military expertise hinders rather than helps his men.
Every defeat becomes his personal failure.
retreat becomes his personal failure. Russia has initial success in the first months of the war, 1914, and even later into 1915,
some success against the Austrians.
But the story of what we're one for the Russians is one of serial defeats with occasional important
and heroic victories, but retreat out of Poland, out
of Western Ukraine, and even through the ebolic states.
But what World War I really does is it exposes to view the weaknesses of the political system,
and in this particular case also of the Tsar himself, Nicholas II.
The political system itself relied too much on it not being
a system. It was very much concentrated in the hands of the court and of the emperor.
No decision really could be made even after 1905 when there was a Duma and nominally a constitution.
All decisions really are being made at the very top of the Kreshin one.
With Nicholas away at war, Alexandra takes a more active role in governing Russia.
But with the country suffering heavy losses, high inflation and severe food shortages worsen the grinding poverty that most Russians already endure.
By this point, Nicholas and Alexandra have five children, four daughters, Olga,
Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia, as well as Alexei, their long-awaited son and heir.
But Alexei suffers from hemophilia,
a serious blood disorder that deeply concerns his parents.
a serious blood disorder that deeply concerns his parents. Amid the wider social discontent, the German-born Alexandra quickly becomes the focus of public
ire along with her confidant, the mystic Rasputin.
Present at court since 1905, Rasputin's influence intensifies with his apparent ability to treat Alexei's
haemophilia.
There's no doubt that Rasputin had enormous influence on Alexandra and therefore through
her on the Emperor. That's pretty well demonstrated. The question is how important was it for policy?
It does seem that his recommendations on ministerial appointments and even the
appointments of some generals played a role in those appointments. And sometimes those
appointments really rubbed other officials in government, civil government and in the
military in the wrong ways. But it is also possible, I think, to overstate Rasputin's influence.
He did not guide the progress of the war.
His influence was limited to a very narrow circle inside St. Petersburg.
Nevertheless, in December 1916, Rasputin is murdered by discontented nobles who see him
as a dangerous influence on the monarchy.
Just weeks later, in February 1917, protests explode across St. Petersburg, renamed Petrograd,
in the war. As the unrest intensifies,
Nicholas loses the loyalty of the army
and is forced to abdicate.
A fragile provisional government emerges,
while the former Tsar and his family
are moved from one location to another
before being imprisoned in Yekaterinburg
in the Ural Mountains.
By October 1917, the provisional government is overthrown by the Bolsheviks,
a radical socialist faction of the Russian revolutionary movement led by Vladimir Lenin.
After a punishing peace treaty with Germany in March 1918, the country collapses into civil war.
forces into civil war. By July, with the anti-Bolshevik White Army closing in on Yekaterinburg, a decision is
needed.
What should be done about the Tsar and his family?
To the Bolsheviks they are still a dangerous symbol of monarchy, and as long as the Romanovs
remain alive, they will be regarded as figureheads for
those wishing to reinstate the old order.
The end of the Romanovs arrives in a similar manner to its beginning,
when a sickly teenage boy is woken in the middle of the night on July the 17th, 1918.
In Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg, 800 miles east of Moscow, 13-year-old Alexei, son of the former Tsar Nicholas,
is roused suddenly from his bed in the room he shares with his parents.
Alexei struggles to sit up in bed, still recovering from a recent hemorrhage.
But when their Bolshevik guards tell his parents to get dressed, he does what he can to move
quickly.
Even this early in the day, Alexei can hear a blast of artillery.
The White Army must be getting closer. His mother puts a cool hand on his forehead, and then with her usual gentleness,
she helps him to get dressed in a military shirt, britches, and peaked cap.
A similar outfit to his father.
She herself dresses in a white blouse and long black skirt.
In all their clothes, the jewels of the Romanov dynasty have been hidden,
sewn into them for safekeeping.
For their journey downstairs, his father lifts Alexei in his arms.
They meet on the landing with his four sisters and three servants,
and the family make their way together to what they are told is a safer location.
Alexei notices how pale his parents look, but that has become normal in this frightening new time.
At least they will be on the move soon.
They are led outside by the Bolshevik commandant. But instead of exiting the compound, they only cross a courtyard and are guided downstairs
to a bare basement, lit by a single electric light bulb.
Alexei, still carried by his father, asks what's going on.
But he is not given an answer.
His mother, the more dominant of his parents, asks for a chair.
Two are brought for her and her son, and his stony-faced father places him gently down.
Now there is some activity in the corridor outside, the slurred voices of drunken soldiers.
But after that, for a while nothing happens. The family waits in sleepy silence.
Alexei's eyelids begin to droop until the door slams open once again.
The Bolshevik commandant enters along with ten armed men.
Across the crowded room, Alexei stares at the men's guns, his heart beginning to pound.
Haltingly, the commandant begins to read from a document.
The words seem jumbled to Alexei, but one of his sisters shrieks and his panicked father asks the man to read the statement again.
He repeats the words and this time their meaning is painfully clear.
It is a death sentence.
Alexei crosses himself and closes his eyes.
The last thing he sees is soldiers raising their rifles.
Nicholas II, his wife and children and their three servants
are brutally executed in the Yucatidinburg in a cellar
over a former governor's house mansion.
In an episode that was so poorly thought out and executed that it looks as ridiculous as
it does horribly tragic.
There was very little planning on what was going to happen.
They didn't know how to dispose of the bodies once they did it.
They throw them onto a lorry and go to a remote area in the woods. They
attempt to burn the two smallest of the bodies just to see if that would work. It doesn't.
They move forward to another location. The mineshaft, they're going to throw the bodies
down the mineshaft, but they get stuck in the mud and they just decide to bury them
there. Many of the more distant relatives of the Romanovs would be executed.
In short, anybody who was a Romanov or Romanov relative who stayed in Russia
after November of 1917 were apprehended and executed.
The Romanovs that are alive today escaped before the bloodletting began.
before the bloodletting began.
The order for the former royal family's execution is believed to have come from Bolshevik leader Lenin, though the exact details and motivations behind the decision remain subject of debate.
After the death of the Romanovs, the dynasty that has ruled Russia for 300 years is no more.
The country continues its radical political transformation with the Bolsheviks' consolidating power.
The establishment of their so-called Socialist Republic in 1917, later to become the Soviet Union,
marks the beginning of over seven decades of communist rule.
Over the years, rumors of Anastasia's survival, the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II,
captivate the world.
What are the enduring features of Russian political culture that pretenders play a role? This is about going back even to the time of troubles, and certainly after 1918 and the
execution of the Romanovs.
Anastasia is the most famous of these pretenders.
There were many others.
And she was able to convince many people, including those who knew the original Anastasia,
that she was Nicholas II's youngest daughter.
Well, DNA proved that that wasn't the case, and it becomes just one more of an interesting
set of incidences in Russian history where a pretender gets a large following and sort
of makes a career out of it.
The legacy of the Romanovs remains complex.
For some, they symbolize the oppressive autocracy of Imperial Russia, while for others, their
tragic deaths embody the heartbreaking consequences of political upheaval. And though today's Russia is almost unrecognizable from the one they left behind,
their character and traditions can still be found more than a century after their demise.
Russia is in constant motion, like all societies really.
It's making itself.
Right now, part of the Romanov tradition isn't just autocracy.
Part of that tradition is also liberalism.
The enlightenment, reason, westernization, these two trends in our minds today might seem
contradictory, come together in Russia as it does in other places to produce a
very dynamic, complicated culture and country.
All of these themes are there.
All of these threads are there that can be pulled on.
Right now, Russia is pulling on some of the threads that it
has received from the past, but it could just as easily pull on some of the others. When
it comes to Russia, nothing is etched in stone.
Next time on Short History, I will bring you a short history of Alfred Hitchcock.
I think the legacy of Alfred Hitchcock is he was a great storyteller and teacher.
He's inspired many filmmakers, directors today from Christopher Nolan to David Fincher
to Park Chang Wook to Bong Jong-ho.
And because people always want a good story,
they want a good yarn.
And Hitchcock was great about the story because he was thinking about the audience
and how they would respond to the storytelling.
He would use things from his life, store them up,
and then put them back on screen in most unexpected ways.
That's next time.
If you can't wait a week until the next episode, you can listen to it right away by subscribing to Noiza Plus.
Head to www.noiza.com forward slash subscriptions for more information.