Anastasia Hendrikova

Anastasia Hendrikova

Infobox Person
name = Anastasia Hendrikova


image_size = 180px
caption = Anastasia Hendrikova, left, with fellow lady in waiting Sophie Buxhoeveden, right.
birth_date = 1887
birth_place =
death_date = death date|1918|9|4|mf=y
death_place = Perm, Russia
parents = Count Vassily Alexandrovich Hendrikov and Princess Sophia Petrovna Gagarine

Countess Anastasia Vasilyevna Hendrikova, (1887 - September 4, 1918), was a lady in waiting at the court of Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra. She was arrested by the Bolsheviks and shot to death outside Perm in the fall of 1918.

Like the Romanovs and their servants who were assassinated on July 17, 1918, Hendrikova and Catherine Adolphovna Schneider, the elderly court tutor who was killed with her, were canonized as martyrs by the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia in 1981.

Background

Hendrikova, who was nicknamed "Nastinka," was the daughter of Count Vassili Alexandrovich Hendrikov, Grand Master of Ceremonies of the Imperial Court, and his wife, Princess Sophia Petrovna Gagarine. She was a descendant of the sister of Catherine the First, the wife of Tsar Peter the Great.cite web |author=Alexander Palace.org | year=| title=Anastasia Vasilyevna Hendrikova and Catherine Adolphovna Schneider"|work=alexanderpalace.org|url=http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/HendrikovaSchneider.html|accessdate = February 27| access year=2007] Hendrikova was appointed a lady of waiting in 1910. She acted as a "sort of unofficial governess" to the four grand duchesses. [King, Greg, and Wilson, Penny, The Fate of the Romanovs, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2003, p. 51]

Exile and death

Hendrikova was devoted to the Romanov family and followed them into exile after the Russian Revolution of 1917, going with them first to Tobolsk and later to Ekaterinburg, even though she was worried about her own family.

Hendrikov's sister, nicknamed "Inotchka," was ill with tuberculosis. "The two sisters were all the world to each other," wrote her fellow lady in waiting, Baroness Sophie von Buxhoeveden, recalling how Hendrikova's "dark eyes glowed" when she heard news about her sister. "And it was from Inotchka's bedside that Nastinka had rushed back to Tsarskoe Selo on the news of the revolution to join the empress in her danger. Now she seldom had news."cite web |author=Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie | year=| title="Left Behind: Fourteen Months In Siberia December 1917 - February 1919"|work=alexanderpalace.org|url=http://www.alexanderpalace.org/leftbehind/index.html|accessdate = February 27| access year=2007]

Buxhoeveden thought Hendrikova was aware of the danger that she was in. Hendrikova had "so fixed her thoughts on approaching death that it had no terror for her," Buxhoeveden wrote in her memoirs. "She was very pretty and looked younger than her twenty-eight years, but she welcomed the thought of death, so weary had she become of life and so much detached from earthly interests. I felt her drifting away to higher planes." [King and Wilson, p. 144]

Hendrikova was separated from the family at Ekaterinburg and imprisoned in Perm for some months.

Account of death

On September 4, 1918, Hendrikova and Schneider were taken from their prison cell and led to the prison office along with Alexei Volkov, a sixty-year-old valet in the household of the Tsar. They were joined by eight other prisoners, including the chambermaid from the house where Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich of Russia had lived. They had an escort of twenty-two guards, none of them Russian.cite web | author=Volkov, Alexei | year=1928 | title= "Memories of Alexei Volkov" | work=alexanderpalace.org| url=http://www.alexanderpalace.org/volkov/volkovmain.html| accessdate= February 28| accessyear=2007]

Volkov, who later escaped, recalled that when he asked a guard where they were being taken, he was told they were being taken "to the house of arrest." Hendrikova, who had been in the washroom, asked a guard the same question when she came out. She was told they were being taken "to the central prison." Hendrikova asked him, "and from there?" The guard replied, "Well! to Moscow." Hendrikova repeated this conversation to her fellow prisoners and made the sign of the cross with her fingers. Volkov took her gesture to mean "they will not shoot us."

The sailor at the prison office door kept checking the front door that led to the street to make sure no one was there. After a while another sailor said, "Let's go." They lined the prisoners up in the street in rows of two, the men in front and the women in back. The group walked all the way to the edge of town and onto the Simbirsk road. Volkov asked another prisoner where the central prison was and was told they had long passed it. Volkov realized they were being taken into the woods to be shot. Volkov broke from the group and ran for his life at the first opportunity. A bullet whizzed past his ear. Behind him he heard gunshots as the other prisoners in the group, among them Hendrikova, were shot and killed. [King and Wilson, p. 504]

Notes

ee also

*Romanov sainthood
*New Martyr


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