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searchJap Dancer nese Dancer and Adjust he Revolution of 1905 stirred up some revolutionaries but luckily the unrest
was put down. Nicholas' personal tragedy plus the unrest in his country was enough to weaken
his reign. He took all possible measures to help his son.
August 12, 1904 was a very happy day in St. Petersburg, for the future Tsar was born just a few miles away at Peterhof. The cannon saluted three hundred times in St. Petersburg's Peter and Paul Fortress signifying the birth of a boy. He was named after Nicholas' favorite former tsar, Alexis. Alexis was conceived after Alexandra bathed in the holy waters at Sarov in 1903. She was praying for a son who would become the next tsar and keep the Romanov family on the throne. The family was more than excited and Alexandra especially believed that she had fulfilled her duty as the Tsarina of Russia. The birth of a boy seemed an omen of hope.
It was in the year 1902, in the capital city of St. Petersburg, that Rasputin made his first appearance. The day was more than likely gray and Nevsky Prospect must have been bustling with people. In this dreary city, Rasputin became closely tied to the Imperial family. Only in this city, where fantastic things happened daily, could a member of the same family that exalted him for his abilities murder Rasputin for his corruption. There, in St. Petersburg, Rasputin "became a controversial figure, leading a scandalous personal life with his mostly female followers from the St. Petersburg high society... he was frequently seen picking up prostitutes and often drank himself into a stupor"("Grigori Rasputin").
Grand Duchess Militsa introduced Rasputin into the Imperial family in 1905 (Jackson). The infant Tsarevich Alexis had been diagnosed with hemophilia earlier that year. Because of this illness Rasputin was brought to the palace and worked his way into the Tsar and Tsarina's personal affairs. His corrupting influence on the Tsarina was also a major factor on weakening the Tsar, for he always took the advice of his darling wife. Rasputin was able to "heal" the boy before the anxious mother and father's eyes, -"it was a fact that more than once before the Tsar and the Tsarista, Rasputin's appearance by the bedside of the apparently dying Alexis caused critical change" (Massie, 200). Rasputin was the key factor that helped Alexis overcome many of his bleeding episodes, although it seemed as if all Rasputin did was threatening to the Imperial family. Without Rasputin, it appears that on many occasions the Tsarevich would have died (Rasputin: The Mad Monk). The Tsarevich's illness caused a triangle affair with Nicholas, Alexandra and Rasputin in the corners and Alexis right in the middle.
Hemophilia troubled Alexis to near death so the tsar and Tsarina turned to Rasputin for spiritual guidance. How was it that Rasputin could stop the bleeding of this poor hemophiliac boy? Nicholas thought of him as "just a good, religious, simple-minded Russian" with whom he could talk freely (Massie, 199-200). For Nicholas, Rasputin's voice was the voice of the people, the people he believed that he was very close to (Radzinsky, 107). Alexandra soon began to think that Rasputin was sent to her by God as an answer to her prayers (Massie, 200). It is very possible that Rasputin just had the power to put Alexis into a hypnotic state or that his calming disposition alleviated the emotional stress Alexis was facing. Rasputin calmed the boy and he would fall off to sleep and the bleeding would soon stop (Massie, 201-202).
In the role of savior to the Tsar and Tsarina's son, Rasputin was able to make himself right at home with the Imperial family. However, the acquaintance of Rasputin with the Imperial family proved to be a disaster because he led a very openly promiscuous life outside of his role as healer of the Tsarevich. Rasputin's reputation among the people was awful; they did not respect him because of his perverted tendencies and profuse behavior (Rasputin: The Mad Monk). This led the public to think less of the ruling family. This relationship the Tsar and his family had with Rasputin was not understood by outsiders since Nicholas wanted to keep secret the illness of the future tsar.
Alexis' illness was a very painful one and it took a toll on his loved ones. During the time that the Imperial family was in Yekaterinburg, the family doctor Yevgeny Botkin wrote a letter to the Ural Regional Soviet Executive Committee. This letter graphically describes Alexis' hemophilia and its life-threatening effects. Part of the letter reads:
The boy is in such indescribable pain day and night that no one from among his closest relatives, though they do not spare themselves, has the strength to bear looking after him too long, not to mention his mother, with her chronically ill heart...His attendant...after a few sleepless nights filled with agony, becomes totally worn out and wouldn't be able to take it at all. (Steinberg, 306)The seriousness of Alexis's health was overwhelming to the victim's anxious parents. Alexandra and Nicholas both are in despair for their only son and his unfortunate well being. Many historians have said that without Alexis' hemophilia there would have been no need for Rasputin and without Rasputin there would have been no revolution (Sarov).
World War One brought chaos to the Russian armies and "political turmoil churned in the country, Alexandra heeded Rasputin and rejected all attempts to reform" (Robins). So Nicholas went to the front to support the army. The army, for the most part, was ill prepared for battle and Nicholas, amidst the disorder, was unable to successfully rule the country. With the Tsar away, power passed more and more through the hands of Alexandra and Rasputin (Summers, 37). Rasputin had influence over the Tsarina, and in turn he had influence over the Tsar. Rasputin would have anyone terminated who dared to speak out against him in the Imperial court or household. For example the lady-in-waiting Tyutcheva demanded that Rasputin be forbidden to associate with the grand duchesses. She was soon forced to leave Tsarskoe Selo. The same happened to Peter Stolypin, the Prime Minister, and others (Radzinsky, 109). Whatever Rasputin wished and thought was necessary, Alexandra did her best to carry out his wishes and it was "her choice of ministers, proposed by Rasputin, beseechingly pressed on and unwisely endorsed by the absentee Tsar, which lost the Tsar his throne" (Massie, 344). Nicholas would rather not have Rasputin meddling in political action but he knew how much Alexandra counted on Rasputin's presence. Nicholas encouraged her and appeased her fears by notarizing her suggestions and recommendations (Massie, 344). mNude Dancer Picturesdating Asain En Foro Campus Tbok 8jcbr Adjust Php Pictures Dating Alexis' Hemophilia: The Triangle Affair of Nicholas II, Alexandra, and Rasputinj Pictures Dating Dating Pictures Dating Pictures Dating pNude Dancer Picturesdating Asain En Foro Campus Tbok 8jcbr Adjust Php Pictures Dating Alexis' Hemophilia: The Triangle Affair of Nicholas II, Alexandra, and Rasputinf a f f Pictures Webcam