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Prince Gabriel was brought up strictly; he and his siblings were taught to speak pure Russian without a mixture of foreign phrases, and they had to memorize prayers.<ref name = " Vassiliev 285"> Vassiliev , '' Beauty in Exile '', p. 285 </ref> The best writers and musicians were invited to Pavlovsk and the [[Marble Palace]] and [[Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia| Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich]] devised a programme of lectures for his children, providing a good education for them <ref name = " Zeepvat 210"> Zeepvat, ''Romanov Autumn'', p. 210 </ref>.
Prince Gabriel was brought up strictly; he and his siblings were taught to speak pure Russian without a mixture of foreign phrases, and they had to memorize prayers.<ref name = " Vassiliev 285"> Vassiliev , '' Beauty in Exile '', p. 285 </ref> The best writers and musicians were invited to Pavlovsk and the [[Marble Palace]] and [[Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia| Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich]] devised a programme of lectures for his children, providing a good education for them <ref name = " Zeepvat 210"> Zeepvat, ''Romanov Autumn'', p. 210 </ref>.


From a very early age, Gabriel was passionately devoted to his father and to all things military <ref name = " King & Wilson 123"> King & Wilson , ''Gilded Prism'', p. 123 </ref>. Following his father’s example, Gabriel Konstantinovich chose a military career, traditional for the male members of the Romanova family <ref name = " Vassiliev 285"> Vassiliev , ''Beauty in Exile'' , p. 285 </ref>. At nineteen, he was promoted to officer’s rank and awarded several orders. His family was close to the Emperor and he spent many times with the Tsar and his family <ref name = " King & Wilson 119"> King & Wilson , ''Gilded Prism'', p. 119 </ref>. [[Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia (1890-1958)|Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna]] and her brother, [[Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich of Russia|Grand Duke Dimitri Pavlovich]] were often his playmates <ref name = " Vassiliev 285"> Vassiliev , ''Beauty in Exile'' , p. 285 </ref>. He took his oath of allegiance to Nicholas II in a ceremony held in the church of the Catherine Palace at Tsarkoye Selo.
From a very early age, Gabriel was passionately devoted to his father and to all things military <ref name = " King & Wilson 123"> King & Wilson , ''Gilded Prism'', p. 123 </ref>. Following his father’s example, Gabriel Konstantinovich chose a military career, traditional for the male members of the Romanova family <ref name = " Vassiliev 285"> Vassiliev , ''Beauty in Exile'' , p. 285 </ref>. In his memoirs, he recalled:''Since the age of seven, I dreamed of entering the Nikolaievsky calvary School'' <ref name = " King & Wilson 123"> King & Wilson , ''Gilded Prism'', p. 123 </ref>. At nineteen, he was promoted to officer’s rank and awarded several orders. His family was close to the Emperor and he spent many times with the Tsar and his family <ref name = " King & Wilson 119"> King & Wilson , ''Gilded Prism'', p. 119 </ref>. [[Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia (1890-1958)|Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna]] and her brother, [[Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich of Russia|Grand Duke Dimitri Pavlovich]] were often his playmates <ref name = " Vassiliev 285"> Vassiliev , ''Beauty in Exile'' , p. 285 </ref>. He took his oath of allegiance to Nicholas II in a ceremony held in the church of the Catherine Palace at Tsarkoye Selo.


== A Russian Prince ==
== A Russian Prince ==

Revision as of 16:57, 3 February 2008

Prince Gabriel Konstantinovich of Russia
File:Gavriil Konstantinovich of Russia.jpg
Born(1887-07-15)July 15, 1887
DiedFebruary 28, 1955(1955-02-28) (aged 67)
Parent(s)Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia and Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mavrikievna.


Prince Gabriel Konstantinovich of Russia (July 15 1887-February 28 1955) was the second son of Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia and his wife Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mavrikievna. A great-grandson of Tsar Nicholas I, he was born in Imperial Russia and served in the army during World War I. He lost much of his family during the War and the Russian Revolution. He narrowly escaped from being executed by the Bolsheviks and spent the rest of his life living in exile in France.

Early life

Prince Gabriel Konstantinovich of Russia was born on July 15 1887 at Pavlovsk[1]. He was the second son among the ten children of Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich of Russia and his wife Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mavrikievna, born Princess Elizabeth of Saxe-Altenburg. Gabriel Konstantinovich and his brother prince Ivan, born a year earlier, were the first to suffer from the reforms of Emperor Alexander III, his father’s cousin, who decreed that in the name of economizing the state budget, only the children and grandchildren of the reigning sovereign would bear the title of grand duke [1]. Thus, Gabriel Konstantinovich was three days old when Tsar Alexander III, issued a manifesto announcing his title as a Prince of the Imperial Blood with the style of highness [2]. Grand dukes received 280,00 gold rubles annually from the imperial treasury, which guaranteed a comfortable life, while Prince Gabriel was given a one time sum of one million gold rubles, and he could count on nothing else[1].

Gabriel Konstantinovich spent his early life living in fabulous splendor on the last period of Imperial Russia. His father, a respected poet, was a second cousin of Tsar Nicholas II and one of the wealthiest members of the Romanov family. As a child, Prince Gabriel had frail health; he was pale and prone to illness [3] . He and his eldest brother Prince Ivan were both often sick and together spent more than a year of their childhood living at Oreanda in the Crimea with a doctor and several servants [4]. Their health improved in the temperate climate, and the boys enjoyed their time spent on the beaches and in short tours around the peninsula. With only each other, for company, they forged a strong sibling relationship that was to last to the ends of their lives [4].

Prince Gabriel was brought up strictly; he and his siblings were taught to speak pure Russian without a mixture of foreign phrases, and they had to memorize prayers.[1] The best writers and musicians were invited to Pavlovsk and the Marble Palace and Grand Duke Konstantin Konstantinovich devised a programme of lectures for his children, providing a good education for them [5].

From a very early age, Gabriel was passionately devoted to his father and to all things military [2]. Following his father’s example, Gabriel Konstantinovich chose a military career, traditional for the male members of the Romanova family [1]. In his memoirs, he recalled:Since the age of seven, I dreamed of entering the Nikolaievsky calvary School [2]. At nineteen, he was promoted to officer’s rank and awarded several orders. His family was close to the Emperor and he spent many times with the Tsar and his family [4]. Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna and her brother, Grand Duke Dimitri Pavlovich were often his playmates [1]. He took his oath of allegiance to Nicholas II in a ceremony held in the church of the Catherine Palace at Tsarkoye Selo.

A Russian Prince

Unlike his serious and reserved brothers, Prince Gabriel was much more social, and began to associate with an aristocratic crowd considered fast by the standards of the day. In August 1911 during a small ball at the mansion of the famous ballerina Mathilde Kschessinskaya, Prince Gabriel met Antonina Rafailovna Nesterovskaya (14 March 1890 - 7 March 1950), a twenty one year old dancer, and member of an impoverished family from the lesser nobility. Gabriel was twenty-four years old, very tall and thin. Nesterovskaya was nearly a foot shorter than he was, plain and plump, but she was witty and lively. Prince Gabriel fell in love with the ballerina. He managed to speak to her during the intervals while she was dancing at the Marinsky Theater every Sunday. By January 1912, he was visiting Nesterovskaya in the little apartment where she lived with her mother. They became lovers and before Eastern 1912, they joined Kschessinskaya and her lover Grand Duke Andrei Vladimirovich on a trip to the Riviera, staying in Cannes and Monte Carlo. The Riviera idyll did not last long, because they soon had to return to St Petersburg, where the prince was studying. From then on, he considered her as his "fiancée". In 1913, he asked her to quit the Ballet Corps and she agreed.

Prince Gabriel was devoted to his mistress and installed her in an extravagant house he purchased for her on Kamennostrovsky Prospek in St Petersburg. In the meanwhile, Prince Gabriel who lived before in Pavlosk received a three big rooms apartment at the Marble Palace on the second floor looking on the Palace Banks. After the death of his father in 1915, Prince Gabriel was increasingly involved with his mistress. They were a hospitable couple and kept and open house entertaining lavishly for their friends. The prince was a most generous lover, and indulged his mistress’ whims. She appeared insatiable in her demands, especially when she found she had only to express a desire for anything to have her wish fulfill.

Gabriel Konstantinovich was devotedly in love, but he could not marry his mistress, because the Romanov’s family status forbade any morganatic union. He appealed to his aunt, Olga, Queen of the Hellens, to intercede on his behalf and, she went to ask Nicholas II requesting permission for his nephew to marry, but the Tsar flatly refused. Through the twist and turns of the years that followed, Prince Gabriel remained passionate in his devotion to the dancer, determined that one day he would overcome the obstacles and marry her.

War and revolution

At the outbreak of World War I Prince Gabriel had to be separated from his mistress. He and four of his brothers joined the active Russian army in the military effort, fighting in advance operations. His brother Prince Oleg was killed in action, at the beginning of the war. The following year Gabriel’s father died of a heart attack. Evacuated to Petrograd in the fall of 1914, he joined the military academy, graduating at the age of twenty-nine, with the rank of colonel. His affair with Nesteroskaya continued openly and was discussed publicly. The two lived together for a long time and in 1916, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, seeing the sincerity of their feelings, decided to help them get married even tough it was considered a misalliance.

Prince Gabriel tried to keep a low profile in Petrograd that fateful spring. Fearing a vengeful mob, his mistress Antonina Nesteroskaya telephoned to warned him, and dispatched a car and driver to collect him from the Military Academy and spirit him to the relative safety of her house.

After the overthrow of the Russian monarchy in the February Revolution of 1917, Prince Gabriel asked her mother for permission to marry Antonina Nesteroskaya, but she did not give him her consent. Gabriel Konstantinovich decided to disobey. On April 9, 1917 at three o'clock pm in a little church, they married. A morganatic union would have never been allowed under the reign of Nicholas II and Gabriel kept his marriage secret from both his mother and his uncle Dimitri Konstantinovich, who only later learned of the wedding.

Gabriel had asked his cousin Prince Alexander of Leuchtenberg, who himself intend to marry morganatically, to find a priest to bless the wedding secretly. At the wedding ceremony, only Lydia Tchistiakova (Antonina’s sister) and a couple of their friends were present. Gabriel Konstantinovich had told his secret to his brother Ivan a few days before, but his elder brother did not want to attend the ceremony because of their mother. However, he promised to keep the secret. On his way to the church, Prince Gabriel saw his brothers Konstantine and George who were walking on Morskaïa Street. They had just met Antonina in wedding dress in another car. Only later, the two brothers realized what had happened. Once married, Prince Gabriel went to see his mother, although she was very upset, at the end gave him her blessing. From then on Prince Gabriel moved in to Nesteroskaya's apartment. For a time the couple lived quietly there

Captivity

After the successful Bolshevik coup of November 1917, the Petrograd newspapers published a decree summoning all male Romanovs to report to the dreaded Cheka, the secret police. Initially they were just required not to leave the city. In March 1918 the Romanovs who registered were summoned again, now to be sent away into internal Russian exile. In the spring of 1918, when the Bolsheviks had initially tried to arrest him, Gabriel was suffering from tuberculosis; rather than imprison him, the Bolsheviks allowed him to stay with his wife Antonina at her Petrograd apartment. By the summer of 1918, however, he had recovered, and one day in July, a contingent of armed soldiers arrived at the modest apartment and took him into custody. He was put in Spalernaia prison in a cell adjoining those of his uncle Dimitri Konstantinovich and Grand Dukes Nicholas Mikhailovich and Grand George Mikhailovich.

Prince Gabriel younger and more resilient than his relatives, found prison less of an ordeal, but he was shocked at his uncle’s appearance when they were first reunited. Until the last, Gabriel recalled, Dimitri was the cheerful favorite uncle of his childhood, telling him jokes, attempting to raise the spirits, and bribing, prison Guards to carry hopeful messages to his nephew’s cell. Through Gabriel’s incarceration Antonina, was tireless in her efforts to obtain her husband’s release. She finally succeeded with the intervention of Maxim Gorky, who lobbied Lenin on Gabriel's behalf. Gorky’s wife was among Antonina’s friends. Near the end of 1918, Gabriel was moved to a hospital. Shortly after, Gorky took the couple under his own roof; they lived for a while in his apartment in Petrograd. A few weeks later, again with Gorky’s assistance, the Petrograd Soviet gave the couple permission to leave Russia for Finland. They hurriedly left Russia and made their roundabout way to France [6]. The Prince’s release came just in time. On the early hours of January 28 1919, his relatives at Spalernaia prison were executed by firing squad at the walls of Peter and Paul Fortress.

Exile

In 1920, Prince Gabriel and his wife took residence in Paris. The couple did not lose interest in society once they were in exile. They were constant attendees at many Russian balls, frequently enjoyed evenings out in Russians nightclubs, and continued their friendship with other Romanovs in exile. Their circle include Tamara de Lempicka who painted a famous portrait of Gabriel Konstantinovich.

By 1924,Prince Gabriel's economical situation was very difficult [6]. Antonina, having considered then rejected the idea of opening s ballet school, instead turned to the world of couture, and established her own fashion house [6] . Christened the house of Berry, the shop opened in a small building located at N 38- bis rue Vitale [6]. Five year later after achieving some measure of success, Antonina was able to move the shop to a more fashionable location[6] . When Antonina received especially important of wealthy clients, especially American millionaires, they were quickly whisked to a salon where, surrounded by the trappings of imperial Russia, they were entertained by Gabriel Konstantinovich himself, who seemed to relish the experience. Visitors later recalled than the Prince frequently spent hours with them, often lecturing them on members of the extended family and using his photographs and paintings as visual aids to a vanished era[6] . Gabriel and his wife, with the proceeds from their successful couture business, lived a comfortable, if not splendid life. Their entire hallways in their apartment were filled with family photographs. They lived happily and often had tea parties. In Paris, they often mingled with other Russian émigrés, including Prince Felix Yussupov, and his wife Princess Irina Alexandrovna, and Grand Duke Andrei Vladimirovich by then married to Mathilde Kschessinskaya.

The Great Depression eventually marked a sharp turn in the fortune of their fashion business and they had to close the shop in 1936. The couple lived very modestly in a Paris suburb, where Prince Gabriel wrote his memoirs. To earn money he organized bridge parties and his wife occasionally gave ballet lessons. They lived happily and often had tea parties. While his wife supplemented their income giving occasional ballet lessons, Prince Gabriel occupied himself by writing his lengthy book o memoirs, a portion of whish was later published as “ In the Marble Palace”; the book appeared first in both Russian and French. A number of Russian editions have appeared over the years, the most recent in 2001. However, it took time to the memoirs to be published in English, because a first English translation was allegedly lost in the bombing of the American Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon in 1984. Gabriel's memoirs provide a detailed account of the private day to day lives of members of the Romanovs and have been sourced for many contemporary biographies on the Russian Imperial family.

Last years

Gabriel Konstantinovich kept in touch with his Romanov relatives during his long years in exile. He supported the claims of the chief Romanov pretender, Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich of Russia. Kirill repaid the favor by ennobling Nesterovskaya as "Princess Romanovskaya-Strelninskaya." Gabriel himself was awarded the style of "Grand Duke" by Kirill's son, Vladimir on May 15 1939. He was the only Romanov Prince to be elevated to this style. The legality of these actions were controversial, since both Kirill and Vladimir's claims were contested. Other members of the Romanov family dismiss the new title turning Prince Gabriel’s elevation as Grand Duke as a source of amusement.

During the tumultuous years of World War II, Gabriel Konstantinovich continued to live in Paris with his wife. The relationship between them never wavered, and they remained devoted to each other. Prince Gabriel's wife died on March 7, 1950, at the age of sixty. Gabriel Konstantinovich not only survived his wife but the following year, on 11 May 1951, remarried. His second wife was Princess Irina Ivanovna Kurakina (22 September 1903 - 17 January 1993), a forty-eight years old exiled Russian noblewoman who was created HSH princess Romanovskaya by Grand Duke Vladimir Kirilovich. Prince Gabriel died four years later on February 28 1955 in Paris. He had no children by either marriage and was buried in the Russian cemetery of Saint Genieve des Bois in Paris.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Vassiliev , Beauty in Exile , p. 285 Cite error: The named reference "Vassiliev 285" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b c King & Wilson , Gilded Prism, p. 123
  3. ^ Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 209
  4. ^ a b c King & Wilson , Gilded Prism, p. 119
  5. ^ Zeepvat, Romanov Autumn, p. 210
  6. ^ a b c d e f Vassiliev , Beauty in Exile , p. 292

Bibliography

  • Cockfield, Jamie H, White Crow, Praeger, 2002, ISBN 0275977781
  • King, Greg, and Penny Wilson. Gilded Prism. Eurohistory, 2006. ISBN 0-9771691-4-3
  • Vassiliev, Alexandre, Beauty in Exile, Harry N. Abrams,2001, ISBN 0-810-95701-9
  • Zeepvat, Charlotte, The Camera and the Tsars, Sutton Publishing, 2004, ISBN 0-7509-3049-7.
  • Zeepvat, Charlotte, Romanov Autumn , Sutton Publishing, 2000, ISBN 0-7509-2739-9


Ancestors