Pierre Gilliard (1879 – 30
May 1962) was a Swiss
academic,
who was French language tutor to the
five children of Tsar Nicholas II
from 1905 to 1918. Years after the
Imperial Family was
assassinated by the
Bolsheviks in
July 1918, Gilliard wrote a book
Thirteen Years at the Russian
Court, about his time with the family. In his memoirs,
Gilliard described
Tsarina Alexandra's
torment over her
son's haemophilia and her faith in the ability of
starets Grigori
Rasputin to heal the boy.
In his memoirs, Gilliard wrote that he initially came to Russia in
1904 as a French tutor to the family of
Duke George of
Leuchtenberg, a cousin of the Romanov family. He was
recommended as a French tutor to the Tsar's children and began
teaching the elder children,
Grand Duchesses Olga
and
Tatiana
Nikolaevna of Russia in 1905.
He grew fond of the family and followed
them into internal exile at Tobolsk
, Siberia
, following
the Russian Revolution of
1917. The Bolsheviks prevented Gilliard from
joining his pupils when they were moved to the Ipatiev House in
Ekaterinburg
in May 1918. He described his final view of
the children in his memoirs:
Gilliard remained in Siberia after the murders of the family,
assisting
White Russian investigator
Nicholas Sokolov. He married Alexandra "Shura" Tegleva, who had
been a nurse to
Grand Duchess
Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia, in 1919. In Siberia, he was
instrumental in unmasking an impostor who claimed to be the
Tsarevich
Alexei. In 1920, he returned to Switzerland from the
Russian Far East.
He became a French
professor at the University of Lausanne
and was awarded the French Legion of Honor. In
1921, he published a book entitled
Le Tragique Destin de
Nicholas II et de sa famille, which described the last days of
the Tsar and his family, and the subsequent investigation into
their deaths.
In 1925, the Tsar's sister,
Grand Duchess Olga
Alexandrovna of Russia, asked Gilliard and his wife to
investigate the case of
Anna Anderson,
who claimed to be Grand Duchess Anastasia.
On 27 July 1925, the
Gilliards saw Anderson at St. Mary's Hospital in Berlin
, where
Anderson was being treated for a tubercular infection of her
arm. Anderson was severely ill, and semi-conscious. Madame
Gilliard asked to examine Anderson's feet, and noted that
Anderson's feet were shaped similarly to Anastasia's: both had
bunions. Gilliard insisted that Anderson be
moved to a better hospital, to ensure her survival while her
identity was investigated. After an operation on Anderson's arm,
she recuperated at the Mommsen Nursing Home in Berlin. There, in
October 1925, the Gilliards saw Anderson again. Anderson did not
recognise Gilliard, which she later claimed was because he had
shaved off his
goatee beard. When he asked
her to "tell me everything about your past", she refused. According
to Gilliard, Anderson mistook Shura for Grand Duchess Olga on the
second day of their visit. At a subsequent meeting, Anderson
mimicked the actions of Anastasia when she asked Shura to moisten
her forehead with
eau de Cologne,
which left Shura shaken.
Anderson's supporters claimed that the Gilliards recognized
Anderson as Anastasia, while the Gilliards denied it, and said her
supporters mistook their compassion for recognition. Anderson's
friend and lifelong supporter,
Harriet von Rathlef, wrote that she
spotted Gilliard in the hallway, looking agitated, and muttering in
French, "My God, how awful! What has become of Grand Duchess
Anastasia? She's a wreck, a complete wreck! I want to do everything
I can to help the Grand Duchess!" Shura cried when she left
Anderson, wondering why she loved the woman as much as she loved
the grand duchess. On departure from the hospital, Gilliard told
the Danish Ambassador in Berlin,
Herluf
Zahle, that, "We are going away without being able to say that
she is
not Grand Duchess Anastasia." Gilliard later wrote
to von Rathlef making further enquiries about Anderson's health,
though he referred to her as "the invalid" rather than "Anastasia".
By the beginning of 1926, however, Gilliard was clearly of the
opinion that Anderson was an impostor.
While supporters of Anderson insisted that the Gilliards recognized
her as Anastasia and then recanted, possibly the couple were
hesitant at first because her emaciated condition made her look so
different from the plump teenage Anastasia they had last seen.
While this was enough to suspend their initial doubts, they
eventually decided, once she was better and they could question her
more closely, that she was an impostor. Anderson's supporters
accused Gilliard of turning his back on her because he was paid off
by the Tsarina's brother,
Ernest Louis, Grand Duke of
Hesse.
Like Ernest Louis, Gilliard became a vociferous opponent of
Anderson and her circle. Gilliard wrote articles and a book
entitled
The False Anastasia, which claimed she was a
"vulgar adventuress" and a "first-rate actress". He said that he
had known at once she was not Anastasia, that there was no facial
resemblance, that her entire knowledge of Russian imperial life was
gleaned from magazines, books and her friends, and that she could
not speak Russian, English or French. He testified against her in
Hamburg in 1958. The lawsuits, designed to determine whether she
was truly the grand duchess, eventually ended inconclusively in
1970, after Gilliard's death.
Shortly
after his testimony, Gilliard was severely injured in a car
accident in Lausanne
. He
never fully recovered and died four years later. Decades later, in
1995, DNA tests proved that Anderson was not Anastasia.
References
- Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra, 1967
- Klier and Mingay, p. 33; Massie, The Romanovs, p.
172
- Klier and Mingay, p. 77
- Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra, pp. 525–526
- Klier and Mingay, p. 76
- Klier and Mingay, p. 99; Kurth, p. 105; Massie, The
Romanovs, p. 172; Phenix, p. 148
- Kurth, p. 106; Massie, The Romanovs, p. 172; Phenix,
p. 149
- Kurth, p. 106; Massie, The Romanovs, p. 172
- Phenix, pp. 150–151
- Kurth, p. 108; Massie, The Romanovs, p. 173
- Klier and Mingay, p. 150
- Kurth, p. 110; Phenix, p. 153
- Klier and Mingay, p. 101
- Kurth, p. 111
- Kurth, p. 112; Massie, The Romanovs, p. 173
- Kurth, pp. 112–113
- Kurth, p. 117
- Klier and Mingay, pp. 101–102
- Klier and Mingay, p. 103
- Klier and Mingay, p. 126; Massie, The Romanovs, p.
174
- Kurth, p. 115; Massie, The Romanovs, p. 175
- Kurth, p. 116; Massie, The Romanovs, p. 175
- Kurth, p. 116
- Kurth, pp. 298–300
- Klier and Mingay, p. 139; Kurth, p. 377
- Kurth, p. 300
Books and Articles
- Gilliard, Pierre, Thirteen Years at the Russian
Court
- Klier, John; Mingay, Helen (1995).
The Quest for Anastasia. London: Smith Gryphon. ISBN 1
85685 085 4
- Kurth, Peter (1983). Anastasia: The Life of Anna
Anderson. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0 224 02951 7
- Massie, Robert K. (1967).
Nicholas and Alexandra. ISBN 0 575 40006 4
- Massie, Robert K. (1995). The Romanovs: The Final
Chapter. Random House. ISBN 0 099 60121 4
- Phenix, Patricia (1999). Olga Romanov: Russia's Last Grand
Duchess. Viking/Penguin. ISBN 0 14028 086 3