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#41
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I just don't agree with you people. Alexei learned Russian but, he spoke in French to Alexandra. I seen many letters he wrote to her in French. I have seen many documentaries and read many books that explain that Alexei did learn English in 1914. He also wrote his first letters to Alexandra in English in 1916.
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#42
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Well, French seems to have been a popular language in Russia, so it wouldn't be too strange if the tsar's children learned French.
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#43
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#44
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ChatNoir |
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#45
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It seems odd to me that the children wouldn't be able to speak French, as that is the language the court spoke and, at that time, the language of diplomacy. Nicholas wrote to his mother in French. The only writing language they had in common. So a Danish born Princess and a Russian Tsar could only write to each other in French. English, secondly, was the language most used by Alix. She wrote to Nicholas in English, she had English nannies for the children, who, I am sure spoke English to them. Nicholas' strong point was his knowledge of languages. He spoke excellent English and French and German very well. Source: Nicholas II The Interrupted Transition. Tatiana wrote to her mother in English. That no one spoke English to Alexei until 1914 seems bizzarre.
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#46
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Of course they spoke English to Alexei all the time. As I pointed out, he did not have his first French lesson until he was eight and a half years old. English was the language used when the whole family were together, but when the children were alone with the Tsar, they often used Russian. According to AA, she always spoke English with her grandmother.
ChatNoir |
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#47
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According to Massie, and the books of those who knew Alix well (Vyrubova, Buxhoevedon, Dehn, Gilliard) her main language was English. It's common and well accepted knowledge that this was true, and that she and Nicky spoke English to each other. Her letters and diaries are English, and she spoke mostly English with the children. As has been mentioned by others, the children learned English young and had some British nannies. No one is saying that Alix didn't speak German, I'm sure she did. She spoke it to her father. However, English was clearly her language of choice. It should tell you something that her correspondence with her siblings, also half German, was in English. They were raised by British nannies, and after their mother died, spent a great deal of time in England with Grandmama Queen Victoria. English was the most used language in her family growing up, and since it was her best language, it became used very much among her own family (Nicky and the kids) Those who were close to Alix described her as having the ways of a Victorian Englishwoman. No one who knew Alix in real life ever said anything about her using German with any frequency, if at all.
On the subject of the guards saying she spoke German, I agree with the poster who said that the guards likely didn't know the difference. Most of the people who became Bolsheviks were peasants, mostly uneducated, many illiterate, few if any had been exposed to foreign languages. Because of all the rumors about Alix being a German spy, being called The German Woman by her enemies, naturally they would assume any language she spoke other than Russian must have been German, but that doesn't mean it was. In The File On the Tsar it says that the Bolsheviks forbid the family to speak any language other than Russian, so that they could be understood. Summers and Mangold wrote that the family was forbidden to use their usual English. Last edited by OlgaNikolaievna : 05-02-2008 at 08:23 PM. |
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#48
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It's very bad, to confirm that information from AA, (a Polish factory worker fraud) who that never even met or knew NAOTMAA. AA was not Anastasia and she never knew any Russian, barely English and French. She didn't even resemble her at all! I don't believe that Alexei spoke English with OTMA. I think they all spoke Russian together- OTMAA. It is true that Nicholas spoke Russian with OTMAA. Then, Alix spoke English with the children. But, sometimes Alix and Nicholas wrote in French to each other. Alix was learning French, and Nicky would assist her with her French. They would write in English often. I'm postive that OTMAA didn't know German at all. Except- Olga and Tatiana they knew very little they were studying it while they were in Ekateringburg.
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Anastasia Romanova- June 18th, 1901- July 17th, 1918. Last edited by AnastasiaEvidence : 06-16-2008 at 01:24 PM. |
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#49
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http://i61.photobucket.com/albums/h4...a1916-1976.jpg Quote:
Last edited by GlitteringTiaras : 06-17-2008 at 11:54 PM. Reason: Changed image to link. |
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#50
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< ed Warren: unnecessary >
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Anastasia Romanova- June 18th, 1901- July 17th, 1918. Last edited by Warren : 06-23-2008 at 06:08 AM. |
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#51
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Queen Victoria was married to a Prussian and behind closed doors, the Queen, her husband and family spoke German. German nor French nor English was used in the Russian Royal court and legal matters. Russian was. Not sure when this changed. I know Alex. III demanded everything become Russianized during his reign, so French may have been on the "outs" during his reign. Anyone know exactly when it changed? As for the peasants in Ekaterinburg,whom some of you think, were unable to know if they heard German or not. Give me a break. Ekaterinburg wasn't an isolated small Siberian tribal village. Ekaterinburg was filled with all sorts of nationalities. It was a thriving community and it's rich mines brought in all sorts of people from across the world. There were streets cars, a telephone company, railway stations, hospital, schools (one being the School of Mines)....banks... I believe there is a Ekaterinburg web site in English which can give you more information on it's history. I may have used it as a source over on AP when we were talking about the phones. If I find it, I'll bring it here. AGRBear
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"Truth ever lovely-- since the world began. The foe of tyrants, and the friend of man." Last edited by AGRBear : 06-20-2008 at 08:10 PM. |
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#52
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It was true, French at that time was considered the language for diplomatic relationships and was taught to all the upper class children. Of course Alexei spoke Russian. He was the future Tsar of Russia. Alexandera had a terrible time speaking Russian, which was another one of her failures since she was the Tsarina of Russia. Kinda like her ancestor George I of England who couldn't speak English and was known as "the farmer". Didn't go well for Georgie nor Alexandra. Like Chat Noir stated, there are German lesson books of Anastasia's,which were provided to the German court in AA's case. [Just because I mention AA doesn't mean I believe AA was GD Anastasia. I don't.] The lesson book/books did survive, and, did end up in the German courts. The reason we know this is because the discussion occured around the lesson book which probably held GD Anastasia's fingerprints. At that time, the method of lifting the print/prints would have destroyed the lesson book, so, it was keep in once piece, and, now, is somewhere in someone's vault. AGRBear
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"Truth ever lovely-- since the world began. The foe of tyrants, and the friend of man." Last edited by AGRBear : 06-20-2008 at 08:15 PM. Reason: typo errors |
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#53
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Quote from Olga Alexandrovna in her biography, on her meeting with AA: My nieces knew no German at all. Mrs Anderson did not seem to understand a word of Russian or English, the two languages all the four sisters had spoken since babyhood. French came a little later, but German was never spoken in the family." Last edited by Anna was Franziska : 06-21-2008 at 09:56 PM. |
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#54
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Chat -- actually, Gibbes was employed in 1908, after King Edward VII complained to his niece (Alexandra) that her daughters' English was "abominable." But in all these questions of languages we need to remember that there was (and is) a difference between "proper" or educated conversation and the sort of "house use" of languages that the grand duchesses grew up in and around. They probably couldn't have conducted an elegant or sophisticated conversation in French or German -- let's say, something that involved IDEAS -- but they could certainly snap out words and phrases for practical purposes. And they could *follow* conversations with ease. As Nancy Wynkoop put it to me about the royal generation just above her, "The family was so polylingual that, when speaking among themselves, they chose a word simply for its precision, from one of several languages."
Gilliard, of course, said whatever suited his purposes: later he claimed that the girls spoke no German at all -- this was in response to AA, and it's a sheer absurdity -- no royal princess of that era escaped tutoring in German. pk Quote:
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#55
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Alexander III Russianized Russia and did so with an iron fist. He wanted Russian to be the first language. The schools were no longer allowed to be completely German or whatever language a community held as their language, because Alexander III required all schools to be taught in Russian, although, hours were given for other languages to be spoken, accept in Poland. I have the date this orders was given around here somewhere....
I agree with Peter Kurth that the upper class and royals mixed their languages with great ease and the words they chose depended upon what they were trying to express in conversations among themselves. I believe, however, during officials functions, Russian was used. AGRBear
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"Truth ever lovely-- since the world began. The foe of tyrants, and the friend of man." Last edited by AGRBear : 06-23-2008 at 03:29 PM. |
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#56
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Just look at the old photos of the late 1800s and 1900s and you'll understand what I'm trying to convey. AGRBear
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"Truth ever lovely-- since the world began. The foe of tyrants, and the friend of man." |
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#57
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I still think it would be hard for ordinary people to tell the difference between different foreign languages.
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#58
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On page 130 of my Nicholas and Alexandra book, Robert Massie writes " Nicholas read equally well in Russian, English and French and he could manage in German and Danish." So, I'm not sure how fluent he was in any of these languages, but I'm guessing the Russian, English and French were better than the German and Danish. For the Danish, I don't know how fluent he would be, but it would not surprise me at all if he knew some basic Danish, since that is his mother's native tongue. However, it is possible to read in a language and not be fluent. I, for instance, know some Danish, but am very, very far from being fluent. Yet I can still read it, though I'm not sure of everything I read sometimes.
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#59
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Thanks for sharing that with us!
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#60
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I'm reading a bio. on Ella, Serge's wife and sister to Alexandra who was taught German, English, and French, then latin and Italian later. Of course we know things changed when Princess Alice died and I haven't gotten there yet. Alexandra, as we all know, was younger than her sister Ella and the change of climate due to Princess Alice's death would have affected her in every way, especially education.
Last edited by Warren : 06-30-2008 at 04:30 AM. Reason: ed quote |