Book contents
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Contents
- PART ONE
- PART TWO
- PART THREE THREE AND EPILOGUE
- 24 The Tsar Visits London, 1874
- 25 Dostoevsky in Bad Ems
- 26 Sophia Perovskaya, Radicalism and the Russian People
- 27 A Mystic in the Desert
- 28 The Tsar at the Front
- 29 The Death of Nekrasov
- 30 A Visit to a Monastery
- 31 Tolstoy Apologizes
- 32 “Prophet, Prophet”: Dostoevsky's Pushkin Speech
- 33 A Death and a Marriage
- 34 Two Conspirators
- 35 Bombs and Blood
- 36 The Trial
- 37 Two Appeals
- 38 A Spectacle on Semenovsky Square
- Epilogue
- Who's Who?
- Chronology
- Endnotes
- A Note on Principal Sources
- Bibliography of Print Materials
- Index
33 - A Death and a Marriage
from PART THREE - THREE AND EPILOGUE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- INTRODUCTION
- Contents
- PART ONE
- PART TWO
- PART THREE THREE AND EPILOGUE
- 24 The Tsar Visits London, 1874
- 25 Dostoevsky in Bad Ems
- 26 Sophia Perovskaya, Radicalism and the Russian People
- 27 A Mystic in the Desert
- 28 The Tsar at the Front
- 29 The Death of Nekrasov
- 30 A Visit to a Monastery
- 31 Tolstoy Apologizes
- 32 “Prophet, Prophet”: Dostoevsky's Pushkin Speech
- 33 A Death and a Marriage
- 34 Two Conspirators
- 35 Bombs and Blood
- 36 The Trial
- 37 Two Appeals
- 38 A Spectacle on Semenovsky Square
- Epilogue
- Who's Who?
- Chronology
- Endnotes
- A Note on Principal Sources
- Bibliography of Print Materials
- Index
Summary
On that May day in 1880 that Dostoevsky left Staraya Russa for the Pushkin celebration in Moscow, the Empress Maria died, finally succumbing to tuberculosis. Her death had been the reason for the delay in beginning the Pushkin festivities. The nation had been in official mourning.
When his wife died, alone in her oxygen-supplied bedroom in the Winter Palace, Alexander was with Katia and their children at Tsarskoe Selo. Since September 1878, when she was born, there had been a new member of the family, the couple's infant daughter, named Katia after her mother. On hearing the news of Maria's death, the Tsar immediately took the short train ride into the city. Days of mourning and requiem services followed.
After the Empress's body had lain in the Winter Palace for a few days, it was transferred to the cathedral of the Peter and Paul Fortress. It was a gloomy Monday, rainy, windy, almost stormy in the morning when the procession wound its way over the Neva to the fortress. On horseback and in military uniform, Alexander rode behind the body of his wife. Foreign dignitaries, family and others followed behind. After a few days of lying in state, the body of the Empress was finally buried in the fortress cathedral.
One of the foreign princes at the funeral was the Empress's nephew, Alexander of Battenburg. The previous year, the Russians had helped to put him on the Bulgarian throne, but only as a limited constitutional monarch.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Russia in the Age of Alexander II, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky , pp. 224 - 228Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2002