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THE RUSSIAN IMPERIAL SUCCESSION
An unsigned article entitled
"The Legitimacy of a Kirillovichi Claim to the Throne of all the Russias"
has been recently disseminated. Many people have written in the last several years about the Russian imperial succession laws. Unfortunately, much that has been written is incorrect, especially various articles that refer to Prince Nicholas Romanoff as head of the Russian dynasty.
The author of the unsigned article will be referred to in these pages as "Mr. X". What is useful about "Mr. X's" article is that it groups together in one document many of the
fallacious arguments which have been repeated from time to time to oppose Russian legitimism and which erroneously purport to be based upon the Russian succession laws. These arguments should not be left unanswered. The term "Kirillovichi" refers to the descendants of the Grand Duke Kirill of Russia, senior first cousin of the Emperor Nicholas II. The Grand Duke Kirill at the fall of the monarchy in
March 1917 was, by primogeniture, third in line to the Russian throne. In July 1918, he succeeded as head of the imperial dynasty following the murders of Emperor Nicholas II and of the two dynasts who had been first
and second in line to the throne: respectively, the Grand Duke-Tsesarevich Alexei (only son of Nicholas II) and the Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich (only living brother of Nicholas II). The Grand Duke Kirill at his
death in 1938 was succeeded as head of the dynasty by his only son, the Grand Duke Wladimir, who in turn at his death in 1992 was succeeded by his only child, the Grand Duchess Maria, present head of the dynasty. Grand Duchess Maria's lawful position as dynastic head recently has been challenged by a morganatic pretender, her distant relation (a third cousin once removed), Prince Nicholas Romanoff. Prince Nicholas Romanoff, however, is not a member of the dynasty, because his mother was not of royal birth, as required under the Russian succession laws. Because he is not a member of the dynasty, his claim to be head of the dynasty has no basis in law. His adherents seem to ignore the fact that the succession laws required each dynast to be born of an equal marriage, that is, born of a marriage of a dynast to a spouse of royal birth (or, to be more precise, to a spouse who was a member of a royal or sovereign dynasty). Instead, his adherents overlook the problem of the morganatic (or unequal) marriage of his parents and appear to base their claim on his being, by primogeniture, "the senior male line descendant of the Romanoff dynasty". The flaw in this reasoning is that succession by primogeniture applied only to dynasts, not to those who were non-dynasts on account of being born of a morganatic union between a dynast and a spouse not of royal birth. In any event, Prince Nicholas Romanoff is not even the senior male line morganatic descendant, because several males of the Ilynsky family (descendants of the morganatic marriage between Grand Duke Dmitry of Russia and Miss Audrey Emery) are ahead of him genealogically. As explained elsewhere in this essay, the title "Prince Romanoff" assumed socially by so many morganatic descendants of the Russian dynasty is a subject of controversy, because the title was invented in emigration and has no basis in Russian imperial law. Although a nobiliary lawyer therefore might well quibble about the legality of the style of "Prince "Mr. X" in his article expresses the erroneous view that the marriage of the late Grand Duke Kirill of Russia (head of the Russian
dynasty from 1918 to 1938), was in violation of the Russian succession laws and that therefore the descendants of that marriage (including the Grand Duchess Maria of Russia, head of the Russian dynasty from 1992 to the present)
should be considered somehow outside of the line of succession. "Mr. X's" conclusion is not supported either by fact or in law, as explained below. The simplest way to disprove "Mr. X's"
contention about Grand Duke Kirill's marriage is to point out that every person who was by birth a member of the Russian dynasty was ipso facto
in the line of succession to the throne. The only method by which a dynast could take himself out of the line of succession was by signing an affirmative act of renunciation of his succession rights. With the exception of several dynasts (all but one of them females) who upon their marriages signed renunciations of their succession rights, there was no such thing as a separate category of people who were dynasts but who were ineligible to succeed to the throne.
Thus, the key issue in considering whether a person was in the line of succession to the Russian throne is to determine whether that person was or is a member of the As discussed in Footnote 3, Grand Duke Kirill, who was third in line to
the Russian throne at the time of the March 1917 abdication of Nicholas II, succeeded as head of the dynasty in July 1918 upon the execution of Nicholas II and the latter's son and brother. In his manifesto of 31 August/13
September 1924, while in exile in France, he proclaimed himself Emperor of Russia, following the precedent of such kings as Charles II of England and Louis XVIII of France, who in exile took the title of king following the
respective executions of Charles I in England and of Louis XVI and Louis XVII in France. The Russian laws governing membership in the imperial house, succession to the throne and other dynastic subjects
are contained in the Fundamental State Laws of the Russian Empire and the Statute of the Imperial Family (codification of 1906, as amended through 1911). These laws, referred to collectively as "the succession laws"
in this essay, are sometimes described as "the Pauline law", because their original version was promulgated in 1797 by Emperor Paul I. From time to time, female dynasts renounced their succession rights upon
marriage into a foreign dynasty. One example was Grand Duchess Anastasia Mikhailovna, who renounced upon her marriage in 1879 to the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Another example was Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna,
who renounced upon her 1846 marriage to the future King of Wurttemberg. A dynast was allowed to renounce his succession rights under Article 37. Article 38 specified that such a renunciation was valid only
upon its being announced publicly and given legal effect. There is no provision allowing a dynast to renounce the succession rights of his minor children. Thus, a common view held among specialists was that the instrument of abdication signed by Emperor Nicholas II in March 1917 was partially illegal: not in respect of his own abdication but to the extent it also purported to effect a renunciation of the succession rights of his minor son, the Grand Duke-Tsesarevich Alexei. According to this view, the position of head of the dynasty passed in March 1917 to Alexei (murdered in July 1918) rather than to Nicholas II's brother, Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich (murdered in June 1918).
For at least the last 80 years of the monarchy, male dynasts were listed in the court calendar by primogeniture in the order of their succession to the throne, while female dynasts were listed according to
other criteria unrelated to the succession. From 1825 to 1831, however, in the early years of the reign of Nicholas I, a unique situation existed: there was a male dynast (Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich, younger
brother of Alexander I and older brother of Nicholas I) who, although remaining a dynast and continuing to be listed in the court calendar, had publicly renounced his succession rights. (Due to his morganatic marriage,
Constantine, first in the line of succession during the reign of Alexander I, had in 1822 chosen to sign a renunciation of his succession rights in favor of his younger brother, later Nicholas I. This enunciation was accepted
and given effect upon being made public in 1825.) Accordingly, in 1830, Constantine, although without succession rights, was, as one of the five living male dynasts, listed in the court calendar at a place directly after
Nicholas I's sons, reflecting the personal precedence given to him at court by his imperial brother; but one would exclude Constantine in calculating the order in the succession of the other male dynasts then living.
From this unique precedent, one can surmise that, if a male dynast were to effect a valid public renunciation of his succession rights, he would, as a dynast, still be listed in the court calendar, but in reckoning other dynasts'
place in the line of succession one would exclude from one's numerical count any male dynast who had validly renounced his succession rights. In the event, Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich was the only male dynast to effect
such a renunciation between the time of the promulgation of the Pauline law in 1797 and the publication of the last court calendar in 1917. The laws set forth a straightforward procedure to follow when a baby was
born who qualified as a dynast. Under Articles 135 and 136, the parent immediately had to inform the emperor in writing of the child's name and birth date. The emperor then would order that the name of the child be
entered in the Genealogical Book of the Imperial Family (maintained by the emperor's chancellery) and that the parents be informed that the child was included in the imperial family (Article 137). It was of course the
emperor's decision as to whether a child satisfied the requirements for dynastic membership. Once he entered the child's name in the Genealogical Book, the issue was closed. Under Article 142, inclusion of a child's
name in the Genealogical Book was proof of membership in the imperial house. The Genealogical Book determined whose names were included as dynasts on the official court calendar and was the basis for entitlement to pensions
and apanages. The two daughters of the Grand Duke Kirill born before the fall of the monarchy were entered in the Genealogical Book, pursuant to the decree of the Emperor Nicholas II dated 15 July 1907. But rather than dismiss "Mr. X" with such a simple rebuttal, let us consider each of his arguments in turn. The Marriage of the Grand Duke Kirill Leaving aside for the moment the issue of a spouse's religion, there were two main legal requirements that had to be followed by a member of the Russian dynasty The laws set forth a
straightforward procedure to follow when a baby was born who qualified as a dynast. Under Articles 135 and 136, the parent immediately had to inform the emperor in writing of the child's name and birth date. The emperor
then would order that the name of the child be entered in the Genealogical Book of the Imperial Family (maintained by the emperor's chancellery) and that the parents be informed that the child was included in the imperial family
(Article 137). It was of course the emperor's decision as to whether a child satisfied the requirements for dynastic membership. Once he entered the child's name in the Genealogical Book, the issue was closed.
Under Article 142, inclusion of a child's name in the Genealogical Book was proof of membership in the imperial house. The Genealogical Book determined whose names were included as dynasts on the official court calendar and
was the basis for entitlement to pensions and apanages. The two daughters of the Grand Duke Kirill born before the fall of the monarchy were entered in the Genealogical Book, pursuant to the decree of the Emperor Nicholas II
dated 15 July 1907. H.I.H. the Grand Duke Kirill of Russia (1876-1938) married H.R.H. Princess Victoria Melita of Great Britain and Ireland (1876-1936). Without stating so directly,
"Mr. X" seems to imply that the Grand Duke's wife should be considered a morganatic spouse, that is, a spouse who was not of royal birth. But it is difficult to think of a person whose antecedents are decidedly more
royal than those of the princess. She was born a member of the British Royal Family and was tenth in line to the British throne at her birth. Her father, Admiral of the Fleet H.R.H. The Duke of Edinburgh, K.G. (Prince
Alfred of Great Britain and Ireland, Duke of Edinburgh), was the second son of Queen Victoria. Her mother, the Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna of Russia, was the only daughter of Emperor Alexander II of Russia. Since
the princess was born into a family that reigned over a kingdom, she was by definition of royal birth. "Mr. X" also argues that the Grand Duke Kirill's marriage was objectionable because it did not have
the approval of the Emperor. But of course it is a matter of historical record that the Emperor Nicholas II did accord his approval to the marriage. In his decree of 15 July 1907, the Emperor recognized the marriage,
stated that "the consort of H.I.H. Grand Duke Kirill" would bear the title of H.I.H. Grand Duchess Victoria Feodorovna of Russia, and proclaimed that the child born of this marriage was Article 36 states: "Children born of a marriage between a member of the Imperial Family and a person not of corresponding birth, that is, not belonging to a royal or sovereign house, have
no right of succession to the Throne." Article 126 states: "All persons of imperial blood who are born of a marriage between a person of imperial blood and a person of corresponding birth which marriage was
authorized by the reigning emperor are recognized as members of the Imperial House." Her only son, the Grand Duke Wladimir of Russia, was at his birth in 1917 20th in line of succession to the British throne.
"The consort of His Imperial Highness Grand Duke Kirill Wladimirovich is to be styled Grand Duchess Victoria Feodorovna, with the predicate of Imperial Highness, and the daughter born of the marriage of
Grand Duke Kirill Wladimirovich with Grand Duchess Victoria Feodorovna, named Maria in holy baptism, is to be recognized as a Princess of the Imperial Blood, with the predicate of Highness belonging to great-grandchildren of an
Emperor." At the time of the 1907 decree, the only child born of the marriage was H.H. Princess Maria Kirillovna of Russia. Later two other children were born, H.H. Princess Kira of Russia and H.H.
Prince Wladimir of Russia. As stated before, in July 1918, following the murders of Nicholas II and of the only son and the only brother of Nicholas II, Grand Duke Kirill automatically became head of the dynasty, by operation
of Article 53. Article 53 states: "On the demise of an emperor, his heir accedes to the Throne by virtue of the law of succession itself, which confers this right upon him. The accession of an emperor to the
Throne is counted from the day of the demise of his predecessor." Thus, when the Grand Duke Kirill became head of the dynasty in July 1918 (or emperor, in monarchist reckoning), his children (Maria, Kira and the 11 month
old Wladimir) were advanced to grand ducal rank by automatic operation of law. Article 146 bestows the titles of grand duke or grand duchess on the children and grandchildren of an emperor. On 31 August/13 September
1924, as head of the dynasty, Grand Duke Kirill took the title of Emperor and formally bestowed upon his 7-year-old son Wladimir the title of Grand Duke-Tsesarevich. The Russian title of grand
"recognized as a Princess of the Imperial Blood." Approval of the marriage of a dynast was in the discretion of the emperor. He had authority
to withhold such approval. Once he accorded his approval, however, the matter was closed. Princess Victoria Melita had had a previous
marriage. Her first husband was Grand Duke Ernest Ludwig of Hesse and the Rhine. This first marriage had been arranged by Queen Victoria, who was the grandmother both of the bride and the groom and who was anxious to
see two of her favorite grandchildren united in matrimony. As has been revealed in a number of biographies, Ernest Ludwig was not naturally inclined towards marriage, and the union was a disaster. As soon as Queen
Victoria died in 1901, the marriage was dissolved. Following the divorce, the Grand Duke Kirill sought permission from Nicholas II to marry Princess Victoria Melita. This raised a very delicate problem,
because Ernest Ludwig was the only brother of the Empress Alexandra of Russia. Nicholas II's consort was very upset by the divorce and resisted a Russian marriage for her ex-sister-in-law. Hence, approval of the
marriage was delayed until 1907. "Mr. X" theorizes that the Grand Duke Kirill's marriage must have been invalid because his wife was a divorcee. This is incorrect. The succession laws place
no obstacle in the path of a dynast's marriage to a divorcee. To cite one example, Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich of Russia, the famous World War I commander, married a royal divorcee, but this fact had no legal effect on
either his status or hers. Furthermore, the succession laws allow divorce. "Mr. X" then attacks the marriage as violative of the rules of the Orthodox Church, on the basis that Grand Duke
Kirill and his wife, as grandchildren of the Tsar-Liberator, Emperor Alexander II, were first cousins. This objection need not detain us unduly. The preeminent role of the emperor in the administration of the
Russian The wife of Grand Duke Nicholas was Princess
Stana of Montenegro, one of the daughters of the personally colorful and impressive King Nicholas of Montenegro. She had divorced her first husband, the Duke of Leuchtenberg, in 1906 and married the Grand Duke six months
later. Articles 194 and 195 provide for the divorce of dynasts. Article 196 provides for their remarriage following divorce. In 1820, 23 years after promulgation of the succession laws, Emperor
Alexander I granted a divorce to his brother Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich so that the latter could remarry. This did not impair Constantine's succession rights, which remained unaffected until he affirmatively renounced
them in 1822. In the final years of the monarchy, Nicholas II accorded divorces to his sister (Grand Duchess Olga) and to his first cousin (Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna). In the Orthodox faith, one is permitted a maximum of
two divorces. I am grateful to Professor Russell Martin of Westminster College (Ph.D., Harvard University) for sharing with me his detailed knowledge of the Russian Orthodox Church and its connections over the
centuries with the Romanoff dynasty. Dr. Martin has correctly pointed out that the Russian church rarely enforced the traditional canonical rules against marriage within certain degrees of consanguinity. It is important
to note that not only first cousin marriages technically violated the consanguinity rules, but also marriages between first cousins once removed and even between second cousins: there was no such thing as different
"degrees of validity", so all such unions would equally transgress the strict letter of Orthodox rules. Nonetheless, there were innumerable valid marriages in the history of the Russian monarchy that technically
violated the consanguinity rules of the Orthodox church, including the unions of Tsar Ivan III in 1472 to Zoe Paleologa; of Emperor Peter III to Empress Catherine II (second cousins); and, after promulgation in 1797 of
the Pauline laws, of Emperor Nicholas I in 1817 to Princess Charlotte of Prussia (second cousins); of Grand Duke Michael Pavlovich in 1824 to Princess Charlotte of Wurttemberg (first cousins once removed); of Grand Duke
Constantine Nikolayevich in 1848 to Princess Alexandra of Saxe- Orthodox Church in the last two centuries of the monarchy was perhaps unique among the major branches of Orthodoxy. As Emperor Paul I stated in his declaration of 5 April 1797, the day of his coronation, the Orthodox faith is "inseparable" from the Russian throne, "because the sovereign in Russia is the Head of the Church." When Peter the Great ascended the throne in 1682, the Russian Orthodox Church was directed by its patriarch, who wielded considerable autonomous power. Emperor Peter I set out consciously to subordinate the church to imperial control, and as part of that effort he suppressed the office of patriarch. This suppression remained in effect until the fall of the monarchy and came to an end only in 1918, when the patriarchate was revived with permission of the Bolshevik government. By a decree in 1721, Emperor Peter formally replaced the patriarchate with an entity called the Governing Holy Synod. From this date onwards, the church ceased to be independent of the state, and its administration became a state function. The Governing Holy Synod, through which the emperor administered the church, was in practical terms a state ministry of religion. Unlike a government ministry, however, the Synod was headed not by a minister but by a council composed of bishops and responsible to the emperor. Under Articles 62 to 65, the monarch, acting through the Governing Holy Synod, administered the church, and as emperor and autocrat he held the titles of "Supreme Defender and Guardian of the Dogmas" of the Russian Orthodox Church. Like several other of the major faiths of Christianity, the Russian Orthodox Church had established a code of rules and laws which nonetheless were subject to exceptions and dispensations, except for matters of dogma. The decision of the emperor and autocrat as to church matters was supreme, except, again, for matters of dogma. Upon ordination, Russian Orthodox priests even took an oath in which they swore to defend without reservation "all the powers, rights and prerogatives belonging to the High Autocracy of His Majesty." Therefore, the procedure for any bishop or member of the Holy Synod to object to a dynastic marriage based upon degree of kinship would be to urge the emperor not to
Professor Richard Pipes, Russia Under the Old Regime (1974), p. 241. It is important to recall that, for purposes of an analysis of a dynast's succession rights, we must confine ourselves strictly
to the succession laws themselves. In promulgating the succession laws in 1797, Emperor Paul I stated that he had established them so "that the successor [to the throne would] be determined by the law itself and that there be not the slightest doubt as to the successor." In the years before the fall of the monarchy, the Grand Duke Kirill's place in the order of succession was completely clear: he was listed as third in line of succession on the official court calendar, his equal marriage had received imperial approval, and his children were dynasts. In considering whether to approve a proposed dynastic marriage, it was the role of the emperor and autocrat, as supreme defender and guardian of the dogmas of the church, to weigh any religious or other issues surrounding the marriage and then to resolve those issues definitively by taking a decision to approve or disapprove the marriage.
If "Mr. X" means to argue that, for succession purposes, an equal dynastic marriage receiving imperial approval is nonetheless subject to a collateral legal attack from laws or rules other than the succession laws, his
argument cannot be sustained. Such a suggestion, if admitted, would render the official order of succession uncertain, tentative and ultimately meaningless, thus defeating the principal intention of Paul I in
promulgating the succession laws: namely, to ensure that the identity of the successor to the throne was clear from the succession laws themselves. Moreover, "Mr. X" should not ignore the attitude of
the church itself to the exiled dynastic heads and thus to the marriage of Grand Duke Kirill. After the Revolution, the Russian Orthodox Church splintered into two principal branches. The Russian Orthodox Church in
Russia, headed by a patriarchate in Moscow restored by permission of the Bolshevik government, was subject to the dictates of the Communist state during the Soviet period and had no contact or association with the dynasty. In
exile, however, the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, headed by a Synod of Bishops with its headquarters in New York City, ministered to the spiritual needs of the emigration. The senior dynast of Act of Emperor Paul I, 4 April 1797: "…Having established the order of succession, I shall explain its aim, which is this: that the State never be without a successor; that the successor be determined by the law itself; that there be not the slightest doubt as to the successor..."
In autumn 1991, Anatoly Sobchak, then mayor of St. Petersburg and
for a period of time a member of the cabinet, invited the Grand Duke Wladimir to attend as special guest of honor the November 1991 ceremonies in which the former imperial capital would revert to its original name of St.
Petersburg. Although the Grand Duke was in failing health and deeply wished to set foot on Russian soil as soon as possible, he felt that he had to risk cancellation of the trip on a matter of principle: that is,
he absolutely declined to apply for a Russian visa, on the basis that he was Russian and that the Bolshevik order depriving the imperial dynasty of Russian citizenship was illegal and invalid. He expressed the view that
to seek a Russian visa would constitute a denial of his Russian nationality and an acceptance of the Bolshevik decree. President Yeltsin then personally intervened and approved an order allowing the Grand Duke Wladimir and
the Grand Duchess Leonida to enter Russia without visas. They flew on a private jet from Continuing his
attack on the marriage, "Mr. X" next suggests that the marriage was in violation of the dynastic laws because, at the time of their marriage, the bride of the Grand Duke Kirill was Protestant, not Orthodox. He
therefore implies that the Russian succession laws required all
dynasts to marry Orthodox spouses. This too is incorrect. In fact, the succession laws were very flexible. They required the direct heir to the throne, that is, the Tsarevich, to marry an Orthodox spouse. They also allowed the Emperor the option, if he so chose, to require other senior dynasts to marry Orthodox spouses. For example, if the Tsarevich as first in line were sickly or a confirmed bachelor or had no sons, the Emperor might well require the second in line to marry an Orthodox spouse. When Emperor Paul I promulgated the succession laws in 1797, however, there were very few Orthodox monarchies, and he had no wish unduly to impede the marriage of those Russian dynasts more remote in the line of succession to suitable royal princesses from Protestant Germany who might not wish to change their religion.
In his eulogy at the funeral mass on April 29, 1992, before dozens of bishops and priests and some 15,000 mourners in St. Isaac Cathedral, St. Petersburg, the Patriarch stated in part as follows: "I
was very impressed by his deep faith, his love for Russia and her people, whom he wished to help…His whole life outside, all his feelings and efforts, Grand Duke Wladimir Kirillovich dedicated to a country he considered his own…His
faith and long patience were not in vain. On the eve of his passage to the other world, he stepped on his native soil…On his return from Russia, he never ceased to dedicate all his strength to assist his country, and despite
his fragile health, he went to the United States to persuade various American business circles to help Russia and to have faith in his country. He died during this trip." The English spouse of the
Grand Duke Kirill was baptized as a member of the Church of England. After her marriage to Grand Duke Kirill, she converted to Orthodoxy. Her Russian mother, despite marrying into the British Royal Family, had remained
devoutly Orthodox and had maintained an Orthodox chapel in her English residence. From early childhood, Princess Victoria Melita, through the influence of her mother, is said by one of her biographers to have been drawn
towards the Orthodox faith. (The spouse of the Grand Duke Wladimir has been Orthodox throughout her life.) In 1797, the only Orthodox kingdoms in Europe were the Russian Empire of the Romanoff dynasty, and
the two kingdoms ruled (until 1801 and 1810, respectively) by different branches of the Bagration dynasty: When the Grand Duke
Kirill married, he was not particularly senior in the line of succession. In fact, four people stood between him and the throne at the moment of his marriage. Given this, Nicholas II approved the marriage without
prescribing any requirement that Princess Victoria Melita become Orthodox, something that she eventually did in any event a year after her marriage. Article 184 provided as follows: "With the
permission of the reigning emperor, members of the Imperial House may enter into marriage both with persons of the Orthodox faith and with persons of other denominations." This was qualified by Article 185, which
addressed marriages of the most senior dynasts: "The marriage of a male dynast of the Imperial House who might succeed to the Throne to a person of another faith may not take place until she embraces Orthodoxy." It was the Emperor who interpreted and defined the meaning of "a male dynast who might succeed to the Throne": as explained above, he could limit this to the Tsarevich or extend it more widely,
depending on the circumstances. The children of approved marriages between male dynasts of the imperial house and Protestant royal princesses were full members of the dynasty. For example, in 1884, with the emperor's
permission, Grand Duke Constantine Constantinovich of Russia, nephew of Alexander II, had married a Princess of Saxe-Altenburg who was devoutly Lutheran and remained so throughout her married life in Russia. But her numerous
sons and two daughters were full members of the dynasty. Another example is provided by the case of the Grand Duke Kirill's parents. In 1874, the Grand Duke Kirill's father, Grand Duke Wladimir Alexandrovich, then
fourth in line to the throne, married a Duchess of Mecklenburg who These four were the Emperor Nicholas II himself (then only 37), his only son
Alexei (who was 1 year old and whose haemophilia was not yet entirely apparent to the family), Grand Duke Michael (the Emperor's 26 year old younger brother, who was unmarried and was still expected to contract a dynastic
marriage), and Grand Duke Wladimir Alexandrovich (Grand Duke Kirill's 58 year old father). In addition, Article 187 provides that the marriage of grand dukes and grand duchesses was to be announced by manifesto
listing the title of the newlyweds and, "if the wife has converted to the Orthodox faith", with an indication of the name given to her at baptism. Article 128 states that the eldest son of the emperor
and the eldest son in each generation descending from that eldest son of the emperor are each considered an heir to the throne. This clarification helps place Article 185 in context. Proof that the children
of Grand Duke Constantine and his Lutheran wife were in the line of succession is provided not only by their inclusion in the Genealogical Book of the Imperial Family and in the official court calendars but also by the decree
issued by Nicholas II on 24 August 1911 with respect to Constantine's daughter, Princess Tatiana of Russia. Princess Tatiana renounced her rights of succession upon her 1911 marriage to a prince of the Bagration
dynasty. Nicholas II decreed as follows: "H.H. Princess Tatiana Constantinovna has presented to Us, over her own signature, a renunciation of her right of succession to the Imperial Throne of all the Russias, which
belongs to her as a member of the Imperial House of Russia. The Governing Senate will take the necessary steps to make this public." The present writer has italicized a portion of the decree to illustrate the fact
that if one was a member of the dynasty, one was ipso facto in the line of succession. remained Lutheran after the marriage. The
sons of this marriage were all dynasts and were listed in the official court calendar in their order of succession to the throne. In 1908, the Grand Duke Kirill's mother converted from the Lutheran faith to Orthodoxy, and on
10 April 1908 Nicholas II issued a manifesto announcing his joy at the conversion and giving his aunt the title of "Orthodox Grand Duchess". Political Issues "Mr. X" also
argues that Grand Duke Kirill was not head of the dynasty because the mother of Nicholas II, who lived in exile until 1928, did not recognize him as such. The flaw in this argument is that succession was determined solely by
the succession laws. The Dowager Empress was enormously respected, but her purported views on the succession were irrelevant from a legal point of view. As her son-in-law wrote in his memoirs, the Dowager Empress was in
the 1920s a broken woman whose two sons and several grandchildren had been brutally murdered. During her remaining reclusive years, she did everything in her power to foster the illusion that her son Nicholas II and grandson
Alexei were somehow still alive in Russia. In the years following the Revolution, many Russian emigres wrote memoirs and articles in which they attributed blame to various dynasts for events leading to the
collapse of the monarchy and in which they settled scores. Empress Alexandra was a frequent and obvious target. Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich was attacked for his role in persuading Nicholas II to abdicate, thus
precipitating the fall of the dynasty. For example, the third son of the marriage, Grand Duke Andrew, was born in
1879. On 2 May 1879, Emperor Alexander II issued a manifesto announcing the birth of "our grandson named Andrew, … the newborn grand duke" and describing the birth as an "augmentation of our House by the grace
of God." The decree stated: "Our beloved aunt, the Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna…by the inclination of her soul has wished to unite herself to us in the faith and in the communion of prayers and
the sacraments. Today, to our great joy, she has received our faith and been anointed. In announcing to all our faithful subjects this much desired event, we ordain that Her Imperial Highness be titled Orthodox Grand
Duchess." Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich was known in the family by the nickname "Nikolasha". On 2 March 1917, Nicholas II received a telegram from the Grand Duke in which the Grand Duke
said it was necessary for him "to beg…on bended knee" that the Emperor abdicate. ( Mark Steinberg and Vladimir Khrustalev, The Fall of the Romanovs [Yale University Press, 1995], pp. 89-90, citing State
Archive of the Russian Federation, Document f. 601, op. 1, d. 2102, l. 1-2). On the afternoon of 2 March, Maj. Gen. Vladimir Voeikov, commandant of the palace, entered the Emperor's railway car to express his grief and
amazement at the Emperor's abdication. In his memoirs, Voeikov described Nicholas II's pointing to the many telegrams on his desk and stating, "What else could I have done when everyone has betrayed me? And
first among them Nikolasha." Mark Steinberg and Vladimir Khrustalev, The Fall of the Romanovs (Yale University Press, 1995), p. 63; V.N. Voeikov, S tsarem i bez tsaria (1936), p. 212. In his famous
diary entry of 2 March, Nicholas II finished his description of the day with this sentence: "All around me is In his memoirs, Grand Duke Kirill described the disorder in the cities, the food shortages in the capital, the increase in crime and violence, the mutinies in military units, and the passivity of the
government. "One could not help feeling that the whole edifice of the exhausted Empire had begun to totter badly and that the collapse was imminent. If energetic measures had been taken to check the growing storm
at that time all might yet have been saved…In the end, during the latter part of February, the mob got out of hand and a mass murder of the police began. In the barracks reserve contingents of soldiers either arrested or
massacred their officers…Those who were in command of the troops in the capital had lost their heads completely. Next the report of the mutiny of the Baltic Fleet at Helsingfors was received…One or two regiments from the
front would have sufficed to re-establish order within a few hours…No one knew at the time what had become of the Emperor, or where he was. The absence of stability, of someone at the helm, of at least some semblance of
direction was felt by all...It was a time of extravagant rumours and there was a complete lack of reliable news. During the last days of February the anarchy in the metropolis had become such that the Government issued an
appeal to all troops and their commanders to show their allegiance to the Government by marching to the Douma and declaring their loyalty. This measure had been decreed to re-establish some kind of order amid this intolerable
chaos. The Government hoped that if the troops could be got to carry out its emergency measures in the capital, normal conditions might yet be established and the rule of gangsterdom checked for good and all. Meanwhile,
there was no news from Mogilev, only wild rumours. No one knew the actual whereabouts of the Emperor beyond that he was trying to come to Tsarskoe backed by loyal troops which would help the Imperial train to break through
the cordons of disloyal revolutionary contingents. I was put in a very awkward position by the decree of the Government. I was the Commander of the Naval Guards, which constituted one of the military contingents of the
capital. The order of the Government, which was the last vestige, even though a sorry one, of authority in St. Petersburg, applied to my men as it did to all other troops, and, further, it applied to me as their commander. I
had to decide, therefore, whether I should obey that order and take my men to the Douma, or else whether to leave my men leaderless in this dangerous situation by resigning, and thus to let them drift on to the rocks of
revolution with the rest. Hitherto I had succeeded in preserving loyalty and good discipline among them. They were the only loyal and reliable troops left in the capital…My main concern was to do my utmost to
re-establish order in the capital by every means available, even with the sacrifice of my personal pride, so that the Emperor might safely return…[I]f the Emperor only returned backed by loyal troops and order could be
re-established then all might yet be saved…The trouble and disorder, because it had not been checked in time, had spread meanwhile to Moscow and other towns. Russia was collapsing and sinking before our eyes." On 3
March 1917, however, Grand Duke Kirill learned of the Emperor's abdication and concluded that all had been lost. "When the troops at the front heard of the disaster [the abdication], they at first refused to
believe it…They suspected treason. Many hardened fighters wept. They bore no ill will to the Emperor. They knew that he had been betrayed and Female Succession Finally, "Mr. X" claims that "no female member of the house of Romanoff may take the throne." This is also patently incorrect.
The Russian dynasty had promulgated succession laws which were very Germanic in their insistence upon equal marriages but "un-Germanic" in their modification of Salic law. The laws state that the succession will
pass solely to male dynasts until the death of the last male dynast, in which event it will pass to the female dynast most closely related to the last emperor. The last male dynasts were Prince Vassily of Russia (who died in
1989) and the Grand Duke Wladimir of Russia (who died in 1992). Upon the latter's death, the only remaining individuals born as members of the Romanoff-Holstein-Gottorp dynasty were three women: Grand Duchess Maria of
Russia (born 1953), Princess Vera of Russia (born 1906), and Princess Katherine of Russia (born 1915). Whether one considers the last emperor to have been Nicholas II or (as do the monarchists) the Grand Duke Wladimir, the
dynast most closely related to him is the Grand Duchess Maria, who is the Grand Duke Wladimir's only child and is descended from Nicholas II's senior uncle. Princesses Vera and Katherine are more distantly related to Nicholas
II and the Grand Duke Wladimir. Under the laws, the Grand Duchess Maria succeeded her father in 1992 as head of the house.
Article 27 specifies that both sexes have the right of succession to the throne, with preference to male dynasts by order of primogeniture but with the succession of female dynasts by substitution upon extinction of the male
dynasts. Article 6 provides that, when the throne passes to a female dynast as empress, she has the same supreme and autocratic power that an emperor would have. Grand Duke Wladimir was head of the house
for more than 53 years, from 1938 to 1992, the longest tenure in the history of the dynasty. Following the death on 23 June 1989 of his dynastic heir (and second cousin once removed) Prince Vassily of Russia, Grand Duke
Wladimir clarified in several pronouncements that he was the last living male dynast, and that under the succession laws the position of head of the dynasty would pass upon his death directly to his daughter, Grand Duchess Maria. In fact, several other individuals, such as the Leiningen and Prussian dynasts descended from the marriages of the two sisters of Grand Duke Wladimir Kirillovich, would be senior by right of substitution to
Princesses Vera and Katherine. Her heir is her son George, born in March 1981 of her equal marriage to H.R.H. Prince Francis-William of Prussia. The latter converted to Orthodoxy before his marriage and remains Orthodox. Grand Duke George's eventual succession as head of the dynasty will mark the first time that the Romanoff succession has passed through the female line since the promulgation of the present succession laws in 1797, but it will not be the first time in the history of the Romanoff dynasty. In 1762, the Romanoff dynasty technically became extinct in the male line upon the death of the Empress Elisabeth. The throne then passed to her German nephew, Emperor Peter III, whose mother was a Romanoff grand duchess but whose father was a German prince, the reigning Duke of Holstein-Gottorp. (In 1742, Peter of Holstein-Gottorp had been summoned to Russia at age 14 by his aunt, the Empress, who created him a Grand Duke of Russia and named him heir to the throne.) Although after 1762 the dynasty still was known as the House of Romanoff, it had technically become the House of Romanoff-Holstein-Gottorp. Peter III's son, Emperor Paul I, was Morganatic Marriages "Mr. X" also appears not to realize that the so-called title of "Prince
Romanoff" is without legal foundation. Under the succession laws, as amended in 1886, dynasts who were sons and grandsons of an emperor had the title of Grand Duke, and dynasts of more distant descent (that is, great-grandsons
and their descendants) had the title of Prince of Russia. The title of "Prince Romanoff" never existed before 1917. It came into being as a self-assumed title used in exile by the morganatic descendants of
Russian dynasts. As stated before, the succession laws required dynasts to contract marriages with spouses of royal birth in order to transmit dynastic membership to their children. These laws were never changed.
Article 188 states as follows: "A person of the Imperial Family who has contracted marriage with a person of a status unequal to his, that is, not belonging to a royal or sovereign house, cannot pass on to that
person or to the posterity that might issue from such a marriage the rights that belong to members of the Imperial Family." On 11 August 1911, Nicholas II added the following addendum to Article 188:
"Henceforth no grand duke or grand duchess may contract a marriage with a person of unequal birth, that is, not belonging to a royal or sovereign house." Following the death of the Grand Duke Wladimir
in 1992, Prince Nicholas Romanoff, the morganatic son of the late Prince Roman of Russia, claimed to be the new head of the imperial house. His adherents have sought to support this claim by means of a rather bizarre
interpretation of the 11 August 1911 addendum. They suggest that Nicholas II's 1911 language changed the succession laws so that the children of grand dukes who married morganatically would not
be dynasts while the children of Princes of Russia who married morganatically would
be dynasts. Obviously, Nicholas II did nothing of the kind. The suggestion defies common sense, because it would mean that junior dynasts would receive special rights which senior dynasts did not enjoy. It is no
These rules are set forth in Articles 144 to 148. Aside from the title of emperor, there were only four titles allowed to
dynasts, as set forth in Article 144: (1) Grand Duke-Tsesarevich, with the predicate of Imperial Highness; (2) Grand Duke or Grand Duchess, with the predicate of Imperial Highness; (3) Prince or
Princess of the Imperial Blood (that is, Prince or Princess of Russia), with the predicate of Highness; and (4) Prince or Princess of the Imperial Blood (Prince or Princess of Russia), with the predicate of Serene Highness. Prince Nicholas Romanoff fully accepts that the successive heads of the dynasty from 1918 to 1992 were the Grand Dukes Kirill and Wladimir. [See, for example, his published letter to a French magazine in
which he wrote that Grand Duke Kirill's position as dynastic head was "incontestable" (indisputable). Point de Vue-Images du Monde, 12 May 1992, p. 17.] Nicholas Romanoff's dispute concerns the 1992
succession. He argues that he, and not Grand Duchess Maria, is the lawful successor of Grand Duke Wladimir. The 1911 addendum quite simply meant that grand dukes, as the senior members of the dynasty, could not contract
morganatic marriages under any circumstances. Nicholas II, who disliked confrontation, dreaded the tense personal interviews in which grand ducal relatives (such as his brother Michael and his uncle Paul) pleaded for
permission to marry morganatically and had to be refused. This addendum was to make clear that the grand dukes should not even think about asking Nicholas II for permission to contract a morganatic marriage, because an absolute
prohibition of such marriages had been made as of 1911 a matter of law. In August 1911, Nicholas II was trying to prevent at all costs the marriage of his only brother Michael to the latter's morganatic mistress and to send a
strong message to several other grand dukes whose domestic situations had become problematic. In 1911, there were so many grand dukes that the male succession seemed assured. Therefore, Nicholas II was not unduly
concerned about the marriages of the junior category of dynasts, the Princes and Princesses of Russia. As to these, there was no express bar to their seeking his permission to contract morganatic marriages. But this
emphatically did not mean that the children of a Prince of Russia and a morganatic wife would be dynasts. Article 188 made clear that such children would not be dynasts. The adherents of the recent morganatic claim also
conveniently ignore Articles 36 and 126, which were never amended. Article 126 specifies that "all persons of imperial blood who are born of a marriage between a person of imperial blood and a person of corresponding
birth which marriage was authorized by the reigning emperor are recognized as members of the Imperial House." Article 36 states clearly as follows: "Children born of a marriage between a member of the
Imperial Family and a person not of corresponding birth, that is, not belonging to a royal or sovereign house, have no right of succession to the Throne." It is therefore clear that a Prince of Russia,
unlike a grand duke, could with the Emperor's permission marry a morganatic spouse, but it is equally clear that the children of any morganatic union (whether contracted by a grand duke or a Prince of Russia) would be
morganatic. The morganatic descendants of Russian dynasts were never allowed to use the name Romanoff during the monarchy. They used other names, such as Yurievsky, Paley, Brassov, Iskander, and Torby. Some
morganatic descendants have scrupulously respected this old tradition even in exile. For example, the senior living morganatic descendant of the dynasty is Colonel Paul R. Ilynsky, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, born in 1928 as
the only child of the morganatic marriage of Grand Duke Dmitry, a grandson of Emperor Alexander II, to Miss Audrey Emery. Paul Ilynsky and After 1917, almost all dynasts who escaped the Revolution contracted morganatic marriages and had children. Confusion ensued because these descendants were born in
France, Britain, America and other countries where children took the surname of their fathers. Thus, these children had the surname of Romanoff entered on their birth certificates in those countries. The confusion was
compounded when the Grand Duke Kirill, as head of the dynasty, accorded to many (but not all) of these children morganatic princely titles and morganatic surnames which included the word "Romanovsky", denoting kinship to
(rather than membership in) the dynasty. In 1935, for example, he accorded to the morganatic son of Grand Duke Andrew the name and morganatic title of Prince Romanovsky-Krassinsky. Prince Romanovsky-Krassinsky later
dropped the "-sky" and the "Krassinsky" and called himself Prince Romanoff. Many other morganatic descendants acted similarly, thus beginning the use socially of a title, that of "Prince
Romanoff", that has no basis in law. The erroneous view that morganatic sons of Princes of Russia are dynasts is a very recent one based upon a highly creative twisting of the succession laws. This
view is not only unsupported in law but also contradicts the clear pronouncements of the three
The Dynasty in 1938 In October 1938, the Grand Duke Kirill died and was succeeded as head of the dynasty by his only son, the Grand Duke Wladimir. On 11/24 October 1938, with the approval of the
Grand Duke Wladimir, the five Russian dynasts next in line of succession to him issued a document of considerable legal significance, because it shows the clear view of the six most senior members of the dynasty. The document
was signed by the three surviving grand dukes and the two most senior Princes of Russia: these were Grand Nor, as a purist, did she approve of the self-assumed title of "Prince Romanoff" used by morganatic descendants of dynasts. She apparently thought the
correct usage for them should be plain old "Mr. Romanoff". Technically, though, her daughters-in-law and grandchildren had been given morganatic princely titles (such as Romanovsky-Kutuzov) by Grand Duke
Kirill or Grand Duke Wladimir as successive heads of the dynasty.
It is useful to read the 11/24 October 1938 declaration in its entirety: "We, members of the Imperial House of Russia, having assembled after the death of the Head of our House, the Grand Duke
Kirill Wladimirovich, consider it our most sacred duty solemnly to declare that the rights of each of the members of the Imperial House of Russia are exactly determined by the Fundamental Laws of the Russian Empire and the Statute
of the Imperial Family, that they are known perfectly to all, and that we must observe them religiously, by virtue of a special oath, which is why the question of the order of succession to the throne has never caused the slightest
doubt among us and still less a disagreement of any kind. We reject any departure from the order provided by the law, because that would be an offense against the intangibility of our laws and of our family traditions. "By virtue of the laws indicated above, we recognize that the succession to the throne belongs by right, in order of primogeniture, to the senior member of the Imperial House of Russia, the Grand Duke
Wladimir Kirillovich, which he assumed by inheritance after the death of his father on 29 September/12 October 1938, with a profound awareness of the sacred duty which devolves upon him according to law as Head of the
Imperial House of Russia, bestowing upon him all the rights and duties belonging to him by virtue of the Fundamental Laws of the Russian Empire and the Statute of the Imperial Family. "The members of the
Imperial House of Russia appear as follows by primogeniture in the order of succession: Grand Duke Boris Wladimirovich, Grand Duke Andrew Wladimirovich, Grand Duke Dmitry Pavlovich, Prince Vsevelod Ioannovich, Prince Gavriel
Constantinovich, Prince George Constantinovich, Prince Roman Petrovich, Prince Andrew Alexandrovich, Prince Feodor Alexandrovich, His morganatic son (and only child) Paul (born 1928) was not
included in the succession list, because he was the child of an unequal marriage and thus was not a member of the dynasty. The Grand Duke Kirill gave him the morganatic title of Prince Romanovsky-Ilynsky.
His two morganatic sons (and only children), Nicholas (born 1922) and Dmitry (born 1926), were not included in the succession list, because they were children of an unequal marriage and thus were not members of the
dynasty. Their father apparently did not seek for them a morganatic title from the Grand It is instructive to examine the attitudes of the 14 individuals listed in the 11/24 October 1938 declaration as the
only living male dynasts: Grand Duke Wladimir Kirillovich (Head of the House). [On attaining his dynastic majority in
1933, he swore an oath of allegiance to his father, Grand Duke Kirill, as emperor.] His two morganatic sons, Michael
(born 1920) and Andrew (born 1923), were not included in the succession list because they were children of an unequal marriage and thus were not members of the dynasty. His morganatic son Michael (born 1924) was
not included in the succession list because he was the child of an unequal marriage and thus was not a member of the dynasty. His morganatic sons (and only children) Nikita (born 1923) and Alexander (born 1929)
were not included in the succession list because they were children of a morganatic marriage and thus were not members of the dynasty. His grand ducal supporters were himself and Grand Dukes Boris, Andrew, Dmitry
Pavlovich, and Alexander, the latter being the brother-in-law of Nicholas II. Two grand dukes, the brothers Peter (died 1931) and Nicholas (died 1929) Nikolayevich, were unfriendly. A third grand duke, Michael
Mikhailovich, was not consulted or involved, having exiled himself from Russia in 1891 due to his morganatic marriage and having ceased from that time to participate in the councils of the family. At the fall of the monarchy,
the Romanoff dynasty had four principal lines, stemming from each of the four sons of Emperor Nicholas I (died 1855). Grand Dukes Kirill and Wladimir (successive representatives of the first and senior of the four lines,
stemming from Nicholas I's eldest son Alexander II) were supported in the early decades of exile by the leading members of the first, second and fourth lines of the dynasty. It was only the leaders of the third line, stemming
from the third son of Nicholas I and thus in the 1920s very junior in the line of succession, who maintained a hostile attitude toward the dynastic heads: the third line of the dynasty produced a total of three male dynasts,
all of whom were hostile to the senior line: these were the Grand Dukes Peter and Nicholas mentioned above, and Peter's son Prince Roman. At the time of writing in 1997, the first line has one living dynast (Grand
Duchess Maria), and the second line has two (Princesses Vera and Katherine). The third line died out with the deaths of Prince Roman in 1978 and of his sister Princess Nadezhda in 1988. The fourth line died out with the
death of Prince Vassily in 1989. (At the time of writing, all four lines also have living morganatic descendants who are not dynasts.) Grand Duke Boris Wladimirovich (lst in line). [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head.] Grand Duke Andrew Wladimirovich (2nd in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head.] Grand Duke Dmitry Pavlovich (3rd in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head.] Prince Vsevelod Ioannovich (4th in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head.] Prince Gavriel Constantinovich (5th in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Wladimir as dynastic head.] Prince George Constantinovich (6th in line) [He emigrated to the United States. The present writer has been unable to determine whether George expressed a view on the succession of Grand Duke Kirill. At the time of the 11/24 October 1938 declaration, Prince George's brother, Prince Gavriel, was unable to involve George with the declaration recognizing the succession of Grand Duke Wladimir, because Prince George was very ill in America. He died in New York at age 32 on 8 November 1938, three weeks after the death of Grand Duke Kirill.] Prince Roman Petrovich (7th in line) [Prince Roman, who was the father of the present Prince Nicholas Romanoff, maintained the hostile attitude of his father, the late Grand Duke Peter, to the senior line.] Prince Andrew Alexandrovich (8th in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head in 1924. Prince Andrew was the eldest of the 6 sons of Grand Duke Alexander and his wife Grand Duchess Xenia, sister of Nicholas II. The other 5 sons, Princes Feodor, Nikita, Dmitry, Rostislav and Vassily, are listed below.] Prince Feodor Alexandrovich (9th in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head in 1924.] Prince Nikita Alexandrovich (10th in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head in 1924.]
Prince Dmitry Alexandrovich (11th in line) [He was in
America in 1924 and did not sign the letter of allegiance to the Grand Duke Kirill which was sent in 1924 by his father, Grand Duke Alexander, and his brothers, Princes Andrew, Feodor, Nikita and Rostislav. Prince Dmitry,
however, did separately
Prince Rostislav Alexandrovich (12th in line) [He recognized Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head in 1924.] Prince Vassily Alexandrovich (13th in line). [He was the only one of the six sons of Grand Duke Alexander and Grand Duchess Xenia who did not formally recognize Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head. When Grand Duke Alexander and his sons signed their joint recognition in 1924, the youngest son Prince Vassily was not asked to sign because he was still a minor. The other sons had all attained their dynastic majority.] When one adds up the numbers as of late 1938, one sees that of the 14 male dynasts alive at Grand Duke Kirill's death in October 1938, all but 3 had recognized Grand Duke Kirill and/or Grand Duke Wladimir as dynastic head, and only one had manifested actual hostility. Recognition of Grand Duke Kirill necessarily carried with it recognition that his officially designated heir was Grand Duke Wladimir, so there is no need to mention in any detail that some dynasts, such as Grand Dukes Boris, Andrew and Dmitry and Prince Vsevelod, recognized Grand Duke Kirill and then on his death prepared a separate recognition of Grand Duke Wladimir. Therefore, if one takes the
trouble to examine the matter closely, it is clear that in 1938 there was no doubt as to the identity of the head of the dynasty and there was no doubt that the children of unequal marriages were not members of the dynasty. For example, Prince Andrew Alexandrovich of Russia, son of
Grand Duke Alexander and Grand Duchess Xenia, was correct in stating that his recognition of the Grand Duke Kirill as dynastic head in 1924 obviated the need for a subsequent formal recognition of the latter's son, Grand Duke
Wladimir. In a letter dated 1 November 1938, Prince Andrew wrote as follows to Grand Duke Andrew, younger brother of Grand Duke Kirill: "Dear Andrew, Mama has sent me the contents of your letter and of the
declaration that you prepared for the press; I am not signing it because I did not attend the family meetings and don't know what you have decided, and, secondly, I don't see why the family must sign this declaration because
it is self-evident that after the death of Kirill as Head of the Imperial House, his son inherits by right of seniority: personally, I considered Kirill as such and now I recognize his son as such. Wladimir, by his
declaration, will himself confirm his position as Head of the House. Affectionately, Andrew." Prince Nicholas Romanoff and his late father, Prince Roman of Russia, were principal organizers of
the so-called "Romanoff Family Association", a purely private entity without any official dynastic status under the Pauline law. The former is now the president of this organization. This organization came
into being as the result of a disagreement in the early 1970s between the head of the dynasty, Grand Duke Wladimir, and several of the then surviving male dynasts. In 1970, there were, in addition to Grand Duke Wladimir, 7
living male dynasts, ranging in age from 73 to 56. Six of them had morganatic wives, and the morganatic wife of the seventh had just died. In December 1969, Grand Duke Wladimir issued a statement setting forth that his
daughter , then age 16, would eventually succeed as head of the dynasty following his own death and that of the 7 male dynasts. He explained that eventual succession through the female line as provided for in the Pauline law
was inevitable, given the ages and morganatic marriages of the 7 male dynasts and consequently the unlikelihood that any of them would so late in life contract an equal marriage and produce from it new dynasts. The statement
did not say that Grand Duchess Maria would succeed ahead of any of the seven; it simply said that she would succeed upon their deaths and that of her father. This greatly upset several of the 7 male dynasts (all of whom
except Princes Roman and Vassily had In 1997, Dr. Stanislav V. Dumin, chairman of the Historical and Genealogical Society in Moscow,
unearthed from the Moscow state archives a fascinating document that fully confirms these conclusions. This document is a letter dated 14 June 1911, sent on behalf of Nicholas II by Baron Vladimir Frederiks, Nicholas II's
Minister of the Imperial Court, to Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich, who had presided at a meeting of grand dukes convened to advise the emperor on the question of permitting dynasts to contract unequal marriages. The letter
informs Grand Duke Nicholas of the following decisions made by the emperor: 1) Grand Dukes of Russia may not contract unequal marriages; 2) Princes of Russia (technically, "Princes of the Blood Imperial"), if they
receive the emperor's specific permission and if they renounce their succession rights beforehand, may contract unequal marriages; and 3) "surnames and coats of arms of the spouses and descendants of Princes of the
Blood Imperial who have contracted marriages with persons not possessing corresponding rank will be granted in each specific case by the Lord Emperor." The latter ruling is yet further confirmation that children of an unequal
marriage, in addition to being excluded from dynastic membership, had no right even to the Romanoff surname, but had to await a grant from the emperor of a new surname and coat of arms. The letter also states that Nicholas II
was completely unwilling to countenance recognition of any middle category between that of "equal marriage" and of "unequal marriage'. State Archives of the Russian Federation, Series 601 ("The Emperor Nicholas II"), Inventory (register) 1, File 2143, pages 58-59. The letter begins as follows: "Your
Imperial Highness – After I presented [to the Lord Emperor] my loyal report on the project undertaken at the meeting of the Grand Dukes, at which Your Imperial Highness presided, regarding amendments and additions to the Statute of
the Imperial Family, together with a determination by the Minister of Justice, the Lord Emperor has seen fit to set the following conditions under which His Imperial Majesty might permit marriages of Princes and Princesses of the
Blood Imperial to persons not possessing corresponding rank…" The exact language of this portion of the letter is: "In relation to the categorization of marriages of Princes and Princesses of the Blood
Imperial, the Lord Emperor has seen fit to recognize only two categories of marriages: (a) equal marriages, that is, those contracted with persons belonging to a royal or ruling house, and (b) unequal marriages, that is,
those contracted with persons not belonging to a royal or ruling house, and He will not recognize any other categories." Before closing, it is useful to discuss the status of the Bagration dynasty. Prince Nicholas Romanoff, while acknowledging that he is the child of an unequal marriage, has
expressed the view that Grand Duchess Maria is also the child of an unequal marriage. In other words, he has contended that a marriage between a Russian dynast and a Bagration cannot be considered an equal marriage for
purposes of the Russian succession laws. On this point, the present writer wishes to cite at some length excerpts from a recent essay by Daniel Sargis, a writer of Georgian descent and of a somewhat anti-Russian
sentiment, which sets forth aptly the legal and historical bases supporting the conclusion that the marriage of the late Grand Duke Wladimir of Russia to Princess Leonida Bagration, a member of the former royal house of Georgia,
was an equal marriage. One should note at the outset that not all royal houses required their members to contract equal marriages in order to transmit dynastic status to descendants of the marriages. In fact, the
requirement of equal birth, or Ebenbuertigkeit, was basically a German concept which generally applied to the German ruling dynasties, including the Habsburgs (and the other houses that ruled the numerous co-states of the
Holy Roman Empire before its dissolution in 1806) and the Hohenzollerns (and the other houses that reigned in the constituent kingdoms and sovereign principalities, grand duchies and duchies of the German Empire).
From the time of the accession of the Holstein-Gottorps to the Russian throne in 1762, Russia followed this strict German custom of equal marriages. The promulgator of the Pauline law, Emperor Paul I of Russia,
was almost entirely German by blood. Paul's father, Emperor Peter III of Russia, was by birth Prince Peter of Holstein-Gottorp, the son of a German sovereign, the reigning Duke of Holstein-Gottorp. Paul I's mother,
Empress Catherine II of Russia, by birth a Princess of Anhalt-Zerbst, was also originally a German. Paul I's son, Emperor Alexander I, formally codified the equal marriage requirement into law. At the
promulgation of the Pauline law in 1797, the only Orthodox kingdoms in Europe were those ruled by the Emperor of Russia, the King of Georgia (a Bagration), and the King of Imeretia (also a Bagration). Several other Orthodox
monarchies came into being in the 19th century, in territories formerly possessed by the Ottoman Empire. Great Britain, for example, does not require equal marriages.
With the exception of Russia, many of the Orthodox monarchies of Europe did not require equal marriages, including the monarchies of Georgia (House of Bagration), Imeretia (House of Bagration), Serbia (House of Karageorgevich),
Montenegro (House of Petrovich Niegoch) and also, at least in recent generations, the dynasties of Greece and Bulgaria. As explained elsewhere, the mother of Prince Peter of Holstein-Gottorp was a Romanoff grand
duchess and sister of the Empress Elizabeth. He was called to Russia in 1742 at age 14 by his imperial aunt and made a grand duke and heir to the Russian throne. On his aunt's death in 1762, the Romanoff dynasty
technically became extinct, and Peter ascended the throne as the first Russian sovereign of the House of Romanoff-Holstein-Gottorp, although the dynasty continued to call itself the House of Romanoff.
The first notable break in this custom of northern European alliances occurred during the reign of Emperor Alexander III. In 1889, Grand Duke Peter Nikolayevich of Russia
married Princess Militza of Montenegro, a daughter of an Orthodox sovereign, Prince Nicholas I of Montenegro Grand Duke Peter and Princess Militza were the parents of Prince Roman of Russia, whose son is the present Prince Nicholas Romanoff. In 1907, Militza's divorced sister,
Princess Stana of Montenegro, married Grand Duke Peter's brother, Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich of Russia. It was the two Montenegrin sisters, enthusiasts of the occult, who first presented Rasputin to Nicholas and
Alexandra, although the sisters later broke with their Siberian protégé. In the 1920s, the most active opposition from within the dynasty to the legitimist imperial claims of Grand Duke Kirill emanated from Grand Duke
Nicholas, supported by his brother Grand Duke Peter, their two Montenegrin wives, and Prince Roman. Although Grand Duke Nicholas was fairly junior in the line of succession, some of his supporters expressed the view that he
was the "best" candidate for the throne and that therefore the actual succession laws should be ignored. The view of him as "the best candidate" derived from the prestige he enjoyed within the Russian
emigration based on his age (he was the oldest living grand duke) and his having been commander-. It is difficult in 1997 to conceive of the degree to
which the Montenegrin marriage was a completely new development for the Russian dynasty. Prior to 1889, the Romanoffs, their veins overflowing through intermarriage with the blood of ancient German dynasties, chose
their spouses from other German and northern European dynasties which had ruled for many hundreds of years. The Montenegrin marriage, on the other hand, allied the Romanoffs with a newly minted dynasty in a tiny new country
in a remote and impoverished section of southeastern Europe that had recently freed itself from Muslim domination. At the time of the 1889 marriage, the Montenegrin dynasty had been reigning for less than 40
years. Montenegro's first sovereign had declared himself "Prince Danilo I" in 1851 and been recognized as such by Russia in 1852. He had been born as Danilo Petrovich Niegoch, a member of a family that had
been prominent in the area as clerics for several generations. He was succeeded as sovereign prince by his nephew, who became Prince Nicholas I of Montenegro. The Petrovich Niegoch family in 1889 had no
blood kinship to the Romanoffs or any other European dynasty descended from one of the ancient German ruling houses. Prince Nicholas I of Montenegro had married a Miss Milena Vucotich. Prince Nicholas I himself was the
son of Mirko Petrovich Niegoch, the brother of Danilo I, by Mirko's wife, born Miss Anastasia Martinovich. Prince Nicholas I and his
family did not begin using the qualification of "Royal Highness" until 1900. In 1910, Nicholas I changed his title from reigning Prince of Montenegro to King of Montenegro. The dynasty was deposed in
1918. Its monarchy therefore lasted for 67 years, including 8 years as a kingdom. Given the mentality of the period, Montenegro's
rustic location far from Europe's centers of traditional culture, and the newness of its dynasty, both in terms of sovereignty and lineage, questions were raised prior to the couple's official engagement as to whether the marriage
could be considered an equal one under Russian dynastic law. The ultimate decision was that it would be an equal marriage, and permission was given to Grand Duke Peter to proceed. The basis of the decision was that
Montenegro's dynasty was a ruling house and thus qualified under the Pauline law. The fact that the dynasty had ruled for less than half a century was considered irrelevant. The fact that the spouse and mother of the
sovereign prince were commoners was similarly irrelevant, because the Montenegrin ruling house did not require its members to contract equal marriages. Finally, the fact that as of 1889 the Montenegrin dynasts were not yet
related by blood to members of other European dynasties was considered equally irrelevant. The precedents set by the 1889 marriage of Grand Duke Peter and Princess Militza of Montenegro, and by two subsequent
marriages between Russian dynasts and Balkan princesses, should be kept in mind when considering the status of the Bagrations. The Bagrations were, unlike the Montenegrins, of unusually ancient royal lineage and had been
sovereign not for a few decades but for many centuries. But they were similar to the Montenegrins in that both were or had been Orthodox sovereigns in remote parts of Europe and in that, until the 20th century, the Bagrations
were unrelated by blood or marriage to other dynasties descended from the ancient ruling houses of Germany. With this introduction, it is helpful to conclude by considering portions of the analysis of the Bagrations
set forth in the essay by Mr. Sargis mentioned above. The footnotes accompanying these excerpts from the Sargis essay have been added by the present writer, not by Mr. Sargis: "What prompts my essay is a recent statement by Nicholas Romanoff. In an interview, he stated that, whilst he freely admits that his own mother was a commoner, he
wishes also to assert his opinion that Grand Duchess Maria's mother was a commoner too. In other words, Mr. In 1907, Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich of Russia contracted an equal
marriage with Princess Stana of Montenegro, another daughter of Prince Nicholas I of Montenegro. In 1911, Prince Ioann Constantinovich of Russia contracted an equal marriage with Princess Helen of Serbia, a granddaughter of
Nicholas I of Montenegro. (Princess Helen was the daughter of King Peter I of Serbia by his wife Princess Zorka of Montenegro. In 1903, when Helen was a teenager, her father's family regained the Serbian throne, having
first become sovereigns early in the 19th century and then having been deposed in 1859.) Like the Montenegrin dynasty in 1889, the Serbian dynasty in 1911 at the time of the marriage was as yet unrelated by blood or
marriage to other reigning dynasties descended from the ancient ruling houses of Germany. A good treatment of the lineage of the Royal House of Georgia is to be found in Burke's Royal Families of the World
(London, Burke's Peerage Ltd., 1980), which contains detailed pedigrees and an interesting article on the dynasty's history by Mark Bence-Jones.
"As somebody whose grandparents were born in Tblisi, the capital of Georgia, I must object… "Georgia is a mountainous country of 27,000 square miles and 5 million people, located on the Black Sea at the eastern edge of
Europe… Its people have a deep sense of the uniqueness and antiquity of their nation, and they are fiercely devoted to their language and culture. Georgia was christianised in the fourth century A.D., more than 550
years before Russia became Christian. "Georgia's royal house, the Bagrations, and France's royal house, the Bourbons, are the oldest Christian dynasties in Europe, much older than the royal families that trace their reigns
to around the year 1000 A.D., such as the ancient German royal dynasties of Bavaria, Saxony and Hanover. And it goes without saying that the Bagrations, who became nobles in the third century A.D. and monarchs in the ninth
century A.D., are much older than the Romanoffs, who only began their reign in Russia in the year 1613 A.D. "The Bagrations have had royal status for over one thousand years, having occupied the throne of the
independent Kingdom of Georgia until that kingdom was illegally devoured by Russia in the nineteenth century. As such, the Bagrations today are no different legally from other dynasties that remain royal families, despite
having lost their thrones in the nineteenth century. Most prominent among such dethroned royal families is the Bourbon dynasty of France (dethroned in 1830), but the list also includes the Bourbon-Sicilies dynasty of the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (dethroned in 1860), the Bourbon-Orleans dynasty of France (dethroned in 1848), and the Bonaparte dynasty (which ruled France twice for short periods, from 1804-1815 and from 1852-1871).
"For Nicholas Romanoff to claim that the Bagrations are not a royal house because their dynasty was dethroned must raise the eyebrows [of the heads of the many dynasties dethroned in Other examples of reigning houses deposed in the 19th century are the dynasties of Hanover, Hesse-Cassell and Nassau (dethroned in 1866), the Habsburg dynasty of Tuscany (dethroned in 1860), and
the Bourbon dynasty of Parma (dethroned in 1859). The rather weak argument by some that the Rurikid and Guedyminian families of old Russia should be considered just as much "formerly sovereign dynasties" as the Bagrations is
unpersuasive. Unlike families that lost sovereignty in the 19th
century, the Rurikids and Guedyminians (to the debatable extent they were ever "sovereign" in the sense that this term has been used in recent centuries) never exercised sovereignty in the modern era. The transformation of the Rurikids into the status of vassals of Muscovy was completed nearly 500 years ago. The ancestor of such Guedyminian houses as the Kurakins and Golitsyns had accepted boyar status in Moscow by 1417. The present-day members of such ancient and distinguished noble houses are comparable not to princes of the blood but to those Scottish and Irish chiefs who descend from early Celtic ruling princes of 700 or 800 years ago. These Russian families were never considered ebenbuertig under the post-1797 Russian succession law. Indeed, Emperor Alexander II's second marriage to a Rurikid, Catherine Dolgorouky, was unequal; he withheld the title of empress from this wife and gave her a morganatic title as Princess Yurievskaya. Further, unlike the Bagrations, whose royal status Russia solemnly guaranteed by treaty in 1783, the Rurikids and Guedyminians were among the by then ordinary boyar families which chose Michael Romanoff as their sovereign in 1613, and neither then nor later were they ever given any special status by virtue of their distant descent from Rurik and Guedymin.
"Georgia lost its independence in the nineteenth century, regained it briefly from 1918 to 1921 (until Soviet Russian troops invaded), and became an
independent country again in 1991, after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Like other independent European countries, it has its own monarchist movement. This monarchist movement was in the news in 1995, when the
head of the Georgian Royal Family and pretender to the Georgian throne, Prince George Bagration, made his first visit to Georgia. "Prince George Bagration, born in Rome in 1944, now lives in Marbella, Spain. As a
professional racecar driver in his youth, he won more than twelve Spanish championships. He is a friend of King Juan Carlos and is related by marriage to the Spanish Royal Family: his stepmother was the late Princess
Maria de las Mercedes Bagration (born H.R.H. Infanta Maria de las Mercedes of Spain). Prince George carried with him to Georgia a personal letter from King Juan Carlos to Georgian President Eduard Shevarnadze. "The
purpose of the Prince's visit was to escort the remains of his grandfather, also named Prince George Bagration, the late head of the Georgian Royal Family, who died in 1957 as an exile in Spain. A solemn funeral mass was sung
in Sioni Cathedral in Tblisi by the Patriarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church. President Shevarnadze attended the mass. Also present were the younger Prince George's aunt, the Grand Duchess Wladimir of Russia (born
Princess Leonida Bagration of Moukhrani) and his first cousin, the Grand Duchess Maria of Russia. The remains were then interred in the royal crypt of the Kings of Georgia at Svetitskhovoi. "The Bagrations began their
reign in Georgia in 886 A.D. They intermarried frequently with the royal dynasties of various Byzantine emperors. The Bagratid dynasty's reign ended in the nineteenth century. The Bagrations thus fulfilled the
only real requirement under international law to qualify as a royal dynasty: they occupied a sovereign throne… [And] Georgia, like England but unlike Russia and Germany, never required its royal princes to marry royal
princesses in order to transmit royal status to their children. "The Bagrations of Moukhrani, the branch of the dynasty from which Prince George Bagration and the Grand Duchess Maria descend, is in fact doubly
royal. First, they were a younger branch of the Georgian royal house. (They did not become the senior line until the twentieth century, when elder lines died out.) Second, they were also sovereigns of the Georgian
principality of Moukhrani in their own right until 1801. In the first decades of
the 1700s, there were three Orthodox kingdoms ruled by different branches of the Bagration dynasty: the kingdom of Kartli, the kingdom of Kakhety, and the kingdom of Imeretia. Kartli: The senior line of the
entire Bagration dynasty were the kings of Kartli, and the Bagrations of Moukhrani were junior dynasts of the Kartli line. The Bagrations of Moukhrani were thus genealogically senior to the Kakhety and Imeretia branches
within the Bagration dynasty. The Kartli branch was dethroned by Muslim invaders, and King Wakhtang VI of Kartli, with his sons, went into exile in Russia in 1724, without, "In view of the tangled history of relations between Georgia and Russia, it is intriguing that…Nicholas Romanoff would try in the 1990s to dispute the royal status of the Bagrations. "In the late
eighteenth century, King Irakly II of Georgia, an Orthodox Christian, was threatened by the Islamic rulers of Persia and Turkey. He turned to Russia, his Christian neighbour, for protection. In 1783, Empress Catherine
the Great of Russia and King Irakly II signed the Treaty of Georgievsk, in which Russia guaranteed the territorial integrity of the Georgian kingdom in return for control of Georgia's foreign policy. The treaty also
guaranteed the royal status of the Bagratid dynasty. To cite the actual words of the treaty: ['Her Imperial Majesty (Catherine II), graciously accepting supreme power and protection over the
Kingdoms of Kartli and Kakheti, promises in Her name and in the name of Her Heirs… to preserve forever on the Throne of the Kingdoms of Kartli and Kakhety [Georgia] the Serene Tsar Irakly, son of Theimouraz, and his Heirs and
Descendants.' The treaty also records that 'From ancient times, the Russian Empire, having the same religion as the Georgian people, has been a bulwark of Although Mr. Sargis mentions that King David VIII granted his brother Bagrat the province of Moukhrani and
installed him as its first sovereign prince, he has not explained the extent to which this branch, despite its sovereign status in Moukhrani, maintained its position as "first Princes of the Blood" within the Kingdom of
Georgia. Three consecutive sovereign Princes of Moukhrani acted as Regents of Georgia. And on the death without heirs of King Rostom of Georgia, Wakhtang Bagration, sovereign Prince of Moukhrani, ascended the Georgian
throne as King Wakhtang V in 1659 and ceded the throne of Moukhrani to his younger brother, Prince Constantine Bagration, ancestor of all the subsequent Princes of Moukhrani and also of the Grand Duchess Leonida. He reigned in Moukhrani as Ivan I (or John I) until his death in 1800, and he was a brother-in-law of the last Georgian king, George XII. "In 1795, the Persian shah, Aga Muhammad, demanded that King Irakly acknowledge Persian suzerainty over
Georgia. King Irakly, declining to break his treaty with Russia, refused. The Persians then invaded. No Russian assistance was provided, but the old King, then more than 80 years old, managed to repulse the
invaders three times before he was outnumbered and defeated. Finally, the Russians intervened and pushed out the Persians. "In 1798, Irakly II died and was succeeded by his son, King George XII.
Fearing the Persian threat, King George suggested to Empress Catherine's son and successor, Tsar Paul I, that he incorporate Georgia into the Russian Empire while allowing the Bagrations to continue to bear the title of King.
(A similar arrangement existed in Germany in the late nineteenth century, when the German emperor ruled over an empire in which he was the suzerain of the Kings of Bavaria, Wurttemberg, and Saxony.) At first, Emperor Paul
agreed, but in the end he simply seized the country, putting an end to the long reign of the Bagrations. "The Encyclopedia Britannica
(1992 edition) summarizes the facts succinctly in its article on the Treaty of Georgievsk of July 24, 1783: '[A]greement concluded by Catherine II the Great…and Erekle [Irakly] II…by which Russia guaranteed Georgia's
territorial integrity and the continuation of its reigning Bagratid dynasty in return for prerogatives in the conduct of Georgian foreign affairs…Under the terms of the treaty, Catherine and her heirs were to defend Georgia against
enemies, and Erekle [Irakly] renounced dependence upon Iran or any other power. Though the treaty was to have permanent validity, Emperor Paul I's manifesto of Dec. 18, 1800, unilaterally declared the annexation of
[Georgia] to Russia, and on Sept. 12, 1801, his successor, Alexander I, formally reaffirmed this determination.' "After annexing Georgia illegally, the Russian Empire embarked on a program of forced
Russification that lasted until the late nineteenth century, including sustained attempts to suppress teaching of the Georgian language and culture. The Bagrations tried without success to resist, especially Prince Alexander
(son of King Irakly II) who eventually fled to Persia, but also Queen Miriam (widow of King George XII of Georgia) and Dowager Queen Daria (widow of King Irakly II of Georgia). Other princes of the blood royal were deported
to Russia. "Part of the Russification campaign included a specific attempt to undermine the royal status of and to weaken nationalist loyalty to the Bagration dynasty. This was because a number of the many
nationalist insurrections which took place in Georgia throughout the nineteenth century were monarchist in inspiration and purpose. The most famous was the 1830 plot to restore the Bagrations. Moscow eventually sent
Grand Duke Michael of Russia, son of Tsar Nicholas I, as viceroy of the Caucasus and also began to list the Bagrations in the nobility books "It was not until the twentieth century,
during the reign of Emperor Nicholas II, that Russia began to make amends. This occurred in 1911, when a member of the Russian Imperial Family, Princess Tatiana of Russia (daughter of Grand Duke Constantine of Russia),
married a member of the Georgian dynasty, Prince Constantine Bagration of Moukhrani, later an aide-de-camp to Emperor Nicholas II. Prior to the wedding, Emperor Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra personally told Grand Duke
Constantine, the father of the bride, that 'they would never look upon her marriage to a Bagration as morganatic, because this House, like the House of Orleans [of France], is descended from a once ruling dynasty.'
(November 30, 1910 entry, From the Diaries of Grand Duke Constantine Constantinovich, published in Moscow, February 1994). The bride was also asked to renounce her rights to the Russian throne, as was customary
when a female of the Russian Imperial Family married a foreign prince. (Another example was the renunciation of Grand Duchess Anastasia Mikhailovna of Russia upon her marriage to the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin).
The late Prince Theimouraz Bagration of Moukhrani, only son of the 1911 Georgian-Russian marriage [of Prince Constantine Bagration and Princess Tatiana of Russia], frequently described Emperor Nicholas II's suggestion that the
groom sign the marriage register as "Prince of Georgia". "Despite his private comment to Grand Duke Constantine, the Tsar never issued a decree formally clarifying that he considered the 1911 union to be
an equal marriage. The First World The Emperor's Ukase to the Senate announcing his assent to the marriage contained no description of the union either as equal or unequal. It simply stated that the children of the
marriage would have the same station as their father, namely, that of a Prince or Princess Bagration, but as worded did not characterize that station as royal or non-royal. Because the Emperor did not translate his private
comment to Grand Duke Constantine into an official decree, some consider that the marriage, at least as of 1911, was "The nagging
question of Russia's violation of its 1783 treaty obligations arose again in exile. In 1946, Prince Irakly Bagration of Moukhrani, father of the present head of the Georgian Royal House, married as his second wife a member of
the Spanish Royal Family, Infanta Maria de las Mercedes of Spain, who was mentioned above. (Prince Irakly's first wife had died in childbirth in 1944, giving birth to the present Prince George.) At the time of the 1946
marriage, the bride's father, Infante Ferdinand of Spain, wrote to the Grand Duke Wladimir, head of the Russian Imperial Family, to ask what the Russian attitude was on the royal status of the Bagrations. "Grand
Duke Wladimir examined the question, assisted by his uncle, Grand Duke Andrew of Russia, who then was next in the line of succession. He was also advised by a prominent Georgian historian. The Grand Duke recognised
immediately that the Bagrations had sat on a royal throne and therefore were ipso facto
of royal status. His conclusion was reinforced by his study of the 1783 treaty, especially the provision guaranteeing forever the royal status of the Bagration dynasty. One suspects too that he must have realised that Russia's treatment of the Bagrations was based purely on "power politics", not on legal reasoning; indeed, as stated before, the 1783 treaty obligations made Russia's actions illegal.
Grand Duke Andrew had been trained as a jurist and was well versed in the Pauline law. This was Professor M. Muskelishvili. The "power politics" aspect of this issue best
explains the treatment of the Bagrations prior to 1911 and 1946. Apologists have tried to advance various arguments justifying this treatment of the Bagrations, but these arguments are unpersuasive. One argument runs as
follows: although the Romanoffs and Bagrations after 1917 were both formerly sovereign houses and thus on equal footing, a distinction can be made for the period prior to 1917, when the Romanoffs were still sovereign and the
Bagrations were only formerly sovereign and thus arguably not of equal birth for marriage purposes. The flaw in this argument is that in Russia and in Europe as a whole prior to 1917, a dynasty's being dethroned did not
deprive it of Ebenbuertigkeit. Maximilien de Beauharnais, Duke of Leuchtenberg, was, at the time of his marriage to a Russian grand duchess in 1839, a member of a formerly sovereign dynasty: the French Imperial House of
Bonaparte, which had been dethroned in 1815. Nonetheless, Russia considered it an equal marriage, and their children were in the Russian line of succession. In addition, the diaries of Nicholas II prior to his accession
in 1894 indicate that his imperial parents strongly encouraged him to wed Princess Helene of France in preference to Princess Alix of Hesse and the Rhine. Princess Helene, a daughter of the French pretender, the Comte de
Paris, was a member of the Orleans dynasty, which had been dethroned in France in 1848. There are numerous examples in other countries of equal marriages contracted by dynasts of reigning monarchies with members of dethroned
dynasties, such as the 1901 marriage of Infanta Maria of Spain (Princess of the Asturias) to Prince Charles of the Two Sicilies (a dynasty dethroned in 1860) or the 1911 marriage of Archduke (later Emperor) Charles of Austria to
Prince Zita of Bourbon-Parma (a dynasty dethroned in 1859). Yet another argument was that, prior to the fall of the Russian monarchy in 1917 and the regained independence of Georgia in 1918, the Bagrations (albeit
involuntarily) had become Russian subjects and thus arguably could not be of equal birth for purposes of marriage to Russian dynasts. The flaw in this argument is that the Pauline law contained no specific prohibition of
marriages to Russian subjects. The relevant portion of the Pauline law only required marriages with spouses from royal or sovereign houses (which would of course have the effect of excluding most Russian subjects), and the
Bagrations were and are a royal house. One can also cite again the equal marriage of the French dynast, Maximilien de Beauharnais, Duke of Leuchtenberg, to a Russian grand duchess: their Leuchtenberg descendants,
although patrilineally from a foreign dynasty, were Russian subjects who remained ebenbuertig and actually received special status within the Russian imperial house. Another example was "Grand Duke Wladimir issued the following decree: 'Act of the Head of the Imperial House, 5th December 1946: His Royal Highness the Infante don Ferdinand…,
when his daughter the Infanta Maria Mercedes was about to contract a marriage with Prince Irakly Bagration of Moukhrani, asked me whether…I could consider the proposed marriage to be an equal one. My reply, which was conveyed
to the Infante through the intermediary of the Spanish minister in Berne, the Conde de Bailen, was in the affirmative, in as much as, after prolonged and diligent study of the history of Georgia and the Georgian question, and after
consulting my uncle, His Imperial Highness Grand Duke Andrew, brother of my late Father,…I consider it right and proper to recognise the royal status of the senior branch of the Bagration family, as well as the right of the members
to bear the title of Prince of Georgia and the style of Royal Highness. The present head of the family is Prince George. If Almighty God, in His Mercy, allows the rebirth of our great empire, I consider it right that
the Georgian language should be restored for use in the internal administration of Georgia and in her educational establishments. The Russian language should be obligatory for general relations within the Empire.
(Signed) Wladimir.' "By his 1946 declaration, Grand Duke Wladimir carried to completion what had been begun in 1911 by his father's first cousin, Nicholas II: namely, the rectification of
Russia's violation of those provisions of the 1783 treaty guaranteeing the royal status of the Bagrations. It is always within the authority of the head of a formerly reigning dynasty to be the final arbiter on the question
of whether a marriage is equal for purposes of the dynasty's laws. Archduke Otto, head of the deposed Austrian-Hungarian imperial house of Habsburg, and Prince Louis-Ferdinand, late head of the deposed German imperial house
of Hohenzollern, have exercised the same authority with respect to the marriages of members of their dynasties. "It was in connection with his examination of the 'Georgian question' in 1946 that Grand Duke
Wladimir came to know Princess Leonida Bagration, sister of Prince Irakly and sister-in-law of the Spanish Infanta. (The Grand Duke had close relations of his own within the Spanish Royal Family: Infanta Beatrice of
Spain was his mother's sister and Queen Victoria Eugenie of Spain was his mother's first cousin). Grand Duke Wladimir contracted an equal marriage when he wed Princess Leonida in 1948. Their only child, Grand Duchess
Maria, was born in 1953. Their marriage lasted 44 years, until the Grand Duke's death in 1992." On Easter Sunday 1992, several days after Grand Duke Wladimir
died, his successor, Grand Duchess Maria, issued a succession decree in the same manner as her father and grandfather had done. It read in part as follows: "Christ is risen. I send my most cordial greetings
to all my compatriots on the radiant Feast of Christ's Resurrection. This year, a deep grief has befallen myself, my family and all Russians faithful to their great historical traditions: on Holy Tuesday…the Lord chose
to recall to Himself my beloved father, the Grand Duke Wladimir Kirillovich, Head of the Russian Imperial House…I ever remember that my grandfather, the Grand Duke Kirill Wladimirovich, in the wake of the defeat of the White Armies
in the civil war, took it as his duty -as the senior member of the House of Romanoff- to secure the future of the dynasty so that, at any moment, in the short or the long term, there should always be an Heir, keeping
alive his Russian spirit, fully aware of his rights and obligations and prepared to fulfill his duty…It is precisely in this spirit that my grandfather and my grandmother…raised my father, and, after their demise, my father and my
mother…educated me. The great historical accomplishment of my father…, now departed in the Lord, has been to assure, during his 53 years as Head of the Russian Imperial
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