At the age of 19 Rasputin returned to Pokrovskoe and
married Praskovia Fyodorovna. They had three children:
Dimitri in 1897, Maria in 1898, and Varvara in 1900.
The picture to the left, shows Rasputin with his three
children, circa 1910. Marriage did not settle
Rasputin, he continued to wander, traveling to places
of religious significance such as Mt. Athos, Greece
and Jerusalem. A self proclaimed holy man, Rasputin
held the power to heal the sick and predict the
future. His fame grew far and wide, and soon people
traveled from long distances in search of his insight
and healing powers. In return for his services, people
brought presents of food and money.
He had no long period of religious or spiritual
training and he had only a limited academic education
(he was not literate), thus his theatrical abilites
became useful. While explaining his training, Alex de
Jonge, the author of The Life and Times of Grigorii
Rasputin , says "mystics, holy men, gurus, indeed
certain kinds of creative artists, devote years to the
disciplined development of their gifts; a sense of the
spiritual alone is not enough" (27). One element of
Rasputin's talents that everyone who sought his
healing powers remarked upon was his great ability to
calm people in distress.
A Revelation
While plowing one day, he was suddenly dazzled by
an apparition. The story is that he was touched by the
Heavenly Mother. She told him of the young Aleksei,
the tsarevich and instructed him to appear at the
boy's side to stop his bleeding- a result of
hemophilia.
Rasputin's first move towards St. Petersburg was in
1902, when he visited the city of Kazan near the Volga
river. He learned his first lessons about European
culture and tradition when he spent his first time in
a European house. Once he made this initial trip, he
rapidly began to build a ever expanding group of
disciples and acquaintances among the upper classes.
Among this group, the "polite society," he was viewed
"as a man of God and a starets [religious elder]."(de
Jonge, 58)
St. Petersburg
Rasputin arrived in St. Petersburg at a very lucky
time. At this point, church leaders were in search of
people of his type. They wanted people with religious
influence, who had power over the people. Rasputin was
both an ordinary peasant - simple, forceful and direct
- while at the same time, he held the power to
captivate people with his healing powers and insight
into the future. There are several different
perspectives of Rasputin's behavior and actions. Not
everyone had a positive view of Rasputin, his "enemies
charged that he was nothing but cynical, and that he
used religion to mask his drive for sex, money, and
power" (de Jonge, 14).
The Romanovs
Tzar Nicholas, Tsarina Alexandra and their children
in a family portrait.
Rasputin arrived in St. Petersburg in 1905, and the
Great Soviet Encyclopedia reports that he was
not invited to the czar's palace until 1907. When
Rasputin finally met the Tsar and Tsarina, he was
needed as a healer for the young Aleksei who was
having a bleeding episode. Nicholas and Alexandra were
very secretive about their son's condition for fear
that, if made public, he would never become tsar.
Reluctant to invite Rasputin, they finally realized
the extent of their son's infliction and the
powerlessness of his doctors. The Tsarevich's disease,
hemophilia, was common throughout European royalty and
was passed on to him by his mother. Upon leaving from
this bleeding episode, having temporarily cured
Aleksei, Rasputin warned that the destiny of both the
Tsarevich and the Romanov dynasty were "irrevocably
linked to him" (Goetz, 948).
Rasputin's life in St. Petersburg, though based on
the Tsarevich's need, was not totally centered around
the Romanov family. He remained an accessible holy
monk and healer. His days consisted of a leisurely
breakfast with family and close friends. Between 10 am
to 1 pm, he had calling hours, open to any St.
Petersburg citizen. Later in the afternoon, he called
at the Alexander Palace at Tsarskoe Selo, the family's
favorite residence, for the family's news. He only
went to the palace when he was needed for healing or
spiritual support. While in St. Petersburg, Rasputin
did stay in touch with his family in Pokrovskoe, and
in 1910 his daughter Maria moved to the city to attend
the Seminary Academy. Soon after Maria's move,
Rasputin's other daughter Varvara arrived and the
girls attended the prominent Steblin-Damensky
Gymnasium. Praskovia, Rasputin's wife, now made yearly
voyages to the city to visit her daughters and
husband.
Leading up to Death
Beginning soon after his daughters moved to St.
Petersburg, Rasputin went through different stages of
acceptance with the Romanovs, other high standing
officials and socialites. Nicholas and Alexandra,
worried about rumors of Rasputin's mistresses and his
life in the city, began some research on his past. For
more information about him, they asked close friends
whose judgments they respected. There was also general
consensus among officials that Rasputin was negatively
influencing Alexandra, and in turn affecting the
entire country.
Rasputin is as famous for his death as he
is for his life. One evening at a meeting of Russian
officials, it was decided that Rasputin was putting
the entire nation in danger. Three men, Prince Feliks
Yusupov (husband of the Tsar's niece), Vladimir
Mitrofanovich Purishkevich (a member of the duma) and
the Grand Duke Dimitry Pavlovich (the Tsar's cousin)
took control of the situation. With an intricate plan,
the three invited Rasputin over to the Yusupov Palace
on December 30, 1916 to meet the Tsar's beautiful
niece. While waiting for her to appear, the men fed
Rasputin poisoned wine and tea cakes. They did not
affect him. Dismay came over Yusupov and he shot
Rasputin. Miraculously, Rasputin staggered out into
the courtyard where Purishkevich and Pavlovich were
preparing to leave the palace. Purishkevich shot the
staggering Rasputin again, but it was only when they
bound his body and threw it into the Neva River that
he died.
There is much controversy over Rasputin's life,
from his mistresses to his mystical healing powers.
But what is certain is that he had an irrefutable
affect on the Romanov family and the Russian Empire.
Rasputin's
last letter
I write and leave behind me this letter at St.
Petersburg. I feel that I shall leave life before
January 1st. I wish to make known to the Russian
people, to Papa, to the Russian Mother and to the
children, to the land of Russia, what they must
understand. If I am killed by common assassins, and
especially by my brothers the Russian peasants, you,
Tsar of Russia, have nothing to fear, remain on your
throne and govern, and you, Russian Tsar, will have
nothing to fear for your children, they will reign for
hundreds of years in Russia. But if I am murdered by
boyars, nobles, and if they shed my blood, their hands
will remain soiled with my blood, for twenty-five
years they will not wash their hands from my blood.
They will leave Russia. Brothers will kill brothers,
and they will kill each other and hate each other, and
for twenty-five years there will be no noblers in the
country. Tsar of the land of Russia, if you hear the
sound of the bell which will tell you that Grigory has
been killed, you must know this: if it was your
relations who have wrought my death then no one of
your family, that is to say, none of your children or
relations will remain alive for more than two years.
They will be killed by the Russian people...I shall be
killed. I am no longer among the living. Pray, pray,
be strong, think of your blessed family. Words written
by Grigory Rasputin in a letter to the Tsarina
Alexandra, 7 Dec 1916 23 days later, Rasputin was
killed, by two relatives of the Tsar Nicholas II 19
months after Rasputin's death, the Tsar and his family
lay dead.