Hypnotic Facts About Maria Rasputin, The Mad Monk’s Daughter

Hypnotic Facts About Maria Rasputin, The Mad Monk’s Daughter

Maria Rasputin: Her Father’s Daughter

Maria Rasputin grew up in the eye of the storm. While her father, Grigori Rasputin, remains one of history’s greatest mysteries, Maria had a privileged look into his notorious life—and she was right there with him in both his rise to infamy and his brutal downfall. In the end, Maria would pay dearly for her forbidden knowledge. 

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1. She Had A Humble Start 

When Maria Rasputin was born, infamy had yet to hit her family. Grigori Rasputin had married her mother, peasant girl Praskovya Dubrovina, at a young age, and they lived in the remote village of Pokrovskoye, far away from any drama. Soon, they had three children: Maria, her older brother Dmitry, and her younger sister Varvara. But things changed quickly. 

File:Rasputin's children.jpgUnknown photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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2. Her Father Went Through A Crisis

While Maria was still in her mother’s womb, her father made a history-altering decision. Prodded by some “emotional or spiritual crisis,” Grigori Rasputin had a religious re-awakening and went on a pilgrimage—though some say his reasons for this trek were as earthly as evading punishment for stealing a horse. 

Regardless, it was the beginning of Rasputin as we know him now. 

File:Rasputin PA.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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3. He Was A Changed Man

When Maria’s father came back to see his newly-born daughter, he was a frightfully changed man. After staying with monks at the St Nicholas Monastery, he appeared disheveled and strange. He also (seemingly temporarily) became a vegetarian and reportedly swore off drinking. 

Yet though he repelled some of their neighbors, Rasputin’s effect on others was much more disturbing. 

File:Rasputin pt.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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4. She Grew Up In A Cult-Like Atmosphere 

The Rasputin that Maria grew up with had a strange power over people, and many thought he was imbued with a holy energy. By the early 1900s, when Maria was a toddler, he was running his own makeshift chapel in a root cellar, holding secret meetings where, reportedly, his avid female followers would ceremonially wash him before each congregation. 

The rumors only got more unsettling as Rasputin’s influence rose. 

File:Raspoutine et ses enfants.jpgUnknown photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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5. Her Family Had A Dark Reputation 

Just as Maria began walking and talking, Rasputin began gaining a reputation in the larger cities of Russia, and traveled to places like Kazan. Dark rumors followed him. Despite Rasputin gaining powerful friends during these trips, there were persistent whispers even then that he was sleeping with his followers.

For now, though, the gossip hardly seemed to matter. Rasputin headed to the capital of Saint Petersburg—and nothing would ever be the same again. 

File:Rasputin-PD.jpgKarl Bulla, Wikimedia Commons

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6. Her Father Got Close To The Royal Family 

In late 1905, thanks to his friendships with the “Black Princesses,” cousins to the Imperial royal family, Rasputin met Tsar Nicholas II and his wife, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna in person. In a very short time, Rasputin was a close confidant of the entire royal family, particularly since the Tsarina believed he was the only one who could heal her hemophiliac son Alexei. 

With such power swirling around him, Rasputin brought Maria right into the fray.  

File:Alexandra Fjodorowna and Nicholas II of Russia in Russian dress.3.jpgOriginal uploader was Crimea at hu.wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons

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7. She Made Her Debut 

By this point, Rapsutin began not only to have a high opinion of himself, but also started to dream bigger for his own family. In 1910, he brought Maria and her sister to Saint Petersburg to live with him in the hopes that they would turn into “little ladies” and eventually do credit to his rising fame. Except this luxury required sacrifice. 

File:Matryona and Varvara Rasputin.jpgUnknown photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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8. She Changed Her Name 

Maria’s given name was actually Matryona, but her father evidently felt this was too back-woods and unsophisticated for the more European Saint Petersburg. Instead, when he brought his daughter to live with him, he changed her name to the more French and worldly-sounding Maria. 

For the Rasputins, any price seemed worth entrance into the glittering world of the Romanovs. It just didn’t work out.

File:Maria Rasputin in 1911 (cropped).jpgUnknown photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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9. They Rejected Her 

When Rasputin sought to enter his girls to study at the legendary Smolny Institute, they got back a bitter answer. The school refused Maria and her sister enrolment on no uncertain terms, and Rasputin was forced to settle for the second choice Steblin-Kamensky preparatory school. After all, Rasputin’s list of enemies was building. 

File:Maria and Varvara Rasputin.jpgUnknown photographer, Wikimedia Commons

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10. Her Father’s Influence Grew 

Many relatives of the Tsar and Tsarina were appalled at the power Rasputin had over the rulers, and were especially disturbed at the liberties he took with the young Romanov princesses OlgaTatianaMaria, and Anastasia—at one point, a governess even complained that he was romping around the nursery with the girls in their nightgowns. 

Rasputin must have sensed he was on thin ice, because Maria’s home life was much different.

File:Olga, Tatiana, Anastasia and Maria NIkolaevna Romanova (OTMA) at the Tsarskoye Selo, 1915.jpgRomanov family, Wikimedia Commons

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11. Her Home Life Was Strict 

In contrast to the playful, even inappropriate energy Rasputin brought to the royal family, he treated his daughters something like inmates. As Maria later described, “We were never allowed to go out alone, rarely were we permitted to go to a matinee,” and Rasputin would insist they kneel in prayer for hours every Sunday. 

When he did let them go out, he chose their company very carefully. 

File:Gregory Rasputin.jpgKarl Bulla, Wikimedia Commons

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12. She Met The Romanov Princesses 

Maria and her sister Varvara were of a similar age with the Romanov daughters, and they soon met the young princesses. As Maria recalled, the girls were almost unbelievably graceful, and often entered the rooms so quietly that Maria couldn’t even hear their feet on the floor. 

With these companions, Maria and Varvara were soaring far beyond their station—and Rasputin was obsessed with ensuring they didn’t fall. 

File:OlgaTatianaMariaAnastasia1916.jpgAlexander Funk, Wikimedia Commons

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13. Her Father Was Overprotective 

As Maria turned into a teenager, young men began showing an interest in the holy man’s daughter. Rasputin’s response was controlling. Maria, even in her nostalgic recollection of her father, called him the “strictest of mentors,” and after just a half hour of any conversation with a boy, he would “burst into the room and [show] the poor lad the door”. 

Perhaps it was no wonder, though. Because outside his home, Rasputin’s world was roiling.  

File:Rasputin near 1914.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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14. Russia Began To Hate Her Name 

Rasputin’s hold over the Tsar and Tsarina grew with the supposed miracles he was performing on Alexei, but so too did civil unrest. Soon, rumors about his intimate relationships with his followers grew to include accusations that he had seduced the Tsarina and even the four young Romanov girls. The reality, though, was even worse than all that. 

GettyImages - 538297787, Grigori Rasputin RUSSIA - 1916: A portrait of Grigori Rasputin ca 1916 in Russia.Laski Diffusion, Getty Images

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15. She Didn’t Understand The Truth 

Maria admitted later that, as a young girl, she didn’t always have a clear idea of what was happening in her father’s adult world. The truth would have broken her. There’s evidence that Rasputin’s religious “worship” was little more than drunken revelry, and that if the rumors about the royal family weren’t true, he was nonetheless carrying on affairs with women from every corner of society. Indeed, several women who knew him accused him of assault. 

In the face of this, Rasputin only clung harder to his control. 

File:Rasputindaughtercropped.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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16. Her Father Tried To Control The Narrative 

To the extent that Maria was aware of the controversy around her father, it was mostly from Rapsutin himself. Insisting that he wouldn’t have “people uttering the filth about you that they do about me,” Rasputin took refuge in making his daughters unimpeachable, and continued controlling the minutiae of their existence and reputations. Yet even he couldn’t stave off disaster.

Gettyimages - 164083795, Grigorij Efimovic Rasputin... UNSPECIFIED - CIRCA 2003: Grigorij Efimovic Rasputin (Pokrovskoe, 1869-Saint Petersburg, 1916), Russian monk and mystic. Paris, Musée D'Histoire Contemporaine (History Museum), Hôtel Des InvalidesDEA / G. DAGLI ORTI, Getty Images

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17. She Almost Lost A Parent 

In the summer of 1914, Maria’s father had a harrowing brush with the Grim Reaper. A woman named Khioniya Guseva, acting on the hatred of Rasputin spreading through Russia, stabbed him in the stomach while he was leaving his home, severely wounding the monk. Maria and her mother rushed to his side at the hospital, terrified he wouldn’t make it. And while Rasputin did recover, he was never the same. 

GettyImages - 691246179, GRIGORIJ RASPUTIN Rasputin (Grigorij Efimovich nových, 1871-1916) portrait rare photo with manual retouching (colored version); was made shortly before his assassination, which occurred on December 30, 1916. The Empress had him buried solemnly in Tsarskoye Selo where, after the February 1917 revolution, the corpse was dug up from the crowd and burned. Photograph, Russia, December 18, 1916.Fototeca Storica Nazionale., Getty Images

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18. Her Father Changed Again 

It took seven long weeks in the hospital for Rasputin to recover enough to go back to Saint Petersburg, but he could never be completely healed. According to Maria, Rasputin was affected both mentally and physically from the attempt on his life. She claimed that the stress on his nerves made him develop acid reflux to the point where he began avoiding sugar. 

Despite his efforts, Rasputin would get little peace. 

Gettyimages - 822507010, Grigori Rasputin... SAINT PETERSBURG, RUSSIAN EMPIRE - circa 1910: Grigori Rasputin, Russian mystic and friend of the family of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.Laski Diffusion, Getty Images

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19. Her Country Fell Apart 

The year of Rasputin’s attempted assassination was also the year Russia entered WWI, hurling the country into turmoil. It did Rasputin no favors: Over the coming months, Russia’s economy plummeted and it lost soldier after soldier to the conflict, further stirring the opposition to the Romanovs and their advisor Rasputin. 

Yet even as Maria’s life was fraying at the edges, she found solace.

File:Russian Troops NGM-v31-p372.jpgGeorge H. Mewes, Wikimedia Commons

20. She Found Love 

At the beginning of WWI, the teenaged Maria became engaged to a young Georgian officer,  Pankhadze. In fact, her father had intervened and kept Pankhadze from the fighting at the front, giving his daughter more time with her fiancé and apparently endorsing him as a romantic option. But very little of this happy time was meant to last. 

File:Maria Rasputin 1930.jpgAgence de presse Meurisse, Wikimedia Commons

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21. They Took Out Her Father 

In December 1916, the single worst event of Maria’s young life took place. Prince Felix Yusupov, one of Rasputin’s acquaintances—and, it would turn out, his most bitter enemy—lured the holy man to his house and then ended his life with the help of several other discontented Russian aristocrats. The details of that night would haunt Maria. 

File:Prince Felix Yusupov.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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22. They Tried And Failed To Poison Him 

The manner of Rasputin’s end is now the stuff of legend. Yusupov later claimed that he first poisoned Rasputin with cookies laced with cyanide, to no avail. Shocked at Rasputin’s otherworldly constitution, Yusupov had to resort to beating him with his co-conspirators, then shooting him and dumping him in a frozen lake. 

This is the story many know today. Yet Maria herself disputed this account. 

RasputinNinara from Helsinki, Finland, Wikimedia Commons

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23. She Revealed The Truth 

Yusupov’s confessions about that fateful night never sat right with Maria. According to her, her father didn’t like sweet things, and would have never eaten the offered cakes—meaning he was never poisoned in the first place. This may have seemed like a small point to some, but it meant everything to Maria: Instead of some superhuman evil being, Rasputin was just a man, and he was murdered like one. 

With her father gone, it was Maria who had to deal with the fallout. 

Gettyimages - 538298605, Grigori Rasputin Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin (1869 - 1916), Russia circa 1905.Laski Diffusion, Getty Images

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24. She Reported Him Missing  

The day after Rasputin went over to Yusupov’s, Maria woke up to a nightmare. Her father had never come home, and she knew in the pit of her stomach that something was deeply wrong. She and her sister went right to the royal family, reporting him missing to lady-in-waiting Anna Vyrubova, Tsarina Alexandra’ closest confidant. 

It didn’t take long for macabre clues to start pouring in. 

File:Anna Vyrubova.jpgKarl Bulla, Wikimedia Commons

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25. She Found Traces Of Him 

By now, all of Saint Petersburg was abuzz with the supposed murder of the evil Rasputin, but Maria simply considered him missing, and worried for her father. As the investigation started, her dread increased: Officers found traces of blood on the Bolshoy Petrovsky bridge, indicating the point where the conspirators had thrown him off, and showed Maria a boot that she identified as her father’s.  

From then on, it was just a matter of confirming the worst. 

GettyImages - 538298781, Grigori Rasputin SAINT PETERSBURG, RUSSIA - DECEMBER 19: A post-mortem photograph of Grigori Rasputin taken after discovery of his body in the frozen Malaya Nevka river near the Bolshoy Petrovsky bridge on December 19 (O.S.), 1916 in Saint Petersburg in Russia. A photograph is a part of a police dossier on Rasputin's death.Laski Diffusion, Getty Images

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26. They Found Her Father 

A couple of days after Rasputin’s brutal end, they finally found his body in the frozen river below. When the city’s surgeon performed the autopsy, he found traces of that night’s trauma on Rasputin’s body, including three gunshot wounds, a slicing wound, and other injuries, some of which the surgeon believed happened post-mortem. 

There was no evidence he’d been poisoned, but this was cold comfort to Maria—and so was her father’s funeral.

Gettyimages - 822507000, Grigori Rasputin... SAINT PETERSBURG, RUSSIAN EMPIRE - circa 1915: Grigori Rasputin, Russian mystic and friend of the family of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.Laski Diffusion, Getty Images

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27. His Funeral Insulted Her 

Maria maintained that she attended Rasputin’s funeral, and her memories are harrowing. She claimed that “Many places in the little chapel were empty, for the crowds that had knocked at my father’s door while he still lived to ask some service of him neglected to come and offer up a prayer for him once he was dead,” showing just how far her family had fallen. 

However, other accounts suggest that neither Rasputin’s children nor his wife were permitted at the service. If so, they did get one consolation. 

Gettyimages - 1691403697, Lannee 1917; Le Faux Moine Gregory Raspoutine T 'L'Annee 1917; Le faux moine Gregory Raspoutine, tué le 30 decembre 1916', 1916. The Russian 'false monk' Grigori Rasputin, killed on 30 December 1916. From Heritage Images, Getty Images

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28. The Royal Family Supported Her 

Whether or not Maria attended her father’s funeral, the Imperial family did rally around the remaining Rasputins. After the small service, which took place in lady-in-waiting Anna Vyrubova’s garden, Maria and her family met with the royal family in Vyrubova’s home, where they offered their friendship and protection.  

The trouble was, the Romanovs’ protection was about to mean nothing. 

File:AnnaVyrubovawithGrandDuchessOlga1916.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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29. Her Homeland Raged 

Grigori Rasputin’s end was just the harbinger of a greater catastrophe: Within months, the simmering unrest throughout Russia boiled over into a civil war, forcing Tsar Nicholas to abdicate in March of 1917. Even Maria wasn’t safe: That April, she was locked up in Tauride Palace for questioning. 

She eventually gained release thanks to one of her father’s old followers, Boris Soloviev, but this was no mere altruistic act.

File:Митинг на Невском проспекте (1917).jpgunknown; photo retake by George Shuklin, Wikimedia Commons

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30. She Had A New Love Interest 

By this time, Maria’s engagement to the Georgian soldier had ended, and after her father’s passing, Boris Soloviev—who was considered by many to be Rasputin’s spiritual successor—seemed like a natural option for a husband; he, likewise, considered her the smart option to be his wife. Only, there was one glaring issue. Neither of them even liked each other.

But in these last days of the Russian Empire, bizarre forces began drawing them together. 

Gettyimages - 83103855, Maria Rasputin Maria Rasputin (Matryona Grigorievna Rasputina, 1889 - 1977), daughter of Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin, the 'Mad Monk', brings an unsuccessful law suit against his murderer, Prince Felix Yusupov, 1928. She was married to Boris Soloviev between 1917 and 1926.Rischgitz, Getty Images

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31. She Claimed Her Deceased Father Wanted Her To Marry 

Maria and Boris, like good students of Grigori Rasputin, often participated in seances with a group of other like-minded people in an attempt to commune with the dead. Naturally, Maria sought to speak with her late father…but when she finally “got” him, his advice left her stunned. According to Maria, Rasputin’s ghost kept insisting she “love Boris”. Eventually, Maria gave in.

Gettyimages - 1172150530, Grigori Rasputin. Colour photograph of Grigori Rasputin. Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin (1869-1916) a Russian mystic and self-proclaimed holy-man, who had great influence in late Imperial Russia.Universal History Archive, Getty Images

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32. Her Husband Sneered At Her 

Trying to survive in her rapidly decaying world, Maria married Boris in October, 1917, making good on her ghostly father’s seance “predictions”. Boris repaid her with betrayal. In his diary, Boris would go on to note that Maria wasn’t even really that useful to him in the bedroom, since he was so much more attracted to women who weren’t her. 

The dye was cast, however, and it was only going to get darker from there.

File:Maria Rasputin 1932.jpgAgence de presse Meurisse, Wikimedia Commons

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33. She Had One Last Conversation With The Tsarina 

The next months of Maria’s life passed by in a blur, and she clung to the Imperial family and her home of Saint Petersburg as best she could. It was all just delaying the inevitable, and everyone knew the end was near. On her final visit to the Romanovs, Maria recalled the last words the Tsarina would ever speak to her: “Go my children, leave us, leave us quickly, we are being imprisoned”. 

But it was Maria’s own family who would hand over the Romanovs to their tragic fate.

File:Alexandra Fyodorovna 1900.jpgWilliam Downey, Wikimedia Commons

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34. Her Husband Stole From The Royal Family 

With Russia falling apart at the seams, Maria’s husband began scrambling for power—and he hit devastating lows. Believing him to be a trusted friend, the royal family went to Boris and asked him to take some jewels for safekeeping in the event they needed quick cash for an escape. 

He promptly proved he wasn’t worthy of that trust: In the most generous interpretation, Boris lost the funds. But according to some, he’d outright embezzled them. Though by the time that news came out, he made sure he was far, far away. 

File:Russian Imperial Family 1913.jpgBoasson and Eggler St. Petersburg Nevsky 24., Wikimedia Commons

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35. She Fled Her Country 

By 1918, not even Boris Soloviev could stand to be in Saint Petersburg anymore, and he and Maria fled first to her hometown of Pokrovskoye, where her mother currently was, and then hopped around various other out-of-the way towns, hoping to wait out the storm of civil unrest that was now fully raging through Russia as the Bolsheviks took over. Still, this wasn’t enough for Maria’s husband. 

Gettyimages - 83103864, Maria Rasputin Maria Rasputin (Matryona Grigorievna Rasputina, 1889 - 1977), daughter of Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin, the 'Mad Monk', brings an unsuccessful law suit against his murderer, Prince Felix Yusupov, 1928. She was married to Boris Soloviev between 1917 and 1926. Rischgitz, Getty Images

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36. Her Husband Betrayed Them 

In choosing to “lose” the Romanov jewels, Boris had made a bet on himself, and it was a bet he kept making no matter who it hurt. Some even accused Boris of turning in some pro-Imperial officers who had been planning to help the Romanovs escape, apparently deciding that if he wasn’t going to save the royal family, no one was. He didn't stop there.

Maria RasputinFilm Footage of Maria Rasputin, Daughter of Grigori Rasputin, John Hall

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37. She Was Involved In An Impersonation Plot

To add insult to injury, Boris soon paraded Romanov imposters around Russia, ironically asking for money to help them escape—a feat he refused to perform for the real Romanovs—so he could keep lining his own pockets. It was a hint of what was to come in the next decades, with Romanov impersonators popping up everywhere, but it was no less cowardly. 

If this upset Maria, it was nothing compared to the tragedy to come. 

File:Nicholas II and children with Cossacks of the Guard, cropped.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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38. Her Patrons Met A Brutal End

In the summer of 1918, Maria received devastating news. The Romanovs never did make it to safety, and the Bolsheviks eventually imprisoned them in Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg. Then, one bitter July night, the revolutionaries brought royal parents and children alike into a basement to face a firing squad, ending them all. 

In a further tragedy, both Maria’s mother and brother disappeared into the infamous Soviet gulags. It only made her more determined to start again. 

The RomanovsBoasson and Eggler St. Petersburg Nevsky 24., Wikimedia Commons

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39. She Started A New Life  

Barely 20 years old at the time of the Romanovs’ end and half her family’s disappearance, Maria now tried desperately to build her life back up. By 1922, she and Boris had two daughters, Tatiana and Maria, who were named after the Romanov princesses. They ended up settling in Paris and, for a time, took on a shockingly mundane existence, with Boris working in a soap factory and doing various odd-jobs around town. 

But Maria Rasputin was never meant for a normal life. 

Gettyimages - 83103850, Maria Rasputin Maria Rasputin (Matryona Grigorievna Rasputina, 1889 - 1977), daughter of Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin, the 'Mad Monk', February 1929. She was married to Boris Soloviev between 1917 and 1926. Topical Press Agency, Getty Images

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40. She Lost Her Whole Family 

In the mid 1920s, tragedy caught up with Maria again. In 1924 or 1925, her younger sister Varvara perished while still in Moscow. Then, just a year or two later, so too did her husband Boris Soloviev, slipping away in a Paris hospital of tuberculosis. As always with Maria, if it rained, it poured.

Alone except for her two girls, Maria was forced to plunge back into a life of danger. 

File:Maria Rasputin 1930 (cropped).jpgAgence de presse Meurisse, Wikimedia Commons

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41. She Began A Surprising Career 

Soon after Boris’s passing, Maria’s infamous name got her a job as a cabaret dancer, where she traveled around as “the daughter of the mad monk”. This came with a world of pain. Her dancing act was biographical, and Maria described the anguish she felt every time she had to go on stage and confront "the tragedy of my father's life and death”. She also put herself in physical danger. 

Gettyimages - 83103871, Maria Rasputin Maria Rasputin (Matryona Grigorievna Rasputina, 1889 - 1977), daughter of Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin, the 'Mad Monk', appears on the Dresden stage, circa 1935. She was married to Boris Soloviev between 1917 and 1926. Topical Press Agency, Getty Images

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42. She Became A Lion Tamer 

Maria’s itinerant performing life soon led her to a job in the circus—and not just any job. Maria took up work as an animal trainer, taming lions and performing with bears. As she wryly told an interviewer, “They ask me if I mind to be in a cage with animals, and I answer, ‘Why not? I have been in a cage with Bolsheviks’”. 

In the end, she should have been much more terrified.

Maria RasputinVaija, Wikimedia Commons

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43. She Suffered A Vicious Attack

Maria’s life as a performer lasted until 1935—and it ended with a horrific moment. While traveling with an American circus, she was mauled by a bear. Although she held it together for most of the rest of the run, she eventually quit by the time they reached Miami, Florida. 

Maria had, after all, swallowed enough trauma to last her a lifetime. But some of her old habits were still with her. 

File:Photograph of a Bear on Roller Skates - DPLA - ded66499711e3124a7ab1eaea6f522aa.jpgWorks Progress Administration. Federal Theatre Project. 8/29/1935-6/30/1939, Wikimedia Commons

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44. She Re-Married 

Maria settled in America in 1937—without her daughters, who were denied entry—and married her childhood friend Gregory Bern a few years later, taking up residence in Los Angeles. It turned into a very bad idea: When they divorced in 1946, Maria admitted to a judge that Greogry had verbally berated her, hit her, and then “just deserted me”. 

Her final years weren’t any less dramatic. 

  Gettyimages - 515133524, Portrait of Maria Rasputin Portrait of Maria Rasputin,daughter of the Mad Monk Bettmann, Getty Images

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45. She Defended Herself 

Maria became a US citizen in the 1940s, and even worked as a riveter during WWII to help support the American effort. For all that—and despite her Imperial Romanov background—when the Red Scare came, people began whispering she was a communist, prompting Maria to write to the Los Angeles Times and unequivocally deny the rumors. 

She may not have been a communist, but she was an eccentric. 

File:Women workers in ordnance shops, Midvale Steel and Ordnance Company, Nicetown, Pennsylvania. Hand chipping with pneumati - NARA - 530774.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author or not provided, Wikimedia Commons

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46. She Did What She Had To

By the late 1950s, Maria was too old for her machinist work, and instead cobbled together money from hosting Russian lessons, babysitting, and giving interviews to people still interested in her past. In these conversations—possibly to keep people interested—she would sometimes make bizarre admissions, including her confession that she was a psychic and that Richard Nixon’s wife had come to her in a dream.

Perhaps because of this, Maria could never quite let her past go.

Maria RasputinFilm Footage of Maria Rasputin, Daughter of Grigori Rasputin, John Hall

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47. She Supported An Imposter

As rumors swirled in the next decades that one or more Romanovs had survived the firing squad, Maria was asked to weigh in on whether Anna Anderson, perhaps the most famous Romanov imposter, was really the Grand Duchess Anastasia. Maria initially supported Anderson, but later recanted; it has since been proven that Anderson was not Anastasia, and that all the Romanovs did perish in July 1918.

Anastasia was not the only ghost from Maria’s old life to come back to haunt her. 

File:AnnaAnderson1922.jpgUnknown authorUnknown author, Wikimedia Commons

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48. She Had One Enemy 

Much of Maria’s life in exile was devoted to remembering her father and reinstating his image. So when Felix Yusupov, her father’s assailant, came out with a memoir in 1928 detailing Rasputin’s end, she unsuccessfully sued him for damages. Soon after, she presented her own memoir, The Real Rasputin, and would follow it up with two more—in addition to sneeringly naming her dogs “Iousso” and “Pov” after “Yusupov”.

It was in these writings that Maria put forward a bombshell accusation. 

File:Principe Feliks Jusupov.jpgnon indicato, Wikimedia Commons

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49. She Made A Controversial Allegation 

According to Maria, the motive behind Rasputin’s demise was nothing like what they teach in history class. In one of her memoirs, Maria insisted that her father’s murder was personal, not political. She claimed that Yusupov had made romantic advances toward her father, and that the prince had lashed out and killed the monk because Rasputin spurned these attempts.

Although most historians dismiss this claim, Maria stood by it.  

Gettyimages - 822506962, Grigori Rasputin... SAINT PETERSBURG, RUSSIAN EMPIRE - 1904: Grigori Rasputin (1869 - 1916), Russian mystic and friend of the family of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.Laski Diffusion, Getty Images

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50. She Survived 

Maria Rasputin lived nearly to 80 years old, passing in 1977 in the Russian-American Silver Lake community of Los Angeles. She kept going until the very end: her third and last book, Rasputin: The Man Behind the Myth, which continued her efforts to humanize her father’s legacy, was published right around her passing. Through blood and exile, Maria Rasputin was nothing if not a survivor. 

Gettyimages - 515422558, Maria Rasputin on the SS Lafayette (Original Caption) November 23, 1935 - New York: Maria Rasputin, daughter of Russia's Bettmann, Getty images

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Want to tell us to write facts on a topic? We’re always looking for your input! Please reach out to us to let us know what you’re interested in reading. Your suggestions can be as general or specific as you like, from “Life” to “Compact Cars and Trucks” to “A Subspecies of Capybara Called Hydrochoerus Isthmius.” We’ll get our writers on it because we want to create articles on the topics you’re interested in. Please submit feedback to hello@factinate.com. Thanks for your time!


Do you question the accuracy of a fact you just read? At Factinate, we’re dedicated to getting things right. Our credibility is the turbo-charged engine of our success. We want our readers to trust us. Our editors are instructed to fact check thoroughly, including finding at least three references for each fact. However, despite our best efforts, we sometimes miss the mark. When we do, we depend on our loyal, helpful readers to point out how we can do better. Please let us know if a fact we’ve published is inaccurate (or even if you just suspect it’s inaccurate) by reaching out to us at hello@factinate.com. Thanks for your help!


Warmest regards,



The Factinate team




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