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ESSAY- Anastasia Manahan: The art of the imposter


Published March 19, 2009 in issue 0811 of the Hook
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The real Anastasia sits at the knee of her mother Alexandra Romanov, in this hand-colored photograph.
FILE PHOTO
The real Anna Manahan and newlywed husband, Jack, hoist an invitation to Richard Nixon's first inaugural and an engraving of Czar Nicholas II, supposedly the blushing bride's late father.
FILE PHOTO BY REY BARRY
The royal imposter is a recurring theme in history and literature, stretching back to ancient times.

It is art, Bram Stoker wrote in his 1910 book on the subject, "that has been practiced in many forms-- impersonators, pretenders, swindlers, and humbugs of all kinds; those who have masqueraded in order to acquire wealth, position, or fame, and those who have done so merely for the love of art." 

Franziska Schanzkowska dosen't appear to have been an outright swindler or a humbug. Where she fell on the impersonator-pretender spectrum is a mystery. Either as an act of desperation or psychotic break, she wove a fiction around herself so tightly that it not only became her reality, it became reality for countless others.

Don't recognize the name? Not surprising. But you know Franziska Schanzkowska... you just know her as Anna Anderson, or in her later incarnation as Charlottesville resident Anastasia Manahan. You know her as the woman who, for over fifty years, insisted she was the Grand Dutchess Anastasia, the sole survivor of the martyred Romanov family.

Fished out of a Berlin canal in 1920 in a failed suicide attempt, the uncommunicative Fraülein Unbekannt (Miss Unknown) was in and out of German mental and general hospitals for several years, slowly revealing her "true" identity as the the daughter of the Czar Nicolas II and Empress Alexandra. 

She insisted that she had survived the carnage that had killed the rest of her family at the coda of their captivity under the Bolsheviks in the Siberian town of Ekaterinburg on July 18, 1918-- wounded, scarred by bullets and bayonets, but shielded from death by the body of her sister Tatiana-- and spirited away by a guard named Alexander Tchaikovksy.

She said he took her to Budapest, married her, and gave her a son before dying in a street brawl. Then, she had come to Germany to try to reunite with her extended family, living in exile.

From the start, the tale told by "Anna Anderson" was full of contradictions. She bore a resemblance to Anastasia, but experts noted dissimilarities as well. Where Anastasia had been playful and clever, she was querulous and eccentric. She spoke no Russian or English, as Anastasia would have, but did speak German... a language Anastasia was never taught.

She seemed to know a great deal about the Romanovs and their private lives, but was often mistaken on important details. Romanov relatives, who hadn't seen much of Anastasia in the years leading up to the Russian Revolution, were split on her veracity. German courts puzzled over her case for a record-setting 32 years before deciding she had not adequately proven her identity. 

For many people over the decades, those details never mattered. They simply made the story more deliciously mysterious. Neither have the several DNA studies beginning in 1994 that have shown, to a high degree of probability, that Anastasia Manahan was not genetically related to the Romanovs and that she was genetically related to the Schanzkowski family. How, they argue, can you reduce a living, breathing human being to a few cells in a petri dish?

Those last true-believers are not even likely to be swayed by the latest evidence released earlier this month: DNA confirmation that two bodies found outside Ekaterinburg in 2007 were the "missing" Romanovs, Anastasia's brother Alexei and her older sister, Marie.

It's a good example of how, even in the age of DNA, people have trouble with the idea of an incontrovertible proof.

Sometimes it just gets in the way of a good story. We don't necessarily need to believe in science. We do need to believe that goodness can triumph over tragedy. Without the survival at least one of the Czar's children, the Romanov murders are a portrait of young people dying a horrific death before they even had a chance to live. It takes a lot of Disney magic to turn that into something heartwarming. 

More often, it disrupts an emotional investment people have made in a person they have taken into their hearts. Imposters play on our fundamental belief that nobody would lie about about something as existential as identity.

"I know one thing for certain," said one of Mrs. Manahan's longtime friends and supporters. "Anastasia was not a Polish peasant."

In a sense, he was right: she wasn't. The fascinating thing about the Anastasia story is that, at some point, it transcended truth, history, DNA, or deception. 

Franziska Schanzkowska picked up the broken thread of Anastasia Romanov's life and made it her own. Anastasia lost her future to revolution; to live Anastasia's life, Franziska had to give up her past.

Anastasia saved Franziska from becoming an nameless suicide in a Berlin morgue; Franziska saved Anastasia from being overlooked by history. Now, there's no way to tell the story of one without telling the story of the other. Through the sheer determination of the survivor, two lives have been merged into one. 

It is, as Stoker might say, a work of art.

~

Heather Michon is a former Vermonter turned Charlottesvillian who is an avid essayist for OpenSalon.com, a community blogging platform launched by Salon.com last summer.

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Comments

                     
Annie4/19/2009 12:49:48 PM

Thank you so much for finally stating that this woman was an imposter and that her supporters cannot give her up emotionally. I have seen this on the internet for years. Now that the final scientific proof has been published showing us all of the bodies are now accounted for, some people still refuse to accept it and would rather believe decades old quotes from people who believed her. Most likely as soon as they see this article you will be visited by some of those 'ghosts of AA past' trying to tell you your details are wrong, Harriet Rathelf said blah, she can't be Franziska, you can't deny the experiences of real people for science, etc. I can't say if you'll get three ghosts or just the same person using three names, which is very possible. Some are very obsessed and refuse to accept the facts and get over it. Thank you for writing about this subject.

While what you say in your closing statement is true, it is very sad that a girl who was brutally murdered so young has had her identity stolen by an eccentric fake. But it's only sad if people continue to believe that. While the stories of the two girls, Franziska and Anastasia are intertwined, we can also separate them and remember Anastasia as the special person she was, while considering the pitiful sadness that must have been Franziska's life when she decided she'd rather die to continue it. Imagine Franziska's great fortune when she found she could live again as a missing princess, and leave the miserable Franziska forever metaphorically dead in the canals of Berlin. Her family had said she didn't want to be buried in a one horse town, she wanted to die a famous actress. And so she did.

Tragically, there is no happy ending for Anastasia, except that maybe she can now have her identity back from the mentally unstable wretch in the beat up station wagon.

Bonnie5/21/2009 8:58:43 AM

I think this is a wonderful essay. I am study about the mistaken identity in history, its very interesting to study the historical event.

BONNIE liu5/25/2009 3:43:30 AM

People have trouble with incontrovertible proof.

Bonnie liu5/25/2009 3:57:28 AM

I like this interpretation, its very subjective and personal, but this is exactly correct and that's what are we thiking about.

sarah6/11/2009 8:50:59 PM

Finally somebody local who has the guts to tell it as it is that Anna Anderson Manahan was a complete and utter fraud. What a complete waste of a life pretending to be somebody you are not. The fanatics will hate your article as they can't cope with the truth. That's their problem though. May the real Grand Duchess Anastasia rest in peace. The other is now in the dustbin of history to be known for all time as a hopeless mentally ill fake.

ChatNoir6/12/2009 1:24:06 PM

Yet another essay written by someone who obviously had some problems. Anna Anderson was never in Budapest, but in Bucharest. She writes that "Fräulein Unbekannt was in and out of general and mental hospitals in Germany". Somewhat misleading; she was sent to Dalldorf since the Berlin police had no idea what to do with her. Not because she was mentally ill. On her return from New York, she was placed at Ilten Sanatorium, and already the next day she was told by the doctors that she was free to go, there was nothing mentally wrong with her.

"Slowly revealing her identity"? Not so slowly, she confessed to nurse Thea Malinovsky already in the fall of 1921 that she was Grand Duchess Anastasia.

"Experts noticed dissimilarities as well"? May we know what these "dissimilarities" were?

"Anastasia was playful and clever"? Not according to her cousins, Nina Chavchavadze and Xenia Leeds, who remembered Anastasia as

"frightfully temperamental", "wild and rough", who cheated at games, kicked, scratched, pulled hair, and generally knew how to make herself obnoxious.

"She spoke no Russian or English"? According to witnesses, she spoke fluent Russian (Erna Bucholz, Gleb Botkin, Xenia Leeds, Mrs. Derfelden, Nina Chavchavadze, Prof. Rudnev, Albert Coyle) and English (Prof. Rudnev, Conrad Wahl, Gleb Botkin, Xenia Leeds, Agnes Gallagher, Faith Lavington)

"She DID speak German...a language that Anastasia was never taught." In the file of testimonies from the Hamburg Oberlandesgericht, now a part of the German State Archives, are Anastasia's own work books, showing her German lessons for everyone to see. Also, the timetables from Tobolsk, clearly showing that the Grand Duchesses had German lessons several times a week, are on display at the University of Lausanne.

"She was often mistaken on important details". May we know what these details were?

And then, there is the problem with the Franzisca identity. Anna Anderson was discovered on February 17, 1920. Franzisca disappeared "sometime in March" 1920, several weeks later. Anna Anderson was just under 5'2". Francisca was remembered by both Wingender sisters Gerda and Louise as "a little taller than us". They were both 5'3". Franzisca wore shoe size 39, according to her mother and sister. Anna Anderson wore size 36. Anna Anderson bore a child, but there is no record or memory of Franzisca ever having had a baby. Anna Anderson's body was covered with "scars and lacerations". Franzisca had no scars on her body according to medical reports and family testimony. Only a little scar under the nail on her right hand ring finger from an accident at the bottle washing plant in Bükow. No such scar was found on Anna Anderson. And so it goes. There is nothing that ties these two women together, although the opposition tried very hard, using a paid witness, a doctored photo, and a bit of clothing evidence that mysteriously disappeared after "identification".

The story is definitely interesting, but before you write an essay about it, please do your homework.

Robert Crouch9/2/2009 10:45:54 PM

An essay that is better prose than it is a critical analysis of the facts.

Anastasia taught me my first words of German. Having known many of her key supporters both in the U.S. and Germany and having read the personal correspondence of many others, I an attest that there was not even the slightest hint of a fraud being perpetrated. Everyone who ever knew her as a friend called her Anastasia and to their last dying breath affirmed her as Anastasia.

I was there when she passed and there was no deathbed confession or final satisfaction that she had fooled the worldl. She died calling for "MaMa" The name history records as the name for the Tsarina.

Next time research your subject.

Nathan Vanhorn1/19/2010 1:21:27 PM

I totally agree with chatnoir and Robert Crouch. Before you write an essay you should check ALL of the facts.There is plenty written on this subject. This essay writer is ethier ignorant of the facts or doesn't care.

OBSERVANT1/19/2010 3:18:38 PM

I am in full agreement with `chatnoir` and Mr. Crouch.. I lived in Scottsville quite a few years back and had the pleasure of meeting Anastasia.. and what a CHARMING woman she was.. RIP


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