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describes desperate conditions at Yasnaya Polyana 426–7

manages Moscow museum 436

emigration (1925) 436

Sukhovo-Kobylin, Alexander 97, 221

Suvorin, Alexey 230, 248, 330, 333, 338, 339, 391

Suvorina, Anna 230

Suvorov, Ivan (Vanyushka) 99, 208

Suvorov, Mikhail 69

Suzdal Monastery prison 276, 338

Swedish Academy 411

Switzerland 133–4

Sytin, Ivan 315, 420

Syutayev, Vasily 291, 292, 297–8, 320, 404

T

Tabor, Emily (governess) 204, 238

Taneyev, Sergey 360–62, 368, 371, 372

The Oresteia 362

Tapsell, Thomas 357

Tarsey, Hannah see Machutadze, Hannah

Tarsey, Jenny 204

Tatars 22, 69, 210–211

Tatyana Filippovna (T family nanny) 30, 44–5

Tchaikovsky, Pyotr Ilyich 167, 215, 360, 371–2

Piano Concerto N0.1 361

Quartet N0.1 op.11 372

Telyatinki 408, 411, 420

Temyasheva, Evdokiya Alexandrovna (Dunechka) 39, 43, 60–61

Terek Cossacks (Terskie kazaki) 100–101

Terek river 100

Théâtre des Variétés, Paris 133

Théâtre Français, Paris 133

Three Elders legend 17

Tiflis 99, 103, 107, 378

Opera House 103

Times, The 273, 364, 412

Tobolsk 84

Tocqueville, Alexis de 133

Tokutomi, Roka (pseudonym of Kenjiro Tokutomi) 403–4

Tolstaya, Alexandra Ilyinichna see OstenSacken

Tolstaya, Alexandra Vladimirovna (née Glebova

T’s daughter-in-law) 389

Tolstaya, Alexandra Lvovna (Sasha

T’s daughter) 312, 326, 368, 403, 408, 410, 442

and T’s secret will 412

and T’s death 412, 413

relationship with her mother 417, 420

copyright issue 418

land handed over to peasants 420–21, 422

Sonya passes over control of her publishing operation 421

goes to the front as a nurse in World War I 421

posts bail for Bulgakov and Makovický 422

and publication of T’s complete works 423, 425, 426, 442, 443

achieves rank of colonel and St George medals for bravery 425

takes charge of T’s manuscripts 425

Commissar of Yasnaya Polyana 427, 433

arrests and imprisonment 427–9, 433

in charge of farming at Yasnaya Polyana 428

forms Co-operative Association 432

upset by Chertkov’s book about T 432

starts Yasnaya Polyana village school 433

pleads for clemency for Bulgakov 434

and centenary of T’s birth 435

attacked in Pravda 436

lectures in Japan 440

never returns to Russia 440

becomes a vociferous critic of the Soviet regime 445

name erased from history as a ‘traitor to the motherland’ 445

partially rehabilitated (1977) 445

death in United States (1979) 445

Tolstaya, Alexandra Ivanovna (née Shchetinina, T’s great-grandmother) 18

Tolstaya, Alexandra Andreyevna

(‘Alexandrine’) 55, 137, 148, 184, 266, 328

dikost 48

calls T ‘the roaring lion’ 48–9

relationship with T 122–3

unmarried and childless 122–3

character 123

well connected at court 123, 339

in Switzerland with T 133–4

and T’s gambling 135

T’s closest confidante 160

Shabunin case 183

asks T to tell her about his children 201

and Samara 212

meets Sonya 245

governess to Alexander II’s youngest children 247

T’s 1878 visit 266, 268, 269

and T’s researches 272, 276, 277

argues with T over religion 280

and Dostoevsky 283

T wants her to intercede on Anna Armfeldt’s behalf 312–13

frosty meeting with T (1897) 366, 399–400

reconciliation with T 400

death 399

Tolstaya, Anna Ilyinichna (T’s granddaughter) 326

Tolstaya, Avdotya Maximovna (nee Tugaeva) 50

Tolstaya, Dora (née Westerlund; T’s daughter-in-law) 403

Tolstaya, Ekaterina Vasilievna (previously Artsimovich

Andrey Lvovich’s second wife) 406

Tolstaya, Elena Sergeyevna (T’s niece) 240–41, 243, 280

Tolstaya, Elizaveta Andreyevna 122, 184

Tolstaya, Maria (Masha

T’s daughter) see Obolenskaya, Maria Lvovna

Tolstaya, Maria Mikhailovna (Masha

née Shishkina

Sergey’s wife) 90, 94, 233, 244, 400

Tolstaya, Maria Nikolayevna (née Volkonskaya

T’s mother) death of her mother 23

at Yasnaya Polyana 26–7, 28, 32, 35

education 28–9

character 29, 30

visits St Petersburg 29

death of her fiancé 29

and Louise Henissiénne 30

appearance 30

marriage to Nikolay Ilyich 21, 30, 32

T’s cult of his mother 32

and Nikolay’s character 33

name and nickname for T 33

deeply religious 33

childbirth 34, 35, 42

waits for her husband’s return 35–6

and her mother-in-law 39

and Toinette 43

death (1830) 32, 35

Nikolay Ilyich buried next to her 58

‘The Russian Pamela, or There are No Rules Without Exceptions’ 29

Tolstaya, Maria Nikolayevna (Masha

T’s sister) 125, 152, 268, 404

birth 35, 42

inherits Pirogovo 38

returns to Yasnaya Polyana from Moscow 60–61

relationship with T 61

education 70

leaves Kazan and lives at Yasnaya Polyana 81

property inheritance 81–2

marries Valerian Petrovich 82, 84

childbirth 93

piano-playing 95, 370

Gasha Trubetskaya works for her 96

T gives her his grand piano 103

takes the waters at Pyatigorsk 107

T visits 107, 130, 412, 419

and Turgenev 120, 138–9, 268

looks after Dmitry 123

unhappy marriage 119, 135–6, 241–2, 243

visits Moscow with T 136

travels abroad 141, 142, 155, 241

and secret police raid of Yasnaya Polyana 148

a depressive 240

affair with de Kleen 241, 243

daughter Elena 240–41, 243, 280

death of son Nikolay 280

becomes a nun 280–81, 328, 351

and Syutayev 298

and Vanechka’s death 358

emotional visit to Sonya 419

death 419, 421

Tolstaya, Olga Konstantinovna (née Diterikhs

Andrey’s first wife) 406

Tolstaya, Pelageya Nikolayevna (T’s grandmother) 18–21, 32, 34, 39–41, 46–7, 55, 56, 58–61, 156

Tolstaya, Praskovya Fyodorovna 50

Tolstaya, Sofya Andreyevna (Sonya; née Bers

T’s wife)

birth (1844) 151

education 152

visits Yasnaya Polyana with her mother 152

character 8, 245, 403

appearance 149–50, 297

marriage to T 149, 150, 154–6, 157, 163–4, 183, 202, 236, 243–4, 289, 299, 301, 311, 312, 331, 349, 357, 368, 405, 411, 420, 432

T’s love for her 153, 157

arrival at Yasnaya Polyana 156–7

household duties 6, 157, 204, 207, 231, 239, 279, 299

attitude to peasants 158

T’s copyist 8, 158–9, 164, 174–5, 188, 197, 204, 231, 235–6, 264, 289, 304, 323

autobiography 161–2, 174, 177, 211, 264, 312, 313, 337, 402

pregnancies and childbirth 6, 8, 18, 150, 160–63, 174, 185–8, 237, 239, 245, 258, 279, 289, 291, 292, 299, 301, 312, 326, 327

anxious for T to start another novel after War and Peace 182

name-day party 183

provides emotional stability 3, 185

longing for a change of scenery 187, 279–80

passionate about opera 188

teaches at T’s school 197

Christmas at Yasnaya Polyana 206

and Anna Karenina 222

deaths of her children 231, 237, 239, 322–3, 358, 360, 362

gravely ill with peritonitis 239–40, 404

attitude to Alexeyev 264

and T’s Decembrist manuscript 275

and T’s plea for clemency for Alexander II assassins 288, 289

goes out into Moscow society 297, 311, 314

publishes T’s old writings 6, 316

death of her mother 323

twenty-fifth wedding anniversary 326