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Catherine the Great
loved horses. She also loved sex. Contrary to popular legend, however,
she never managed to unite the two passions. Still, the autocratic
empress of Russia brought all the enthusiasm of a vigorous ride to her
extremely busy bedroom.
After
ridding herself of her imbecile husband Peter III in 1762,1 Catherine
grabbed the Russian crown and came to dominate her kingdom for the
next thirty-four years. Boldly indulging herself as she grew more
secure in her position, the empress consumed handsome young lovers
with an appetite that sometimes shocked |
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her contemporaries. “She’s no
woman,” exclaimed one, “she’s a siren!”
The
empress relished her weakness for men, abandoning herself to a giddy
romanticism that belied her cold and pragmatic rule. She loved being
entertained, even into old age, by a succession of well-formed young
studs eager to please her. “It is my misfortune that my heart cannot
be content, even for one hour, without love,” she wrote.
Sharing
the empress’s bed brought ample rewards, not the least of which was
an intimate proximity to power, but getting there wasn’t easy. A
good body and a pleasant face, combined whenever possible with wit and
intelligence, were merely starters. Potential lovers also had to have
the right pedigree and pass a crucial test. Catherine had several
ladies-in-waiting—test drivers of sorts— whose job it was to
ensure that all candidates for their mistress’s bed were up to the
highly demanding task of satisfying her.
The
applicants were most often supplied by the empress’s one-eyed
ex-lover—the man many assumed to be her secret husband—Gregory
Potemkin. She had fallen in love with this rough, hulking officer
relatively early in her industrious sexual career, overcome by his
brash courage, quick wit, and almost primitive sexuality. Wasting
little time disposing of Alexander Vassilzhikov, her boyfriend at the
time, Catherine was delighted the first night Potemkin came to her
bedroom, naked under his nightshirt and ready for action. “I have
parted from a certain excellent but very boring citizen,” the
empress wrote to a confidante, “who has been replaced, I know not
how, by one of the greatest, oddest, most amusing and original
personalities of this Iron Age.”
Because
of his long greasy hair, and brutish unwashed body, many women found
Potemkin repulsive. Catherine, however, reveled in his strength,
charm, and sexual domination. She couldn’t get enough of this
strange man who made her forget her royal dignity. Whenever they were
parted, even for a few hours, she regaled him with an avalanche of
feverish love notes, each peppered with at least one of her special
pet names: “My marble beauty,” “my darling pet,” “my dearest
doll,” “golden cock,” “lion of the jungle,” “my
professional bon bon.”
In
one letter, she pretended to be shocked at the intensity of her
passion and tried to get hold of herself: “I have issued strict
orders to my whole body, down to the smallest hair on my head, not to
show you the least sign of love. I have locked my love inside my heart
and bolted it ten times, it is suffocating there, it is constrained,
and I fear it may explode.” In other letters she gloried in his good
company: “Darling, what comical stories you told me yesterday! I
can’t stop laughing when I think of them . . . we spend four hours
together without a shadow of boredom, and it is always with reluctance
that I leave you. My dearest pigeon, I love you very much. You are
handsome, intelligent, amusing.”
Of
course Catherine loved the sex, and in her exultation could sound much
more like a bad romance novelist than the authoritarian empress of all
the Russias:
—“There is not a cell in my whole body that does not yearn for
you, oh infidel!”
—“I thank you for yesterday’s feast. My little Grisha fed me and
quenched my thirst, but not with wine. . . .”
—“My head is like that of a cat in heat. . . .”
—“I will be a ‘woman of fire’ for you, as you so often say.
But I shall try to hide my flames.”
Moody
and temperamental, subject to bouts of black depression and fits of
jealousy, Potemkin was sometimes lovingly scolded by his royal
mistress: “There is a woman in the world who loves you and who has a
right to a tender word from you, Imbecile, Tatar, Cossack, infidel,
Muscovite, morbleu!” The relationship was so physically intimate
that Catherine did not hesitate to share even the most unflattering of
ailments with him: “I have some diarrhea today, but apart from that,
I am well, my adored one. . . . Do not be distressed because of my
diarrhea, it cleans out the intestines.”
There
is no surviving evidence to support the rumor that Catherine secretly
married Potemkin, although she often referred to him in her letters as
“my beloved spouse,” or “my dearest husband.” Married or not,
the relationship certainly transcended the bedroom as it evolved into
a close political partnership. Catherine shared her vast kingdom with
Potemkin as if he were her king. She consulted with him on all affairs
of state, working closely with him on her ambitious plans to expand
Russia’s borders and crush the Muslim Turks.
The
empress’s powerful lover is perhaps best remembered for the
legendary “Potemkin Villages” he is said to have created for her
benefit as she embarked on a grand tour of all the newly Russianized
lands he had conquered for her. These “villages,” it was said,
were little more than elaborate stage sets of prosperous towns,
populated by cheerful serfs, all of which were quickly collapsed and
set up again at the next stop on Catherine’s carefully plotted
itinerary. The artificiality of the Potemkin Villages came to
represent in the minds of many, Catherine’s superficial and
halfhearted attempts to reform and liberalize her kingdom.
Though
the relationship with Potemkin endured until his death in 1791, the
sexual intensity between them dimmed after only a few years. No longer
champion of the empress’s boudoir, Potemkin resolved to retain her
favor by pimping his replacements. He handpicked a steady succession
of new lovers for his erstwhile mistress—all of whom paid him a
handsome brokerage fee for the privilege of servicing her. There was
Zavadovsky, followed by Zorich, followed by Rimsky-Korsakov, followed
by Lanskoy, followed by Ermolov, followed by Mamonov and so on and on,
and on.
After
being installed in the official apartment set aside for Catherine’s
lovers, each new favorite was feted and adored by the passionate
monarch with almost girlish enthusiasm. But each, in turn, was
eventually dismissed, either for boring Catherine or breaking her
heart. Few, however, left her service without a handsome settlement.
When Zavadovsky was dismissed in 1776, for example, Chevalier de
Corberon, the French chargé d’affaires in Russia, wrote that “He
has received from Her Majesty 50,000 rubles, a pension of 5,000, and
4,000 peasants in the Ukraine, where they are worth a great deal
[serfs at the time were tradeable commodities, like cattle]. . . . You
must agree, my friend, that it’s not a bad line of work to be in
here.”
One
ex-lover, Count Stanislas Augustus Poniatowski, was even given the
crown of Poland, although Catherine did eventually hack away huge
chunks of his kingdom and absorb them into her own. All told, the
generous payments to fallen lovers amounted to billions of dollars in
today’s currency. When her friend, the French philosopher Voltaire,
gently chided Catherine for inconsistency in her love affairs, she
responded that she was, on the contrary, “absolutely faithful.”
“To
whom? To beauty, of course. Beauty alone attracts me!” |
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Part I: To Read Excerpts From
"The Lust Emperors", Click Here
Part II: To Read Excerpts From "Six Royals
Sinning", Click Here
Part III: To Read Excerpts From "Unholy Matrimony", Click Here
Part IV: To Read Excerpts From "Mom Was a Monster, Pop Was a
Weasel", Click Here
Part V: To Read Excerpts From "Royal Family Feud", Click Here
Part VI: To Read Excerpts From "Strange Reigns", Click Here
Part VII: To Read Excerpts From "When in Rome", Click Here
Part VIII: To Read Excerpts From "Papal Vice", Click Here
Part IX: To Read Excerpts From "Death Be Not Dignified", Click Here |
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