Anna Diterikhs was born in Kiev in the family of a professional military man (then a General of the Infantry,
Konstantin Alexandrovich Diterikhs (1823-1899), who had served to the rank of full general. During the
Caucasian War, Leo Tolstoy met Diterikhs and used his "Notes on the Caucasian War" to write
"Hadji Murat". Anna's mother was the aristocrat Olga Iosifovna Musnitskaya (1840-1893). Anna was the eldest daughter and second child of the family. In the early 1860s, Anna's family lived on the
Volga River in a two-story wooden house with a
mezzanine and a front garden in the town of
Dubovka. She later described in her childhood memoirs her strong impression of the fires that took place there in 1861-1862 and her fear of the arsonists, who were never discovered. The girl preferred to walk barefoot and did not pay much attention to clothes, especially bright colors. Later she remembered that as a child she wanted to be a boy. Among the most pleasant impressions of her childhood, she emphasized music and especially singing. According to Diterikhs, music "
hypnotized" her. In the family, the girl was called Galya, not Anna, according to the order introduced by her maternal grandfather, General
Osip Musnitsky, according to her memoirs, half-Polish, half-
Lithuanian. Her mother was a deeply religious person, a firm supporter of
Orthodoxy, while her father, who lived for a long time in the
Caucasus, was interested in
Islam as well as Christian sectarians (
molokane and
dukhobortsy). File:К. А. Дитерихс. 1866.jpg|Father, 1866 File:О. И. Дитерихс 1860-е.jpg|Mother, 1860s File:Дитерихсы.jpg|К. A. and O. I. Diterikhs with their children and relatives File:Моя няня. 1864.png|Darya Kuzminishna Dubovskaya, Anna Diterikh's nanny, 1864 In Kiev, the girl was a student at the
gymnasium (secondary school) and seriously studied music. In 1878, Anna entered the verbal department of the higher
Bestuzhev courses in
St. Petersburg, but two years later transferred to the natural department. Historian Georgy Orekhanov claimed that Anna Dieterichs was a fellow student of
Nadezhda Krupskaya at Bestuzhevsky courses. After graduating in 1886, Diterikhs was not able to get a diploma of its completion. After four years of study, she fell seriously ill and missed the final exam. During her studies she became interested in
materialism,
positivism and
Johann Gottlieb Fichte's studies. . Portrait of V.G. Chertkov, 1881 Since 1885 Diterikhs began to participate in the work of the publishing house "Posrednik", where she was introduced by the public figure and publicist
Pavel Biryukov. , Anna and Vladimir Chertkov (far right) in Yasnaya Polyana, before 1910 There she met Leo Tolstoy In 1897, Chertkov was exiled from Russia. The couple left with their entire family. With them went
Vladimir Chertkov's mother, two maids who had lived with them for many years - Anna, who had served in their house since her early youth, and her son's nanny Katya, as well as the house doctor Albert Shkarvan, an
Austrian maid of
Slovakian nationality. While living in
Great Britain from 1897 to 1908, Anna Chertkova worked with her husband in the publishing house "Svobodnoe Slovo". In her autobiography, she wrote that although she was listed as a publisher, she actually performed the duties of a proofreader, office assistant, compiler and editorial assistant, wrote editorial notes, compiled the number of issues of "Svobodnoe Slovo", communicated with the printing house, etc. A contemporary describes
Tuckton House, where the Chertkovs lived in
Christchurch, as very strange and uncomfortable. It had three floors in some parts and four in others, built of brick and all covered with
ivy. There was a staircase in the center of the building, with doors to many rooms on the right and left sides. There was a special steel storeroom for Tolstoy's manuscripts, equipped with an alarm system. All the rooms were isolated and did not communicate with each other, except for
fireplaces, there was no other heating, and Anna Chertkova suffered from cold in winter. There were 30-40 people living in the house at the same time: Russians,
Latvians,
Estonians, Englishmen, who had different beliefs: there were Tolstoyans,
social democrats,
socialist-revolutionaries: "They were all doing something, working, and life was full and interesting. On certain days of the week, the Chertkovs fed English vagabonds. The printing house of "Svobodnoe Slovo" was near the Tuckton house. After returning from Great Britain, the couple settled in the
Tula province. Their house in Telyatinki became the center of attraction for the Tolstoyans. According to a contemporary, they felt more at home there than in
Yasnaya Polyana, "where they were bound by the strange arictocratic ambience. Son Vladimir was closely associated with the peasant youth. Chertkovy quickly attracted the attention of the local administration, and were denounced. Since October 1908, the couple had been under silent
surveillance. Their house was located three kilometers from Yasnaya Polyana, it was wooden, two-storied and, according to a contemporary, uncomfortable. Tolstoy called it a "beer factory". On the ground floor was a large dining room, behind which were corridors in both directions, each of which led to four small rooms. In the middle of the second floor was a hall with a stage for amateur performances. There were 34 rooms in all. Almost all of them were filled with guests. There was no
terrace,
flower garden, river or pond around the house. Anna Chertkova was seriously ill. Tolstoy admired her resilience and considered her one of those women for whom "the highest and living ideal is the coming of the Kingdom of God". Anna Chertkova died in Moscow in 1927. Chertkova is depicted on
Mikhail Nesterov's paintings "In Russia. Soul of the People" (1916) next to her husband and Leo Tolstoy == Literary work and contribution to her husband's career in publishing ==