Anna Demidova, whose nickname was "
Nyuta," was described in adulthood as a "tall, statuesque blonde." She was the daughter of Stepan Demidov and his wife. Her father was a well-off merchant in
Cherepovets, where he also served on the Cherepovets City Duma, and was a member of the
House of Demidov, a Russian noble family. Demidova graduated from the Yaroslavl Institute for Maids with a teaching certificate. She was a good friend of
Elizaveta Ersberg, a parlormaid at the court, and was once engaged to Ersberg's brother Nikolai. About 1905 Ersberg secured her friend a position at the court as a governess. In his memoirs,
Charles Sydney Gibbes, the Romanov children's English tutor, described Demidova as "of a singularly timid and shrinking disposition." On the night of the murders, the family was awakened and told to dress. Demidova carried two pillows into which gems had been sewn. After the first volley of fire by the firing squad, Demidova, who had fainted after being wounded, revived and, finding herself still alive, exclaimed "Thank God! God has saved me!" Hearing her, the killers turned on her. Crying, she attempted to defend herself, but was stabbed to death with bayonets. ==Discovery of remains==