On the night of 12–13 June 1918, George's father was shot dead on the outskirts of Perm by the
Cheka, the Bolshevik secret police. The circumstances of his father's death would not become known until after George's death. Still believing Michael to be alive, George's mother and half-sister Natalia, his mother's daughter from her first marriage, were smuggled out of Russia to
Kiev, in
German-controlled Ukraine, by the Germans. After the armistice in November 1918, the
Royal Navy evacuated George's mother and half-sister to England, and George and Miss Neame joined them in a rented house at
Wadhurst,
Sussex, just after Easter 1919. George was enrolled at
St Leonards-on-Sea College in September 1919, until he moved to
Harrow, a prominent
public boarding school in 1920. In 1927, due to financial problems, his mother relocated to
Paris but he remained in England to finish his school year. He then went to another boarding school,
École des Roches in
Verneuil, Normandy, and then the
Sorbonne. As he matured, many remarked at his strong resemblance to his father. By the 1920s, the Soviets had a firm grip on power in Russia, and the return of the monarchy was not a serious possibility. Nevertheless, George's cousin,
Grand Duke Cyril Vladimirovich, declared himself Emperor Cyril and George a
prince. In 1928, George's grandmother, the
Dowager Empress Marie, died and George inherited a third of her estate. He had enjoyed riding his
Norton motorcycle as a teenager, and some of his inheritance was spent on a
Chrysler sports car. George was buried in
Passy Cemetery in Paris. In 1952, his mother died from
cancer, and she was interred beside him in a grave marked by a
Slavonic cross of stone on a marble tomb. (Section 9, near the intersection with the outer wall and Section 8.) The gold inscription reads,
Fils et Epouse de S.A.I. Grand Duc Michel de Russie. Although he had no succession rights due to the
morganatic marriage of his parents, George was the last male-line descendant of
Alexander III of Russia. ==See also==