In March 1918, Yakovlev was appointed by the
Central Executive Committee to oversee the transfer of former
Russian Tsar Nicholas II and his family from
Tobolsk to
Omsk (or Moscow according to other sources), where Nicholas was to be put on trial. The train departed on April 17 but due to the advancement of
White Army soldiers loyal to Admiral
Aleksandr Kolchak, who were blockading the railway as part of the ongoing
civil war, orders from Moscow led to Yakovlev diverting the train to
Yekaterinburg instead, where it arrived on April 30. The family were then seized by the Ural Regional Soviet and held prisoner in the
Ipatiev House until July 17, when they and four retainers were executed. The above account contradicts that in
Robert Massie's book
Nicholas and Alexandra, which states that Yakovlev defected from the Bolsheviks and joined the
White armies. It describes Yakovlev as being motivated by the desire to save the Imperial family to the extent that he was following his orders, which were to take the family to Moscow. In Massie's account, Yakovlev arrived at Tobolsk on 22 April, accompanied by one hundred and fifty horsemen and his own private telegraph operator, through whom he could communicate directly with the
Kremlin. He carried documents that stated that he should be cooperated with fully, on pain of death. He showed these documents to
Eugene Kobylinsky, the officer in charge at Tobolsk. On 25 April, Yakovlev informed Kobylinsky that his mission was to take the Imperial family away from Tobolsk. He did not say at that stage that he was going to take them to Moscow, but those were his orders. However, Yakovlev soon found that
Alexei, formerly the heir to the throne, was seriously ill. He communicated this to Moscow, and was told to only take Nicholas.
Alexandra, the former empress, decided to go with Nicholas, accompanied by her daughter
Maria. Yakovlev, his troops and his royal prisoners then travelled over three hundred and twenty kilometres to
Tyumen, the site of the nearest railway station, with the members of the Imperial family riding in horse-drawn carts. Once at Tyumen, however, Yakovlev came to the conclusion that it would be too dangerous to go through
Yekaterinburg because the Ural Regional Soviet would seize his prisoners. He therefore decided to make a detour to
Omsk, over five hundred kilometres south-east of Tyumen, from where he could proceed to Moscow without going through Yekaterinburg. However, when the party reached Kulomzino, ninety-six kilometres from Omsk, they were intercepted by troops who had been alerted by the Ural Regional Soviet. Yakovlev then went into Omsk to argue his case with the Omsk Soviet, but could not convince them. He contacted Sverdlov by telegram and was told to take the Imperial family to Yekaterinburg. Acting on Sverdlov's instructions, he proceeded to Yekaterinburg, where the train was surrounded by troops; the members of the Imperial family were then taken away by officials of the Ural Regional Soviet. Massie's version is supported by
Shay McNeal in
The Plots to Rescue the Tsar. In McNeal's account, Yakovlev was trying to follow his orders to take the Imperial family to Moscow. In various telegrams to Moscow, he made it clear that it was not safe to take the family through Ekaterinburg, in the
Ural Mountains (the most direct route to Moscow), because he was sure the Ural Regional Soviet would seize the family. He only agreed to go through Ekaterinburg because
Yakov Sverdlov told him to. This view is also supported by
Mark D. Steinberg and Vladimir M. Khrustalev in
The Fall of the Romanovs. The authors quote a telegram from Yakovlev to
Filipp Goloshchekin, dated 27 April 1918, in which Yakovlev stated that Goloshchekin's detachments had the desire to destroy the Imperial family (referred to as "the baggage"). He states that he has taken a prisoner who had confessed everything, and that if "the baggage" was not handed over to them, their intention was to destroy the whole detachment, including Yakovlev himself. In a telegram dated 27 April 1918, he states that the Ekaterinburg detachments have only the single goal of destroying "the baggage" at all costs. Finally, he states that if "the baggage" falls into the hands of the Ekaterinburg detachment, it will be destroyed. After the Imperial family had been taken off his hands, Yakovlev returned to Moscow, where on May 15 he was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the
Red Army's Ural Front, and in June
Commander of the Army. He was captured and arrested by
White forces in November — having tried to infiltrate them since October — but was released in 1919 and fled to
Harbin,
China, where in 1921 he became an adviser to the republican government under the name
Konstantin Alekseyevich Stoyanovich. He returned to Moscow in 1928, was immediately convicted of treason and imprisoned until 1933. He was released shortly after, but in 1938 — during the
Great Purge — was again convicted of treason and executed on September 16. Later, according to Massie, the Bolsheviks claimed that Yakovlev's actions in regard to the Imperial family had actually been part of a monarchist escape attempt. ==Description==