The muddy trenches of Manchuria and the dazzling gold of Bangkok. St. George’s Cross medals on a nurse’s chest and the title of a princess in mysterious Siam. The life of Ekaterina Desnitskaya is a story that seems impossible to believe. For her, Prince Chakrabongse secretly accepted baptism, betrayed the faith of his ancestors, and defied the will of two emperors. Together, they traded the St.
Petersburg chill for the orange skies of the tropics, only to discover that the price of a real crown is not gold, but a broken heart. The thread of this incredible destiny began to weave long before their meeting—in the silence of a provincial town somewhere in Russia. In a world of strict nobility, a character was forged capable of withstanding the storms that would soon change the history of two empires.
Ekaterina Desnitskaya was born on April 27, 1886, in Lutsk, then the capital of Volhynia, which was part of the Russian Empire. Her father, Ivan Desnitsky, held the rank of State Councilor—a civil general, a solid and well-to-do man. But happiness was short-lived. Her father died when Katya was not yet two years old. Her mother, Maria, moved with her children to Kyiv to live with relatives, where she passed away in 1904.
Katya and her older brother, Ivan, were left orphans. She was eighteen; he was twenty. Grief did not break them—they decided to move to St. Petersburg. Ivan enrolled in the university, dreaming of a diplomatic career. Katya attended nursing courses. She had reddish hair braided into plaits, blue eyes, and skin of extraordinary, almost porcelain whiteness.
But what truly defined her was something else: courage, compassion, and absolute inner purity. In 1904, the Russo-Japanese War began. Katya—not yet nineteen—volunteered. She bandaged the wounded right in the trenches. She assisted surgeons during operations. A hospital train ran from Manchuria to Irkutsk. A shell exploded in a trench. Shell shock.
St. George’s Cross medals on her chest. She returned from the front not broken—she returned a different person. A person who had looked death in the face and chosen life. In the salons of early 20th-century St. Petersburg, art circles flourished—informal clubs for educated youth where music played, poetry was read, and political debates took place.
One such salon was hosted by the widow of a hussar named Khrapovitskaya, a friend of the Desnitsky family. It was here that Katya found herself next to a young, dark-skinned officer of the Russian army with an unusual name—Chakrabongse. Prince Chakrabongse was the son of the King of Siam, Rama V.
The very same king who had met Nicholas II in Peterhof in 1897, posed for photos with Bismarck, and ordered his royal jewelry from Cartier in Paris. Rama V was a reformer. He was the first Asian monarch to personally tour Europe, abolish slavery in Siam, and modernize the country. It was he who sent his eldest sons to study at the best European educational institutions.
Since 1898, Chakrabongse had been studying at the Page Corps in St. Petersburg—an elite military school that prepared those closest to the Russian Emperor. He mastered Russian and English brilliantly, was awarded the rank of Colonel in the Russian Army, and received the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called. He was intelligent, refined, courteous—and completely alone in a strange, cold city. He was twenty-two. She was nineteen.
The Prince proposed. He was honest with her: the laws of Siam allowed him to have more than one wife. But he swore that he saw no one but her in that role. Katya agreed. The summer of 1906. Prince Chakrabongse had to return home. His time in Russia was expiring. Nicholas II awaited an official farewell.
The Prince was under the personal care of the Russian Tsar. He was a subject of the King of Siam. Any public announcement of an intention to marry a Russian girl would have required approval from both monarchs—and both, most likely, would have refused. His bodyguard and advisor, Nai Pum, never tired of reminding the Prince of the reality: the differences in faith and culture, and the fact that a marriage without the consent of his father, the King, would be a scandal. The Prince listened. And did as he pleased.
The decision was simple and daring: to marry not in Russia, but in Constantinople, through which their route home lay. Far from the eyes of Nicholas. Far from potential explanations. A Siamese prince. A descendant of an ancient Buddhist dynasty. A man whose ancestors had ruled the country for centuries within the framework of Buddhist tradition—this man accepted Orthodox baptism. For her. To be married in an Orthodox church. To share her faith.
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They were married in Constantinople. The newlyweds spent their honeymoon in Cairo. Then they sailed to Singapore on a ship. The Prince dared not appear at the royal palace with a foreign wife immediately. He left Katya in Singapore—under the care of his loyal servants—and set off for Bangkok alone.
For several months, he prepared the ground: introducing his older brother to Katya and mentioning her to his father several times. King Rama V never officially accepted his Russian daughter-in-law. To him, Katya remained an unwelcome foreigner. She was not allowed into the palace. The young family was permitted to settle in Paruskavan Palace—a separate building away from the royal residence. It was, in essence, a golden cage.
A young woman—twenty years old. A strange country. A strange language. A strange culture. The orange-green sky of the tropics during the rainy season. Unusual food. Servants speaking a language you do not understand. The court does not accept you. Your mother-in-law, the Queen, looks right through you. Others would have broken. Katya Desnitskaya did not.
She learned the Thai language—stubbornly, every day. She mastered local etiquette. She studied court protocol. She planned the interior of the palace. She laid out a garden—despite the heat and the shortage of fresh water. She treated the servants when they were ill—and they began to love her. Not for her title, not for her wealth, but for her humanity.
She did not complain. In letters to her brother Ivan, she wrote about the beauty of the tropics, the character of her husband, and how much was new here. Not a word of bitterness. Not a word of reproach. On March 28, 1908, a boy was born in Paruskavan Palace. Prince Chula. Dark-eyed like his father. Fair-skinned like his mother.
A curious detail: he was born on the same day of the week and at almost the same hour as his father and his uncle—the future King Vajiravudh. A triple coincidence. The family took it as a sign. Shortly before his death in 1910, King Rama V finally came to see his grandson. He looked—and could not look away. The dark-eyed boy looked back at him without fear and smiled.
The King, who had ruled for forty years and had seventy-seven children, melted. He granted Chula the title of Prince of the Blood. On October 23, 1910, King Rama V passed away. His eldest son ascended to the throne. The new King officially recognized his brother’s marriage. Katya Desnitskaya moved from “Mom”—a conditional status of a wife of royal blood—to “Chula Chakrabongse.
” This was the title of a full-fledged princess of the Siamese royal house. The family moved to the official royal residence. By that time, Katya was already speaking Thai fluently. She knew all the subtleties of court etiquette. She became friends with the King’s wife. She became “one of them.” She had done the impossible—alone, without support, without allies—she had won a place in one of the most closed royal families in Asia. From 1911, the couple’s life was spent traveling.
Prince Chakrabongse held high military positions—commanding units, traveling the country, and visiting abroad. Katya accompanied him—sometimes together, sometimes separately. They built a new house on the shores of the Gulf of Siam—white, looking like a ship standing by the water on white sand. It was here that they spent, perhaps, their best years. Quiet. Secluded.
Truly familial. Seven happy years. And then everything changed. While Katya was in China, the Prince grew close to a young Thai princess, Chavalit. She moved to live in his house. The laws of Siam allowed a prince to have multiple wives. He had told her about this back in St. Petersburg—a long time ago, at the very beginning.
Then it had seemed like an abstraction. Now, it had become reality. Katya could not accept it. Her position is easy to understand. She had given this man and this country everything. She had renounced her homeland and her familiar world. She learned the language. She endured isolation. She won over the court. She raised her son. She was there—always. And now—no.
The Prince could not understand that his relationship with Chavalit would leave him without Katya. He was accustomed to the ways of Siam. He did not think that for her, it was a betrayal. But she thought exactly that. She demanded a divorce. She received it—and a proper allowance. In 1919, Katya left Bangkok. With the intention of never returning. She did have to return, however—a year later.
On May 11, 1920, Prince Chakrabongse passed away suddenly. He was thirty-seven years old. Too young. Too unexpected. Katya came to the funeral. She mourned him herself. She buried him herself. She visited his tomb in the royal pantheon of Bangkok daily. And then—she left again. Forever. Her husband’s relatives did everything to distance her from her son.
Chula grew up at court, surrounded by numerous aunts and uncles. There was no place for her there. She chose dignity. And left. The historical whirlwinds of the twentieth century carried Katya around the world. From Bangkok to Shanghai. Her brother Ivan, who had become a well-known literary scholar, lived there. His sister found him—and lived nearby for a time.
There, she met the American engineer Harry Clinton Stone, whom she later married. Initially, they moved to the USA, but later to Paris, to the suburbs of the French capital. There, Katya spent the remainder of her tumultuous life. On January 3, 1960, Ekaterina Desnitskaya passed away in Paris. She was seventy-three.

Prince Chula, left without both parents, came under the guardianship of his uncle, the King. He was sent to study in Great Britain. Harrow School. Trinity College at the University of Cambridge. He became an avid racecar driver, traveled all over Europe, and wrote a series of books about racing with his cousin Birabongse. He married an Englishwoman, Elisabeth Hunter. He settled in England.
He had a daughter—Narisa. Katya’s granddaughter. Narisa grew up and wrote a book with her mother, Katya and the Prince of Siam. It was published in several languages and became the primary source for this story. Chula maintained contact with his mother, although he was never able to fully forgive her for her abrupt departure from the palace.
He outlived Katya by only three years, dying of cancer in 1963. She entered the official history of the Siamese royal house of the Chakri dynasty forever—as the Serene Highness Catherine, wife of Crown Prince Chakrabongse and mother of Prince Chula. Paruskavan Palace, where she lived during her years of isolation, is open to tourists today.
In the living room, there are her portraits. An integral part of the history of an entire era. The story of Katya is a quiet whisper in the shaded gardens of Paruskavan, an echo of an era where two cultures and two different worlds collided. She was like a delicate lotus with an icy core: fragile on the outside, but capable of withstanding any storm.
Leaving behind luxury for the sake of silence and her own dignity, she wrote her own unique page in history. Thank you for watching. Like and subscribe so we can continue to discover such incredible biographies together. If you have thoughts on her divorce or facts about her life that remained behind the scenes, write in the comments.
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