Yes, we already know he suffered from hemophilia according to the many memoirs and letters from the imperial family and the doctors and tutors. It really doesn't make a difference.
That's right, thanks for your excellent post with all the quotes from those who knew the family. The doctors especially knew the disease.
Irene's sons Waldemar and Heinrich were both hemophiliacs. Heinrich,I think he died at the age of four from hemophilia when he fell and bruised his head, in 1904.
Nobody needs "Anna Anderson" as a source for this info, Chat! It's well documented in history as well as in books by those who knew the family. And don't forget AA actually met Irene, so she would of course know this. I see the recent DNA proof of four separate profiles for the Grand Duchesses has not changed the special realm of reality in which Chat resides, apparently, he still believes AA was AN.
It's also a very good point Elspeth made that it was hemophilia because only boys had it. If it was some other blood disease, girls would get it too, but hemophilia only affects males. All information we have leads to it being hemophilia, so if it walks like a duck, well, you know. Even if the scientists had enough bone powder from the fragments to do the faulty gene test, I seriously doubt that those who don't choose to accept the reality of the results would have believed it anyway.
JK, RH factor is not a lifelong affliction that causes bleeding! I know this, because it has happened in my family (it's not hereditary, other than the mother having negative blood and the father having postive) The first baby is always okay, but second and other following children are affected if the mother doesn't get a RhoGam shot (I had to take this after my first baby because my blood is negative and my husband's is positive and my second baby turned out okay.) I have an aunt whose second baby was born anemic, jaundiced and sickly due to RH factor, but he survived and grew up to be a tall healthy basketball player. The RH factor will affect the baby at birth, and in olden times it often died because no one knew what was wrong or how to treat it, or they were unable to treat it. It almost never happens now due to RhoGam, but like I said about my cousin, if they are born with it in modern times and are treated at birth they survive to live a normal life and are not 'bleeders.' (I have heard some babies born with RH factor who lived suffered mental retardation, but not bleeding disorders) Another reason we know this wasn't the caase with the royals is that it's not random, any other child after the first, male or female, would be affected in some way.(the reason it takes until the second child to act up is because when the first baby is born with positive blood, somehow that goes into the mother's system and her body produces antibodies to attack the positive cells, which in turn harms the next baby she carries with positive blood. The RhoGam shot prevents the production of the antibodies)
JK, I really don't understand what the point is of trying to prove Alexei had a disease other than hemophilia. Now that we know he was not Tammet, your reason for fighting this cause is over.