Rare photographs from the albums of the Romanov family years before their murder. Terrible secrets of the Romanov family (19 photos)

In the photographic heritage of the Romanovs, many photographs are especially associated with the family of Nicholas II. The imperial family was portrayed by many famous photographers. What remains are studio photographs of outstanding masters of Russian photography G. Denyer, S. L. Levitsky, A. Pazetti, C. Bergamasco. While abroad, the royal family was photographed by famous foreign photographers: in Denmark - L. Danielson, M. Steen, G. Hansen, in Poland - L. Kowalski, in Germany - O. Skovranek, F. Telgman and others. When visiting Romanov cities Russian Empire the shooting was entrusted to the best city photographers: F. Orlov in Yalta, M. Mazur in Sevastopol, V. Barkanov in Tiflis, A. M. Ivanitsky in Kharkov, etc.

Emperor Nicholas II. 1900s


Emperor Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna with their daughters Grand Duchesses Olga and Tatiana. 1898

Most large collection photographs of the last Russian emperor and his family were left by the photo studio “K. E. von Hahn and Co. "The atelier was opened in Tsarskoye Selo in 1887. It was owned by the wife of the assistant senior mechanical engineer Kazimira-Ludviga Evgenievna Jacobson, nee Hahn. In 1891, Alexander Karlovich Yagelsky became a co-owner of the atelier, who since 1897 receives the exclusive right to photograph Emperor Nicholas II and his family. A. K. Yagelsky photographed the emperor during diplomatic receptions and visits, on trips around the country, during military maneuvers and reviews, official court events, on vacation on the imperial yacht “Standart”, in the Finnish skerries, in Livadia, while hunting on the estates of Spala and Belovezh. These photographs rarely reached the public and formed the imperial family’s own photographic archive. In 1911, A. K. Yagelsky received the honorary title of Photographer of His Majesty’s Court.


Parade of troops of the Moscow garrison. Moscow, 1903

Yagelsky was also the only one who was allowed to film the royal family. From 1900 until his death in October 1916, he was the personal cameraman of Emperor Nicholas II and left a very significant film archive.


Rope tug. Finnish skerries, 1911


Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia. Tsarskoe Selo, 1903

The famous reportage photographer K.K. Bulla photographed Nicholas II a lot. In 1904, he received permission to photograph “views of the capital, as well as celebrations in the Supreme presence.” From the Main Headquarters of the War Ministry, Bulla had a certificate of permission to “take photographic photographs during maneuvers and exercises of the Guard troops and the St. Petersburg Military District,” as well as a special certificate from the Main Naval Staff, allowing to take photographs “during maneuvers, reviews, exercises, descents and laying ships and, in general, all events relating to marine life.”


The heir is Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich. 1911

The Romanovs themselves left many personal albums with photographs - the Emperor, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, all children, including the heir, were passionate amateur photographers. Since Nicholas II got his first camera in 1896, he has never parted with it. Some of the albums were filled out by the emperor himself, pasting and signing photographs with his own hands. Each family member had personal photo albums, usually annually or for two or three years together.


Emperor Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna in the costumes of Russian tsars of the 17th century. 1903

Another category of the Romanovs’ photographic heritage is the photo albums of their close associates, those who, on duty, were with the emperor and his family on trips around the country and abroad, and especially during vacations. The Romanovs themselves, their personal photographer A.K. Yagelsky and the emperor’s associates took the largest number of family photographs on vacation, when the members of the august family were left to their own devices and less bound by the conventions of court etiquette. This close circle, which had the opportunity to take informal photographs of the family of Nicholas II, included large court officials, members of the emperor’s retinue, ladies-in-waiting, state ladies, officers of the imperial yacht “Standart” and a whole series other people.


Royal hunt in Belovezhskaya Pushcha. Sitting: Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich (2nd from left), Empress Alexandra Feodorovna (3rd from left), Emperor Nicholas II (4th from left), Grand Duke Mikhail Nikolaevich (6th from left). Standing: Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich Jr. (1st from left), Duke of Saxe-Altenburg Albert (2nd from left), head of the court youth department A.A. Grunwald (3rd from left), Baron V.B. Fredericks (7th from left), etc. Belovezh, 1897

The fate of the photographic heritage of the Romanov family in Soviet Russia is quite complicated and bears the imprint of the tragic fate of its owners. After the execution, documents and photographs of the Romanov house were transferred from archive to archive more than once. The photographic heritage is still insufficiently studied. We do not even know the approximate number of photographic objects in state repositories Russian Federation; It is also unknown what legacy has been preserved in the CIS countries and abroad.


Nicholas II in his office, 1900

From July 6 to September 9, 2018, the State Museum and Exhibition Center ROSPHOTO will host an anniversary exhibition dedicated to Emperor Nicholas II. This year marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of the last Russian emperor.

The imperial family was filmed best photographers Russian Empire. When traveling abroad, the Romanovs always ordered photographic portraits from famous foreign artists. The exhibition presents studio portraits of the families of Alexander III and Nicholas II, occupying special place in the works of their authors, outstanding domestic and foreign photographers.

A unique component of the exhibition is photographs taken by Nicholas II and members of his family. The Emperor himself, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, and all the children, including the heir, were passionate amateur photographers.

Based on materials provided by ROSPHOTO

On the night of July 17, 1918, in the basement of Ipatiev’s house in Yekaterinburg, the royal family of Russian Emperor Nicholas II and members of her retinue were executed. The execution took place by order of the executive committee of the Ural Regional Council of Workers, Peasants and Red Army Deputies, which was headed by the Bolsheviks.

Resolution:
“In view of the fact that Czech-Slovak gangs threaten the capital of the Red Urals, Yekaterinburg; in view of the fact that the crowned executioner can avoid the trial of the people (a conspiracy of the White Guards has just been discovered, with the goal of kidnapping the entire Romanov family), the Presidium of the regional committee, in fulfillment of the will of the people, decided: to shoot the former Tsar Nikolai Romanov, guilty before the people of countless bloody crimes.”

To this day, there is no unanimity of opinion among modern historians on the questions of whether sanction was given for the execution of Nicholas II without trial, what actually happened, and whether sanction was given for the execution of the entire family, and not just the emperor. In addition, there is also no consensus among lawyers on the question of whether the shooting was authorized by senior management.

According to the records, the participants in the execution did not know how the “execution” would be carried out. On the night of July 17, a truck arrived at Ipatiev’s house to transport corpses, after which doctor Botkin from the royal retinue was awakened, who was informed that everyone urgently needed to go to the basement due to the alarming situation in the city. IN basement Nicholas II, his wife Alexandra Feodorovna, five children (Olga, Tatyana, Maria, Anastasia, Alexey) and four people from the royal retinue crossed over. Then the Commandant of the Ipatiev House, Yakov Yurovsky, introduced the firing squad and read out the verdict. The emperor was killed first, but the son and daughters of Nicholas II, as well as the maid and doctor, were not killed immediately by the executioners. According to Yurovsky, the emperor’s daughters wore bodices entirely covered with diamonds and precious stones, which, in some way, saved them from fatal bullets. According to the investigation, the survivors were finished off with a bayonet.

After Tsar Nicholas II and his family were executed by the Bolsheviks, the collection personal photos royal family was smuggled out of Russia. The albums offer a look at daily life Romanov family.

The photo is one of the few in the Romanov albums that focuses on the ordinary people of Russia

Grand Duchess Olga - firstborn of Nicholas II

Tsarevich Alexei is the heir to the Russian throne. The boy was 13 years old when he and his family were killed

Empress Alexandra with her devoted friend Anna Vyrubova and daughter Olga. Anna Vyrubova was arrested after the revolution, but managed to escape to Finland with albums that contain more than 2,600 photographs of the Romanovs' private lives. She died in Helsinki in 1964

Rare photographs of the last Tsar of the Russian Empire, Nicholas II, which were taken from Russia, were found in the manuscript library of Yale University. The photographs are not royal at all; let’s face it, they look more like staged ones.
There are forces that benefit from considering Nicholas II killed in order to lay claim to the Russian throne.

Tsar Nicholas II on the rocky coast of Finland. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

After Tsar Nicholas II and his family were shot by Bolshevik revolutionaries, a collection of personal photographs of the royal family was smuggled out of Russia.

The photographs were found in the Yale University library. We offer a glimpse into the life of the royal family, which ended so tragically.

After early death his father, Nicholas II admitted to a friend: “I am not yet ready to be a king. I don't know anything about the board."

The young heir suffered from hemophilia, a genetic disorder that prevents blood from clotting.

Anna Vyrubova (right) on the beach with princesses Tatiana and Olga. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

After the royal family was shot, Anna, a close friend of the family, managed to escape from Soviet Russia with 6 albums of photographs of the family.

Empress Alexandra (left) with Anna Vyrubova and Olga. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

After the revolution, Anna was arrested, but she managed to escape to Finland with albums that contain more than 2,600 photographs of the Romanovs' private life. Vyrubova died in Helsinki in 1964.

Empress Alexandra is welcomed aboard Standart, the imperial yacht. Her little daughters are in the background. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

Two Grand Duchesses on board Standard. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

When the children were small, a sailor looked after each one so that they did not fall overboard.

Nicholas II and his daughters in Crimea. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

Pedestrian bridge in Spala, Poland. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

When the Siberian mystic Rasputin helped the prince recover from internal bleeding due to a bruised hip, he became a close friend and confidant of the royal family.

Empress Alexandra and her daughter, Grand Duchess Tatiana. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

They were said to be especially close.

Tsar Nicholas II (left) welcomes King Gustav of Sweden aboard Standart. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

The boy was 13 years old when he and his family were shot.

Tsarevich Alexei, third from left, playing soldier. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

Gilliard, the family's French mentor, with his students Olga and Tatiana Romanov. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

After the murder of his family, he helped in the investigation, and then fled Russia. U measures in Switzerland in 1962.

Aboard Standard, the sailors took turns bouncing on the mats. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

Tatiana was described as "a poetic girl, always striving for the ideal and dreaming of great friendship."

Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria aboard Standart in 1914. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

The sisters were 22, 21 and 19 years old when they were killed.

Empress Alexandra with her likeness in clay. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

Olga Romanova in a wicker chair on board Standart. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

Villagers in the photo during the trip of the king and his family. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

Anastasia, the youngest of the grand duchesses, was photographed after a round of tennis with the officer and her father, Nicholas II. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University

For several months after the 1917 revolution, Grand Duchess Tatiana helps dig a vegetable garden while being captured by the revolutionaries. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale

Tsar Nicholas II and his son Alexei sawing wood while in captivity. Photo: Manuscript Library, Yale University


Nicholas 2 and the three Grand Duchesses are sailing on a boat along a canal in Tserskoye Selo, near St. Petersburg.


A few months after the 1917 Revolution, Grand Duchess Tatiana helps plant vegetables in her garden while she is being held captive by the Bolsheviks.

Tsar Nicholas 2 and his son Alexei in captivity (by the Bolsheviks) are sawing wood.
(A little boy with hemophilia, at any moment, will cut himself)
They were killed a few months later.
In the diary of one of the high-ranking Soviet leaders it was written that Vladimir Lenin decided to kill the Romanov family and thereby not leave the anti-Bolshevik forces as a living emblem, especially in such difficult circumstances.

Despite the fact that the royal family in Russia was an example to follow, many rulers hid terrible secrets from the people. Every king and queen had sins behind them, which admirers of the royal family try not to talk about. This post will tell us about these terrible secrets.

Mikhail Fedorovich (from 1613 to 1645)

The first of the Romanovs was crowned king at the age of 16, and at that time he could barely read. The next year, by his decree, Marina Mnishek’s three-year-old son, allegedly the grandson and heir of Ivan the Terrible, to whom several cities had managed to swear allegiance, was hanged in Moscow. This was after the severe Troubles, and fear of new possible impostors forced the elimination of the competitor publicly.

Alexey Mikhailovich (1645-1676)

The father of the future Emperor Peter the Great was a religious maniac, sometimes he prayed for six hours in a row and dealt with those who missed church services: without asking the reasons, he ordered them to be thrown into an icy river.

Peter I (1682-1725)

History describes many terrible scenes when Peter showed himself to be violent, inhumanly cruel and inadequate to the point of madness. Here are just some facts. Streltsy executions. 26-year-old Peter personally chopped off heads in front of a huge crowd and forced each of his retinue to take up the ax (unless the foreigners refused, justifying themselves by saying that they were afraid of incurring the hatred of the Russians). The mass executions actually turned into a grandiose show: the crowd was poured free vodka and they roared with delight, expressing devotion and love to the dashing sovereign. In a drunken stupor, the king immediately invited everyone to be an executioner, and many agreed.

Lifetime portrait of 44-year-old Peter, artist Antoine Pen:

“The Morning of the Streltsy Execution”, Vasily Surikov:

Death of Tsarevich Alexei. In acute conflict with his eldest son, Peter forced him to abdicate the throne and began to zealously investigate his misdeeds, for which he specially created the Secret Chancellery. 28-year-old Alexei was sentenced to death for treason and, after the verdict, was tortured in prison: in the presence of his father, he received 25 lashes. According to some reports, this is why he died. And Peter the next day noisily feasted, with an orchestra and fireworks, on the occasion of the anniversary of the Battle of Poltava.

“Peter I interrogates Tsarevich Alexei in Peterhof”, Nikolai Ge:

“Maria Hamilton before execution”, Pavel Svedomsky:

Execution of a mistress. The next year, Peter sent his former mistress, one of the most beautiful ladies-in-waiting at court, Maria Hamilton (Gamontova), to the chopping block, having learned that she had twice caused miscarriages and strangled the third baby. Although at that time she was already living with someone else, the king, apparently, suspected that the children could be from him, and was furious at such “murder.” At the execution, he behaved strangely: he picked up Mary’s severed head, kissed it and calmly began to lecture the people on anatomy, showing the organs affected by the ax, after which he kissed the dead lips again, threw the head in the mud and left.

Anna Ioannovna (1730-1740)

The niece of Peter I, like himself, was a great hunter of entertainment with the participation of dwarfs and “fools” - court jesters. If many of them were indeed distinguished by their wit, then the inventions of the empress herself, which brought her into wild merriment, were rather obscene. Once, for example, one of her favorites, the Italian violinist Pietro Miro, nicknamed Pedrillo (Petrillo, Parsley), laughed off an attempt to make fun of his ugly wife, saying that his “goat” was pregnant and would soon bear “kids.” Anna Ioannovna immediately came up with the idea of ​​putting him into bed with a real goat, dressed for laughs in a peignoir, and forcing the whole courtyard to bring them gifts. Pedrillo, who pleased his mistress, became richer by several thousand rubles on that day alone. “Jesters at the Court of Empress Anna Ioannovna”, Valery Jacobi (Pedrillo on the left, depicted with a violin; in the center of the picture in a yellow caftan the famous jester Balakirev jumps above everyone else):

The Empress generally adored all kinds of obscenity, especially gossip and stories of a pornographic nature. Knowing this, specially selected girls were sent to the court who were capable of conducting such conversations and inventing more and more new stories with juicy details.

Elizaveta Petrovna (1741-1762)

The daughter of Peter I was known as a beauty from childhood and did nothing but have fun and take care of her own appearance, remaining almost uneducated. She had never read and even as an adult did not know that Great Britain was an island. Most of all, Elizabeth was interested in masquerades and especially the so-called “metamorphoses,” where all the ladies had to appear in men's attire, and the men in women's attire. Moreover, the empress was convinced that her court rivals had ugly legs and that in men's leggings everyone except her was making a mockery of themselves. One of the successful rivals, State Lady Natalya Lopukhina, who was considered a beauty, was “mercifully” spared by Elizabeth from the death penalty, instead ordering her to be flogged, her tongue torn out and exiled to Siberia. Officially, Lopukhina was arrested and tortured in the case of a political conspiracy, but unofficially it was the empress’s revenge for the repulsed gentlemen and ridicule in her youth.

Natalya Fedorovna Lopukhina, engraving by Lavrenty Seryakov:

Finally, Elizabeth doomed the legitimate heir to the throne, appointed before her death by Anna Ioannovna, to a terrible existence. Emperor Ivan VI was only a year and a half old when Peter's daughter staged a coup and secretly ordered him to be thrown into prison, forever separating him from his parents and protecting him from human contact. The “famous prisoner,” as he was called after the strictest ban on mentioning his name, was stabbed to death by guards at the age of 23, already under Catherine II.

Catherine II (1762-1796)

33-year-old Catherine overthrew and arrested her own husband and second cousin Peter III, a relationship with whom had not worked out from the very beginning. They got married when she was 16 and he was 17 years old. According to one version, he was infantile almost to the point of dementia and avoided marital duty for 9 years, allegedly not knowing what to do in bed with a woman. According to another version (and Catherine admitted this in her biographical notes), he did not love her and made no attempts to get closer. At the same time, he openly took mistresses and even planned to marry one, but died under unclear circumstances 10 days after his deposition.

Coronation portrait of Emperor Peter III, Lukas Conrad Pfanzelt:

Meanwhile, the unhappy marriage made Catherine herself the greatest mistress on the Russian throne. She gave birth to her first child, the future Emperor Paul I, only in the 10th year after the wedding, which gave rise to rumors that he was not from Peter, although he looked like him. The empress had two more children from different lovers, and she gave birth to one in complete secret from her husband - in order to distract the emperor and take him away from the palace, her faithful valet started a fire in own home.

Modern painting“The Triumph of Catherine”, Vasily Nesterenko (after right hand from the Empress her famous favorite Prince Grigory Potemkin)

The “depraved empress” took her last favorite at the age of 60: he became the 21-year-old nobleman Platon Zubov, whom she enriched unspeakably and who, five years after her death, participated in the murder of her son Paul I.

Platon Aleksandrovich Zubov, artist Ivan Eggink:

Alexander I (1801-1825)

Catherine's 23-year-old grandson came to power as a result of a conspiracy against his own father: he was convinced that if Paul was not overthrown, he would destroy the empire. At the same time, Alexander did not allow murder, but the perpetrators - officers inflamed with champagne - decided otherwise: in the middle of the night they struck the emperor with a powerful blow to the temple with a golden snuffbox and strangled him with a scarf. Alexander, having learned about the death of his father, burst into tears, and then one of the main conspirators said in French: “Stop being childish, go reign!”

Alexander II (1855-1881)

Having ascended the throne, Alexander, who had previously lived in a happy marriage with many children, began to have favorites, with whom, according to rumors, he had illegitimate children. And at the age of 48, he began secretly dating 18-year-old Princess Katya Dolgorukova, who years later became his second wife.

Their extensive erotic correspondence has been preserved - perhaps the most frank on behalf of the head of state: “In anticipation of our meeting, I am trembling all over again. I imagine your pearl in the shell"; “We had each other the way you wanted. But I must confess to you: I will not rest until I see your charms again...”

Nicholas II (1894-1917)

The most terrible secret was and remains the death of the family of the last Russian emperor. For many years after the execution in the basement without trial or investigation, the Soviet authorities lied to the whole world that only Nikolai was killed, and his wife, four daughters and son were alive and well and “transported to a safe place where nothing threatens them.” This gave rise to popular rumors about the allegedly escaped princesses and Tsarevich Alexei and contributed to the emergence of a huge army of impostor adventurers. In 2015, at the insistence of the Church, the investigation into the death of the royal family began “from scratch.” A new genetic examination has confirmed the authenticity of the remains of Nicholas II, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna and three Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana and Anastasia, found near Yekaterinburg in 1991 and buried in the Peter and Paul Cathedral.

Faces of Nicholas II and Princess Anastasia reconstructed from the remains:

Then they began to compare them with the genetic materials of Alexei and Maria, found in 2007. The timing of their burial depends on the willingness of the Church to recognize the remains


Abdicating the throne, Nicholas II tried to negotiate the fulfillment of certain conditions for himself and his family. At that moment, the Romanovs were not yet going to be sent to Tobolsk, so the abdicated emperor insisted on the absence of tight security and unhindered travel to his family in Tsarskoe Selo. Most of all, Nikolai hoped that the children would be able to stay at home without risking their own safety long time. At that time they were suffering from measles and any travel could worsen their condition. Romanov Sr. also asked for permission to travel to England for himself and his family.

First, the Provisional Government agrees to fulfill all the conditions. But already on March 8, 1917, General Mikhail Alekseev informed the Tsar that he “can consider himself, as it were, under arrest.” After some time, a notification of refusal comes from London, which previously agreed to accept the Romanov family. On March 21, former Emperor Nicholas II and his entire family were officially taken into custody.

A little more than a year later, on July 17, 1918, the last royal family of the Russian Empire would be shot in a cramped basement in Yekaterinburg. The Romanovs suffered hardships as they moved closer and closer to their grim end. Let's look at rare photos of members of the last royal family of Russia, taken some time before the execution.


1. After the February Revolution of 1917, the last royal family of Russia, by decision of the Provisional Government, was sent to the Siberian city of Tobolsk to protect them from the wrath of the people. A few months earlier, Tsar Nicholas II had abdicated the throne, ending more than three hundred years of rule by the Romanov dynasty.


2. The Romanovs began their five-day journey to Siberia in August, on the eve of Tsarevich Alexei's 13th birthday. The seven family members were joined by 46 servants and a military escort. The day before reaching their destination, the Romanovs sailed past the home village of Rasputin, whose eccentric influence on politics may have contributed to their dark ending.


3. The family arrived in Tobolsk on August 19 and began to live in relative comfort on the banks of the Irtysh River. In the Governor's Palace, where they were housed, the Romanovs were well fed and they could communicate a lot with each other, without being distracted by state affairs and official events. Children staged plays for their parents, and the family often went to the city for religious services - this was the only form of freedom they were allowed.


4. When the Bolsheviks came to power at the end of 1917, the regime of the royal family began to tighten slowly but surely. The Romanovs were forbidden to attend church and generally leave the territory of the mansion. Soon coffee, sugar, butter and cream, and the soldiers assigned to protect them wrote obscene and offensive words on the walls and fences of their homes.


5. Things were getting worse and worse. In April 1918, a commissar, a certain Yakovlev, arrived with an order to transport the former tsar from Tobolsk. The Empress was adamant in her desire to accompany her husband, but Comrade Yakovlev had other orders that complicated everything. At this time, Tsarevich Alexei, suffering from hemophilia, began to suffer from paralysis of both legs due to a bruise, and everyone expected that he would be left in Tobolsk, and the family would be divided during the war.


6. The commissar’s demands to move were adamant, so Nikolai, his wife Alexandra and one of their daughters, Maria, soon left Tobolsk. They eventually boarded a train to travel through Yekaterinburg to Moscow, where the Red Army was headquartered. However, Commissar Yakovlev was arrested for trying to save the royal family, and the Romanovs got off the train in Yekaterinburg, in the heart of the territory captured by the Bolsheviks.


7. In Yekaterinburg, the rest of the children joined their parents - they were all locked in Ipatiev’s house. The family was placed on the second floor and completely cut off from outside world, boarding up the windows and posting guards at the doors. For the rest of their days, the Romanovs were allowed to go out into the fresh air for only five minutes a day.


8. At the beginning of July 1918, the Soviet authorities began to prepare for the execution of the royal family. Ordinary soldiers on guard were replaced by representatives of the Cheka, and the Romanovs were allowed last time go to worship. The priest who conducted the service later admitted that none of the family said a word during the service. For July 16, the day of the murder, five truckloads of barrels of benzidine and acid were ordered to quickly dispose of the bodies.


9. Early in the morning of July 17, the Romanovs were gathered and told about the offensive of the White Army. The family believed that they were simply being moved to a small, lighted basement for their own protection, because it would soon be unsafe here. Approaching the place of his execution, the last Tsar of Russia passed by trucks, in one of which his body would soon lie, not even suspecting what a terrible fate awaited his wife and children.


10. In the basement, Nikolai was told that he was about to be executed. Not believing his own ears, he asked: “What?” - immediately after which the security officer Yakov Yurovsky shot the Tsar. Another 11 people pulled their triggers, filling the basement with Romanov blood. Alexei survived the first shot, but was finished off by Yurovsky's second shot. The next day, the bodies of members of the last royal family of Russia were burned 19 km from Yekaterinburg, in the village of Koptyaki.

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