📚“Maria Romanov After 17 July 1918” In a sense, the First World War was the battle of cousins. The financiers of the war decided to erase the last traces of the Russian Empire from history. They had already identified the most suitable employer to achieve their goals. Kaiser Wilhelm the second. They knew the Kaiser's weakness for Tsarina Aleksandra Fyodorovna, who was the wife of the last Russian Tsar Nicholas the second. It didn't take long for the Kaiser to find the right shooter for the job. He was Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, who was later known as Lenin. Lenin's brother Aleksandr Ulyanov was executed for the assassination of Tsar Alexander III. According to the agreements of the Kaiser and Lenin, the Tsar would be killed. The Tsar's family would be sent to the Kaiser. But Lenin did not obey the agreement, thinking that the Kaiser would betray him. The execution, which took place on July 17, 1918, at 01:00, was concluded as neither the Kaiser nor Lenin had planned. Maria and her brother Alexei were able to survive with the help of the young Prince, whom Maria had met at a prom in Romania. This book is about the lives of Maria and Alexei after July 17, 1918.
Too bad Stalin and Lenin didnt die in prison during this time. Even if the Communists were to take over it wouldnt have been any worse than those monsters, especially Stalin.
Какие красивые дети. Татьяна больше всех на отца похожа. Жаль, что убили их ни в чем ни повинных. Во всех европейских странах существуют короли, королевы, принцы, принцессы. Были бы и у нас а России, как реликвия, чтоли.
Anastasia as well as her three sisters and brother Alexei ALL died. Prince Philip supplied the DNA that tested and proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that all their bones were related through the line of Queen Victoria from which both Tsarina Alexandra and Philip were descendants. DNA tests were run on a piece of Anna Anderson's innards from an operation she had had, and her DNA was found to be a 100% NON match to that of Prince Philip or Alexandra. Read the facts and learn the truth. We often wish history were filled with 'what ifs,' but in this case there is NO what if. I have seen the burial chamber in the Petropavlovsk Cathedral in St. P and they are all buried there, and each has their own tomb stone set into the wall. This is why members of the British royal family attended the Romanov funeral. They were related through Queen Victoria -- QEII and Philip are distant cousins.
Beautiful tribute. A loving mother and father murdered along with their 5 children because of hatred. I hope those Bolshevik bastards are burning in hell.
انتم ذهبتم فداء للمسيح لتكونوا شهدائنا شهداء المسيح .في ديننا المسيحي نكون شهداء للسيد يسوع المسيح نموت لاجله ولا نقتل الاخرين لندخل الجنةونكون شهداء عاءلة روماف هي احد رموز التضحية. الاورثودوكسية لاجل المسيح لانوا قاتليهم كلنوا شياطين ابالسىة لم يتحملوا وجود هؤلاء الملاءكة .لكم الرحمة وتكونوا مع الابرار والقديسين .➕➕➕♥♥♥
TK is a complete Prick! Someone should puch that shithead in the face- maybe shorten that shnouzer of his a bit.... Never did like that arrogant, peice of shit bastered.. he and cry-baby Will have no busines in Indycar...
Still can't believe Hornish left the best ride one could ever dream of. He had it all. And threw it all away. He has to regret his decision to leave Team Penske. Bizarre.
Long live Orthodox Russia - Greetings from Greece. My grandfather was in the White Army of Tsar Romanov as a Greek volunteer Да здравствует Россия Православная. Мой дед был в белой армии царя Романова как греческий волонтера Привет из Греции.
Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna (Paternal 1st cousin to Tsar Nicholas II) suggested Elinor Glyn ("Three Weeks" novel writer) might like to come to Russia to gather material for a Russian-based story 'Everyone always writes books about our peasants' she had told her 'come and write one about how the real people live' - Helen Rappaport: The Romanov Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Daughters of Nicholas and Alexandra Very good book BTW - Aside from this books expose of their lives, I think this quote by the Grand Duchess neatly sums up how this family lived. They really were sheltered, and didn't have any understanding of the suffering of the people they ruled. It's a shame they were not just exiled, but taken in the context of the time, it's understandable. Think of a similar uprising against Marie Antoinette. Push a population to the brink, then mob mentality arises. I believe that was a large part of their final undoing.
The French, Bolshevik, and Islamic revolutions have too much in common with each other, and I mean right down to the fact that the three leaders ousted from power by those revolutions were dead within a year.
I must hand it to the late Sir Peter Ustinov, who although many instigators of the Russian Revolution were from the middle and upper classes, made the observation that: "Terrorism is the war of the poor, and war the terrorism of the rich." Ustinov deserves kudos for acknowledging why his Czarist supporting forbears were kicked out of Russia.
I am sorry for the people who approve this massacre. I hope that never can meet these monsters. The British, Japan, China, Frances Spain, Portugal and others nation including the ottoman turkey. Commit crimes against innocent people. Nicolas never wants to be tzar he was good but does have character after all the British remain in power. Eternal rest for that family by the my older daughter has some resemble to Anastasia and I cry to see somebody who looks to my daughter. If there a hell Lenin will has a special place for him.
"Approve" is a pretty strong word. I will say that what happened to the Romanovs was the inevitable result of years of a specific ethnic minority group as well as the average Russian being marginalized, starved, abused, and murdered for far too long, and kept poor and ignorant because Czarist rule would only thrive if the people kept getting fed the idea that the Czar ruled by Divine Right of Kings, which a more educated populace would inevitably challenge. I would say that students of history owe it to those killed by the Communists to remember the circumstances that led to their demise and see that history does not repeat itself.
Attempts at peaceful reform were thwarted at every turn, and in the words of President Kennedy, "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable."
The late historical writer Barbara Tuchman observed, "Every successful revolution puts on in time the robes of the tyrant it has deposed." Many around the world find Americans to be as cruel and as conceited as they used to find the British when we're at our most disagreeable, Napoleon had to rehire many officials ousted by the French Revolution because of their expertise in certain areas of government, and what ever brute force tactics the Bolsheviks used, they definitely learned from the Czars. The difference is that the Czars enforced their cruelties in the name of God, and Communists deserve a few points for honesty for leaving God out of the deal when they took over and behaved in the same despicable way.
Deborah Earle who was funding the revolutionaries and why were they funding them?answer Rothschild and other banking criminals why because the previous tzars refused to allow for a central banking system owned by these criminal banking cartels.
Yes, well, they wouldn't have had a revolution if there had been a decent government. All the classic symptoms that lead to revolution were there: They were too isolated (largely because of Alexis' hemophilia), consequently too ill-informed, there was corruption(if not their own, than that of their officials), it was felt there was too much money being spent on materialistic things as the basic needs of the majority of the people were ignored,they could be too arrogant to listen to practical advice on affairs of state, they had a swift, brutal way of putting down any dissent(i.e. Bloody Sunday), foreigners often got the best of everything while the country's majority lived like outcasts in their own country, they got their long-suffering people into one senseless, unnecessary, and very un-affordable war too many, and they made the most dangerous mistake of all by assuming that no matter what they did, the people would always be for them. The French, Bolshevik, and Islamic Revolutions all took place for those reasons, and as Marx was a big fan of the French Revolutionaries, his Communist Ideology was inspired by that revolution. Noticeably, all the leaders ousted by those revolutions were dead within a year, via the guillotine, firing squad, and cancer, respectively. The long-corrupt Hapsburg regime tumbled as a result of World War I as well, but they got out alive.
Yes, it was, but did you see what happened to them in those pogroms over the centuries? The attack of the Jewish shtetl in "Fiddler on the Roof" looks like a riot in a Kindergarten classroom compared to the reality of the massive loss of life in those incidents. Centuries of that kind of abuse made these people so hardened that inevitably, they had no moral qualms about killing the Czar and his family in retaliation. I'm sorry for the loss of the five Romanov children, especially given that his oldest daughter, Olga, whose favorite book was "Les Miserables" was, by most accounts, the only one with enough sense to realize what was going to happen and could do nothing to stop it. But those they victimized for centuries had children who were just as dear to them for whom there never was any real justice. if you marginalize the existence of certain people for a long time, and keep brutalizing them, this is what happens. You can only push human beings so far.
Michael Lynch Most interestingly, itself the tsar's wife - Alexandra took care of the wounded in the 1st World war! Once the country was declared a general mobilization, Alexandra immediately started practicing device hospitals, infirmaries, forming groups of sanitary trains and open storage of medicines. She constantly monitored the smooth operation of the entire network infirmaries. The tsar's daughters Olga and Tatiana were the sisters of mercy and engaged wounded and sick. Even the youngest of their daughter Maria and Anastasia helped in the work: visiting the wounded soldiers, were engaged in sewing clothes and preparing bandages and lint, buy medicines at their own expense, read to wounded soldiers, wrote letters to relatives under the dictation of the wounded. And after all this, their simply killed!
+Tamerlane i think Nicholas II reign came at the wrong time even the most brilliant tsar would handle the chaos he faced I am actually surprised that he managed to do survived for so long.
+Tamerlane with all the Chios he was facing he didn't what to do I mean imagine your country being part of World War I and facing a rebellion at the same time no one could handle all of that.
Or he just passively reverted to the idea that everything that happened was God's will at the expense of people whose suffering he could have alleviated. They didn't become a nation full of Atheists for no reason.
As Edvard Radzinsky stated in his book, "The Last Tsar", "Childlike faith is an enchanting quality in an ordinary person and a fatal quality in a ruler."