To come in
Speech therapy portal
  • How to gain self-confidence, achieve calmness and increase self-esteem: discovering the main secrets of Gaining self-confidence
  • Psychological characteristics of children with general speech underdevelopment: features of cognitive activity Mental characteristics of children with onr
  • What is burnout at work and how to deal with it How to deal with burnout at work
  • How to Deal with Emotional Burnout Methods for Dealing with Emotional Burnout
  • How to Deal with Emotional Burnout Methods for Dealing with Emotional Burnout
  • Burnout - How To Deal With Work Stress How To Deal With Emotional Burnout
  • Daily life of the royal family in Tobolsk. The Royal Family: real life after the alleged execution Life of the royal family after "death"

    Daily life of the royal family in Tobolsk.  The Royal Family: real life after the alleged execution Life of the royal family after

    Russian empire. 1914 year.

    2nd place in the world in terms of GDP (after the USA),
    - 4th place in the world in terms of total industrial production,
    - 5th place in the world in terms of living standards. - industrial production growth rates - 1st place in the world.
    - the rate of growth of national income - 1st place in the world.
    - the rate of growth of labor productivity - 1st place in the world.
    - the level of concentration of production - 1st place in the world.
    - volume of gold reserves - 3rd place in the world.
    - one of the hardest currencies in the world - the Russian gold ruble.
    - the world's largest oil exporter,
    - the world's largest exporter of textile products,
    - one of the world's largest manufacturers of non-ferrous and ferrous metallurgy products,
    is one of the world's largest manufacturers of mechanical engineering products.
    is one of the largest countries in the world in terms of coal production.
    - one of the longest in the world railways... One of the highest rates of railroad construction in the world.
    - the world's largest exporter of cereals, flax, eggs, milk, butter, meat, sugar, etc. Grain yields are 1/3 more than that of Argentina, the USA and Canada combined.
    - a practically resolved land issue (80% of the land in European Russia and 100% of the land in Siberia was in the hands of peasants on the basis of ownership or lease rights). Increasing the fertility of the land and the number of yields, the active introduction of new tools of labor, for example, tractors, new types of plows, etc.
    - the most developed social legislation in the world - for example, the wages of Russian workers are higher than those of European workers, second only (in the world) to American wages. The law on social insurance was adopted first by all European states and the United States.
    - one of the most low levels taxes among European countries (below Great Britain, France, Austria-Hungary and Germany, below Russian taxes were only in Italy).
    - the world's fastest pace of demographic growth (during the reign of Nicholas II, the population increased by about 60 million people).
    - rapidly developing literacy. In particular, universal primary education, which had been successfully functioning since 1908, was planned in 1918 to introduce universal secondary education. The largest number of female students among all European countries.
    - a rapidly developing health care system. In terms of the number of doctors, Russia is in second place in Europe and third in the world.
    - one of the strongest armies in the world, which, moreover, is developing rapidly. The world's best Mosin rifles, some of the world's best Maxim machine guns and some of the world's best 76 mm field guns. The largest aircraft fleet in the world. The world's best destroyers and some of the world's best battleships, the world's best mines and mine-laying tactics.
    - the world's largest river merchant fleet.
    - release of some of the world's best steam locomotives.
    - alcohol consumption per capita is lower than in the main European countries.
    - there are no problems with inflation and unemployment, since both are almost completely absent.
    - the crime rate is lower than in the USA and Western Europe.

    History, like a corrupt girl, falls under any new "tsar". That's recent history our country has been rewritten many times. "Responsible" and "unbiased" historians rewrote biographies and changed the fate of people in the Soviet and post-Soviet period.

    But today, access to many archives is open. Only conscience is the key. What gets to people bit by bit does not leave indifferent those who live in Russia. Those who want to be proud of their country and raise their children as patriots of their native land.

    In Russia, historians are a dime a dozen. If you throw a stone, you will almost always hit one of them. But now only 14 years have passed, and no one can establish the real history of the last century.

    Miller and Baer's modern henchmen are robbing Russians in all directions. Either, scoffing at Russian traditions, they will start Maslenitsa in February, then they will bring an outright criminal under the Nobel Prize.

    And then we wonder: why is it such a poor people in a country with richest resources and cultural heritage?

    Abdication of Nicholas II

    Emperor Nicholas II did not renounce the throne. This act is “fake”. It was compiled and typed by the Quartermaster General of Headquarters Supreme Commander-in-Chief A.S. Lukomsky and the representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the General Staff N.I. Basili.

    This printed text was signed on March 2, 1917, not by Tsar Nicholas II Alexandrovich Romanov, but by the Minister of the Imperial Court, Adjutant General, Baron Boris Fredericks.

    After 4 days, Orthodox Tsar Nicholas II was betrayed by the top of the Russian Orthodox Church, misleading the whole of Russia by the fact that, seeing this false act, the clergy passed it off as a real one. And they transmitted by telegraph to the entire Empire and beyond its borders that the Emperor, they say, had abdicated the Throne!

    March 6, 1917 The Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church listened to two reports. The first is the act of March 2, 1917, about the "abdication" of the Sovereign Emperor Nicholas II for himself and for his son from the Throne of the Russian State and about the resignation of the Supreme Power. The second is the act of March 3, 1917, on the refusal of the Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich from the perception of the Supreme Power.

    After the hearings, until the establishment in the Constituent Assembly of the way of government and new basic laws of the Russian State, ORDERED:

    « The aforementioned acts should be taken into account and executed and announced in all Orthodox churches, in city ones - on the first day after receiving the text of these acts, and in rural ones - on the first Sunday or holiday, after the Divine Liturgy, with a prayer to the Lord God for the calming of the passions, with the proclamation of the many years of the God-protected Russian Power and its Blessed Provisional Government».

    And although the top of the generals of the Russian Army for the most part consisted of Jews, the middle officer corps and several higher ranks of the generals, such as Fyodor Arturovich Keller, did not believe this fake and decided to go to the rescue of the Emperor.

    From that moment on, the split of the Army began, which turned into a Civil War!

    The priesthood and the entire Russian society split.

    But the Rothschilds achieved the main thing - they removed Her Lawful Sovereign from governing the country, and began to finish off Russia.

    After the revolution, all the bishops and priests who had betrayed the Tsar suffered death or scattering throughout the world for perjury before the Orthodox Tsar.

    Chairman V. Ch. K. No. 13666/2 comrade. Dzerzhinsky FE INDICATION: “In accordance with the decision of V. Ts. IK and the Council of People's Commissars, it is necessary to put an end to the priests and religion as soon as possible. Popov should be arrested as counter-revolutionaries and saboteurs, shot mercilessly and everywhere. And as much as possible. Churches are to be closed. The premises of the temples should be sealed and turned into warehouses.

    Chairman V. Ts. I. K. Kalinin, Chairman of the Sov. bunk bed Komissarov Ulyanov / Lenin / ".

    Simulated murder

    There is a lot of information about the sovereign's stay with his family in prison and exile, about his stay in Tobolsk and Yekaterinburg, and it is quite truthful.

    Was there a shooting? Or perhaps it was staged? Was it possible to flee or be taken out of the Ipatiev house?

    It turns out, yes!

    There was a factory nearby. In 1905, the owner, in case of seizure by revolutionaries, dug an underground passage to it. When the house was destroyed by Yeltsin, after the decision of the Politburo, the bulldozer fell into a tunnel that no one knew about.

    Thanks to Stalin and the intelligence officers of the General Staff, the Tsar's Family was taken to various Russian provinces, with the blessing of Metropolitan Macarius (Nevsky).

    On July 22, 1918, Evgenia Popel received the keys to the empty house and sent a telegram to her husband, N.N.

    In connection with the offensive of the White Guard Army, Soviet institutions were evacuated in Yekaterinburg. Documents, property and valuables were taken out, including the Romanov family (!).

    Great excitement spread among the officers when it became known in what condition the Ipatiev house, where the Tsar's Family lived, was. Who was free from service, went to the house, everyone wanted to take an active part in clarifying the question: "where are they?"

    Some examined the house, breaking the boarded up doors; others dismantled the lying things and papers; still others dumped the ashes from the stoves. The fourth, scoured the courtyard and garden, looking into all the basements and cellars. Everyone acted independently, not trusting each other and trying to find an answer to the question that worried everyone.

    While the officers were examining the rooms, the people who came to profit, took away a lot of abandoned property, which was then found at the bazaar and flea markets.

    The head of the garrison, Major General Golitsin, appointed a special commission of officers, mainly cadets of the Academy General Staff, chaired by Colonel Sherekhovsky. Which was instructed to deal with the finds in the area of ​​Ganina Yama: local peasants, raking up recent fireplaces, found burnt things from the Tsar's wardrobe, including a cross with precious stones.

    Captain Malinovsky was ordered to survey the area of ​​Ganina Yama. On July 30, taking with him Sheremetyevsky, the investigator for the most important cases of the Yekaterinburg District Court A.P. Nametkin, several officers, the Heir's doctor - V.N. Derevenko and the Sovereign's servant - T.I. Chemodurov, went there.

    Thus began the investigation into the disappearance of Tsar Nicholas II, the Empress, the Tsarevich and the Grand Duchesses.

    Malinovsky's commission lasted for about a week. But it was she who determined the area of ​​all subsequent investigative actions in Yekaterinburg and its environs. It was she who found the witnesses of the cordoning off of the Koptyakovskaya road around Ganina Yama by the Red Army. I found those who saw a suspicious convoy that passed from Yekaterinburg inside the cordon and back. I got evidence of destruction there, in bonfires near the mines of the Tsar's things.

    After the entire staff of the officers went to Koptyaki, Sherekhovsky divided the team into two parts. One, headed by Malinovsky, examined the Ipatiev house, the other, headed by Lieutenant Sheremetyevsky, took up the survey of Ganina Yama.

    When inspecting Ipatiev's house, the officers of Malinovsky's group managed to establish almost all the basic facts in a week, on which the investigation later relied.

    A year after the investigations, Malinovsky, in June 1919, showed Sokolov: "As a result of my work on the case, I became convinced that the August family is alive ... all the facts that I observed during the investigation were a simulation of murder."

    At the scene

    On July 28, A.P. Nametkin was invited to the headquarters, and from the side of the military authorities, since the civilian power had not yet been formed, it was proposed to him to investigate the case of the Tsar's Family. After that, they began to inspect the Ipatiev house. Doctor Derevenko and old Chemodurov were invited to participate in the identification of things; Professor of the Academy of the General Staff, Lieutenant General Medvedev, took part as an expert.

    On July 30, Aleksey Pavlovich Nametkin took part in inspecting the mine and fires near Ganina Yama. After the inspection, the Koptyakovsky peasant handed over to Captain Politkovsky a huge diamond, recognized by Chemodurov who was right there as a jewel belonging to Tsarina Alexandra Fedorovna.

    Nametkin, examining the Ipatiev house from 2 to 8 August, had publications of the decisions of the Ural Soviet and the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, announcing the execution of Nicholas II.

    Inspection of the building, traces of shots and signs of spilled blood confirmed known fact- possible death of people in this house.

    As for the other results of the inspection of Ipatiev's house, they left the impression of an unexpected disappearance of its inhabitants.

    On August 5, 6, 7, 8, Nametkin continued to inspect Ipatiev's house, described the state of the rooms where Nikolai Alexandrovich, Alexandra Feodorovna, Tsarevich and Grand Duchesses were kept. On examination, I found many small things that belonged, according to the valet TI Chemodurov and the doctor of the Heir VN Derevenko, to members of the Royal Family.

    Being an experienced investigator, Nametkin, after examining the scene of the incident, stated that an imitation of an execution had taken place in the Ipatiev House, and that none of the members of the Royal Family was shot there.

    He officially repeated his data in Omsk, where he gave interviews on this topic to foreign, mainly American correspondents. Stating that he had evidence that the Royal Family was not killed on the night of July 16-17 and was going to publish these documents soon.

    But he was forced to hand over the investigation.

    War with investigators

    On August 7, 1918, a meeting of the branches of the Yekaterinburg District Court was held, where, unexpectedly for the prosecutor Kutuzov, contrary to agreements with the chairman of the court Glasson, the Yekaterinburg District Court, by a majority vote, decided to transfer "the case of the murder of the former Sovereign Emperor Nicholas II" to a member of the court Ivan Alexandrovich Sergeev ...

    After the transfer of the case, the house where he rented the premises was burned, which led to the death of the investigative archive of Nametkin.

    The main difference in the work of a detective on the scene lies in what is not in the laws and textbooks in order to plan further measures for each of the revealed significant circumstances. That is why their replacement is harmful, because with the departure of the former investigator, his plan to unravel the tangle of riddles disappears.

    On August 13, A.P. Nametkin handed over the case to I.A.Sergeev on 26 numbered sheets. And after the capture of Yekaterinburg by the Bolsheviks, Nametkin was shot.

    Sergeev was aware of the complexity of the forthcoming investigation.

    He understood that the main thing was to find the bodies of those killed. Indeed, in forensic science there is a strict directive: "no corpse - no murder." They placed great expectations on the expedition to Ganina Yama, where they very carefully searched the area, pumped out water from the mines. But ... they found only a severed finger and an upper jaw prosthesis. True, the "corpse" was also removed, but it was the corpse of the dog of the Grand Duchess Anastasia.

    In addition, there are witnesses who saw the former Empress and her children in Perm.

    Doctor Derevenko, who treated the Heir, like Botkin, who accompanied the Tsar's Family in Tobolsk and Yekaterinburg, repeatedly testifies that the unidentified corpses delivered to him are not the Tsar and not the Heir, since the Tsar should have a mark on his head / skull / from the blow of the Japanese sabers in 1891

    The clergy also knew about the release of the Royal Family: Patriarch St. Tikhon.

    Life of the royal family after "death"

    In the KGB of the USSR, on the basis of the 2nd Main Directorate, there was a special. department that oversaw all the movements of the Royal Family and their descendants across the territory of the USSR. Whether someone likes it or not, they will have to reckon with it, and, consequently, revise Russia's future policy.

    Daughters Olga (lived under the name Natalia) and Tatiana were in the Diveyevo monastery, disguised as nuns and sang in the choir of the Trinity Church. From there Tatyana moved to the Krasnodar Territory, got married and lived in the Apsheronsky and Mostovsky districts. She was buried on September 21, 1992 in the village of Solyonom, Mostovsky District.

    Olga, through Uzbekistan left for Afghanistan with the Emir of Bukhara Seyid Alim-Khan (1880 - 1944). From there - to Finland to Vyrubova. Since 1956 she lived in Vyritsa under the name of Natalya Mikhailovna Evstigneeva, where she rested in Bose on January 16, 1976 (11/15/2011 from the grave of V.K.Olga, Her fragrant relics were partially stolen by one demoniac, but were returned to Kazan temple).

    On October 6, 2012, her remaining relics were removed from the grave in the cemetery, joined to the abducted, and reburied near the Kazan Church.

    The daughters of Nicholas II, Maria and Anastasia (lived as Alexandra Nikolaevna Tugareva) were in the Glinsk Hermitage for some time. Then Anastasia moved to the Volgograd (Stalingrad) region and got married on the Tugarev farm of the Novoanninsky district. From there she moved to st. Panfilovo, where she was buried on June 27, 1980. And her husband Vasily Yevlampievich Peregudov died defending Stalingrad in January 1943. Maria moved to the Nizhny Novgorod region in the village of Arefino and was buried there on May 27, 1954.

    Metropolitan John of Ladoga (Snychev, d. 1995) nursed Anastasia's daughter, Julia, in the city of Samara, and together with Archimandrite John (Maslov, d. 1991) he nourished Tsarevich Alexei. Archpriest Vasily (Shvets, d. 2011) took care of his daughter Olga (Natalia). The son of the youngest daughter of Nicholas II - Anastasia - Mikhail Vasilyevich Peregudov (1924 - 2001), having come from the front, worked as an architect, a railway station in Stalingrad-Volgograd was built according to his design!

    The brother of Tsar Nicholas II, Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich, was also able to escape from Perm right under the nose of the Cheka. At first he lived in Belogorie, and then moved to Vyritsa, where he rested in Bose in 1948.

    Until 1927, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna was at the Tsar's dacha (Vvedensky skete of the Serafimo Ponetaevsky monastery, Nizhny Novgorod region). And at the same time she visited Kiev, Moscow, Petersburg, Sukhumi. Alexandra Feodorovna took the name Xenia (in honor of St. Xenia Grigorievna of Petersburg / Petrova 1732 - 1803 /).

    In 1899, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna wrote a prophetic poem:

    “In the solitude and silence of the monastery,

    Where guardian angels fly

    Far from temptation and sin

    She lives, whom everyone considers dead.

    Everyone thinks She already dwells

    In the divine celestial sphere.

    She steps outside the walls of the monastery,

    Submissive to her increased faith! "

    The Empress met with Stalin, who told her the following: "Live peacefully in the city of Starobelsk, but you don't need to interfere in politics."

    Stalin's patronage saved the Tsarina when local security officers opened criminal cases against her.

    Money transfers were regularly received from France and Japan to the Queen's name. The Empress received them and passed them on to four kindergartens. This was confirmed by the former manager of the Starobelsk branch of the State Bank Ruf Leontyevich Shpilev and the chief accountant Klokolov.

    The empress did needlework, making blouses, scarves, and straws were sent to her from Japan to make hats. All this was done on the orders of local fashionistas.

    Empress Alexandra Feodorovna

    In 1931, the Tsarina came to the Starobelsk branch of the GPU and announced that she had 185,000 marks in her account in the Berlin Reichsbank, as well as 300,000 dollars in the Chicago bank. She wants to transfer all these funds to the disposal of the Soviet government, provided that it provides her with old age.

    The Empress's application was forwarded to the GPU of the Ukrainian SSR, which instructed the so-called "Credit Bureau" to negotiate with abroad on receiving these deposits!

    In 1942 Starobelsk was occupied, the Empress on the same day was invited to breakfast with Colonel-General Kleist, who suggested that she move to Berlin, to which the Tsarina replied with dignity: “I am Russian and I want to die in my homeland.” she was offered to choose any house in the city that she wanted: it is not suitable, they say, for such a person to huddle in a cramped dugout. But she refused that too.

    The only thing the Queen agreed to was to use the services of German doctors. True, the commandant of the city nevertheless ordered to install a plaque near the Empress's dwelling with the inscription in Russian and German: "Do not disturb Her Majesty."

    What she was very happy about, because in her dugout behind a screen there were ... wounded Soviet tank crews.

    The German medicine came in very handy. The tankers managed to get out, and they safely crossed the front line. Taking advantage of the location of the authorities, Tsarina Alexandra Fedorovna saved many prisoners of war and local residents who were threatened with reprisals.

    Empress Alexandra Fedorovna under the name of Xenia from 1927 until her death in 1948 lived in the city of Starobelsk, Luhansk region. She took monastic tonsure with the name of Alexandra in the Starobelsk Holy Trinity Monastery.

    Kosygin - Tsarevich Alexei

    Tsarevich Alexei - became Alexei Nikolaevich Kosygin (1904 - 1980). Twice Hero of Socialist. Labor (1964, 1974). Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Sun of Peru. In 1935, he graduated from the Leningrad Textile Institute. In 1938 the head. department of the Leningrad regional party committee, chairman of the executive committee of the Leningrad City Council.

    The wife of Klavdia Andreevna Krivosheina (1908 - 1967) is the niece of A.A.Kuznetsov. Daughter Lyudmila (1928 - 1990) was married to Jermen Mikhailovich Gvishiani (1928 - 2003). The son of Mikhail Maksimovich Gvishiani (1905 - 1966) since 1928 in the GPUKVD of Georgia. In 1937-38. deputy. Chairman of the Tbilisi City Executive Committee. In 1938, the 1st deputy. People's Commissar of the NKVD of Georgia. In 1938 - 1950. early UNKVDUNKGBUMGB Primorsky Territory. 1950-1953 early UMGB of the Kuibyshev region. Grandchildren Tatiana and Alexey.

    The Kosygin family was friends with the families of the writer Sholokhov, the composer Khachaturian, and the rocket designer Chelomey.

    In 1940 - 1960. - deputy. prev. Council of People's Commissars - Council of Ministers of the USSR. In 1941 - deputy. prev. Council for the evacuation of industry to the eastern regions of the USSR. From January to July 1942 - Commissioner of the State Defense Committee in besieged Leningrad. Participated in the evacuation of the population and industrial enterprises and property of Tsarskoe Selo. The tsarevich walked around Ladoga on a yacht "Shtandart" and knew the vicinity of the Lake well, therefore he organized the "Road of Life" across the Lake to supply the city.

    Aleksey Nikolaevich created an electronics center in Zelenograd, but enemies in the Politburo did not allow him to bring this idea to fruition. And today Russia is forced to purchase household appliances and computers all over the world.

    The Sverdlovsk Region produced everything: from strategic missiles to bacteriological weapons, and was filled with underground cities hiding under the indexes "Sverdlovsk-42", and there were more than two hundred of these "Sverdlovsk".

    He helped Palestine as Israel expanded its borders at the expense of Arab lands.

    He implemented projects for the development of gas and oil fields in Siberia.

    But the Jews, members of the Politburo, made the export of crude oil and gas the main line of the budget - instead of exporting refined products, as Kosygin (Romanov) wanted.

    In 1949, during GM Malenkov's promotion of the Leningrad Affair, Kosygin miraculously survived. During the investigation Mikoyan, deputy. Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, "organized a long trip to Siberia Kosygin, in connection with the need to strengthen the activities of cooperation, improve the procurement of agricultural products." Stalin coordinated this trip with Mikoyan on time, because he was poisoned and from the beginning of August to the end of December 1950 he lay in his dacha, miraculously survived!

    In dealing with Alexei, Stalin affectionately called him "Kosyga", since he was his nephew. Sometimes Stalin called him Tsarevich in front of everyone.

    In the 60s. Tsarevich Alexei, realizing the ineffectiveness of the existing system, proposed a transition from social economy to a real one. Keep records of products sold, not manufactured, as the main indicator of the efficiency of enterprises, etc. Alexei Nikolaevich Romanov normalized relations between the USSR and China during the conflict on the island. Damansky, meeting in Beijing at the airport with the Premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China Zhou Enlai.

    Alexei Nikolaevich visited the Venevsky monastery in the Tula region and talked with nun Anna, who was in touch with the entire royal family. He even once gave her a diamond ring, for clear predictions. And shortly before his death he came to her, and she told him that He would die on December 18!

    The death of Tsarevich Alexei coincided with Leonid Brezhnev's birthday on 12/18/1980, and these days the country did not know that Kosygin had died.

    The ashes of the Tsarevich have been resting in the Kremlin wall since 12/24/1980!

    There was no funeral service for the August Family


    Until 1927, the Royal Family met on the stones of St. Seraphim of Sarov, next to the Tsar's dacha, on the territory of the Vvedensky Skete of the Seraphim-Ponetaevsky Monastery. Now only the former baptismal remains of the Skete. It was closed in 1927 by the forces of the NKVD. This was preceded by general searches, after which all the nuns were moved to different monasteries in Arzamas and Ponetayevka. And icons, jewelry, bells and other property were taken to Moscow.

    In the 20s - 30s. Nicholas II stayed in Diveevo at st. Arzamasskaya, 16, in the house of Alexandra Ivanovna Grashkina - Schema Nun of Dominica (1906 - 2009).

    Stalin built a dacha in Sukhumi next to the dacha of the Tsar's Family and came there to meet with the Emperor and his cousin Nicholas II.

    In the form of an officer, Nicholas II visited Stalin in the Kremlin, as confirmed by General Vatov (d. 2004), who served in Stalin's guard.

    Marshal Mannerheim, having become President of Finland, immediately left the war, as he secretly communicated with the Emperor. And in the office of Mannerheim there was a portrait of Nicholas II. Confessor of the Royal Family since 1912, Fr. Alexey (Kibardin, 1882 - 1964), while living in Vyritsa, took care of the woman who arrived there from Finland in 1956 at the railway station. the eldest daughter of the Tsar - Olga.

    In Sofia, after the revolution, in the building of the Holy Synod on St. Alexander Nevsky Square, the confessor of the Highest Surname, Vladyka Theophan (Bystrov), lived.

    Vladyka never served a requiem for the August Family and told his cell attendant that the Royal Family was alive! And even in April 1931 he went to Paris to meet with Tsar Nicholas II and with the people who freed the Tsar's Family from captivity. Vladyka Theophan also said that over time the Romanov family would be restored, but along the female line.

    Expertise

    Head Department of Biology of the Ural medical academy Oleg Makeev said: “Genetic examination after 90 years is not only difficult due to changes in the bone tissue, but also cannot give an absolute result even if it is carefully performed. The methodology used in the studies already conducted has not yet been recognized as evidence by any court in the world. "

    A foreign expert commission to investigate the fate of the Royal Family, created in 1989, chaired by Pyotr Nikolayevich Koltypin-Vallovsky, ordered a study by scientists at Stanford University and received data on the DNA mismatch of the “Yekaterinburg remains”.

    The commission provided for DNA analysis a fragment of the finger of VK St. Elizabeth Feodorovna Romanova, whose relics are kept in the Jerusalem Church of Mary Magdalene.

    « The sisters and their children must have identical mitochondrial DNA, but the results of the analysis of the remains of Elizaveta Fedorovna do not correspond to the previously published DNA of the alleged remains of Alexandra Fedorovna and her daughters, ”was the conclusion of the scientists.

    The experiment was carried out by an international team of scientists led by Dr. Alec Knight, a molecular taxonomist from Stanford University, with the participation of geneticists from East Michigan University, Los Alamos National Laboratory, with the participation of Dr. Lev Zhivotovsky, an employee of the Institute of General Genetics of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

    After the death of an organism, DNA begins to rapidly decompose, (chop) into parts, and the more time passes, the more these parts are shortened. After 80 years, without creation special conditions, DNA fragments longer than 200 - 300 nucleotides are not preserved. And in 1994, during the analysis, a segment of 1.223 nucleotides was isolated».

    Thus, Peter Koltypin-Vallovskoy emphasized: “ Geneticists again denied the results of an examination carried out in 1994 at the British Laboratory, on the basis of which it was concluded that Tsar Nicholas II and his Family belonged to the "Yekaterinburg remains"».

    Japanese scientists presented to the Moscow Patriarchate the results of their research in relation to the “Yekaterinburg remains”.

    On December 7, 2004, in the building of the MP, Bishop Alexander of Dmitrov, vicar of the Moscow Diocese, met with Dr. Tatsuo Nagai. Doctor of Biological Sciences, Professor, Director of the Department of Forensic and Scientific Medicine, Kitazato University (Japan). Since 1987 he has worked at Kitazato University, is the Vice Dean of the Joint School of Medical Sciences, Director and Professor of the Department of Clinical Hematology and the Department of Forensic Medicine. Published 372 scientific work and made 150 presentations at international medical conferences in various countries. Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine in London.

    He carried out the identification of the mitochondrial DNA of the last Russian Emperor Nicholas II. During the attempt on the life of Tsarevich Nicholas II in Japan in 1891, his handkerchief remained there, which was applied to the wound. It turned out that the DNA structures from the cuts in 1998 in the first case differ from the DNA structure in both the second and the third cases. A research team led by Dr. Nagai took a sample of dried sweat from the clothes of Nicholas II stored in the Catherine Palace in Tsarskoye Selo and performed mitochondrial analysis.

    In addition, mitochondrial DNA analysis of hair, mandible bone and nail was performed. thumb buried in the Peter and Paul Cathedral of VK Georgy Alexandrovich, the younger brother of Nicholas II. He compared DNA from bone cuts buried in 1998 in the Peter and Paul Fortress, with blood samples from Emperor Nicholas II's nephew Tikhon Nikolayevich, as well as with samples of sweat and blood of Tsar Nicholas II himself.

    Conclusions of Dr. Nagai: "We got results different from the results obtained by Drs. Peter Gill and Pavel Ivanov on five points."

    Glorification of the King

    Sobchak (Finkelstein, d. 2000), being the mayor of St. Petersburg, committed a heinous crime - he issued death certificates for Nicholas II and his family members Leonida Georgievna. He issued certificates in 1996 - without even waiting for the conclusions of the "official commission" of Nemtsov.

    “Protection of the rights and legitimate interests” of the “imperial house” in Russia began in 1995 by the late Leonida Georgievna, who, on behalf of her daughter, “the head of the Russian imperial house,” applied for state registration of the death of members of the Imperial House, who were killed in 1918-1919. , and the issuance of certificates of their death. "

    On 01.12.2005, an application was submitted to the Prosecutor General's Office for the "rehabilitation of Emperor Nicholas II and his family members." This application was submitted on the instructions of the "princess" Maria Vladimirovna by her lawyer G. Yu. Lukyanov, who replaced Sobchak in this post.

    The glorification of the Royal Family, although it took place under Ridiger (Alexy II) at the Bishops' Council, was just a cover for the "consecration" of Solomon's temple.

    After all, only the Local Council can glorify a tsar in the face of the Saints. Because the King is the spokesman for the Spirit of all the people, not just the Priesthood. That is why the decision of the Council of Bishops in 2000 must be approved by the Local Council.

    According to ancient canons, it is possible to glorify God's saints after healing from various ailments occurs on their graves. After that, it is checked how this or that ascetic lived. If he lived a righteous life, then healings come from God. If not, then Bes does such healings, and then they will turn into new diseases.

    In order to be convinced on your own experience, you need to go to the grave of Emperor Nicholas II, to Nizhny Novgorod to the Krasnaya Etna cemetery, where he was buried on December 26, 1958.

    The famous Nizhny Novgorod elder and priest Grigory (Dolbunov, d. 1996) served the funeral service and buried the Tsar Emperor Nicholas II.

    Whom the Lord will grant to go to the grave and be healed, he can be convinced by his own experience.

    The transfer of His relics is still pending at the federal level.

    Sergey Zhelenkov

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

    A little over a year later, on July 17, 1918, the last royal family Russian Empire will be shot in a cramped basement in Yekaterinburg. The Romanovs suffered hardships, getting closer and closer to their gloomy finale. Let's take a look at rare photos of members of the last tsarist family of Russia, taken some time before the execution.

    After February revolution In 1917, the last tsarist family of Russia, by decision of the Provisional Government, was sent to the Siberian city of Tobolsk to protect it from the wrath of the people. A few months earlier, Tsar Nicholas II abdicated the throne, as a result of which more than three hundred years of the reign of the Romanov dynasty were interrupted.

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

    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 placed, the Romanovs were well fed, and they could communicate a lot with each other, without being distracted by state affairs and official events. Children performed plays for their parents, and the family often went to the city for religious services - this was the only form of freedom they allowed.

    When the Bolsheviks came to power at the end of 1917, the regime of the tsarist family began to tighten slowly but surely. The Romanovs were banned from attending church and generally leaving the territory of the mansion. Soon coffee, sugar, butter and cream disappeared from their kitchen, and the soldiers assigned to protect them wrote obscene and offensive words on the walls and fences of their homes.

    Things got 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 things. At this time, Tsarevich Alexei, suffering from hemophilia, because of a bruise, began to suffer from paralysis of both legs, and everyone expected that he would be left in Tobolsk, and the family would be divided during the war.

    The commissioner's demands to move were adamant, so Nikolai, his wife Alexandra and one of their daughters, Maria, soon left Tobolsk. They eventually took a train to travel through Yekaterinburg to Moscow, where the Red Army was headquartered. However, Commissioner 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.

    In Yekaterinburg, the other children joined the parents - everyone was locked in the Ipatiev house. The family was placed on the second floor and completely cut off from the outside world, the windows were boarded up and guards were posted at the door. The Romanovs were allowed to go out into the fresh air for only five minutes a day.

    Early July 1918 Soviet authorities began to prepare for the execution of the royal family. The ordinary soldiers on the guard were replaced by representatives of the Cheka, and the Romanovs were allowed to go to church services for the last time. The priest who conducted the service later admitted that none of the family spoke a word during the service. On July 16, the day of the murder, five trucks were ordered with barrels of benzidine and acid to quickly dispose of the bodies.

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

    In the basement, Nikolai was told that he was going to be executed. Not believing his own ears, he asked again: "What?" - immediately after which the Chekist Yakov Yurovsky shot the tsar. Another 11 people pulled the trigger, flooding the basement with the blood of the Romanovs. 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.

    The first thoughts of leaving Tsarskoye Selo arose among the August prisoners at the beginning of March 1917, but then, through Count Benckendorff, it was announced that "we will stay here for a long time" (the Emperor's entry of March 11). On July 11, 1917, an entry in the diary of Nicholas II reappears that Kerensky reported about the family's possible departure to the south “due to the proximity of Ts<арского>She sat down to the troubled capital. " The Tsar's family kept the hope that they would be transported to the Crimea, to Livadia, almost until their departure, while Kerensky had already changed his mind and drew attention to the cities of Western Siberia. Later he recalled that the idea of ​​Tobolsk came to him by accident. Learning that the city was approaching this "mission" in all respects, Kerensky made a final decision. Nobody should have known about this decision, it was a secret of state importance. But soon the secret was told "in secret" to all of Petrograd. Various rumors spread that the Tsar was being taken away from the Alexander Palace either to Kostroma or Tobolsk.

    E.A. Naryshkina, who had been released by that time, already under July 16, that is, about two weeks before her departure, wrote: “Book. Paley told me that a normally knowledgeable Englishman told them yesterday that the inhabitants of the Alexander Palace had been taken and taken to Tobolsk on the night of Thursday to Friday! I objected energetically, but rumors like this prove that this idea is in the air. " Among the rumors, there was a version about the Ipatiev Monastery in Kostroma.

    "They are being taken away ... to one of the distant provincial towns ... And we were counting on a long stay in Livadia!"

    The topic of departure worried the prisoners themselves: “We all thought and talked about the upcoming trip; it seems strange to leave here after a 4-month retreat. " They pack their things and still hope to leave for Livadia. About three days before they were informed that they were being taken “not to the Crimea, but to one of the distant provincial cities, three or four days' journey to the east! But where exactly, they do not say - even the commandant does not know. And we were counting on a long stay in Livadia, ”writes the Emperor.

    On July 31, the day of departure, Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich visited his brother, but they spoke for only 10 minutes even under Kerensky. The process of leaving Tsarskoye Selo took a long time and ended at 5-6 o'clock in the morning.

    Having reached Tyumen, the family got on the steamer "Rus", which took her to her destination.

    With the move to Tobolsk, no drastic changes occurred, but life nevertheless became different. First of all, this is due to the house itself, where the Tsar's family was settled. It was a two-story mansion on the outskirts of the city, formerly owned by the governor, but now abandoned, empty and absolutely unprepared for life. The unhappy Provisional Government, which had just survived the "July crisis", squeezed by the Bolsheviks and, in general, amassed a sea of ​​problems in the socio-economic, political and military spheres, was not too quick in moving the Tsar's family. The arrangement of the house took about a week, during which the Tsar's family was forced to live on board the Rus ship. “The house is empty, dirty, and nothing is prepared to spend the night in it. Back on board the ship, until everything in our house and all other houses is prepared, ”the Empress will write in her diary. Only on August 13 did it finally become possible to move into the governor's house, which gave the impression of being uncomfortable and empty. “August 13th. Sunday.<…>Many rooms are not yet finished and look unattractive.<…>Everything has an old, abandoned look, ”wrote the Emperor.

    The royal family occupied the entire second floor of the house, servants and guards settled on the first floor, and a dining room was located there. Some of the employees settled in a neighboring house opposite, the so-called "Kornilov's house". It took a lot of time to arrange the dwelling. So, on September 20, Baron Bode arrived, who brought carpets, curtains, etc. from the Tsar's. “September 26. Tuesday.<…>After tea, they dismantled the newly brought carpets and decorated our rooms with them, ”we read in the diary.

    With a frost of 22 degrees in the office of the Emperor and his daughters it was + 10 ° С

    Every now and then there were various troubles like the breakdown of the sewage system, broken windows due to the wind, etc. At the beginning of December, there was almost no heating in some rooms. With a frost of 22 degrees in the office of the Emperor and his daughters it was + 10 ° C, "therefore, day and night I sit in a Plastun Circassian coat."

    During the first time of their stay in Tobolsk, the life of the family was not established. From August to the beginning of September, there were no lessons, all the forces of the Tsar's family were thrown into the improvement of the house and backyard territory. A swing was set up in the yard. Games became frequent entertainment: dominoes, dice, "towns", "bezique", an ice slide was built in winter. The only thing that never stopped was the royal family's attendance at divine services. "Such a spiritual consolation in the time we are going through!" - wrote the Emperor on October 22 in his diary after accepting the Holy Gifts. By the way, unlike Tsarskoye Selo, they were allowed to visit the city church here. Although a visit to the Annunciation Church was one of the family's favorite events, this "privilege" was often revoked under the pretext of an imaginary danger to the prisoners.

    Initially, the service was conducted in one of the halls of the governor's house. Nuns from the Ioannovsky Monastery came here as singers and a priest from the Annunciation Church.

    Immediately upon arrival, the house was consecrated: “At the 12th prayer service, 4 nuns from the Ioannovsky Monastery sang. The abbess gave N. the image of St. John Maximovich. " First, the priest Alexy Vasiliev served. Nicholas II spoke of him this way: “We all really like the priest who serves with us; four nuns are singing. "

    "We went to church services ... grateful for being in a real church for the first time in 6 months."

    The family attended the first service in the church on Friday, September 8, on a holiday. A visit to a church outside the walls of the governor's house was, apparently, a very serious action, because the local authorities had been preparing for it for more than one day. Judging by how large the number of guards was located along the path along which the Tsar's family walked to the temple, it can be assumed that the authorities saw a considerable risk in this. “At 12 we went to the service in Blagov<ещенский>sob<ор>on foot, I am in my chair, through the city garden; the soldiers are stationed all the way, the crowd is where they crossed the street. It is very unpleasant, but, nevertheless, I am grateful for being in a real church for 6 months [for the first time], ”the Empress will write. The royal family was only allowed to attend early services. “We were present exclusively at the early mass,” the teacher recalled. French P. Gilliard, - almost alone in this church, barely consecrated with several wax candles. "

    Although visiting the city church became a consolation for the Emperor's family, the awareness of their lack of freedom was especially acute here, in the distant provincial city of Western Siberia. “Here the feeling of being locked up is much stronger than it was in C<арском>WITH<еле>", - writes the Emperor in his diary dated August 26.

    As before, in the evenings, reading of books continued, which were now read aloud not only by Nicholas II, but also by Tatishchev, Dolgorukov, Botkin. Not far from the house there was an abandoned garden - “a nasty vegetable garden,” as the Tsar called it. On this site, Nicholas II was engaged in the preparation of firewood for the house and made a small pond for ducks. “There were many in the air; filled the duck pond and sawed wood for our bath. " Sawing wood soon became a universal occupation, turning into a kind of sport for the Emperor's daughters. After the soldiers destroyed the ice slide in early 1918, this became their only entertainment. Alexandra Feodorovna at that time was engaged in needlework, painted or wrote letters.

    Another activity that pleased the Emperor's family was their communication with the sentry soldiers. Until the change in composition at the beginning of 1918, the princesses and the Emperor could freely enter the guardhouse, talk and play with the soldiers. “The Grand Duchesses loved to talk with these people with enchanting simplicity, who, like them, still felt connected with the past,” P. Gilliard recalled.

    With the coming to power of the Bolsheviks, the conditions of detention of the Tsar's prisoners began to change. In January 1918, their content was reduced to 600 rubles. per person, deducted from their personal condition, oil and coffee were removed from the diet as luxury products, the composition of the guard was changed: the good-natured soldiers were replaced by boorish and unprincipled "reds".

    Lessons from the Tsar's children began in mid-September: “September 28. Thursday. From the beginning of the week, the children went to classes in the morning; I continue my lessons in history and geography with Alexey. " The subjects taught remained the same. On October 8, K.M. Bitner: “October 10th. Tuesday.<…>Claudia Mikhailovna Bitner, who came here two days ago, handed me a letter from Xenia. Today she began to study with children, except for Olga, in various subjects. " Classes were conducted from 9 am to 11 am and continued after evening tea until 6 am. Due to the increase in the number of lessons, the walk now ends at 4 o'clock. The schedule of classes has also undergone some changes in this regard. Alexandra Feodorovna still taught Mary, Tatiana and Alexei the Law of God, and Tatiana - German. The Empress no longer outlines in detail the content of all the lessons. This must be due to the deterioration of her health.

    In general, during this trip to the East and stay in Tobolsk, the health of members of the whole family has noticeably changed for the worse. V to a greater extent this is evident from the state of the Empress. In the diaries written in Tsarskoye, there are practically no complaints from Alexandra Feodorovna about her health; her heart pains, which are evidently indicated in the diary with a heart icon, began during the trip on August 5, then continued on the evening of the 8th. On August 9, Maria's heart pains appeared to have started, as a result of which she had a fever. By the time she moved to the house, the princess had almost recovered. Until October, Alexandra Feodorovna does not write about heart attacks. They resumed only at the end of October and caused pain for three days in a row - from October 19 to October 21, then they stopped. In addition to pains in her heart, the Empress suffered from toothaches and headaches and insomnia, a derivative of them. These illnesses continued alternately from late August to September. On October 17, the dentist Kostritsky arrived from the Crimea, under whom the Tsar and Empress were undergoing treatment.

    Tsarevich Alexei also often fell ill during the time described. On August 25, he developed mild bronchitis with pain in the ear, on August 29 he recovered. Then, from mid-October, the boy's leg became ill and swollen, and a few days later - his arm and second leg.

    The everyday life of the Royal family in Tobolsk cannot be called idyllic or cloudless. In general, the daily routine was preserved, but here life was slower and more boring. And therefore the diary entries are becoming shorter, more often the words appear: "The day passed as usual." At the same time, relations with the "authorities" became worse and control tightened. However, the control concerned only the Tsar's family, the authorities had not yet encroached on the freedom of those close to the Sovereign. The employees could move freely around the city, visit the Crowns at a convenient time; So, Kolya Derevenko, the son of the life surgeon V.N. Village. This largely allowed the family to find out what was going on "in the world." Meanwhile, events took place in Petrograd that predetermined the fate of the Tsar's family and Russia: on October 25, the Bolsheviks came to power.

    History, like a corrupt girl, falls under any new "tsar". So, the recent history of our country has been rewritten many times. "Responsible" and "unbiased" historians rewrote biographies and changed the fate of people in the Soviet and post-Soviet period.

    But today, access to many archives is open. Only conscience is the key. What gets to people bit by bit does not leave indifferent those who live in Russia. Those who want to be proud of their country and raise their children as patriots of their native land.

    In Russia, historians are a dime a dozen. If you throw a stone, you will almost always hit one of them. But now only 14 years have passed, and no one can establish the real history of the last century.

    Miller and Baer's modern henchmen are robbing Russians in all directions. Either, scoffing at Russian traditions, they will start Maslenitsa in February, then they will bring an outright criminal under the Nobel Prize.

    And then we wonder: why is it such a poor people in a country with richest resources and cultural heritage?

    Abdication of Nicholas II

    Emperor Nicholas II did not renounce the throne. This act is “fake”. It was compiled and typed on a typewriter by the Quartermaster General of the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief A.S. Lukomsky and the representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the General Staff N.I. Basili.

    This printed text was signed on March 2, 1917, not by Tsar Nicholas II Alexandrovich Romanov, but by the Minister of the Imperial Court, Adjutant General, Baron Boris Fredericks.

    After 4 days, Orthodox Tsar Nicholas II was betrayed by the top of the Russian Orthodox Church, misleading the whole of Russia by the fact that, seeing this false act, the clergy passed it off as a real one. And they transmitted by telegraph to the entire Empire and beyond its borders that the Emperor, they say, had abdicated the Throne!

    On March 6, 1917, the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church listened to two lectures. The first is the act of March 2, 1917, about the "abdication" of the Sovereign Emperor Nicholas II for himself and for his son from the Throne of the Russian State and about the resignation of the Supreme Power. The second is the act of March 3, 1917, on the refusal of the Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich from the perception of the Supreme Power.

    After the hearings, until the establishment in the Constituent Assembly of the way of government and new basic laws of the Russian State, ORDERED:

    « The aforementioned acts should be taken into account and executed and announced in all Orthodox churches, in city ones - on the first day after receiving the text of these acts, and in rural ones - on the first Sunday or holiday, after the Divine Liturgy, with a prayer to the Lord God for the calming of the passions, with the proclamation of the many years of the God-protected Russian Power and its Blessed Provisional Government».

    And although the top of the generals of the Russian Army for the most part consisted of Jews, the middle officer corps and several higher ranks of the generals, such as Fyodor Arturovich Keller, did not believe this fake and decided to go to the rescue of the Emperor.

    From that moment on, the split of the Army began, which turned into a Civil War!

    The priesthood and the entire Russian society split.

    But the Rothschilds achieved the main thing - they removed Her Lawful Sovereign from governing the country, and began to finish off Russia.

    After the revolution, all the bishops and priests who had betrayed the Tsar suffered death or scattering throughout the world for perjury before the Orthodox Tsar.

    On May 1, 1919, the Presidential Commissar Lenin signed a document that is still hidden from the people:

    Chairman V. Ch. K. No. 13666/2 comrade. Dzerzhinsky FE INDICATION: “In accordance with the decision of V. Ts. IK and the Council of People's Commissars, it is necessary to put an end to the priests and religion as soon as possible. Popov should be arrested as counter-revolutionaries and saboteurs, shot mercilessly and everywhere. And as much as possible. Churches are to be closed. The premises of the temples should be sealed and turned into warehouses.

    Chairman V. Ts. I. K. Kalinin, Chairman of the Sov. bunk bed Komissarov Ulyanov / Lenin / ".

    Simulated murder

    There is a lot of information about the sovereign's stay with his family in prison and exile, about his stay in Tobolsk and Yekaterinburg, and it is quite truthful.

    Was there a shooting? Or perhaps it was staged? Was it possible to flee or be taken out of the Ipatiev house?

    It turns out, yes!

    There was a factory nearby. In 1905, the owner, in case of seizure by revolutionaries, dug an underground passage to it. When the house was destroyed by Yeltsin, after the decision of the Politburo, the bulldozer fell into a tunnel that no one knew about.

    Thanks to Stalin and the intelligence officers of the General Staff, the Tsar's Family was taken to various Russian provinces, with the blessing of Metropolitan Macarius (Nevsky).

    On July 22, 1918, Evgenia Popel received the keys to the empty house and sent a telegram to her husband, N.N.

    In connection with the offensive of the White Guard Army, Soviet institutions were evacuated in Yekaterinburg. Documents, property and valuables were taken out, including the Romanov family (!).

    On July 25, the city was occupied by White Czechs and Cossacks.

    Great excitement spread among the officers when it became known in what condition the Ipatiev house, where the Tsar's Family lived, was. Who was free from service, went to the house, everyone wanted to take an active part in clarifying the question: "where are they?"

    Some examined the house, breaking the boarded up doors; others dismantled the lying things and papers; still others dumped the ashes from the stoves. The fourth, scoured the courtyard and garden, looking into all the basements and cellars. Everyone acted independently, not trusting each other and trying to find an answer to the question that worried everyone.

    While the officers were examining the rooms, the people who came to profit, took away a lot of abandoned property, which was then found at the bazaar and flea markets.

    The head of the garrison, Major General Golitsin, appointed a special commission of officers, mainly cadets of the General Staff Academy, chaired by Colonel Sherekhovsky. Which was instructed to deal with the finds in the area of ​​Ganina Yama: local peasants, raking up recent fireplaces, found burnt things from the Tsar's wardrobe, including a cross with precious stones.

    Captain Malinovsky was ordered to survey the area of ​​Ganina Yama. On July 30, taking with him Sheremetyevsky, the investigator for the most important cases of the Yekaterinburg District Court A.P. Nametkin, several officers, the Heir's doctor - V.N. Derevenko and the Sovereign's servant - T.I. Chemodurov, went there.

    This is how the investigation into the disappearance of Tsar Nicholas II, the Empress, the Tsarevich and the Grand Duchesses began.

    Malinovsky's commission lasted for about a week. But it was she who determined the area of ​​all subsequent investigative actions in Yekaterinburg and its environs. It was she who found the witnesses of the cordoning off of the Koptyakovskaya road around Ganina Yama by the Red Army. I found those who saw a suspicious convoy that passed from Yekaterinburg inside the cordon and back. I got evidence of destruction there, in bonfires near the mines of the Tsar's things.

    After all the officers went to Koptyaki, Sherekhovsky divided the team into two parts. One, headed by Malinovsky, examined the Ipatiev house, the other, headed by Lieutenant Sheremetyevsky, took up the survey of Ganina Yama.

    When inspecting Ipatiev's house, the officers of Malinovsky's group managed to establish almost all the basic facts in a week, on which the investigation later relied.

    A year after the investigations, Malinovsky, in June 1919, showed Sokolov: "As a result of my work on the case, I became convinced that the August family is alive ... all the facts that I observed during the investigation were a simulation of murder."

    At the scene

    On July 28, A.P. Nametkin was invited to the headquarters, and from the side of the military authorities, since the civilian power had not yet been formed, it was proposed to him to investigate the case of the Tsar's Family. After that, they began to inspect the Ipatiev house. Doctor Derevenko and old Chemodurov were invited to participate in the identification of things; Professor of the Academy of the General Staff, Lieutenant General Medvedev, took part as an expert.

    On July 30, Aleksey Pavlovich Nametkin took part in inspecting the mine and fires near Ganina Yama. After the inspection, the Koptyakovsky peasant handed over to Captain Politkovsky a huge diamond, recognized by Chemodurov who was right there as a jewel belonging to Tsarina Alexandra Fedorovna.

    Nametkin, examining the Ipatiev house from 2 to 8 August, had publications of the decisions of the Ural Soviet and the Presidium of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, announcing the execution of Nicholas II.

    Inspection of the building, traces of shots and signs of spilled blood confirmed the well-known fact - the possible death of people in this house.

    As for the other results of the inspection of Ipatiev's house, they left the impression of an unexpected disappearance of its inhabitants.

    On August 5, 6, 7, 8, Nametkin continued to inspect Ipatiev's house, described the state of the rooms where Nikolai Alexandrovich, Alexandra Feodorovna, Tsarevich and Grand Duchesses were kept. On examination, I found many small things that belonged, according to the valet TI Chemodurov and the doctor of the Heir VN Derevenko, to members of the Royal Family.

    Being an experienced investigator, Nametkin, after examining the scene of the incident, stated that an imitation of an execution had taken place in the Ipatiev House, and that none of the members of the Royal Family was shot there.

    He officially repeated his data in Omsk, where he gave interviews on this topic to foreign, mainly American correspondents. Stating that he had evidence that the Royal Family was not killed on the night of July 16-17 and was going to publish these documents soon.

    But he was forced to hand over the investigation.

    War with investigators

    On August 7, 1918, a meeting of the branches of the Yekaterinburg District Court was held, where, unexpectedly for the prosecutor Kutuzov, contrary to agreements with the chairman of the court Glasson, the Yekaterinburg District Court, by a majority vote, decided to transfer "the case of the murder of the former Sovereign Emperor Nicholas II" to a member of the court Ivan Alexandrovich Sergeev ...

    After the transfer of the case, the house where he rented the premises was burned, which led to the death of the investigative archive of Nametkin.

    The main difference in the work of a detective on the scene lies in what is not in the laws and textbooks in order to plan further measures for each of the revealed significant circumstances. That is why their replacement is harmful, because with the departure of the former investigator, his plan to unravel the tangle of riddles disappears.

    On August 13, A.P. Nametkin handed over the case to I.A.Sergeev on 26 numbered sheets. And after the capture of Yekaterinburg by the Bolsheviks, Nametkin was shot.

    Sergeev was aware of the complexity of the forthcoming investigation.

    He understood that the main thing was to find the bodies of those killed. Indeed, in forensic science there is a strict directive: "no corpse - no murder." They placed great expectations on the expedition to Ganina Yama, where they very carefully searched the area, pumped out water from the mines. But ... they found only a severed finger and an upper jaw prosthesis. True, the "corpse" was also removed, but it was the corpse of the dog of the Grand Duchess Anastasia.

    In addition, there are witnesses who saw the former Empress and her children in Perm.

    Doctor Derevenko, who treated the Heir, like Botkin, who accompanied the Tsar's Family in Tobolsk and Yekaterinburg, repeatedly testifies that the unidentified corpses delivered to him are not the Tsar and not the Heir, since the Tsar should have a mark on his head / skull / from the blow of the Japanese sabers in 1891

    The clergy also knew about the release of the Royal Family: Patriarch St. Tikhon.

    Life of the royal family after "death"

    In the KGB of the USSR, on the basis of the 2nd Main Directorate, there was a special. department that oversaw all the movements of the Royal Family and their descendants across the territory of the USSR. Whether someone likes it or not, they will have to reckon with it, and, consequently, revise Russia's future policy.

    Daughters Olga (lived under the name Natalia) and Tatiana were in the Diveyevo monastery, disguised as nuns and sang in the choir of the Trinity Church. From there Tatyana moved to the Krasnodar Territory, got married and lived in the Apsheronsky and Mostovsky districts. She was buried on September 21, 1992 in the village of Solyonom, Mostovsky District.

    Olga, through Uzbekistan left for Afghanistan with the Emir of Bukhara Seyid Alim-Khan (1880 - 1944). From there - to Finland to Vyrubova. Since 1956 she lived in Vyritsa under the name of Natalya Mikhailovna Evstigneeva, where she rested in Bose on January 16, 1976 (11/15/2011 from the grave of V.K.Olga, Her fragrant relics were partially stolen by one demoniac, but were returned to Kazan temple).

    On October 6, 2012, her remaining relics were removed from the grave in the cemetery, joined to the abducted, and reburied near the Kazan Church.

    The daughters of Nicholas II, Maria and Anastasia (lived as Alexandra Nikolaevna Tugareva) were in the Glinsk Hermitage for some time. Then Anastasia moved to the Volgograd (Stalingrad) region and got married on the Tugarev farm of the Novoanninsky district. From there she moved to st. Panfilovo, where she was buried on June 27, 1980. And her husband Vasily Yevlampievich Peregudov died defending Stalingrad in January 1943. Maria moved to the Nizhny Novgorod region in the village of Arefino and was buried there on May 27, 1954.

    Metropolitan John of Ladoga (Snychev, d. 1995) nursed Anastasia's daughter, Julia, in the city of Samara, and together with Archimandrite John (Maslov, d. 1991) he nourished Tsarevich Alexei. Archpriest Vasily (Shvets, d. 2011) took care of his daughter Olga (Natalia). The son of the youngest daughter of Nicholas II - Anastasia - Mikhail Vasilyevich Peregudov (1924 - 2001), having come from the front, worked as an architect, a railway station in Stalingrad-Volgograd was built according to his design!

    The brother of Tsar Nicholas II, Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich, was also able to escape from Perm right under the nose of the Cheka. At first he lived in Belogorie, and then moved to Vyritsa, where he rested in Bose in 1948.

    Until 1927, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna was at the Tsar's dacha (Vvedensky skete of the Serafimo Ponetaevsky monastery, Nizhny Novgorod region). And at the same time she visited Kiev, Moscow, Petersburg, Sukhumi. Alexandra Feodorovna took the name Xenia (in honor of St. Xenia Grigorievna of Petersburg / Petrova 1732 - 1803 /).

    In 1899, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna wrote a prophetic poem:

    “In the solitude and silence of the monastery,

    Where guardian angels fly

    Far from temptation and sin

    She lives, whom everyone considers dead.

    Everyone thinks She already dwells

    In the divine celestial sphere.

    She steps outside the walls of the monastery,

    Submissive to her increased faith! "

    The Empress met with Stalin, who told her the following: "Live peacefully in the city of Starobelsk, but you don't need to interfere in politics."

    Stalin's patronage saved the Tsarina when local security officers opened criminal cases against her.

    Money transfers were regularly received from France and Japan to the Queen's name. The Empress received them and passed them on to four kindergartens. This was confirmed by the former manager of the Starobelsk branch of the State Bank Ruf Leontyevich Shpilev and the chief accountant Klokolov.

    The empress did needlework, making blouses, scarves, and straws were sent to her from Japan to make hats. All this was done on the orders of local fashionistas.

    Empress Alexandra Feodorovna

    In 1931, the Tsarina came to the Starobelsk branch of the GPU and announced that she had 185,000 marks in her account in the Berlin Reichsbank, as well as 300,000 dollars in the Chicago bank. She wants to transfer all these funds to the disposal of the Soviet government, provided that it provides her with old age.

    The Empress's application was forwarded to the GPU of the Ukrainian SSR, which instructed the so-called "Credit Bureau" to negotiate with abroad on receiving these deposits!

    In 1942 Starobelsk was occupied, the Empress on the same day was invited to breakfast with Colonel-General Kleist, who suggested that she move to Berlin, to which the Tsarina replied with dignity: “I am Russian and I want to die in my homeland.” she was offered to choose any house in the city that she wanted: it is not suitable, they say, for such a person to huddle in a cramped dugout. But she refused that too.

    The only thing the Queen agreed to was to use the services of German doctors. True, the commandant of the city nevertheless ordered to install a plaque near the Empress's dwelling with the inscription in Russian and German: "Do not disturb Her Majesty."

    What she was very happy about, because in her dugout behind a screen there were ... wounded Soviet tank crews.

    The German medicine came in very handy. The tankers managed to get out, and they safely crossed the front line. Taking advantage of the location of the authorities, Tsarina Alexandra Fedorovna saved many prisoners of war and local residents who were threatened with reprisals.

    Empress Alexandra Fedorovna under the name of Xenia from 1927 until her death in 1948 lived in the city of Starobelsk, Luhansk region. She took monastic tonsure with the name of Alexandra in the Starobelsk Holy Trinity Monastery.

    Kosygin - Tsarevich Alexei

    Tsarevich Alexei - became Alexei Nikolaevich Kosygin (1904 - 1980). Twice Hero of Socialist. Labor (1964, 1974). Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Sun of Peru. In 1935, he graduated from the Leningrad Textile Institute. In 1938 the head. department of the Leningrad regional party committee, chairman of the executive committee of the Leningrad City Council.

    The wife of Klavdia Andreevna Krivosheina (1908 - 1967) is the niece of A.A.Kuznetsov. Daughter Lyudmila (1928 - 1990) was married to Jermen Mikhailovich Gvishiani (1928 - 2003). The son of Mikhail Maksimovich Gvishiani (1905 - 1966) since 1928 in the GPUKVD of Georgia. In 1937-38. deputy. Chairman of the Tbilisi City Executive Committee. In 1938, the 1st deputy. People's Commissar of the NKVD of Georgia. In 1938 - 1950. early UNKVDUNKGBUMGB Primorsky Territory. 1950-1953 early UMGB of the Kuibyshev region. Grandchildren Tatiana and Alexey.

    The Kosygin family was friends with the families of the writer Sholokhov, the composer Khachaturian, and the rocket designer Chelomey.

    In 1940 - 1960. - deputy. prev. Council of People's Commissars - Council of Ministers of the USSR. In 1941 - deputy. prev. Council for the evacuation of industry to the eastern regions of the USSR. From January to July 1942 - Commissioner of the State Defense Committee in besieged Leningrad. Participated in the evacuation of the population and industrial enterprises and property of Tsarskoe Selo. The tsarevich walked around Ladoga on a yacht "Shtandart" and knew the vicinity of the Lake well, therefore he organized the "Road of Life" across the Lake to supply the city.

    Aleksey Nikolaevich created an electronics center in Zelenograd, but enemies in the Politburo did not allow him to bring this idea to fruition. And today Russia is forced to purchase household appliances and computers all over the world.

    The Sverdlovsk Region produced everything: from strategic missiles to bacteriological weapons, and was filled with underground cities hiding under the indexes "Sverdlovsk-42", and there were more than two hundred of these "Sverdlovsk".

    He helped Palestine as Israel expanded its borders at the expense of Arab lands.

    He implemented projects for the development of gas and oil fields in Siberia.

    But the Jews, members of the Politburo, made the export of crude oil and gas the main line of the budget - instead of exporting refined products, as Kosygin (Romanov) wanted.

    In 1949, during GM Malenkov's promotion of the Leningrad Affair, Kosygin miraculously survived. During the investigation Mikoyan, deputy. Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, "organized a long trip to Siberia Kosygin, in connection with the need to strengthen the activities of cooperation, improve the procurement of agricultural products." Stalin coordinated this trip with Mikoyan on time, because he was poisoned and from the beginning of August to the end of December 1950 he lay in his dacha, miraculously survived!

    In dealing with Alexei, Stalin affectionately called him "Kosyga", since he was his nephew. Sometimes Stalin called him Tsarevich in front of everyone.

    In the 60s. Tsarevich Alexei, realizing the ineffectiveness of the existing system, proposed a transition from social economy to a real one. Keep records of products sold, not manufactured, as the main indicator of the efficiency of enterprises, etc. Alexei Nikolaevich Romanov normalized relations between the USSR and China during the conflict on the island. Damansky, meeting in Beijing at the airport with the Premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China Zhou Enlai.

    Alexei Nikolaevich visited the Venevsky monastery in the Tula region and talked with nun Anna, who was in touch with the entire royal family. He even once gave her a diamond ring, for clear predictions. And shortly before his death he came to her, and she told him that He would die on December 18!

    The death of Tsarevich Alexei coincided with Leonid Brezhnev's birthday on 12/18/1980, and these days the country did not know that Kosygin had died.

    The ashes of the Tsarevich have been resting in the Kremlin wall since 12/24/1980!


    There was no funeral service for the August Family

    Until 1927, the Royal Family met on the stones of St. Seraphim of Sarov, next to the Tsar's dacha, on the territory of the Vvedensky Skete of the Seraphim-Ponetaevsky Monastery. Now only the former baptismal remains of the Skete. It was closed in 1927 by the forces of the NKVD. This was preceded by general searches, after which all the nuns were moved to different monasteries in Arzamas and Ponetayevka. And icons, jewelry, bells and other property were taken to Moscow.

    In the 20s - 30s. Nicholas II stayed in Diveevo at st. Arzamasskaya, 16, in the house of Alexandra Ivanovna Grashkina - Schema Nun of Dominica (1906 - 2009).

    Stalin built a dacha in Sukhumi next to the dacha of the Tsar's Family and came there to meet with the Emperor and his cousin Nicholas II.

    In the form of an officer, Nicholas II visited Stalin in the Kremlin, as confirmed by General Vatov (d. 2004), who served in Stalin's guard.

    Marshal Mannerheim, having become President of Finland, immediately left the war, as he secretly communicated with the Emperor. And in the office of Mannerheim there was a portrait of Nicholas II. Confessor of the Royal Family since 1912, Fr. Alexey (Kibardin, 1882 - 1964), while living in Vyritsa, took care of the woman who arrived there from Finland in 1956 at the railway station. the eldest daughter of the Tsar - Olga.

    In Sofia, after the revolution, in the building of the Holy Synod on St. Alexander Nevsky Square, the confessor of the Highest Surname, Vladyka Theophan (Bystrov), lived.

    Vladyka never served a requiem for the August Family and told his cell attendant that the Royal Family was alive! And even in April 1931 he went to Paris to meet with Tsar Nicholas II and with the people who freed the Tsar's Family from captivity. Vladyka Theophan also said that over time the Romanov family would be restored, but along the female line.

    Expertise

    Head Department of Biology of the Ural Medical Academy, Oleg Makeev said: “Genetic examination after 90 years is not only difficult due to changes in the bone tissue, but also cannot give an absolute result even if it is carefully performed. The methodology used in the studies already conducted has not yet been recognized as evidence by any court in the world. "

    A foreign expert commission to investigate the fate of the Royal Family, created in 1989, chaired by Pyotr Nikolayevich Koltypin-Vallovsky, ordered a study by scientists at Stanford University and received data on the DNA mismatch of the “Yekaterinburg remains”.

    The commission provided for DNA analysis a fragment of the finger of VK St. Elizabeth Feodorovna Romanova, whose relics are kept in the Jerusalem Church of Mary Magdalene.

    « The sisters and their children must have identical mitochondrial DNA, but the results of the analysis of the remains of Elizaveta Fedorovna do not correspond to the previously published DNA of the alleged remains of Alexandra Fedorovna and her daughters, ”was the conclusion of the scientists.

    The experiment was carried out by an international team of scientists led by Dr. Alec Knight, a molecular taxonomist from Stanford University, with the participation of geneticists from East Michigan University, Los Alamos National Laboratory, with the participation of Dr. Lev Zhivotovsky, an employee of the Institute of General Genetics of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

    After the death of an organism, DNA begins to rapidly decompose, (chop) into parts, and the more time passes, the more these parts are shortened. After 80 years, without creating special conditions, DNA segments longer than 200-300 nucleotides are not preserved. And in 1994, during the analysis, a segment of 1.223 nucleotides was isolated».

    Thus, Peter Koltypin-Vallovskoy emphasized: “ Geneticists again denied the results of an examination carried out in 1994 at the British Laboratory, on the basis of which it was concluded that Tsar Nicholas II and his Family belonged to the "Yekaterinburg remains"».

    Japanese scientists presented to the Moscow Patriarchate the results of their research in relation to the “Yekaterinburg remains”.

    On December 7, 2004, in the building of the MP, Bishop Alexander of Dmitrov, vicar of the Moscow Diocese, met with Dr. Tatsuo Nagai. Doctor of Biological Sciences, Professor, Director of the Department of Forensic and Scientific Medicine, Kitazato University (Japan). Since 1987 he has worked at Kitazato University, is the Vice Dean of the Joint School of Medical Sciences, Director and Professor of the Department of Clinical Hematology and the Department of Forensic Medicine. He has published 372 scientific papers and presented 150 reports at international medical conferences in various countries. Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine in London.

    He carried out the identification of the mitochondrial DNA of the last Russian Emperor Nicholas II. During the attempt on the life of Tsarevich Nicholas II in Japan in 1891, his handkerchief remained there, which was applied to the wound. It turned out that the DNA structures from the cuts in 1998 in the first case differ from the DNA structure in both the second and the third cases. A research team led by Dr. Nagai took a sample of dried sweat from the clothes of Nicholas II, stored in the Catherine Palace in Tsarskoye Selo, and performed mitochondrial analysis.

    In addition, a mitochondrial analysis of the DNA of hair, the bone of the lower jaw and the thumbnail of V.K.Georgy Alexandrovich, the younger brother of Nicholas II, was buried in the Peter and Paul Cathedral. He compared DNA from bone cuts buried in 1998 in the Peter and Paul Fortress, with blood samples from Emperor Nicholas II's nephew Tikhon Nikolayevich, as well as with samples of sweat and blood of Tsar Nicholas II himself.

    Conclusions of Dr. Nagai: "We got results different from the results obtained by Drs. Peter Gill and Pavel Ivanov on five points."

    Glorification of the King

    Sobchak (Finkelstein, d. 2000), being the mayor of St. Petersburg, committed a heinous crime - he issued death certificates for Nicholas II and his family members Leonida Georgievna. He issued certificates in 1996 - without even waiting for the conclusions of the "official commission" of Nemtsov.

    “Protection of the rights and legitimate interests” of the “imperial house” in Russia began in 1995 by the late Leonida Georgievna, who, on behalf of her daughter, “the head of the Russian imperial house,” applied for state registration of the death of members of the Imperial House, who were killed in 1918-1919. , and the issuance of certificates of their death. "

    On 01.12.2005, an application was submitted to the Prosecutor General's Office for the "rehabilitation of Emperor Nicholas II and his family members." This application was submitted on the instructions of the "princess" Maria Vladimirovna by her lawyer G. Yu. Lukyanov, who replaced Sobchak in this post.

    The glorification of the Royal Family, although it happened under Ridiger (Alexy II) at the Bishops' Council, was just a cover for the "consecration" of Solomon's temple.

    After all, only the Local Council can glorify a tsar in the face of the Saints. Because the King is the spokesman for the Spirit of all the people, not just the Priesthood. That is why the decision of the Council of Bishops in 2000 must be approved by the Local Council.

    According to ancient canons, it is possible to glorify God's saints after healing from various ailments occurs on their graves. After that, it is checked how this or that ascetic lived. If he lived a righteous life, then healings come from God. If not, then Bes does such healings, and then they will turn into new diseases.

    In order to be convinced on your own experience, you need to go to the grave of Emperor Nicholas II, to Nizhny Novgorod to the Krasnaya Etna cemetery, where he was buried on December 26, 1958.

    The famous Nizhny Novgorod elder and priest Grigory (Dolbunov, d. 1996) served the funeral service and buried the Tsar Emperor Nicholas II.