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  1. 25 paź 2018 · All seven of the Romanovs—and the last gasp of the Russian monarchy—were dead. What may have looked like an impromptu murder was in fact a carefully planned act of violence.

  2. Perpetrators. Bolshevik revolutionaries under Yakov Yurovsky on instructions from the Ural Regional Soviet [a] The Russian Imperial Romanov family (Nicholas II of Russia, his wife Alexandra Feodorovna, and their five children: Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia, and Alexei) were shot and bayoneted to death [2][3] by Bolshevik revolutionaries under ...

  3. 20 lip 2018 · The Romanovs were to be killed because they were the supreme symbols of autocracy. The irony was that, in Yekaterinburg, the Bolsheviks had turned them into the opposite of aristocrats.

  4. The Romanovs were taken to the Ipatiev House, where they would be eventually murdered. When the tsar entered the house, he was told: “Citizen Romanov, you may enter.”

  5. 9 lip 2023 · From July 16 to July 17, 1918, Czar Nicholas II of Russia, his wife, and his five children were shot and stabbed to death by the Bolsheviks at the Ipatiev House. The full truth about the bloody murders wasn't revealed until after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

  6. 17 lip 2023 · Was this the reason for the shattered state of the bones? Were these bones really the Romanovs? Or had someone escaped?

  7. 1 maj 2018 · 100 years ago, the Russian Tsar Nicholas II and his entire family were killed by a firing squad. For many years, the circumstances of their death were shrouded in mystery.

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