Travel To Catherineburg

переезд в Екатеринбурге
In default, Nikolai II sought to agree on certain conditions for himself and his family. At that point, the Romanovs were not going to go to Tobolsk, so the Emperor ' s resignation insisted that there was no strict security and unimpeded passage to the family in the Czar village. Nicolai was hoping that children could stay at home for a long time without risk to their own safety. At that time, they were sick of measles and any journey could have worsened their condition. Also, the Romans Senior requested permission to travel to England for himself and his family.

First, the Interim Government agrees to meet all the conditions. But as of 8 March 1917, General Michael Alexeiev informs the King that he " may consider himself as being arrested " . After a while, from London, which had previously agreed to accept the Romanov family, there was notice of rejection. On 21 March, former Emperor Nikolay II and his entire family were officially detained.

A little more than a year later, 17 July 1918, the last royal family of the Russian Empire will be shot dead in a close basement in Catherineburg. The Romans have been deprived, closer and closer to their grim fiction. Let's look at the rare photos of the members of the last royal family of Russia made some time before the execution.

After the 1917 February Revolution, the last Russia ' s royal family was sent to the Siberia city of Tobolsk to protect against the anger of the people. A few months earlier, King Nikolai II revoked the throne, which resulted in more than three hundred years of the Romanov Dynasty.

The Romans began their five-day journey to Siberia in August, on the eve of the 13th birthday of Cesarevic Alexei. Forty-six servants and military escorts joined seven family members. The day before reaching the destination, Romans fled past the home village of Rasputin, whose eccentric influence on politics could have made their darkest contribution to their grief final.

The family arrived in Tobolsk on 19 August and began to live in relative comfort on the banks of the Irtysh River. In the Gubernator Palace where they were placed, the Romans were well fed, and they were able to communicate with each other a lot without distracting public affairs and official activities. Children were playing for parents, and the family was often chosen to go to the city for religious services, which was the only form they were allowed to exercise.

When the Bolsheviks came to power at the end of 1917, the regime of the royal family began slowly, but it was true that the regime was tightening. Romanov was forbidden to go to church and leave the mansion at all. Shortly from their kitchens, coffee, sugar, cream oil and cream were vanished, and soldiers who were assigned to protect them wrote indecent and offensive words on the walls and fences of their homes.

Things went worse and worse. In April 1918, a Commissioner, some Yakovlev, arrived with an order to move a former king from Tobolsk. The Empress was inclined to accompany her husband, but comrade Yakovlev had other orders that made it difficult. At that time, the Queen of Alexei, suffering from the hemophilia, started to suffer the paralysis of both legs, and everyone expected him to be left in Tobolsk and the family to be separated during the war.

Related posts: