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  1. 25 de oct. de 2018 · After months of plotting, the Romanov family is assassinated by their Bolshevik captors. Finally, late at night on July 17, 1918, the Romanov family was awoken and told to get ready for another move.

  2. 18 de ene. de 2022 · Instead, the Bolsheviks had loose plans to bring the Romanovs back to Moscow for a show trial. By the spring of 1918, conditions were growing steadily worse for the family as they endured captivity in exile. In April 1918, plans changed once more, and the family was moved to Yekaterinburg. Tsar Nicholas II and his daughters Olga, Anastasia and ...

  3. 17 de jul. de 2018 · For a century the Romanov story has exercised a seductive power that has never ceased to fascinate. Now, with 100 years passed, the centenary offers an opportunity for that fascination to be ...

    • 1 min
    • Helen Rappaport
  4. 5 de nov. de 2009 · In Yekaterinburg, Russia, Czar Nicholas II and his family are executed by the Bolsheviks, bringing an end to the three-century-old Romanov dynasty. Crowned in 1896, Nicholas was neither trained ...

  5. 12 de oct. de 2018 · Romanov Family. At the time of the executions, about a dozen Romanov relatives were known to have escaped the Bolsheviks, including Maria Feodorovna, the mother of Czar Nicholas II, her daughters ...

    • 6 min
  6. The Romanov family tree can barely be contained on one page. By early 1917, there were a total of 65 family members, 32 of them male, and 18 of them had ascended to the throne!

  7. 9 de jul. de 2023 · Published July 9, 2023. Updated February 27, 2024. In the midst of the Russian Revolution, the imperial family was killed by the Bolsheviks, a horrific execution that ended a 300-year dynasty. In July 1918, Czar Nicholas II of Russia, his wife Alexandra, their five children Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia, and Alexei, and their servants were ...