The nonconformity of the people had already taken the life of one tsar, Nicholas II's grandfather ... The Provisional Government imprisoned Nicholas, Alexandra and their five children who were ...
Tsar Nicholas II, Tsarina Alexandra, their four daughters, Grand Duchesses Anastasia, Maria, Olga and Tatiana, and son Tsarevich Alexei - along with four royal staff members - were killed on 17 ...
Tsar Nicholas II was the son of Alexander III ... a spirit consonant with the precepts of Orthodoxy and the best traditions of his nation. Tsaritsa Alexandra, a grand-daughter of Queen Victoria of ...
Nicholas II, Czarina Alexandra, their five children and four servants were executed by Bolshevik revolutionaries overnight to July 17, 1918. Located at the site now is the altar of the lower ...
Czar Nicholas II, who abdicated on March 2 ... The Russian Orthodox Church canonized Czar Nicholas, Czarina Alexandra, Crown Prince Alexis, and Princesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia ...
Notably, the untimely death of Princess Diana in 1997, as well as the execution of Tsar Nicholas II with his family in 1918, are events that have continued to shock and captivate people worldwide.
The last tsar of the previous dynasty ... The relationship of Nicholas II and Alexandra, their love and their final end, and the mystery surrounding the missing children has inspired novels ...
As valet to Michael Romanov, younger brother of Tsar Nicholas II, Johnson had known he faced execution as the 300-year-old dynasty was swept aside in 1917. Michael pleaded with his faithful ...
Tsar Nicholas II was unable to rule effectively ... The departure of Nicholas II to the front left his wife, Tsarina Alexandra, in control. Alexandra was not hugely popular in Russia.
100 secondslong sixscene footage consisting of selected coronation ceremonies of the Russian Tsar Emperor ... of troops and carriages Nicholas II and his wife empress Alexandra Feodorovna ...
The Empire did not have an elected parliament (until 1905) and there were no elections for positions in the government. There were no legal or constitutional methods by which Tsarist power could ...
Tsar Nicholas II, the head of the tragic Romanov family, commissioned the ornate building not only to honor the late tsarevich but also to accommodate the religious needs of the city's growing ...