Rescue of the royal family of Nicholas II. About the attempt to save the royal family

In Nizhny Novgorod, in the Avtozavodsky district, next to the temple in Gnilitsy, an elder was buried Grigory Dolbunov. His entire family - children, grandchildren, daughters-in-law and distant relatives - are subjected to strange persecution by the regional church authorities. What's the matter? The situation becomes more understandable if the version of the salvation of the royal family is considered as real.

Older car manufacturers, from the parish of Grigory Dolbunov’s son – Fr. Nicholas - they remember an unusual parishioner who introduced himself to them with a smile "King of Love". So, it’s no secret to anyone that it was Nicholas II who was saved earlier, who died in the arms of the elder Grigory Dolbunov, who personally buried him at the old Red Etna automobile plant cemetery on December 26, 1958, under the name Wanderer NICHOLAS.

Witnesses of this are the living Archimandrite Illarion (Tsarev) and Archpriest Valery Protorov, son of Fr. Gregory - priest Nikolai Dolbunov. But the owner of “People's Radio” Nikolai Vasilyevich Maslov published an article about the salvation of the royal family, being aware that his uncle, Archimandrite John Maslov, was one of the confessors of the royal family in the USSR.



The grave of Nicholas II at the Red Etna cemetery

In the same grave, before her husband, the empress, who died on April 20, 1948, was reburied on the territory of the Starobelsky Trinity Monastery in the Lugansk region Alexandra Fedorovna, whose remains, during Stalin’s lifetime, in 1950, were transported to Nizhny Novgorod and buried in the Red Etna cemetery. And already in 1958, Tsar Nicholas II was buried in this grave with his wife.

The Tsar and Queen, as is known, have not yet been glorified as Saints, since, according to church canons, only the Local Council, but under no circumstances not Bishop's, because the Russian Emperor is the custodian of the dogmas of Orthodoxy throughout the world. But the Council of Bishops is only an exponent of the will Cainite sect at the top of the Moscow Patriarchate, which illegally seized control of the Russian Orthodox Church on June 6, 1990, which is trying with all its might to “legitimize” not only the royal remains, but also to recognize, thereby, the fact of abdication by Nicholas II, which did not happen ( Cainites- servants of the Jewish authorities in Russia and later in the USSR).

T.N. “manifesto of renunciation”, typed by Jews - an official of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command Nikolai Ivanovich Basili and Quartermaster General of the Supreme Command Headquarters Alexander Sergeevich Lukomsky. This fake was signed by a Jewish baron Fredericks.

And they misled the whole world Cainites of the Holy Synod, who on March 6, 1917 passed off this forgery as a “real renunciation”, notifying the whole world by telegrams, and thereby marking the beginning of a civil war and the destruction of the Russian Empire.

It cannot be recognized as legal, etc. “glorification of the royal family” in 1981 by the bishops’ council abroad ROCOR. They did not have the right to do this and were not authorized by the Local Council. And the beginning of this “alleged glorification” was laid by the Archbishop of Washington Nikon, who during the Great Patriotic War fought on the side of the Third Reich in the troops of the SS Ober-Gruppenführer Vladimir Kirillovich, being the main military priest, archimandrite for all those who fought against the Soviet Army.

On July 17, 1969, in Brussels, this same Archimandrite Nikon (Rklitsky-Korsakevich) held an “absentia funeral service” for the royal family, in order to subsequently give “the road to the throne” in Russia to his “chief” - SS Obergruppenführer Vladimir Kirillovich, whose daughter Maria Vladimirovna and have been promoted “in the form of a queen” to the Russian throne for the last 26 years Cainite impostors, leading our country and the Moscow Patriarchate.

This is not surprising, since the ROCOR itself was created impostorly, without the required blessing of the Patriarch of the ROC Tikhon. Its head was Anthony (pseudonym Khrapovitsky), with his real name Bloom, and it was this same Blum who came up with the false dogma about the “king-redeemer,” which was “drilled” into the heads of believers in the 1990s! Therefore, the so-called The “glorification of the royal family” on July 17, 1981 by the bishops of the ROCOR was carried out illegally, on the basis of that very “absentia funeral service.”

(The reader, among other things, needs to know that in ancient Rus'(Slavic-Aryan Empire) never any there was no religion. After the nuclear war and second planetary catastrophe, when the infrastructure of civilization was destroyed, the surviving earthlings went wild. And in order to help them survive, the URs introduced the so-called. Vedic worldview- a set of everyday rules, the implementation of which made it possible at least not to fall in evolutionary development. They built in Rus' many temples, but these were public buildings - schools, libraries, “houses of culture”, etc. The employees of these temples were knowledgeable people - sorcerers and witches. In the last couple of centuries, these temples began to be seized and appropriated by bandits from religious mafia and with their help zombify the population. – Ed.)

Archbishop Feofan Poltavsky(Bystrov), the confessor of the royal family, officially opposed the false dogma of the “tsar-redeemer” when he lived in Bulgaria and when he moved to France, where he met with Sovereign Nicholas II, who traveled there on affairs of national importance, organized at the request of and the support of Stalin.

In the 2nd Main Directorate of the KGB of the USSR there was a department that monitored the Tsar’s family on the territory of the USSR.

The people were not told the essence of the events of the State Emergency Committee, and they still do not know what exactly Cainites(servants of the Jewish authorities in Russia and later in the USSR) carried out a coup on August 19, 1991, according to the scenario of March 2, 1917, and removed its legitimate President M.S. from governing the country. Gorbachev, who has the right to make claims in the name of the House of Romanov. But more on that later…

After August 21, 1991, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR created commissions that worked across all ministries of the USSR with the goal of “the civilized collapse of the country.” A similar commission was created for the KGB of the USSR, which included Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR Alexander Alexandrovich Sokolov, who gave a press conference on the topic of saving the royal family. After which the department in the 2nd Main Directorate of the KGB of the USSR for supervision of the royal family was hastily disbanded, and the archives of this department were classified and sent to the Urals, along with the archives of the Politburo and the CPSU Central Committee.

Here is a list of investigators in the “Royal Family” case who proved that the royal family survived:

Dmitry Apollonovich Malinovsky;

Alexey Pavlovich Nametkin;

Ivan Aleksandrovich Sergeev;

Alexander Fedorovich Kirsta;

Mikhail Konstantinovich Diterichs;

Nikolai Alexandrovich Sokolov.

Prime Minister V. Pepelyaev;

Professor of Tomsk University E.V. Dil;

former French teacher for the children of Tsar P.P. Gilliard;

London Times correspondent R. Wilton;

Lieutenant Count B. Kapnist...

Brother of Emperor Nicholas II the Great Prince Mikhail Alexandrovich died on April 3, 1949 in Vyritsa, near St. Petersburg, and was buried on the territory of the Kazan Church.


The eldest daughter of Nicholas II is great Princess Olga- buried on January 19, 1976 in Vyritsa, near St. Petersburg, under the name of Natalia Mikhailovna Evstigneeva. Until her last days, she did not lose contact with the confessor of the royal family since 1912. Alexey (Kibardin).




The third daughter is great Princess Maria- died of illness and was buried on May 27, 1954 in the village of Arefino, Vachsky district, Nizhny Novgorod region under the name of Maria Petrovna.


The fourth royal daughter is great Princess Anastasia- buried on June 27, 1980 at the Panfilovo station, Novoanninsky district, Volgograd region, under the name of Alexandra Nikolaevna Tugareva-Peregudova. Her daughter - Julia- in Samara, none other than Metropolitan John of Ladoga (Snychev) himself fed, and together with Archimandrite John (Maslov) - and Tsarevich Alexei.



And the heir to the throne - Tsarevich Alexei(Alexey Kosygin) - died on December 18, 1980 in Moscow, and, as Prime Minister of the USSR, was buried in the Kremlin wall. By tradition in the USSR - as a member of the Politburo.




Moscow elder, hieroschemamonk Aristoklis, who took monastic vows at St. Panteleimon Monastery on Mount Athos, who was in seclusion there, often repeated: “The House of the Romanovs is a great mystery, a great mystery!”

Famous Elder Seraphim(Tyapochkin), Archbishop of Brest and Kobrin Konstantin, Metropolitan of Ulyanovsk Proclus, Archpriest of Pechora Vasily (Shvets) - they also told everyone that the king's family was all alive and lived on the territory of the USSR.

The living archimandrite of the Kazan key hermitage in Mordovia, Illarion, can tell a lot, in the world Tsarev Ivan Dmitrievich, who worked for many years next to the prince - was Kosygin’s financial assistant!

When asked by Tsar Paul I what would happen to Russia in the 20th century, Prophet Abel answered:

“Nicholas II is a holy Tsar, he will have the mind of Christ, long-suffering and dove-like purity. He will replace the Royal crown with a crown of thorns; he will be betrayed by his people, as the son of God once was. There will be a great world war. Treason will grow and multiply. On the eve of victory, the Tsar's throne will collapse. Blood and tears will water the damp earth. A man with an ax will take power, and the Egyptian execution will truly begin.

And then the Jew will scourge the Russian land like a scorpion, plunder its shrines, close the churches of God, execute the best Russian people... Two wars, one worse than the other. The new Batu in the West will raise his hand. The people are between fire and flame... God hesitates with help, but it is said that he will give it soon, erect the Horn of Russian salvation. And the Great Prince will rise in exile from your family, standing for the sons of his people. This will be the Chosen One of God, and on his head is a blessing... His name is destined three times over in Russian History. The two namesakes were already on the Throne, but not the Royal Throne. He will sit on Tsarskoe as the third...

Then Russia will be great, throwing off the Jewish yoke,” “Russian hopes will be fulfilled: the Orthodox cross will shine on Sophia in Constantinople.

A Great Destiny is destined for Russia; that is why she will suffer in order to purify herself and kindle the light for the revelation of tongues. Holy Rus' will be filled with the smoke of incense and prayers and will prosper like a heavenly crane! The time will come when people will bless this King, and his Heir will rule according to him!..”

“You say that the Jewish yoke will hang over Russia in a hundred years. Record everything that you have said, put it all in writing. I will put my seal on your prediction, and until my great-great-grandson, your writing will be inviolably kept in my Gatchina palace.”



Icons given by Abel to Emperor Paul I and Empress Catherine II



1901, on the 100th anniversary of the martyrdom of Emperor Paul I, Nicholas II, accompanied by members of his retinue, arrived at the Gatchina Palace to fulfill the will of his great-great-grandfather. The emperor opened the casket, took out his icon of Nicholas from there and several times read the letter-prediction of the monk Abel about the fate of himself and Russia.

And here is what was written down by Elder Nicholas of Valaam 7 days before Japan declared war on Russia in 1904, and from his notebook was copied by Hieromonk Joel on January 30, 1917:

“The time of torment has passed, but a martyr can exist without blood. There was a decree from God that if the king had been darkened in faith, then the entire royal house would have been destroyed. Therefore, the path that Emperor Nicholas II took, although difficult, is right, and for this his life will be intact, although many enemies will rise up against him. And according to Him, His Heir will reign. And the time will come when people will bless this King!

Coming to his spiritual father, John of Kronstadt, and asking questions, Emperor Nicholas II received the answer: there are such ways for Him: to go abroad or become a wanderer like Alexander I (Semyon, son of Paul I from Countess Sofia Semyonovna Chertoryzhskaya, née Ushakova, who remarried Count P.K. Razumovsky. Having hidden the birth of a child from Paul I, he was given the name Semyon, and when he grew up, he was sent to India as a military representative of the Russian Empire. He returned to St. Petersburg on the day of his father’s murder. brother, the Masons forced him to play the role of Alexander I, who was killed with his father).

On the eve of the arrest of Nicholas II, he was given a box found in January 1917, during the repair of a fireplace, in the room of the Taganrog house where Alexander 1 was located with the inscription: “Transfer to the Reigning Emperor 100 years after my death.” The text was written by the hand of Emperor Alexander I (Semyon Afanasyevich the Great). Since 1801, Semyon, after the murder of Paul I’s paternal brother Alexander, played the role of Emperor Alexander I and the husband of Princess Louise of Baden, who converted to Orthodoxy with the name of Elizaveta Alekseevna, the widow of Alexander’s brother.

On September 1, 1825, Semyon, having ordered a memorial service for his brother Alexander I at the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, arrived in Taganrog, where, on the advice of the Orthodox elders Vassian of Kyiv, Nicholas of Valaam, Abel of Suzdal, Theodosius of Jerusalem, Lazar of Pskov and Seraphim of Sarov, he arranged his own false funeral on November 19, 1825, leaving the throne to his stronger brother - Nicholas I.

To do this, in 1823, after a conversation with Seraphim of Sarov, Alexander I (Semyon) instructed Metropolitan Philaret (Drozdov) to draw up a Manifesto on the appointment of Grand Duke Nikolai Pavlovich as heir to the throne, and sealed it in an envelope on which he made a handwritten inscription. From Taganrog, Emperor Alexander I (Semyon), left for the Sarov Forest, where he was a cell attendant with Seraphim of Sarov, after whose death, on January 2, 1833, he moved to Tomsk, where he became a wanderer Fedor Kuzmich.

In April 1826, Elizaveta Alekseevna left Taganrog and went to St. Petersburg, passing through Kaluga. In the city of Belyov she stayed in the house of the merchant Dorofeev. That same night, May 4, 1826, at the age of 48, she dies. This is the official version of the death of the august wife of Emperor Alexander I (Semyon), Elizaveta Alekseevna.

But, in fact, the empress did not die in Belev, but accepted the feat of silence in the Holy Cross Belevsky convent and died on May 6, 1861, in the Syrkov monastery of the Novgorod province, at the age of 72 years under the name Silent faiths.

The eldest son of Emperor Alexander II, Nikolai Alexandrovich, engaged to the Danish Princess Dagmara(who later became Maria Feodorovna, mother of Nicholas II) visited the elder several times Fedor Kuzmich(Alexander I Semyon the Great) near the village of Korobeynikovo.

Another interesting fact is that Nicholas I suddenly died in the Russian city of Nice on April 27, 1865. After his funeral, Dagmara was forced to urgently marry his brother, Grand Duke Alexander III, since she was pregnant by Nicholas, and her born son, who was raised separately, was given the title of count and surname Krymov. This is the essence of why the head of the emperor appears in Lenin’s office. It's actually the head General Krymov, who simply looked like his maternal brother, and planned with Kornilov to remove Kerensky, but ended his life in the Winter Palace...



On the icon of St. Nicholas, painted by the President of the Russian Academy of Sciences - Grand Duke Konstantin Romanov, and presented to Hieromonk Grigory Rasputin, the latter, on the reverse side of this icon, mounted the Cross of St. George and inside - two intersecting Monograms of the Emperors Nicholas II and Alexander I, emphasizing this is the similarity of their destinies - wandering!



At the beginning of December 1916, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna visited the 104-year-old elder of the Tithe Monastery, Maria Mikhailovna, and she predicted to the empress that her daughters would have children.

In 1929, while in Serbia, the poet S.S. Bekhteev made a public statement that Tsar Nicholas II and his family were alive, and that he personally communicated with the secretary of Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich, Johnson.

Archbishop Feofan Poltavsky(Bystrov), the confessor of the royal family, who lived in Bulgarian Sofia after the 1917 coup, never served a memorial service for the august family, and constantly repeated to his cell attendant that the royal family was alive. In April 1931, he went to Paris to meet with Emperor Nicholas II and the people who freed the royal family from captivity. Bishop Theophan predicted that over time the Romanov Family would be restored, but through the female line.

“I will glorify the king who glorifies me,” the prophecy began with these words Seraphim of Sarov in a letter addressed to Nicholas II and given to him by Abbess Maria Ushakova. The letter was read personally by the Tsar on August 2, 1903, in the cell of Pasha of Sarov. In the letter, Seraphim of Sarov stated:

“The Lord will preserve the Sovereign and the entire Royal Family and will give complete victory to those who took up arms for Him, for the Orthodox Church and for the good of the indivisibility of the Russian land, but not so much blood will be shed here as when the right side for the Sovereign receives victory and catches all the traitors and delivers them into the hands of Justice, then no one will be sent to Siberia, but everyone will be executed, and here even more blood will be shed, but this blood will be the last cleansing, for after that the Lord will bless His people with peace and exalt the Horn of His Anointed David, a man after the heart of the most pious Sovereign.”

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. In 20-30 years. Nicholas II stayed in Diveevo at the address: st. Arzamasskaya 16, in the house of Alexandra Ivanovna Grashkina- Schema nun Dominica.

Stalin built himself a dacha in Sukhumi - next to the dacha of the royal family - and came there to meet with the emperor and his cousin, Nicholas II. In the uniform of an officer, Nicholas II visited Stalin in the Kremlin, which was confirmed by the general of the 9th Directorate of the FSO Vatov.

Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, under the name Ksenia from 1927 until her death in 1948 she lived in the city of Starobelsk, Lugansk region, took monastic vows with the name Alexandra, in the Starobelsky Holy Trinity Monastery. The Empress met with Stalin, who told Her the following: “Live quietly in the city of Starobelsk, but there is no need to interfere in politics.”

Money transfers were regularly received from France and Japan in the name of the queen. The Empress received them and donated them to four kindergartens. This was confirmed by the former manager of the Starobelsky branch of the State Bank, Ruf Leontyevich Shpilev and chief accountant Klokolov.

In 1931, the Tsarina appeared at the Starobelsky okrot department of the GPU and stated that she had 185,000 marks in her account in the Berlin Reichsbank, and, in addition, 300,000 dollars in the Chicago Bank; She supposedly wants to transfer all these funds to the disposal of the Soviet government, provided that it provides for her old age. The Empress’s statement was forwarded to the GPU of the Ukrainian SSR, which instructed the so-called “Credit Bureau” to negotiate with foreign countries about receiving these deposits.

When the Germans occupied Starobelsk in 1942, the Empress was invited to breakfast with the general on the same day Kleist, who invited her to move to Berlin, to which the Tsarina replied with dignity: “I am Russian, and I want to die in my homeland.”

Then she was offered to choose any house in the city - whatever she wanted. But she refused that too. The only thing the queen agreed to was to use the services of German doctors. True, the city commandant still ordered a sign to be installed near the empress’s home with the inscription in Russian and German: "Do not disturb Her Majesty", which she was very happy about, because in her dugout behind the screen there were... wounded Soviet tankers. The German medicine was very useful. The tankers managed to get out, and they safely crossed the front line. Taking advantage of the location of the occupation authorities, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna saved many prisoners of war and local residents who were threatened with reprisals.

Son of the youngest daughter of Nicholas II - Anastasia– Mikhail Vasilievich Peregudov, was discharged due to injury, and after returning from the front of the Second World War, he worked as an architect, and it was according to his design that the railway station in Stalingrad - Volgograd was built.

Brother of the King Nicholas II, Grand Duke Mikhail Alexandrovich, escaped from Perm right under the nose of the Cheka. At first he lived in Belogorye, and then moved to Vyritsa, where he died on April 3, 1949.

Conclusions of the Government Commission of the Russian Federation according to the family of Emperor Nicholas II, were repeatedly criticized in the public press. Here are the stupidest facts in these conclusions:

1. In the burial of the “remains” in Ganina Yama, the skeletons of only three daughters of the king were discovered. From 1991 to 1995, commission experts repeatedly changed their opinion, believing that either Anastasia or Maria were missing... Ultimately, skeleton No. 6 was recognized as Anastasia. But his height is 171 cm, while Anastasia’s height is 158: a difference of 13 cm.

2. Three of the world's largest anthropologists - William Maples (USA), Peter Gill (England), Zvyagin (Russia) - believe that among the remains discovered in Ganina Yama there are no skeletons of Grand Duchess Anastasia and Tsarevich Alexei. And here is a DNA examination of the descendants of the family carried out in Germany Filatovs matched 100% with the DNA of the remains found near Yekaterinburg. This suggests that the Filatov family was shot in Yekaterinburg - doubles of the royal family.

3. On December 7, 2004, in the building of the Moscow Patriarchate, Bishop Alexander of Dmitrov met with Tatsuo Nagai, Doctor of Biological Sciences, Professor, Director of the Department of Forensic and Scientific Medicine at Kitazato University. This internationally recognized expert - and, most importantly, a member of the Royal Society of Medicine in London - carried out an examination of the blood of Nicholas II, who, while still his crown prince, was hit twice on the head with a saber on May 12, 1891 in the city of Otsu, in Kyoto, by a Japanese policeman Wa- Tsu. But the blow only slipped, causing a harmless injury, because Prince George of Greece hit the criminal with a bamboo cane, and the Korean, driving the rickshaw, rushed with all his might from the scene of the attack, thereby saving the life of the heir to the Russian Empire.


The samurai sword of the policeman Wa-Tsu, with which he wounded Tsarevich Nicholas II

The research team led by Dr. Nagai took a sample of dried sweat from the clothes of Nicholas II, stored in the Catherine Palace of Tsarskoe Selo, and performed mitochondrial analysis on it. In addition, a mitochondrial DNA analysis was carried out on the hair, lower jaw bone and thumbnail of Grand Duke George Alexandrovich, the younger brother of Nicholas II, buried in the Peter and Paul Cathedral. Next, the commission compared DNA from bone cuts buried in 1998 in the Peter and Paul Fortress with blood samples from Emperor Nicholas II’s own nephew, Tikhon Nikolaevich Kulikovsky, as well as with samples of the sweat and blood of Tsar Nicholas II himself, left on a handkerchief in Japan.

Conclusions of Dr. Tatsuo Nagai: “We have obtained results excellent from the results obtained by doctors Peter Gill and Pavel Ivanov on five points" (!)

4. The foreign expert commission to investigate the fate of the royal family, created in 1989 under the chairmanship of Pyotr Nikolaevich Koltypin-Vallovsky, ordered a study by scientists from Stanford University and received data on inconsistency DNA from the “Ekaterinburg remains”. The commission provided a fragment of V.K.’s finger for DNA analysis. St. Elizabeth Feodorovna Romanova, whose relics are kept in the Jerusalem Church of Mary Magdalene. “Sisters and their daughters should have identical mitochondrial DNA, but the results of the analysis of the remains of Elizaveta Fedorovna do not correspond previously published DNA of the alleged remains of Alexandra Fedorovna and her daughters,” is the conclusion of 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 Eastern Michigan University, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and with the participation of Doctor of Sciences Lev Zhivotovsky, an employee of the Institute of General Genetics of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Lev Zhivotovsky emphasized: “the old DNA samples were in fact (contaminated) by fresh DNA, which distorted the analysis. After the death of an organism, the DNA begins to quickly decompose (cut) into pieces, 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.

I wonder how it was that in 1994, during the “analysis”, a segment of as many as 1223 nucleotides was isolated?

Thus, as Pyotr Koltypin-Vallovskoy emphasized, “geneticists are again refuted the results of the examination, conducted in 1994 in the British laboratory, on the basis of which it was concluded that the “Ekaterinburg remains” belonged to Tsar Nicholas II and his family.

5. Conclusions of the Head of the Department of Biology of the Ural Medical Academy Oleg Makeev: “Genetic examination after 90 years is not only complicated, due to the changes that have occurred in the bone tissue, but also cannot give an absolute result even if it is carried out carefully. The methodology used in the studies already conducted is still not recognized as evidence by any court in the world.”

6. Members of the State Commission at the final meeting on January 30, 1998 did not vote (by name and as a whole) for the decisions made, and did not put their signatures on them. All of them are signed only by the chairman of the commission - B. Nemtsova. Of the 18 commission members, 5 expressed their dissenting opinion, which did not coincide with the opinion of the commission. But all this was ignored, and Chubais, as head of the Presidential Administration, began the procedure for burying the “unknown bones” to give a legal start Hohenzollern !

7. A criminal case initiated under Art. 102 (premeditated murder in connection with the discovery of remains), was closed and not brought to trial. Therefore, according to the Civil Code, the St. Petersburg registry office had no right issue death certificates, which can only be done in court.


Despite this, in 1996, Anatoly Sobchak fled to Madrid with certificates “of the death of members of the Royal Family”, handed them over to the Hohenzollerns and became their personal lawyer! At the same time Sobchak, Chubais And Nemtsov entered into an agreement with Maria Hohenzollern - if she “became queen” and financial assets were registered in her name, part of the interest was to be registered in the name of this “trinity”.


Little of, Sobchak managed to get the go-ahead for his daughter's engagement Ksenia with the son of Maria Hohenzollern - Georgiy, after which he already felt like “the king’s father-in-law.”

At the same time, the “unification” took place Moscow Patriarchate(MP) with foreign Russian Orthodox Church ( ROCOR), which demanded that the MP put in order the “canonicity” in its ranks, this meant that the MP must as quickly as possible "glorify" the royal family– just after Sobchak’s arrival in the Russian Federation from Madrid.

The leadership of the MP complied with the requests of the ROCOR, convened a Council of Bishops and created new “passion-bearers” from the tsar’s family, and, simply put, threw a “bone” to the common people so that they would completely shut up and calm down in relation to the emperor.

In the MP in 1994, a situation arose in which the Tsar, as a locally revered saint, was glorified by the Archbishop of Ekterinburg Melchizedek, and this action was supported by the brethren of the Valaam Monastery. However, the “helmers” in the MP, apparently, were afraid that such a “march of democracy” through the dioceses would “backfire” on them, and they immediately removed Melchizedek from their see, sending him to the “dead” Bryansk, and the brethren of the Valaam monastery headed by O. Gerontius - dispersed. However, a “wave of veneration” for the Tsar has already spread across the expanses of the Russian Orthodox Church and church leaders made a “Solomon’s decision”: to partially glorify the Tsar in the MP (!)

On December 1, 2005, to the General Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation, on behalf of “Princess” Maria Vladimirovna, as her new secretary G.Yu. Lukyanov, who replaced Anatoly Sobchak in this post, was submitted statement about the “rehabilitation of Emperor Nicholas II and members of his family.” It said, in particular:

The “protection of the rights and legitimate interests” of the Imperial House in Russia began in 1995 by the late “Princess” Leonida Georgievna, who, on behalf of her daughter Maria Vladimirovna Hohenzollern - supposedly the “head of the Russian Imperial House” - applied for state registration of the death of members of the Imperial House killed in 1918-1919, and issuing death certificates."

It is appropriate to recall that Leonida Georgievna was the wife SS Obergruppenführer Vladimir Kirillovich, who sat on Hitler’s headquarters and, in the event of the victory of the Third Reich, his candidacy was planned in the form of a “puppet king” in the USSR. Vladimir Kirillovich was helped in this by none other than himself L. Beria, since his wife, Nina Teymurazovna Gegechkori, was Leonida’s sister. In particular, P. Quaroni, who was the Italian consul in Tiflis in 1926, was aware of this.

Some time ago (and experts knew about this before) it became known about the existence 10 volumes from the old KGB archives, which contain information that burials in the Koptyakov area were organized by the Cheka in 1919 and the NKVD in 1946, with far-reaching goals. What are these goals?

In the early 1950s, Beria was preparing to dismember the USSR and create a Confederation out of it, exactly for his brother-in-law Vladimir Kirillovich. Why did Beria in 1948 “bury” “unknown bones” by the NKVD forces in the area of ​​Ganina Yama, which he later wanted to pass off as “royal”! Beria was able to complete this scam Geliy Ryabov– journalist and screenwriter of feature films. It was this “special operation” that served as the foundation for the promotion of the Hohenzollerns in the Russian Federation! But in order to give them a legally “path to the throne,” it was necessary to “finish off” the royal family, i.e. It’s stupid to “bury” them. And so that as a result, only the only contenders for the Tsar’s assets remain - Maria and George of Hohenzollern .

That's how it started global scam with “royal bones”, which today has no end!

On October 1, 2008, the Chairman of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation committed a second crime Vyacheslav Lebedev, which assembled the Presidium of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation and, despite the resistance of the Basmanny Court of Moscow, changed the criminal formulation in the “tsar’s case” to a political one, which allowed the Hohenzollerns to lay claim to all the tsar’s material assets. Then and Prosecutor General's Office, on January 13, 2011, also changed the wording in this case, and already on January 15, the Investigative Committee became an independent structure, not subordinate to the Prosecutor General’s Office.

We should not forget about the following:

1. Research remains within the framework of a criminal case were carried out as preliminary, and do not constitute forensic examinations (examinations ordered by the court).

2. Prosecutor General's Office conducted the case as part of a criminal investigation, which made it closed to the public. The materials were published only in 1998, which simply presented the public around the world with a fait accompli.

The Prosecutor General's Office did not listen to the opinions of other parties, which is its fundamental difference from the court, which is obliged in an open trial to listen to the opinion of any party interested in this case.

The replacement of the court by the Prosecutor General's Office could have only one goal: to resolve the issue within the framework of only one “selected” version, appointed initially.

3. Expert work The government commission took place during non-working hours and without budget funding, which could not ensure the required quality of the work done, as well as personal responsibility for the results obtained. And for the money of the oligarchs, they “produced on the mountain” the results necessary for those who “paid for the girl.”

What other way than God’s punishment can explain the unexpected death of the failed “royal father-in-law” Sobchak, who returned to the Russian Federation in 2000? When his motorcade passed along Svetlogorsk Karl Marx Street, from the balcony of house No. 5, the granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas II literally said the following: “May you die, you bastard!” Instant death overtook the slanderer in the bathhouse of the Svetlogorsk Rus Hotel, in the company of two ladies of, to put it mildly, deviant behavior, one of whom was “Miss Kaliningrad.”

What other than a mystical sign of retribution from Above marks the strange story of another “engine” of deliberate false burial Helium Ryabov?! However, first things first. When the KGB was headed by Yu.V. Andropov (Fleckenstein), an enthusiastic grave digger gained great influence under him Yulian Semenov, who “dug up” the remains of Leonid Andreev, Chaliapin, dug the ground in search of the Amber Room, without ceasing, apparently, to think about what else he could dig. Finally, I remembered the story of my father, a security officer close to Dzerzhinsky, about burials in the Koptyakov area. However, since digging such For some reason, he felt uncomfortable with the remains under his own name; it was Semyonov who gave this amazing idea to his detective colleague and friend Gelia Ryabov.

This latter restored several artistic canvases that were short-sightedly thrown into a landfill by uneducated owners and presented them as a “gift” to a lover of various antiques to the Minister of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR. After which Geliy Ryabov was appointed advisor Shchelokova on cultural values. This allowed him to get into the archives of the MGB, which were then stored in the Ministry of Internal Affairs, where he became acquainted with the materials of Beria, who made bookmarks and burials in the Koptyakov area. From 1976 to 1979 A group of “enthusiasts” led by him carried out work to search for the remains of the family of Emperor Nicholas II. The search was conducted in a secret manner; the official “foundation” was declared to be “rare books about the execution of the Royal Family” allegedly found by Ryabov and Avdonin.

Ahead, behind the procedure of the ceremonial burial of the “entire royal family,” a solid jackpot loomed for the authors and enthusiasts, paid exclusively by those interested in the mega-project Rothschilds(it was they who “pushed” Maria Vladimirovna’s son, Georgy Hohenzollern, into the Board of Directors of Norilsk Nickel in December 2008 for his promotion in Russia). But, as you know, in 1997 they “didn’t work out” - the Russian Orthodox Church did not dare to openly admit what was refuted by the above-mentioned respected international experts.

Although, in fairness, it should be admitted that the church leaders tried as best they could: June 22, 1997 in person Alexy II(Ridiger) blessed George Hohenzollern to take the oath of allegiance to Russia in the Ipatiev Monastery in Kostroma. But local patriots simply did not allow them inside the monastery, disrupting the event. Then Ridiger sent George along with his “mother and grandmother” to Jerusalem, where on April 9, 1998 the young man took the oath of “Allegiance to Russia” to the Patriarch of Jerusalem Diodorus. As you can see, a lot was seized from the Rothschilds, a lot was paid for. That is, if these Anglo-barons agreed to retreat, it was only for a while.

In 2015, the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Medvedev again stirred up the “royal topic” and urgently proposed to finally establish the “authenticity” of the royal remains and bury them and the whole topic completely and irrevocably. Rothschilds and their invested billions, as they say, were “tore up with their hooves.”

The official date for the “ceremonial burial” of the missing royal bones was also set - October 18, 2015. On October 16-17, heads of monarchies from different countries of the world and other honored guests were supposed to fly to St. Petersburg and stay at the Leningrad Hotel. BUT... On October 16, unexpectedly for everyone, it caught fire! They called 35 fire brigades, blocked the entire Pirogovskaya embankment, and evicted everyone who already lived there. And they urgently refused everyone who had a reservation.

This funeral had to be cancelled. However, on this day another funeral took place, ominous in a certain sense: four days before the stated date, he died unexpectedly Geliy Ryabov! So, instead of “reburying the royal children Alexei and Maria,” they buried one of the main swindlers.

These days pass Bishops' Council, the organizers of which somehow casually mentioned the issue of “royal remains”. Patriarch Kirill is clearly fidgeting and frantically looking for a “positive” way out for the customers. I performed better to the point of declaring that science cannot put a “final point” on this issue (?!) But bishops’ councils can do this.

That is, the experts’ conclusions are meaningless nonsense (you have to somehow “knock them out of the game”, but how else?). Patriarch Kirill (Gundyaev) knows very well that bishops’ councils do not have the right to resolve this issue, for, according to Orthodox church dogmas, the tsar is the exponent of the Spirit of the entire people, but not the priesthood, and represents the interests of the entire people only Local Council. And the Council of Bishops represents only the priesthood!

The Head of Population of the Russian Orthodox Church understands this, but has he decided on yet another scam? What's the matter?

About a month ago I was given “news” from one of the control departments of the Presidential Administration that the project Masha and Gosha Hohenzollern almost ruined, but Rothschilds This doesn't suit me. So they are pushing Patriarch Kirill, no longer with a carrot, but with a stick. That is, he is not his own master. And the Jewish moneylenders themselves are completely confused about what they confused others about, and they don’t see a way out of the situation.

But in such a nervous situation, Kirill now apparently needs only one thing: to relinquish responsibility for this latest church-political tent. Hence the idea about the Council of Bishops - like, it was he who made the decision, and Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Kirill (Gundyaev) personally had nothing to do with it! Again, if anything Bishop's- Not Local, you can think about the legality if it comes from the other side...

And to tell the truth, then, in my opinion, the main legal and moral basis for the Orthodox inhabitants of Russia is the decision of the Vladivostok Zemsky Council of July 3, 1922, which determined that the contenders for the Russian throne are the heirs of the Romanov dynasty, but only those who were not deprived of their heritage.

And, therefore, the task of the descendants of Nicholas II is the Convocation of the Zemstvo-Local Council.

And if such a council takes place, and it puts the State structure in order, then the Council can choose candidates from various Russian families, including the Bolkhov princes, who originate from the eldest son of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich - Mikhail Alekseevich.

...The most secret facility on the territory of the Russian Federation - you will be surprised! - is Tsarskaya Dacha, located in the Pervomaisky district of the Nizhny Novgorod region! All the Tsars' dachas were declassified a long time ago, but the big question remains: why has this one not been declassified yet?

The historian of the royal family, Sergei Zhelenkov, shed light on the facts that he found over a quarter of a century in closed and open archives, as told to him by the descendants of those who, at the turn of the 20th century, were in the thick of events around the Romanovs. His information does not fit into the official version of recent history...

Contrary to the established opinion that the king's family Nicholas II was shot on July 18, 1918; in recent years, fairly reliable information about her rescue has appeared. A former party intelligence officer spoke about this for the first time in his book. (successor to Stalin's personal intelligence service), performing under the pseudonym Oleg Greig. In his book “The Secret Behind 107 Seals,” he argued that in fact the royal family, before being executed, was secretly replaced by doubles and taken away by the people of the People’s Commissar of Military Affairs L.D. Trotsky to Moscow. One of the seven families of royal doubles, distant relatives of Nicholas II by the name of the Filatievs, was shot.

Subsequently, the royal family was kidnapped from the “demon of the revolution” by I.V. Stalin with your people. In this they were helped by employees of the former personal intelligence service of the tsar himself, led by Count Konkrin. The book also provides some details of the Tsar's secret life for several decades after 1918. In October 2014, new data came to light about the life of the royal family “after the execution” and details of their “miraculous” rescue. New materials were presented in a televised address to the people of Russia by former party intelligence officer Sergei Ivanovich Zhelenkov. In the video clip, he was introduced to the audience as a historian of the royal family. And, I must say, what he said almost completely coincides with Oleg Greig’s data. Judge for yourself.

According to Sergei Ivanovich, the royal family was saved from execution by I.V. Stalin. This sensational statement is not unfounded. Turns out, Joseph Dzhugashvili was a cousin of Tsar Nicholas II on his father’s side. The fact is that Nikolai Romanov’s grandfather Alexander III was very loving. His numerous affairs with various women from the nobility left illegitimate children. One of them was Stalin’s real father, Major General N.M. Przhevalsky. The situation was as follows. At the beginning of 1877, N.M. arrived in Gori for training in the mountains before traveling to Tibet. Przhevalsky. He stayed at the house of Prince Mikeladze. The prince's niece Ekaterina Geladze often visited her uncle. There she met N.M. Przhevalsky. They began an affair. The result of this in December 1878 was the birth of a son, who was named Joseph.

Subsequently, I.S. Stalin had to hide the true date of his birth throughout his life. He changed it to one year (made myself younger) so that no one could connect the moment of his birth with the visit to the Georgian city of Gori N.M. Przhevalsky. To confirm this, we present the following fact. An entry in Georgian in the metric book of the Gori Assumption Cathedral indicates that Joseph Dzhugashvili was born on December 6/18, 1878. This book was in the Georgian branch (GF) of the Institute of Marxism-Leninism. There is another source in the Russian State Archive of Socio-Political History. Unlike his two maternal brothers who died early, Joseph weighed up to five kilograms at birth. (the brothers weighed almost half as much).

By the way, the reason for Vissarion Dzhugashvili’s departure from Gori to Tiflis was the death of his first two sons in infancy. He could not bear such shame, and, in the end, he soon became an alcoholic and died. Stalin's real father, Major General N.M. Przhevalsky did not forget his son from a Georgian woman. According to Stalin's daughter Svetlana Aliluyeva, grandmother Ekaterina told her that she received money from St. Petersburg to support her son for several years. And only after the death of Major General N.M. Przhevalsky near Lake Issykkul, following his return from Tibet in 1882, the deportation of alimony stopped. But that's not the whole truth. At the age of twelve, Joseph Dzhugashvili was exchanged for a double at the Tiflis Seminary. Then, according to the testimony of the historian of the royal family Sergei Ivanovich, the son of N.M. Przhevalsky was transported by his colleagues in the military counterintelligence of the General Staff of the Russian Imperial Army to St. Petersburg. There he secretly studied at the special faculty of military counterintelligence at the Academy of the General Staff of the Russian Imperial Army. By the way, the future Tsar Nikolai Romanov also trained there.

After completing his studies, Joseph Dzhugashvili was introduced into the revolutionary movement, since already at the end of the 19th century it was clear that several revolutions were coming in Russia and the power of the tsar would fall anyway. Let us say right away that Joseph Dzhugashvili’s double, who replaced him at the Tiflis Theological Seminary, was soon liquidated. Such is the difficult fate of such intelligence officers. After the February Revolution, the royal family was exiled to the Urals. Then the Bolsheviks came to power. Their overseas owners, the Rothschilds, demanded from V.I. Ulyanov-Lenin to liquidate Nikolai Romanov and his entire family.

This requirement was due to the fact that it was the last tsar who was the founder of the US Federal Reserve System (FRS) and the owner of most of its assets. Lenin began preparations for the ritual murder of the royal family. But then Stalin intervened in the matter, and it took an unexpected turn. Stalin contacted the German ambassador to Russia, Count Mirbach, and informed him of the impending execution of the royal family. At the same time, the future General Secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks threatened the ambassador with the same fate for the German Emperor Wilhelm II. After such a conversation, Mirbach urgently contacted Berlin. As a result of the negotiations, he, on behalf of his Emperor, presented an ultimatum to Lenin: the Tsar must personally attend the negotiations in Brest on concluding a separate peace between Germany and Russia.

Lenin, contrary to Rodschild’s demands and his own wishes, had to simulate the execution of the royal family. Otherwise, Wilhelm II threatened to urgently launch an attack on Moscow. Lenin analyzed the current situation and decided this: Rodschild is far away, and German troops are a day's drive from Moscow by rail. The Germans can easily reach the Kremlin. And some dashing German officer will simply slap Lenin in the heat of the moment, while the senior military leaders have time to understand the matter. And Lenin decided to take a risk. He thought that while Rodschild figured out who was executed in Yekaterinburg, time would pass. And there already, we'll see.

So, after such thoughts, Lenin gave two orders to different groups of his fellow party members. He gave the order to the commander of the Ural Front, Reinhold Berzin, and the chairman of the Ural Regional Cheka, Fedor Lukoyanov, to take the royal family through Perm to Moscow, and ordered the chairman of the Yekaterinburg Council, Alexander Beloborodov, to shoot the king’s doubles and members of his family in Yekaterinburg. Which was done with extreme cruelty. The severed heads of the doubles of Nikolai Romanov and his wife were preserved in alcohol and taken by Rodschild's emissaries to the USA. And the tsar and his family were transported under heavy escort through Perm, first to Moscow, and then to Brest.

There he came at the complete disposal of Trotsky. After the unsuccessful conclusion of the negotiations in Brest, Trotsky declared the slogan “No peace, no war!”, and returned with the royal family to Moscow. In the capital, Nikolai Romanov and members of his family secretly lived in a house on Bolshaya Ordynka, then they were taken to a suburban dacha in Zubalovo. At that time, Trotsky was able to find and detain five of the remaining six families of royal doubles. He intensively searched for the remaining sixth family of doppelgängers. Meanwhile, Stalin began to act actively. Stalin's employees, led by Zabrezhnev, managed to kidnap the royal family from a secret prison. Trotsky “was left with his nose” and did not dare to inform Rodschild that the royal family had been stolen from him. Since then, his fall from the heights of the Olympus of power in Soviet Russia began. Stalin organized the removal of the royal family to Abkhazia. In Sukhumi, next to his dacha, he built a dacha for the king and his family members. They lived there for some time. Then they had to separate.

Nikolai Romanov was taken to the Moscow region. There he often saw Stalin. The former Tsar was presented by the General Secretary to Rodschild's representatives during the Great Patriotic War to decide on US assistance to our country under the Lend-Lease Law. After the war, he was transported to Nizhny Novgorod, which was a closed city to foreigners. After Stalin's death, the tsar lived out his life there. He died on December 26, 1958. Elder Grigory Dolgunov performed his funeral service. The queen was first sent to the Glinsk Hermitage. Then she was transported to Ukraine to the Trinity Starobelsky Monastery. There she died in Starobelsk, Lugansk region on April 20, 1948. Tsarevich Alexei, with the help of Stalin and his assistants, completely changed his biography and received documents in the name of Alexei Niklaevich Kosygin. Then he started a new life. In 1964 he became chairman of the Soviet government.

The Tsar's eldest daughters Olga and Tatyana first lived together. They lived in the courtyard of the Diveyevo Monastery, where the choir, led by regent Agafya Romanovna Uvarova, was forced to move from St. Petersburg. In the Trinity Church of this monastery, the royal daughters even sang in the choir for some time. Then someone identified them, and they were forced to leave this quiet place. Then their paths diverged. Olga, together with the Emir of Bukhara Alimkhan, first left for Afghanistan through Uzbekistan. Alimkhan remained in Kabul, and Olga again moved through Finland to the monastery in Diveevo. There in Vyritsa she died on January 19, 1976. She was buried in the Kazan Church in the area of ​​St. Seraphim of Vyritsky. Tatyana took a roundabout route to Kuban, then to Georgia. She died on September 21, 1992, and was buried in the village of Solenoye, Mostovsky District, Krasnodar Territory.

Maria moved to the Nizhny Novgorod region. She lived there all her life. She died of illness on May 24, 1954. She was buried in the village of Arefino, Nizhny Novgorod region. Anastasia married her security guard, who was first subordinate to Trotsky and then to Stalin. She died on June 27, 1980. She was buried in the Vanino district of the Volgograd region. At the end of the 1950s, the ashes of the queen were transported to Nizhny Novgorod and reburied in the same grave with the king.

This is the true story of the salvation of the Romanov royal family and the role of Joseph Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili (Przhevalsky), who went down in history under the pseudonym Stalin.

Attempts to liberate the family of Nicholas II.

The efforts of the monarchists.

So, let us dwell on the analysis of several attempts to save the family of Nicholas II from exile.
Moreover, many speculative myths have now been created around this issue.
The current “Russian” film hacks even managed to make a Hollywood-style nonsense film about how “gentlemen officers” heroically try to help out the Tsar-Father, simultaneously, at the first opportunity, destroying the cowardly “red bastard” in batches.
Let's see what was actually done at that time.

It must be said that, by and large, NOTHING SERIOUS in this regard was undertaken by any of those political forces that played any serious role in Russia in 1917-18: liberals, monarchists and Germans.
Looking ahead somewhat, it can be noted that they all wore either a caricature, or a demonstration, or even downright fraudulent appearance.

The first person who became seriously concerned about the possibility of a conspiracy to free the royal family from Tobolsk exile was...Minister Chairman of the Provisional Government A.F. Kerensky.
This action of his, like many others associated with his short reign, was somehow a false caricature.

One of Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna’s friends was Margarita Sergeevna Khitrovo. This girl simply loved the royal family and was selflessly devoted to it. When she learned that the royal family had been taken to Tobolsk, she immediately voluntarily went after her.
Someone “whistled” to Kerensky that Margarita was almost the head of a conspiracy of 10 people who went to the rescue of the royal family.
And Kerensky, as soon as he learned about Khitrovo’s departure, sent the following telegram to the prosecutor in Tobolsk:
“Tobolsk to the Prosecutor of the Court Out of turn
Decipher personally and if Commissioner Makarov or Duma member Vershinin of Tobolsk in their presence, point I order that strict supervision be established over all those arriving by ship in Tobolsk, finding out the identity and place from where they left, as well as the route by which they arrived, as well as stops, point Pay special attention to the arrival of Margarita Sergeevna Khitrovo, a young secular girl who immediately on the ship arrest search take away all letters passports and printed works all things that do not constitute personal travel luggage money pay attention to pillows
secondly, keep in mind the probable arrival of ten persons from Pyatigorsk, who may, however, arrive in a roundabout way, period. They too should be arrested and searched in the indicated order, period.
Due to the fact that these persons may have already arrived in Tobolsk, conduct a thorough investigation and, if they are found, arrest, search, thoroughly find out who they met, period
Everyone who was seen should be searched and all of them should not be released from Tobolsk until further notice, having vigilant supervision point Khitrovo, one of the rest will probably arrive together point
All those arrested should be immediately delivered to Moscow under reliable guard to the Prokulata. If (they) any of them already lived in Tobolsk, conduct a (search) of the house inhabited by the former royal family, a thorough search, selecting correspondence that arouses the slightest suspicion, as well as all things not brought before and all extra money, period About the execution of the order, as actions are carried out, telegraph to me and the Moscow Prokulat, the orders of which must be carried out by all authorities, point 2992.
Minister Chairman Kerensky.”

In accordance with this telegram, Khitrovo was arrested in Tobolsk, searched and sent to Moscow.
Of course, no 10 villains who intended to free the royal family could be found. Nothing was found even in her pillows, which Kernsky was so worried about. As a result, the case of the “Khitrovo conspiracy” was dropped.

Investigator N.A. Sokolov, later, already in Paris, A.F. Kerensky testified during interrogation:
“Indeed, regarding the arrival of Margarita Khitrovo in Tobolsk, a telegraph investigation was carried out at my request. It turned out this way. During the Moscow State Conference, information was received that 10 people from Pyatigorsk were trying to penetrate the Tsar. This was covered as an attempt to take away the royal family. Because of this, an investigation was carried out. However, this information was not confirmed. There was nothing serious here.”

Other attempts to free the royal family were associated with the then monarchists.
Before the abdication of Nicholas II, there were many quite influential monarchist organizations in Russia that had their own newspapers, a faction in the Duma, etc. Immediately after their abdication, they somehow quietly disappeared from the political horizon.
A year after the abdication of Nicholas II, Russian monarchists began to cautiously show signs of some kind of activity in rescuing the royal family from exile.

True, these attempts were unusually timid, inconsistent, and besides, our monarchists turned out to be closely connected with ... Germany and it was from the Germans that they expected help in liberating the royal family.
In general, it is not customary to remember the post-revolutionary cooperation of our monarchists with the Germans; this topic is too “slippery” and unpleasant.
After all, Germany, even after the Brest-Litovsk Treaty, was de jure an enemy of Russia; it occupied vast Russian territories: the Vistula region, Bessarabia, Courland, Little Russia, Crimea, the Baltic region, etc. German troops were stationed even in Batum and Tiflis.
Under these conditions, conducting direct negotiations for assistance with Germany was a very risky business. If they became public, then the entire legend about the Bolsheviks as German spies would be under attack...

This topic is little known and very unpopular among today’s “monarchists” and liberal myth-makers.
So much effort, time and money were spent on creating the image of the Bolsheviks as “agents of the German General Staff” who made the revolution, naturally, with German money.

One can argue for a long time about why the extraterritorial “sealed carriage” in which Lenin and his comrades traveled through Germany is better (or worse) than the train under the Japanese (!!!) flag, in which the family of the former Russian autocrat for some reason followed Russian soil into exile .
In both cases, the “rules of the game” and the order of movement within their territory were not determined by the passengers of these trains.
Let's take a better look at how the Russian monarchists tried to save the family of the one to whom they swore allegiance and swore allegiance to the grave.
Here's what actually happened:

Leader of Russian monarchists, member of the State Duma N.E. Markov during interrogation by investigator N.A. Sokolov in 1921 showed:
“During the period of the Tsarskoye Selo imprisonment of the August Family, I tried to enter into communication with the Sovereign Emperor. I wanted to do something for the well-being of the royal family, and in a note that I sent through the wife of a naval officer, Yulia Alexandrovna Den, very devoted to the Empress, and one of the palace servants, I informed the Emperor of my desire to serve the royal family, to do everything possible to ease her fate, asking the Emperor to let me know through Den whether he approves of my intentions, conditionally: by sending an icon. The Emperor approved of my desire: he sent me the image of St. Nicholas the Pleasant through Den...”
Actually, this is where all attempts to establish connections between the monarchists and Nicholas during his imprisonment in Tsarskoye Selo ended.

In the summer of 1917, the royal family was exiled to Tobolsk. There, attempts by monarchists to establish contact with the royal family are renewed.
In all these attempts, the efforts of the then monarchists are intricately intertwined with the efforts of members of the Rasputin circle, who also actively revolved around these problems.
In order not to confuse the actions of these two parties that hated each other, we will try to consider their actions separately, starting with the monarchists..

As General M.K. rightly noted in his book. Dieteriks, in August-September 1917 was the most favorable time to try to free the royal family: it was relatively quiet in Siberia, and the family of “Citizen Romanov” (as democratic newspapers wrote then) began to be slowly forgotten.
Moreover, as part of the guard itself, among the soldiers of the former 4th Imperial Family Rifle Regiment, some soldiers themselves “suggested that the Emperor take advantage of the days of their duty to escape. The Emperor answered them that he would not leave Russia anywhere and would not be separated from his Family.”
On the other hand, Nicholas II would not have been able to escape on his own. This required serious organization and support.
The only way from the Tobolsk outback to civilization and more populated places was along the river, and then by rail.
Of course, this path could be easily controlled.
But in the capitals, the monarchists of that time initially did not do anything serious in order to “self-organize” and try to help out their abdicated emperor.
Events accelerated after the October Revolution.

A truce was declared at the fronts, the demoralized remnants of the Russian army quickly fled to their homes, sowing chaos and anarchy on all types of transport.
At the end of 1917, German commissions headed by Keyserling and Count Mirbach arrived in Petrograd.
It was with them that the Russian monarchist groups tried to start negotiations.
In the spring of 1918, with the move of the Council of People's Commissars and the German embassy of Mirbach to Moscow, negotiations were conducted in the new capital.
At first they came to nothing.
Then contacts between the monarchists and the Germans began to improve.

Investigator N.A. Sokolov notes:
“In the spring of 1918, Russian monarchists negotiated with the Germans to overthrow the power of the Bolsheviks.
One of these persons, member of the State Council V.I. Gurko shows: “When during these negotiations the Germans were pointed out the danger that threatened the royal family if we started a coup on our own, the Germans gave the answer: “You can be completely calm. The royal family is under our protection and supervision.” I can’t guarantee that I accurately convey their words, but that was the meaning.”
I have no doubt that Soloviev worked for the Germans.”

Well, it’s very difficult to say for whom this same Soloviev actually worked.
As we will see, he managed to simultaneously work for the monarchists, the Germans, and the Rasputinists, having his own considerable “gesheft” everywhere.
Most likely, it was just one of the unprincipled adventurers who, in the Time of Troubles, always appear in large numbers in Rus'.

As for the monarchists, apparently they had an original idea: using the influence and capabilities of the German embassy, ​​to organize the “removal” of the royal family from Tobolsk.
At least there are good reasons to believe so.
Here is what investigator N.A. writes about this. Sokolov:
“Of course, such an intention could only be born in Russian monarchist groups. It could become a real attempt, due to the political situation, only at the will of the Germans.
If before the war many of us, being its opponents, did not see an enemy in Germany, then after the revolution, when the country was increasingly engulfed in the flames of anarchy and, abandoned by the allies, was completely left to its own devices, this view began to find even more supporters.
The very coup of October 25th Art. Art. to many it seemed short-term, fragile and increased hopes for help from Germany ... "

A little comment is needed here.
There is no particular secret that many Russian monarchists did not consider Germany an enemy of Russia and were categorically against war with it.
Suffice it to recall the famous prophetic letter of P. Durnovo to Nicholas II, written at the beginning of 1914.
All the Germanophobia of Nicholas II, which brought so many troubles to Russia (to himself) was based on several subjective factors:
The anti-German prejudices of his father, Alexander III, who hated Bismarck (for his position at the Berlin Congress of 1878) and made a sharp turn in Russian foreign policy from centuries-old friendship with Prussia and Germany (which lasted throughout the 19th century) to a political and military alliance with republican France.
Nicholas II remained faithful to this anti-German strategy.
“Back in 1899, the well-known Germanophobe Professor Zolotarev, in front of a huge crowd of the highest society of Petrograd, gave his famous lecture, blasting the predecessors of Emperor Alexander III for their indulgences allowed towards the Germans in Russia, and for being too keen on the colonization of the southern provinces by the Germans and praising Alexander III , which put an end to the formidable but peaceful conquest of Russia by the Germans.
Sovereign Emperor Nicholas II, who was present at the lecture, at the end of it, approached the lecturer and, in the presence of the entire large audience, hugged Professor Zolotarev and kissed him, thanking him for his soundness and courage in fair historical criticism. Wilhelm could not forget this kiss of Nicholas II...” (Dieteriks M.K. Murder of the Royal Family and members of the House of Romanov in the Urals. M., 1991)

The second (and decisive) factor that supported his anti-German policy was, strange as it may sound, his beloved wife, the “German” Empress Alexandra Feodorovna.
Contrary to rumors about her secret pro-German sympathies that accompanied her throughout the 23 years of her reign, she sincerely HATED both Germany and Wilhelm II.
This is what General M.K. wrote about this in his book. Dieteriks:
“Empress Alexandra Feodorovna not only did not love, she hated Germany and Emperor Wilhelm and could not talk about it without strong excitement and anger. Her hatred stemmed from the evil that Germany caused to the Duchy of Hesse.
“If you knew how much evil they did to my homeland!” - She told close people. This feeling of hatred was so acute in Her, perhaps because, having lost her mother as a little girl, She was constantly raised in England by her grandmother Queen Victoria, as a result of which, for both Germany and Wilhelm, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna was a definite Anglophile.”

The consequence of all this was the disastrous foreign policy of Nicholas II for Russia and his focus on protecting the interests of France and England in Europe. (Russia and Germany had nothing to “divide” in Europe at all).
By the way, the “Friend” of the royal family, the famous Grigory Efimovich Rasputin, was also CATEGORICALLY against the war with Germany.
Rasputin subsequently repeatedly said that if he had been in St. Petersburg in July 1914, and not lying in a hospital bed in Tobolsk, wounded by Khionia Guseva, he would have been able to dissuade “Papa” from participating in the war.
“If it weren’t for this damned woman-villain who cut my guts, there would be no war,” he declared to his friend singer Belling. “Rasputin himself confirmed to me: if he had been in Petrograd, there would have been no war,” former Foreign Minister Sergei Sazonov testified to the Provisional Government commission.

Even while recovering from this stab wound, “Friend” tried to influence the situation.
In 1915, he told his bodyguard Terekhov that “last year, when I was in the hospital, I asked the Emperor not to fight, and on this occasion I sent the Emperor about 20 telegrams, one of which was very serious.”
In 1968, in the collection “Russian Revolution” published in Paris, the text of that very “serious” telegram sent on July 29 after the signing of the decree on general mobilization was published: “A terrible cloud is over Russia: trouble, a lot of grief, no light, a sea of ​​​​tears , and there is no measure, but blood? There are no words, but indescribable horror. I know everyone wants war from you. You are the king, the father of the people, do not allow the insane to triumph and destroy themselves and the people. Gregory."
It remains to be regretted that it was precisely these advice from “Friend” that Nicholas II ignored...
Let's return to the events of 1918 and the role of monarchists in them.
Let's see what investigator N.A. says about this. Sokolov:

“In January 1918, a group of Russian monarchists in Moscow sent their man to Tobolsk to the royal family.
The envoy found out the situation on the spot and reported alarming information. The royal family, first of all, had no money. True, she had jewelry, but in her position it was difficult to turn it into money.
250,000 rubles were collected. The same person delivered this money to Tobolsk a second time in March and handed it over to Tatishchev and Dolgorukov.
Through the latter, the group established conditional written communication with the Sovereign...
Painfully searching for a way out,” said Krivoshey, “and realizing our powerlessness to help the royal family, we decided to turn to the only force at that time that could alleviate the situation of the family and prevent danger if it threatened it - the German embassy.”

What a strange twist of fate: to ease the fate of the royal family, Russian monarchists, instead of trying to do something on their own, turn to the embassy of Germany, a hostile country with which Russia lost the war...
Several prominent monarchists PERSONALLY appealed to the German ambassador to Russia, Count Mirbach.
Among them was Senator D.B. Neidgart.

He was interrogated by N.A. Sokolov in January 1921 in Paris and showed the following:
“In view of the position that the Germans occupied in Russia in the spring of 1918, our group, in order to improve the position of the royal family, tried to do everything possible in this regard through the German ambassador Count Mirbach. On this issue, I myself personally addressed Mirbach three times. The first time I visited him was back when we knew nothing about the departure of the royal family from Tobolsk. In general terms, I asked Mirbach to do everything possible to improve her situation.
Mirbach promised to provide me with his assistance in this direction, and, if I am not mistaken, he used the expression “I will demand.” As soon as we learned about the family’s removal, I again visited Mirbach and talked to him about it. He reassured me with general phrases. I was impressed that the stay of the royal family in Yekaterinburg took place against his will. Whether the order came from him to take the family away from Tobolsk somewhere in order to save it, I cannot say.”

Leader of the Russian monarchist movement A.F. Trepov at that time lived quite legally in Petrograd.
Already in exile, in 1921, in Paris, he gave detailed testimony to investigator Sokolov:
“On the issue of the actions of the Moscow monarchist groups, whose goal was to save the life of the Sovereign Emperor and the royal family, I can show the following.
In 1918, when I lived in Petrograd, Senator Neidgart, who had come from Moscow, approached me with a request to discuss this issue. He told me that the Moscow group of monarchists, looking for ways to protect the life of His Majesty, found it necessary to turn in this case to the assistance of the German mission in Moscow, which they did. However, she is far from satisfied with the attitude towards both her and the issue raised by her on the part of the German ambassador.
Count Mirbach, according to Neidgart, at first completely avoided any relations with the group. In the end, he agreed to accept Neidgart, but the meetings were short, cold, did not give anything definite and, rather, as Neidgart said, testified to Count Mirbach’s evasive attitude towards the specified issue of protecting the well-being of the Sovereign Emperor and the royal family.”

I think that there is nothing surprising in the fact that Mirbach initially avoided meeting with our monarchists.
The German leadership then officially considered Russia to be the culprit for unleashing a world war, and remembered very well that Nicholas II in 1916 several times rejected German proposals for “peace without annexations and indemnities,” both made publicly, through the official channels of the Foreign Ministry, and in private William the Second's letters to him (to which Nicholas did not even respond).
After the Russian army disintegrated and Russia disintegrated, the Germans in relation to it professed the ancient principle “Woe to the vanquished!” and saw no reason to make special efforts to ease the fate of either Nicholas II or Russia itself.
Even during the negotiations in Brest-Litovsk, at the very beginning of 1918, a book by the German political economist Werner-Day was published in Germany, entitled: “Advance to the East. Asian Russia as a German peaceful economic goal.”
It emphasized:
“The general course of German politics does not depend either on the current Russian government at the moment, or on the conditions of social life in Russia. German policy needs systematic continental development; the solution to the Russian problem is for her a solution to the joint problem; it needs to secure an unassailable trade and political position on the Eurasian continent and to do this seize the most important industrial points. Therefore, it should not pay attention to which Russia the main provisions of its Eastern policy associate it with.
In a foreign country, she no longer knows parties, but there is only a party in itself.
Therefore, it puts forward its demands with equal certainty - today Bolshevik, tomorrow social-revolutionary, the day after tomorrow Cadet-Romanov Russia. We will express our views regarding the necessary conditions for the conclusion of peace, and we will consider it a personal matter for the Russian government of that time with what feeling it will accept our conditions and bring the peace negotiations to their conclusion.”

As we see, the Germans did not care at all about the Bolsheviks, the “democrats”, and the monarchists. They pursued their own imperialist goals.
And even more so, they didn’t care about Nicholas II and his problems. For them, this was the fallen leader of a hostile country, and Wilhelm II and his government simply had no reason to save him or take his family to Germany.
In order to force the Germans to do this, the Russian monarchists had to offer Mirbach something significant, something that Germany, which was at war with the Entente, could not refuse.
And, apparently, they managed to do this, because... Mirbach began to regularly meet with the leaders of our monarchists, negotiate with them and even (if you believe their words) gave them some assurances and advances.
It is difficult to say what exactly our monarchists could have promised the leadership of Germany at that time. They, of course, don’t say anything about this, and investigator N.A. Sokolov did not bother them with such unpleasant questions during his interrogations in Paris.
It is possible that the Germans were promised, in the event of the monarchists (who for the most part, let me remind you, were against Russia’s participation in the World War and sympathized with Germany) coming to power, a sharp change in the foreign policy of the restored monarchy, up to a military alliance with Germany.
This could interest the German leadership and force it to begin helping the Russian monarchists.
One can only be sure that this cooperation did not begin at all because of the “beautiful eyes” of Senator Neidgart or Count Benckendorf, who negotiated with Mirbach.

Let's continue the story of the leader of Russian monarchists A.F. Trepova:
“Looking for ways to influence the German authorities in one sense or another, Senator Neidgart then arrived in Petrograd and came to me to discuss this issue. Sharing in my heart the views of the Moscow monarchists, I was very concerned about the current situation. Having discussed it together with Neidgart, I settled on the idea that he would address a letter to Chief Marshal Count Benckendorff and invite him to write a letter to Count Mirbach.
At the same time, I categorically stated that this letter, in my opinion, firstly, should not have had a pleading tone, and, secondly, it should not have been of a political nature, because otherwise the question of the life of the Sovereign Emperor , if His Majesty had been pleased not to share one or another of our political views, assumptions, etc., expressed in this letter, would have been not absolute, but conditional in nature. I found it necessary to express in a letter that, under the conditions of Russian reality at that time, only the Germans could take real actions capable of achieving the desired goal. Therefore, since they can save the life of the Emperor and his family, then they must do this out of a sense of honor. If they do not do this, they will appear or may find themselves in the role of connivance in a grave crime, which we will announce to the whole world in due time. Although it is clear to us that they themselves understand this very well, so that there are no excuses, this letter is being written, so that later they cannot say that they were not warned by us about the danger threatening the royal family. In addition, I found it necessary to include in the letter that it insists on the need for its contents to be reported to Emperor William, who, as a result, will be the main responsible person in the event of an accident.
This is exactly what the letter from Count Benckendorf to Count Mirbach should have been, as I found, with which Senator Neidgart also agreed. Neidgart, as soon as we discussed this issue with him, immediately went to Count Benckendorff...
From there, if I’m not mistaken, he telephoned me that Count Benckendorff first wanted to see me. The next day I visited Benckendorff in his apartment. Our meeting also took place in the presence of Neidgart. I again repeated the thoughts that I had already expressed to Neidgart and which I found necessary to put in the letter. Count Benckendorff completely agreed with me and asked me to be with him the next day, promising to prepare a letter by that time. The next day I was at Benckendorf's. The letter he composed contained exactly the wishes I had expressed; Besides them, the letter contained only a reference to the personal relationship between Count Benckendorff and Count Mirbach. Count Benckendorff's letter was conveyed to Neidgart, and he, as I remember, left for Moscow the next day.
Neidgart did not see Mirbach this time and left a letter at the German embassy. This happened on May 7 or 8, when the Emperor was already in Yekaterinburg.”

There is a lot of interesting and surprising things here:
Prominent monarchist and former tsarist senator D.B. In the spring of 1918, Neidgart lived quite calmly in Moscow and regularly made visits to the German embassy, ​​receiving an audience with Count Mirbach himself three times. He easily comes to Petrograd to see the most famous leader of Russian monarchists, the “reactionary” A.F. Trepov (who also lives there completely legally) and negotiates with him about involving the Germans in saving the royal family.
Then they call up and meet in St. Petersburg with another prominent monarchist, Chief Marshal of the Imperial Court, Adjutant General, Count P.K. Benckendorf, who belonged to the inner circle of Nicholas II, being a member of the State Council and a Member of the Imperial Yacht Club (!!!).
Judging by the fact that this “royal satrap” had a working telephone at home (which other monarchists knew), he also legally lived in Petrograd at that time.
Liberal historians are now telling us that in “revolutionary Petrograd” and Moscow the Cheka committed atrocities at that time and everyone was shaking in fear of his thugs...
And here - the most famous monarchists throughout the country, princes, counts and marshals live quietly in their apartments, telephone each other, arrange meetings and openly visit the German embassy many times. (What is characteristic is that ALL of them remained alive and left the Soviet Union to emigrate).
For example, the mentioned former chief marshal of the imperial court, adjutant general, Count P.K. Benkendorf received PERMISSION to leave Soviet Russia already in 1921, and went to Estonia. For some reason, no mass executions of hostages affected this “dirty reactionary and monarchist.” Miracles, and that’s all...

One of the participants in the negotiations with Ambassador Mirbach, A.V. During interrogation, Krivoshei gave the following testimony to investigator Sokolov:
“We did not pursue any political goals and proceeded from the most elementary motives of humanity and our devotion to the family... Count Mirbach received them (Russian monarchists) very dryly, and what he said in response to a request to pay attention to the need to take measures to protect security The royal family boiled down to approximately the following:
“Everything that happens to Russia is a completely natural and inevitable consequence of Germany’s victory. The usual story repeats itself: woe to the vanquished.
If victory had been on the side of the Allies, Germany's position would undoubtedly have been much worse than Russia's position now.
In particular, the fate of the Russian Tsar depends only on the Russian people. If there is anything we need to think about, it is about protecting the safety of the German princesses who are in Russia.”

As we can see, Mirbach’s assumptions about the fate of Germany in the event of a victory for its opponents were brilliantly justified. The terms of the Treaty of Versailles, dictated by the victors, turned out to be extremely difficult and humiliating for the Germans.
As for the fate of Nicholas II, Mirbach made it clear to our monarchists that this matter does not concern Germany.
One can only ASSUME that, to some extent, the mission of Commissar Yakovlev (which will be discussed later) was connected with these visits of the monarchists to Mirbach. So, in particular, Sokolov and Dieteriks suggest in their research.
However, these are just assumptions, not objectively confirmed. Yakovlev traveled to Tobolsk with a mandate from the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, signed by Yakov Sverdlov, and unquestioningly carried out his instructions.
In general, all the events of the summer of 1918 in Moscow (the revolt of the left Socialist Revolutionaries on July 6, the murder of Mirbach by Blumkin, etc.) still largely remain a mystery.

General M.K. talks about another attempt by the monarchists. Dieteriks in his book:
“A representative of another organization, Lieutenant Colonel P.K.L. says the following:
“In May 1918, I was sent from Petrograd to Yekaterinburg by the monarchist organization “Union of Heavy Cavalry,” which had the goal of saving the life of the August Family. In Yekaterinburg, I entered the 2nd year of the Academy of the General Staff and, having in mind the implementation of the above goal, carefully and gradually became friends with some officer cadets: M-im, Ya-im, S-im, P-im, S- them. However, we did not have to do anything real, since the events happened quite unexpectedly and quickly. A few days before the capture of Yekaterinburg by the Czechs, I joined them in the officer company of Colonel Rumsha and participated in the capture of Yekaterinburg.
After this, the idea arose among the officers to do everything possible to establish the truth: whether the Sovereign Emperor was really killed.”
That’s all there was to the private officer organizations, guided by the principles of national character and good intentions to sincerely help or save the Royal Family.”

What can I say...
Despite the formidable name, this “union of heavy cavalry” really did nothing to save the royal family. This Lieutenant Colonel P.K.L. went to Yekaterinburg, even joined the students of the General Staff Academy there, “got along” with several students, and that’s all.
As often happened (and happens) with us, things didn’t go beyond empty chatter.

By the way, about this very Academy of the General Staff (AGSH), which was evacuated from Petrograd to Yekaterinburg at the beginning of 1918. This is where the “best of the best” and the most combative officers of the tsarist army were then gathered.
Moreover, in quite a significant number, because in addition to many dozens of military officers of the “variable composition” who studied there, the AGSH also included a considerable number of experienced administrators, course directors and other “professorial and teaching staff.” Almost all of them had combat experience, held respectable ranks, and were decorated with orders and medals for their military services.
It would seem that who else but them would be involved in the liberation of the family of their former monarch, to whom they all took the oath of allegiance.
Moreover, the family was not kept in some impregnable fortress with ditches and watchtowers, but in an ordinary 2-story house in the center of the city, around which the Bolsheviks hastily put together a plank fence.
The security of this very “House of Special Purpose” was also poorly organized: the bulk of the guards were ordinary workers of the local “Zlokazovsky” factory, who volunteered to guard the “crowned executioner”, some for ideological reasons, and some seduced by the large salary (400 rubles per month ), who promised them
Commissar Mrachkovsky, who was recruiting volunteers for security.
The vast majority of these security workers did not know how to fight and did not even serve in the army, which means they had the vaguest idea of ​​rifles, and especially machine guns, which were in service with the detachment guarding the house of the merchant Ipatiev.
Of course, in the event of an assault on a house and close fire combat, one combat officer-listener of the AGSh (who went through many battles and hand-to-hand combat in the war) would be worth five such security workers.
And the guard service itself in the House of Special Purposes was carried out extremely poorly: the sentries stood (sat) at their posts for 4 hours (which could not but affect the vigilance of their service), after being relieved from their posts, they calmly went to the city, where sometimes they even got pretty drunk. The head of the security (S. Yurovsky) also did not spend the night in Ipatiev’s house, but lived in the city, in the American Hotel, where the Cheka detachment was quartered.
In general, at night in the House of Special Purposes the guards and even more so carried out their service “carelessly,” so taking Ipatiev’s house by night assault would not have been much of a problem for determined militant officers.
However, no attempt was made to do so.
With the approach of the Czechoslovaks and the Siberian White Army in July 1918, some of the AGSH officers were evacuated to Kazan, while others simply fled to the surrounding area and then joined the White army.

This is what General M.K. said about this. Dieteriks:
“After the execution of the former Tsar, they said in the city that some kind of secret monarchical organization had been discovered, but none of the above-mentioned officers knew anything about it, none of them themselves were harmed and none of them heard that any other one had suffered at all officer in the city for trying to save the Royal Family.
The officers of these organizations, who strived to honestly do a good deed and really help the imprisoned Royal Family, did not shout about their activities, did not make noise, did not boast about their connections in the past, did not boast about their intentions and work, and who knows, if God had been pleased to give more time at their disposal - perhaps they would be able to seriously help the Unhappy Prisoners. There were few such officers, officers of duty and honor; the revolution scattered them too much, weakened them and overwhelmed them.
But on the other hand, groups of other savior officers - products and sons of the revolution - were more numerous. Perhaps, in reality, they were not part of any organizations and they did not have any organizations, but they existed only in their words. These officers were distinguished by bluster and swagger; made noise about their activities wherever they could; they shouted at almost every crossroads, entering into all frankness with the first people they met and not being embarrassed by the fact that they could be heard by Soviet agents and authorities. The latter, however, oddly enough, completely ignored the activities of such types, did not pursue the noisy conspirators, and sometimes even had open relations with them.”

In the next part we will talk about the attempts of the Rasputin monarchists to save the royal family.

In the photo: Nicholas II's food card, issued in Tobolsk.

Sergei Osipov, AiF: Which of the Bolshevik leaders made the decision to execute the royal family?

This question is still the subject of debate among historians. There is a version: Lenin And Sverdlov did not sanction the regicide, the initiative of which supposedly belonged only to members of the executive committee of the Ural Regional Council. Indeed, direct documents signed by Ulyanov are still unknown to us. However Leon Trotsky in exile, he recalled how he asked Yakov Sverdlov a question: “Who decided? - We decided here. Ilyich believed that we should not leave them a living banner, especially in the current difficult conditions.” Without any embarrassment, the role of Lenin was unequivocally pointed out by Nadezhda Krupskaya.

At the beginning of July, he urgently left for Moscow from Yekaterinburg party “master” of the Urals and military commissar of the Ural Military District Shaya Goloshchekin. On the 14th he returned, apparently with final instructions from Lenin, Dzerzhinsky and Sverdlov to exterminate the entire family Nicholas II.

- Why did the Bolsheviks need the death of not only the already abdicated Nicholas, but also women and children?

- Trotsky cynically stated: “In essence, the decision was not only expedient, but also necessary,” and in 1935, in his diary, he clarified: “The royal family was a victim of the principle that constitutes the axis of the monarchy: dynastic heredity.”

The extermination of members of the House of Romanov not only destroyed the legal basis for the restoration of legitimate power in Russia, but also bound the Leninists with mutual responsibility.

Could they have survived?

- What would have happened if the Czechs approaching the city had liberated Nicholas II?

The sovereign, members of his family and their faithful servants would have survived. I doubt that Nicholas II would have been able to disavow the act of renunciation of March 2, 1917 in the part that concerned him personally. However, it is obvious that no one could question the rights of the heir to the throne, Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich. A living heir, despite his illness, would personify legitimate power in turmoil-ridden Russia. In addition, along with the accession to the rights of Alexei Nikolaevich, the order of succession to the throne, destroyed during the events of March 2-3, 1917, would automatically be restored. It was precisely this option that the Bolsheviks desperately feared.

Why were some of the royal remains buried (and the murdered themselves canonized) in the 90s of the last century, some - quite recently, and is there any confidence that this part is really the last?

Let's start with the fact that the absence of relics (remains) does not serve as a formal basis for refusal of canonization. The canonization of the royal family by the Church would have taken place even if the Bolsheviks had completely destroyed the bodies in the basement of the Ipatiev House. By the way, many in exile believed so. The fact that the remains were found in parts is not surprising. Both the murder itself and the concealment of traces took place in a terrible hurry, the killers were nervous, the preparation and organization turned out to be extremely poor. Therefore, they could not completely destroy the bodies. I have no doubt that the remains of two people found in the summer of 2007 in the town of Porosyonkov Log near Yekaterinburg belong to the children of the emperor. Therefore, the tragedy of the royal family has most likely come to an end. But, unfortunately, both she and the subsequent tragedies of millions of other Russian families have left our modern society practically indifferent.

18 May 2016, 15:45

The royal family was separated in 1918, but not executed. Maria Feodorovna left for Germany, and Nicholas II and the heir to the throne Alexei remained hostages in Russia

The heir to the throne Alyosha Romanov became People's Commissar Alexei Kosygin

In April of this year, Rosarkhiv, which was under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Culture, was reassigned directly to the head of state. The changes in status were explained by the special state value of the materials stored there. While experts were wondering what all this meant, a historical investigation appeared in the President newspaper, registered on the platform of the Presidential Administration. Its essence is that no one shot the royal family. They all lived long lives, and Tsarevich Alexei even made a career in the nomenklatura in the USSR.

About the transformation of the prince Alexey Nikolaevich Romanov Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR Alexey Nikolaevich Kosygin They first started talking during perestroika. They referred to a leak from the party archive. The information was perceived as a historical anecdote, although the thought - what if it was true - stirred in the minds of many. After all, no one saw the remains of the royal family then, and there were always many rumors about their miraculous salvation. And suddenly, here you are - a publication about the life of the royal family after the alleged execution is published in a publication that is as far as possible from the pursuit of sensation.

Was it possible to escape or be taken out of Ipatiev’s house? It turns out yes! - the historian writes to the President newspaper Sergey Zhelenkov. - There was a factory nearby. In 1905, the owner dug an underground passage to it in case of capture by revolutionaries. When a house is destroyed Boris Yeltsin after the decision of the Politburo, the bulldozer fell into a tunnel that no one knew about.

STALIN often called KOSYGIN (left) Tsarevich in front of everyone

Left hostage

What reasons did the Bolsheviks have for saving the life of the royal family?

Researchers Tom Mangold And Anthony Summers published in 1979 the book “The Romanov Case, or the Execution that Never Happened.” They started with the fact that in 1978 the 60-year secrecy stamp of the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty signed in 1918 expires, and it would be interesting to look into the declassified archives. The first thing they dug up were telegrams from the English ambassador reporting on the evacuation of the royal family from Yekaterinburg to Perm by the Bolsheviks.

According to British intelligence agents in the army Alexander Kolchak Having entered Yekaterinburg on July 25, 1918, the admiral immediately appointed an investigator in the case of the execution of the royal family. Three months later captain Nametkin He put a report on his desk, where he said that instead of an execution, it was a re-enactment. Not believing it, Kolchak appointed a second investigator Sergeeva and soon received the same results.

In parallel with them, the captain’s commission worked Malinovsky, who in June 1919 gave the third investigator Nikolai Sokolov the following instructions: “As a result of my work on the case, I have developed the conviction that the august family is alive... all the facts that I observed during the investigation are a simulation of murder.”

Admiral Kolchak, who had already proclaimed himself the Supreme Ruler of Russia, did not need a living tsar at all, so Sokolov received very clear instructions - to find evidence of the death of the emperor.

Sokolov can’t come up with anything better than to say: “The corpses were thrown into a mine and filled with acid.”

Tom Mangold and Anthony Summers believed that the answer should be sought in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk itself. However, its full text is not in the declassified archives of London or Berlin. And they came to the conclusion that there were points relating to the royal family.

Probably the Emperor WilliamII, who was a close relative of Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, demanded that all the august women be transferred to Germany. The girls had no rights to the Russian throne and therefore could not threaten the Bolsheviks. The men remained hostages - as guarantors that the German army would not march on St. Petersburg and Moscow.

This explanation seems quite logical. Especially if we remember that the tsar was overthrown not by the Reds, but by their own liberal-minded aristocracy, the bourgeoisie and the top of the army. The Bolsheviks had no regard for NicholasII special hatred. He did not threaten them in any way, but at the same time he was an excellent ace in the hole and a good bargaining chip in negotiations.

Besides Lenin understood perfectly well that Nicholas II was a chicken capable, if shaken well, of laying many golden eggs so necessary for the young Soviet state. After all, the secrets of many family and state deposits in Western banks were kept in the king’s head. Later, these riches of the Russian Empire were used for industrialization.

In the cemetery in the Italian village of Marcotta there was a gravestone on which Princess Olga Nikolaevna, the eldest daughter of the Russian Tsar Nicholas II, rested. In 1995, the grave, under the pretext of non-payment of rent, was destroyed and the ashes were transferred

Life after death"

According to the President newspaper, the KGB of the USSR, based on the 2nd Main Directorate, had a special department that monitored all movements of the royal family and their descendants across the territory of the USSR:

« Stalin built a dacha in Sukhumi next to the dacha of the royal family and came there to meet with the emperor. Nicholas II visited the Kremlin in an officer's uniform, which was confirmed by the general Vatov, who served in the security of Joseph Vissarionovich.”

According to the newspaper, in order to honor the memory of the last emperor, monarchists can go to Nizhny Novgorod to the Red Etna cemetery, where he was buried on December 26, 1958. The funeral service and funeral of the sovereign was performed by the famous Nizhny Novgorod old man Gregory.

Much more surprising is the fate of the heir to the throne, Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich. Over time, he, like many, came to terms with the revolution and came to the conclusion that one must serve the Fatherland regardless of one’s political beliefs. However, he had no other choice.

Historian Sergei Zhelenkov provides a lot of evidence of the transformation of Tsarevich Alexei into the Red Army soldier Kosygin. During the thundering years of the Civil War, and even under the cover of the Cheka, this was really not difficult to do. His future career is much more interesting. Stalin He saw a great future in the young man and far-sightedly moved along the economic line. Not according to the party.

In 1942, the representative of the State Defense Committee in besieged Leningrad, Kosygin supervised the evacuation of the population and industrial enterprises and property of Tsarskoye Selo. Alexey had sailed around Ladoga many times on the yacht “Standart” and knew the surrounding area of ​​the lake well, so he organized the “Road of Life” to supply the city.

In 1949, during promotion Malenkov Kosygin “miraculously” survived the Leningrad case. Stalin, who called him Tsarevich in front of everyone, sent Alexei Nikolaevich on a long trip around Siberia due to the need to strengthen cooperation activities and improve the procurement of agricultural products.

Kosygin was so removed from internal party affairs that he retained his position after the death of his patron. Khrushchev And Brezhnev They needed a good, proven business executive, and as a result, Kosygin served as head of government for the longest time in the history of the Russian Empire, the USSR and the Russian Federation - 16 years.

There was no funeral service

As for the wife of Nicholas II and daughters, their trace cannot be called lost either.

In the 90s, the Italian newspaper La Repubblica published an article about the death of a nun, sister Pascalines Lenart, who held an important post under the Pope from 1939 to 1958 Pius XII. Before her death, she called a notary and said that Olga Romanova, the daughter of Nicholas II, was not shot by the Bolsheviks, but lived a long life under the protection of the Vatican and was buried in a cemetery in the village of Marcotte in northern Italy. Journalists who went to the indicated address actually found a slab in the churchyard, where it was written in German: “Olga Nikolaevna, eldest daughter of the Russian Tsar Nikolai Romanov, 1895 - 1976.”

In this regard, the question arises: who was buried in 1998 in the Peter and Paul Cathedral? President Boris Yeltsin assured the public that these were the remains of the royal family. But the Russian Orthodox Church then refused to recognize this fact. Let's remember that

in Sofia, in the building of the Holy Synod on St. Alexander Nevsky Square, lived the confessor of the Highest Family, who fled from the horrors of the revolution Bishop Feofan. He never served a memorial service for the august family and said that the royal family was alive!

Golden Five Year Plan

The result of the developed Alexey Kosygin economic reforms became the so-called golden eighth five-year plan of 1966 - 1970. During this time:

National income increased by 42 percent,

The volume of gross industrial output increased by 51 percent,

Agricultural profitability increased by 21 percent,

The formation of the Unified Energy System of the European part of the USSR was completed, the unified energy system of Central Siberia was created,

The development of the Tyumen oil and gas production complex has begun,

The Bratsk, Krasnoyarsk and Saratov hydroelectric power stations, the Pridneprovskaya State District Power Plant, and

The West Siberian Metallurgical and Karaganda Metallurgical Combines started operating,

The first Zhiguli cars were produced,

The provision of the population with televisions has doubled, washing machines - two and a half times, and refrigerators - three times.