The End of the Romanov Dynasty

Much of life is both filled with ironies and lessons of the past. This particular story is both filled with Myth and controversies is such lessons that teach us about fatal decisions made that could have been avoided. The era in which the last Romanov’s have lived in, is one in which was both filled in turmoil but prior a world of uncertainty that was still guided with moral platitudes with a conscience still observing the fear of God, even when ones fate is predicted and sealed. Lastly who would have thought Germany and Great Britain would also play a role that would turn their backs on humanity and betray their own bloodlines.

On March the 2nd, 1917, two representatives of the Duma, arrived in Pskov to receive Nicholas’ II abdication. That was the end of the Romanov Dynasty. The video follows the events from the February Revolution 1917 until the murder of the Romanov family and the discovery of their remains, in 1991.

One of the main features of this video is the film with V. Shulgin, one of the two Duma members who met Tsar Nicholas II and received from him his abdication statement. Shulgin related the story in 1957, after Stalin’s death, in a film that was shot in the very same train compartment where they met Nicholas II and received his abdication.

This video is produced as part of the project for the book "The Romanov Royal Martyrs”, which is an impressive 512-page book, featuring nearly 200 black & white photographs, and a 56-page photo insert of more than 80 high-quality images, colorized by the acclaimed Russian artist Olga Shirnina (Klimbim) and appearing here in print for the first time.

On March the 2nd, 1917, two representatives of the Duma, arrived in Pskov to receive Nicholas’ II abdication. That was the end of the Romanov Dynasty. The video follows the events from the February Revolution 1917 until the murder of the Romanov family and the discovery of their remains, in 1991.

One of the main features of this video is the film with V. Shulgin, one of the two Duma members who met Tsar Nicholas II and received from him his abdication statement. Shulgin related the story in 1957, after Stalin’s death, in a film that was shot in the very same train compartment where they met Nicholas II and received his abdication.

This video is produced as part of the project for the book "The Romanov Royal Martyrs”, which is an impressive 512-page book, featuring nearly 200 black & white photographs, and a 56-page photo insert of more than 80 high-quality images, colorized by the acclaimed Russian artist Olga Shirnina (Klimbim) and appearing here in print for the first time.

I visited this site by mistake, thinking the Jooish Bolsheviks murdered the Czar and his family here. It turned out that their remains were buried here temporarily.

Nonetheless it is a very beautiful and serene place in the woods with religious structures all around.

The downfall of the Romanovs was well planned calculated in advance by the City of London and Wall Street. There was this British-Japanese alliance penned in 1902, which obliged the Japanese to fight Russia in 1904, the reason for which the Japanese could never fully understand, but it benefited the bankster regimes in London and Washington enormously at the expense of the blood shed by Russian and Japanese soldiers. This is what we call a proxy war at best.

This war stained the Czar’s prestige, leading to the revolution. It must be pointed out, however, that the Russian populace never wanted abdication of the Czar; they merely wanted more openness and reforms which Gorbachev termed Glasnost and Perestroika 70 years later.

However, satanists who gathered in their synagogues had something different in mind for Russia (and the world).

Which from my understanding sunk the entire fleet that Peter the Great spent his life building in a humiliating defeat at the hands of the Japanese.

The war that really did in the Czar was declaring one against Germany, and for all the wrong reasons when he could have simply sat it out and focused on domestic issues that probably would have avoided the following revolution. Of course with such probable proclamations of 'what if’s" hindsight is 20/20, but their fate and destiny were sealed as almost ordained by God itself.

On that article that you listed where the remains of the Romanov’s were found, is mentioned in the documentary when DNA analysis was conducted to confirm the identity of the remains. Their Body’s were exhumed a couple of times to have them buried in the family crypt in St. Petersburg to which Putin himself had order to be restored. (Putin is a big fan of the history of the Romanov’s and in fact the current Flag that comes to signify Russia today was reconstituted for this very reason. It was the same flag that adorned the Romanov’s royal palaces before the Bolsheviks took over and introduced the Communist red hammer and sickle that represented the former Soviet Union.

It was the Baltic Fleet which traveled all the way from St Petersburg around Africa and across the Indian Ocean making stops for provisions and repairs. It took them many months toward their final destination, Vladivostok, which they never reached because the battle took place off the coast of Korea and most Russian ships were destroyed.

Overall, the Japanese casualties were higher in the war which was fought in northern China, but (Teddy) Roosevelt wanted to make sure Russia would lose.

Just like his distant cousin, FDR, Roosevelt was a bankster stooge and a criminal, whose face should be erased from Mt Rushmore.

Teddy Roosevelt was pompous dork who acted like he had a potato stuff up his ass!

They never had the moral high ground which is baffling when considering the Czar’s decision making at the time.

The Czar was deceived by his own emissaries to Portsmouth for peace talks with Japan.

He gave them specific instructions not to surrender or concede any territory. Nonetheless, Sergei Witte, who led the Russian delegation, was a Mason and married to a Jooess, which didn’t help.

Then again they were also bamboozed by a charlatan pretending to be a shaman healer named Rasputin, so not having presence of mind to know who to trust was probably his Achilles heel due to the fact the Czar was preoccupied with family matters and not stately ones.

No doubt. The whole court was corrupt. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Dostoevsky foresaw hard times were coming for Russia and he knew who the enemies were. He tried at least to warn his countrymen but he got laughed at.

1 Like