1868-1918

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d
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1868-1918

The last days of the Romanovs

tragedy at Ekaterinburg
2008
Chronicles the final experiences of the Romanov family in the hours leading up to their assassination. Details the events that caused their deaths and examines how the end of the Romanov family's 300-year reign impacted the whole of Russia. Includes black-and-white photographs.

The kitchen boy

2004
A historical novel in which Leonka, an old man who served as a youth as kitchen boy in the Ipatiev House where the tsar and tsarina, Nicholas and Alexandra, were imprisoned, finally reveals what he saw, and what he did on the night the Imperial Family was executed in 1918.

A lifelong passion

Nicholas and Alexandra :their own story
1997
Collection of diaries and correspondence between the members of the Russian royal family and their closest friends, from the 1880s to the time of their deaths in 1918.

The last tsar

1977
Biography of the last Russian emperor, known to his people as "Bloody Nicholas" whose inept leadership was one of the reasons behind the revolution and civil war.

The Last Tsar

the life and death of Nicholas II
1993

The Murder of the Romanovs

2011
Draws upon new forensic evidence and newly released Russian Secret Service records to reveal the truth about the proposed British rescue of the Rusian Imperial Family and their eventual murder by the Ural Bolsheviks.

The Romanovs

the final chapter
2012
In July 1991, nine skeletons were exhumed from a shallow mass grave near Ekaterinburg, Siberia. The site was a few miles from the Ipatiev House where the Tsar and his family, and retainers, had been murdered seventy-three years before. Authenticating these bones as those of the Romanovs added yet another chapter to the Russian Revolution of 1917. But when all the testing was done, and the bones were authenticated as those of the Russian royal family, it was discovered that two of the children were missing: one daughter and the son, Alexis, the tsarevich. Which daughter it was could not be determined but it was either Marie or Anastasia. After the bones were identified, fresh rumors persisted that Anna Anderson, who for sixty years had maintained she was Anastasia, really was the only surviving member of the royal family.

Nicholas and Alexandra

the fall of the Romanov dynasty
2012
The story of the last Tsar of Russia, his life, the lives of his family, the end of Russia as an autocracy, the murders of the Romanov family, and the Russian Revolution.

The Lost crown

2012
In alternating chapters, Grand Duchesses Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia tell how their privileged lives as the daughters of the Tsar in early twentieth-century Russia are transformed by World War and revolution.

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