
In Yekaterinburg, Russia, Czar Nicholas II and his family are
executed by the Bolsheviks, bringing an end to the three-century-old
Romanov dynasty.


Crowned in 1896, Nicholas was neither trained nor inclined to rule,
which did not help the autocracy he sought to preserve among a people
desperate for change. The disastrous outcome of the Russo-Japanese War
led to the
Russian Revolution of 1905, which ended only after Nicholas approved a representative assembly--the
Duma--and promised constitutional reforms. The czar soon retracted these concessions and repeatedly dissolved the
Duma
when it opposed him, contributing to the growing public support for the
Bolsheviks and other revolutionary groups. In 1914, Nicholas led his
country into another costly war--
World War I--that
Russia was ill-prepared to win. Discontent grew as food became scarce,
soldiers became war weary and devastating defeats at the hands of
Germany demonstrated the ineffectiveness of Russia under Nicholas.


In March 1917, revolution broke out on the streets of Petrograd (now
St. Petersburg) and Nicholas was forced to abdicate his throne later
that month. That November, the radical socialist Bolsheviks, led by
Vladimir Lenin, seized power in Russia from the provisional government,
sued for peace with the Central Powers and set about establishing the
world's first communist state.
Civil war
broke out in Russia in June 1918, and in July the anti-Bolshevik
"White" Russian forces advanced on Yekaterinburg, where Nicholas and his
family were located, during a campaign against the Bolshevik forces.
Local authorities were ordered to prevent a rescue of the Romanovs, and
after a secret meeting of the Yekaterinburg Soviet, a death sentence was
passed on the imperial family.


Late on the night of July 16, Nicholas, Alexandra, their five
children and four servants were ordered to dress quickly and go down to
the cellar of the house in which they were being held. There, the family
and servants were arranged in two rows for a photograph they were told
was being taken to quell rumors that they had escaped. Suddenly, a dozen
armed men burst into the room and gunned down the imperial family in a
hail of gunfire. Those who were still breathing when the smoked cleared
were stabbed to death.



The remains of Nicholas, Alexandra and three of their children were
excavated in a forest near Yekaterinburg in 1991 and positively
identified two years later using DNA fingerprinting. The Crown Prince
Alexei and one Romanov daughter were not accounted for, fueling the
persistent legend that Anastasia, the youngest Romanov daughter, had
survived the execution of her family. Of the several "Anastasias" that
surfaced in Europe in the decade after the Russian Revolution, Anna
Anderson, who died in the
United States
in 1984, was the most convincing. In 1994, however, scientists used DNA
to prove that Anna Anderson was not the czar's daughter but a Polish
woman named Franziska Schanzkowska.
taken from:
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/romanov-family-executed [16.07.2012]
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