[ad_1]
German public service broadcaster Deutsche Welle said in a statement released Friday that the remains of people found in a forest near Yekaterinburg were by the last Russian Tsar Nicholas II and members of his family.
Following the reopening of the remains, the committee is said to have conducted a total of approximately 37 different examinations.
“According to the findings of many experts, the investigation concluded that the remains belong to Nicholas II, his family and the people around him,” the committee said.
wikimedia.org photo / Tsar Nicholas II of the Romanesque dynasty with his future wife, the German princess Alexander
Principal investigator Marina Molodtsova told the Russian newspaper Izvestia that “according to molecular genetic data, the remains of two people found near the burial place of nine other victims in the summer of 2007 are the daughter and son of Nicholas and Alexander Romanov and Alexei and Mary “.
Investigations are ongoing. Furthermore, it explains how the Russian imperial family was assassinated.
Recognized as a saint
According to an article on the Deutsche Welle website, the Bolsheviks killed his German-born wife, Alexander Fyodorovna, and their five children, Anastasia, Mary, Tatiana, Olga, and Alexei in 1918 during the revolution.
In 1981, the Russian Orthodox Church recognized the Tsar as a tortured saint.
Photo from wikimedia.org/ Tsar Nicholas II of the Roman dynasty
The remains of the last members of the Romanov dynasty, as originally claimed, were thrown into the mine shaft. Later, the killers were immediately burned and buried.
Aleksandra Romanova, a spokeswoman for the study, told Izvestia that “our investigation has refuted the version that the bodies of the victims were covered in sulfuric acid and burned.”
Photo from Wikipedia / Bolshevik military in 1917
The remains were discovered by amateur historians in 1979.
However, the discovery was only revealed in 1991, when investigators announced the remains of nine people found at a burial site in a forest near Yekaterinburg.
The remains were discovered by amateur historians in 1979. However, the discovery was only revealed in 1991, when investigators announced the remains of nine people found at a burial site in a forest near Yekaterinburg.
Later it was announced that these were the remains of members of the imperial family: Nicholas II, his wife, his daughters Anastasia, Tatiana and Olga, as well as his doctor and servants.
Photo from wikimedia.org / Olga and Tatiana, daughters of Tsar Nicholas II of the Romanesque dynasty in 1913
In 2007, researchers conducting archaeological excavations south of the tomb found the remains of two people who they believed were the two remaining children of the imperial couple, Alexei and Mary.
Deutsche Welle recalls that the case was later reopened and other remains exhumed.
[ad_2]