The Imperial Family of Russia all died in 1918, right? Wrong! While the Tsar, his wife and five children were indeed shot to death in Yekaterinburg on July 17, 1918, many nieces, nephews, and cousins escaped the murderous hands of the Bolsheviks. Whatever happened to them?
Romanovs in the 21st Century answers that very question. This work is not the story of any one person, but is the biography of a family. Emperor Nicholas I died in 1855 and is the common root of all of the branches of the Romanov family tree. As we travel up and down each branch like a squirrel we will examine each of the leaves that are still attached, and maybe even find a nut or two.
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On-Line Genealogies:
2012 Edition Now Available!
This book is designed to be a quick reference for anyone who needs to identify members of the royal houses or know basic information about who is who, what are their correct titles, and how the succession works in their country.
It is the essential guide that should be in every reporters briefcase or royal watcher's backpack.
Now Tracking: The entire line of succession to the British Throne
He defied an Emperor to be with her. She found the love she had been seeking in his arms. Their passion would ignite the imagination of an Empire.
It sounds like a promotion for the latest romance novel, but this story is no work of fiction. Archduke Ernst of Austria, cousin of Emperor Franz Joseph, fell in love and started a family with Laura Skublics. However, she was not born into the right family to be considered a suitable bride for an Archduke. Some say they married anyway. But did they?