As a lifelong documentary devotee I regard this as one of the finest historical documentaries ever made. The judicious and always pertinent use of images and films and witnesses combine with brilliant editing and a terrific narration delivered with wonderful restraint by Ms Kenyon to make this the best documentary account of the fall of the Romanov dynasty.
@barbarakrall43316 жыл бұрын
Yes, very good documentary, but TERRIBLE subtitles!
@veronicagraziano74854 жыл бұрын
Mesmerizing! The narration is superb the dramatization is mesmerizing held my interest to the very end
@TR193 жыл бұрын
Dude they got 110 year old people telling their stories. I've never seen a documentary have this much storys told from in person dealings from the early 1900s. Very good doc series.
@wimdefoort76982 жыл бұрын
I concur
@cartermcafee11422 жыл бұрын
Da comrade.
@natasha_nom_de_guerre3 жыл бұрын
The interviews with the 90 and 100 year old eye witnesses in an historical treasure.
@Rawnervzz Жыл бұрын
Yup but I think when this was made some were still under 90 thankfully, your memory gets weird when you get 70+
@allenenaufahu5119 Жыл бұрын
x3@@Rawnervzz
@SamDiMento10 ай бұрын
Absolutely incredible to think of what the eldest Russians born around 1900 lived through...Tsarist autocracy, the Russian Revolution, 70 years of Bolshevism and then glanost and perestroika and then the downfall of Communism...unbelievable!
@eamonwright7488 Жыл бұрын
This goes down as one of my favorite historical documentary series of all time. I’ve watched it 15 times over the years! Cheers!
@cheekloins41265 жыл бұрын
This documentary truly has felt like a journey through time. One of the best I’ve seen!
@michaell104 жыл бұрын
Female narrator. Can't do.
@andytan48194 жыл бұрын
A classic fairytale marriage turned tragic
@415Dub4 жыл бұрын
@@michaell10 Shut up weirdo.
@adam.august4 жыл бұрын
i have hate beyond measure for this documentary i need to watch it for school and take notes
@thereilneid28683 жыл бұрын
With a great attitude like that, I'm sure you're a straight A student.
@64MDW11 жыл бұрын
By far and away, the best documentary I've seen on the subject. Many thanks for posting.
@michaell104 жыл бұрын
Female narrator nah
@MsDefectiveToaster5 жыл бұрын
The thing, for me, about the fall of the Romanovs is that the story unfolds with such tragic inevitability. They were charming and brimming with life but at the same time naive and foolish. Alex and Nicky don't really have anyone to blame but themselves and yet you can't help but feel sorry for them. They didn't deserve to rule Russia, but they didn't deserve to die either.
@dagmastr122 жыл бұрын
And the Russians got the Soviet Union and 75 years of living hell....
@soavemusica Жыл бұрын
"Alex and Nicky don't really have anyone to blame but themselves" - really? The documentary says: Lenin. And other communists.
@LordZontar6 ай бұрын
@@soavemusica The documentary does not say that. Lenin and the Bolsheviks were not around for the actual downfall of the dynasty. The February revolution, a completely spontaneous uprising of peasants and soldiers, was an event Lenin never expected. He had to scramble to get in a position to bring about the overthrow of the provisional government, and had Kerensky decided to drop Russia out of the war and at a time before Lenin could make his secret deal with the Kaiser's government, he'd have never left Switzerland. There would have been no sealed train to take him to Petrograd, no October revolution, no civil war. Lenin would never have gotten his chance; instead dying in Zurich a mad crank nobody would have been listening to after 1917. As for Nicky, he really did stick himself into the soup, having the incredible talent for making exactly the wrong decisions at exactly the worst possible times to make them. He doesn't decide to mobilise the Russian army to show support for Serbia, there is no war with Germany and none of the disastrous consequences of that war that leads to the 1917 revolutions. Nicky doesn't decide to go to war with Japan, there is no humiliating defeat that destroys the aura of invincibility around the Romanov dynasty and which also sows the seeds for future revolution. And leaving Alexandra, the stupid cow, to run the government in his absence during World War I was but one more disastrously wrong decision on top of his entire string of wrong decisions made almost from the moment he took the throne. It didn't help that both of them were so completely lost in religious mysticism that they handed so much influence over to Rasputin. And the one time Nicky should have listened to Rasputin when the "Mad Monk" emphatically advised against war, he didn't. Oh yes, Alex and Nicky very much did have nobody but themselves to blame for the downfall of the dynasty. A different critical decision here or there, and they'd have never ended up in that house in Yekaterinburg.
@hmansur-r5zАй бұрын
Why were they to blame? What did they do? Could you explain to me briefly.
@spiderlegs504 жыл бұрын
There is a lot to be learned from hearing and researching this awful stretch of history.......Thank you for sharing.
@solmamita420511 жыл бұрын
Without a doubt, the best documentary on the Romanovs to date. The next best is, unfortunately for me, in Russian. Thank you!
@karenmerritt35525 жыл бұрын
Sol Mamita Yes i agree and the Narrator presents it so well spoken
@foxinhenhouse315610 жыл бұрын
One of the best documentaries I have seen on the Romanovs. Lot's of source material.
@foxinhenhouse315610 жыл бұрын
Which family was this?
@katylake2124 жыл бұрын
@HBB LOL. What a loon.
@ytjepool4 жыл бұрын
Once apon a december ..paris.
@glendabarton45barton482 жыл бұрын
@@foxinhenhouse3156 The Romanov royal family of Russia: Tsar and Tsarina, three daughters and one younger son, the Tsarevitch (their to the throne). Alexei, the young son, suffered from hemophilia, a disease caused by inbreeding. Tsar Nicholas was cousin to the King of England. Queen Victoria was said to be the grandmother of European royal families. A staret, a Russian monk who was a mystic from the wilderness, was able to stop the child's bleeding, probably by hypnosis, and he became indespensible especially to the Tsarina. When the Tsar went off to fight the war, Alexandra and Rasputin were effectively in charge and were resented by the Russian people, who, suffering famine and joblessness, were marching toward revolution. Rasputin, showing a preternatural ability to perceive the future, claimed that if he, Rasputin, was killed by an aristocrat, a member of the royal family, the royal family and the Empire would fall. Sure enough, it was Prince Yousoupov, a member of the royal family and a cohort who eventually killed Rasputin. Although it took several methods of execution to finally take the life of what seemed almost a supernatural mystic figure, charged with life force that at first prevented them from killing him. After poisoning him, and I believe shooting him, he was still raging on with his mad eyes glowing. Only when they finally wrapped his body in a rug and dropped him in the River Neva,did he finally leave this earth.
@skontheroad5 ай бұрын
Just to be clear, hemophilia is not caused by inbreeding. It is hereditary and therefore may be passed down from parent to child. @glendabarton45barton48
@jimalexander6876 жыл бұрын
Helen Rappaport has two excellent books on the Romanov's: "The Last Days of the Romanov's" and "The Romanov Sisters". I highly recommend both.
@petercrossley29565 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Mr. Alexander. I will attempt to find these and add them to my library.
@angelinasmith63074 жыл бұрын
And a third that came out last year called "The Race to Save the Romanovs"
@joannehardin48684 жыл бұрын
I read both books. Excellent.. I am fascinated by this family and what happened to them. Whatever the tzar didn’t or didn’t do his children did not deserve this. To think the tzar’s first cousin the King of England refused to offer asylum is unforgivable.
@patsheffield32684 жыл бұрын
@@joannehardin4868 BC
@joseeduardotschen91864 жыл бұрын
Joanne Hardin I am pending to read the one of the Romanov Sisters. One question: Do you think that the Romanovs could actually been saved? I think it would have been impossible since all of the trains were controlled by the bolchevikes. Also, interesting thing, none of the Romanov family liked Alexandra.
@antoniobittarperdomoyboliv75015 жыл бұрын
19:00 "I'm not going to abdicate in favor of my son. He's ill. He'll go to Crimea and grow flowers..." I cried. That man only wanted to be a good father and husband but was trapped in a job he was not suited for.
@annagagliardi20465 жыл бұрын
Nicholas was betrayed by his cousins, the weak George V and the wicked Wilhelm II. Either one could have saved the family. The biggest losers were the Russians under the murderous reign of Lenin.
@NataliaVostrikovaSINTEZ5 жыл бұрын
@@annagagliardi2046 From where Lenin -from London
@annagagliardi20465 жыл бұрын
@@NataliaVostrikovaSINTEZ You are right, Lenin lived in exile in London for a while.
@kristinebailey28044 жыл бұрын
And with a wife that was addicted to controlling those around her. Poor man.
@joseeduardotschen91864 жыл бұрын
He should’ve been a gardener instead of Tsar.
@TheTesemeau6 жыл бұрын
This is a brilliant series of documentaries, fantastic film footage and photographs and the interviews with eye witnesses are awesome. Thank you!
@t.l.16105 жыл бұрын
“Tender thanks for your severe scolding ... your weak-willed husband.” 😂 Disastrous rule aside, you can feel their bond echoing through across decades through their letters. Such a sad story, for everyone. Their people & family.
@helenmcintosh98804 жыл бұрын
I know, !😂 poor Nicky, if only he’d realised size doesn’t matter 😂
@helenmcintosh98804 жыл бұрын
Tara G. ❤️
@zz4244 жыл бұрын
The shouldn't have hing Lenin's brother. It was payback time.
@creature574 жыл бұрын
Really awful for the PEOPLE of Russia to have this man as their 'leader'. He wouldn't lead his own family. His wife was the was leader of the family. No wonder Russia imploded. I feel for the people.
@joseeduardotschen91864 жыл бұрын
Great comment!! And many people say that he wasn’t weak! He himself confesses it!
@jimalexander6876 жыл бұрын
Subsequent to the making of this documentary, the remains of Alexei and Maria were found in 2004, not far from where the others had found.
@mamavswild5 жыл бұрын
Jim Alexander Yeah about 60 meters away. DNA was matched to both the mother and the father.
@NataliaVostrikovaSINTEZ5 жыл бұрын
Fake
@gurukirupa98405 жыл бұрын
@@NataliaVostrikovaSINTEZ so you think they're still alive? There seems no evidence that they're still alive.
@NataliaVostrikovaSINTEZ5 жыл бұрын
@@gurukirupa9840 Look Anastasia Gleb Botkin book
@NataliaVostrikovaSINTEZ5 жыл бұрын
@@gurukirupa9840 Анастасия полумертвая похищена братьями Чайковскими увезена в Румынию...Глеб Боткин ..Было два суда в Европе по установлению личности и постановили что ЗА НЕДОСТАТОЧНОСТЬЮ ДОКАЗАТЕЛЬСТВ личность осталась НЕУСТАНОВЛЕНОЙ, Очень ИНТЕРЕСНАЯ ИСТОРИЯ, ЕСТЬ ГОЛЛИВУДСКОЕ КИНО 1959 ГОДА Анастасия...
@brahim11910 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this wonderful documentary, really appreciated. Despite being an anti-monarchy, it still sadden me to this day to know that the whole family was cowardly murdered in a very cold, atrocious and immoral way ( I hate you Lenin !!!), especially that history tells us that despite being out touch with their subjects, Nicolas and his wife were not blood thirsty monarchs, neglectful and inexperienced but not cruel. What I never understood is the stubbornness of the Tsar, this man have had the chance in 1890’s to observe in London the House of Commons in debate and was apparently pleased or at least impressed by the mechanism of a constitutional monarchy, as well as during his visit to the USA where it is said he attended debates during one of the US Congress sessions. What was wrong with him ? And why he did not listen to his wise and intelligent uncle ? Sad indeed.
@mistygroves35039 жыл бұрын
+brahim119 Yes it is very sad. One would think Nicholas would have considered what he had experienced in other countries, regarding constitutional monarchy. I don't know my history well enough....but wonder if there were perhaps factors which prevented him taking this option before it became too late?
@Clipgatherer2 жыл бұрын
+brahim119. He should even have listened to Rasputin, who advised against going to war with Germany (see Episode 2 in this series).
@reneedailey16962 жыл бұрын
Essentially he believed his own hype. Folx tend to lay all the blame on Alix, but the man was raised to believe he was ordained by God to rule. Growing up with that much entitlement will create someone too stubborn/willfully blind to see anything else.
@josef18362 жыл бұрын
living in luxury while people died of starvation and privation,parasites and killers not even russian but incestuous royalty german english etc
@teakonorth439311 жыл бұрын
rest in peace Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia, and Alexei.
@joeschmoe216 жыл бұрын
They were not innocent. Their income depended on getting it at gun-point from the people. Every thing they ate, everything they wore, was taken from the people by force. Their deaths were not punishment enough.
@bhavanisingh8526 жыл бұрын
God bless the King Tsar Nicholas
@stardustalways6 жыл бұрын
Joe Schmoe what a vile thing to say!
@zeynepnemli18006 жыл бұрын
teako north each time I read or watch about the Romanovs I cry cry..my granny was the first cousin of the czar😳😳😙
@AB-lq1zd5 жыл бұрын
@Michael Cristian In these things it's prudent to kill off the whole blood line lest any heirs claim in the future. This is the dynamic of monarchies throughout history. In this sense they were both innocent and not innocent.
@AiraCamille4 жыл бұрын
Good decision that I clicked this documentary.. how many times these Romanov docs were just passing by my KZbin feeds and haven't paid any attention. Here I am now, I'm on my 3 days ,binge watching Romanovs
@marvinken41863 жыл бұрын
I feel you
@TheMartinick10 жыл бұрын
Very good documentary. I don't think I've seen better. Thank you for uploading.
@brendakulik360411 жыл бұрын
There are quite a few films of Tsar Nicholas and there is the actual movie itself, Nicholas and Alexandria. What they all have in common is that you never see him actually mingling with the people, talking to them, asking them how their live are and how he can help them. Instead you see him living in a disney like palace tucked away in a dreamworld totally oblivious to what was going on in the real world.
@haroldrupert4957 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing this great historical video tribute . God bless this family .
@Nmax Жыл бұрын
Also Fall of Eagles a 13 part series which shows Tsar Nicholas II assuming the throne as well as the story of Kaiser Wilhelm II and of the Hapsburg dynasty
@donnaleist698 Жыл бұрын
I guess it had nothing to do with prior assassinations of his family.... You need to read up on those trouble makers the Bolsheviks.... BTW it wasn't Germany, it was England and NYC Banker's.... You'll Notice those pesky Revolutionaries literally eliminated European Royalty. Don't let authentic photos lead you astray.
@pyromania10187 ай бұрын
That's pretty much how it was. Alexandra deliberately kept them inside that bubble, while also being utterly apathetic about her reputation. On one occasion, their train passed by a village and the peasants came out to pay respects to (and get a glimpse of) the couple. Nikki opened his window, stuck his head and arm out, and waved; Alix haughtily looked away and had the shades drawn. Both of their families (including Queen Victoria) vehemently berated Alix for this, but she scoffed and declared that the tsar was a god, thus good PR was unneeded.
@MrGp598 жыл бұрын
It was the ultimate betrayal of family not to allow the Nicholas & his family asylum in England. Shame on you George!
@lexigrimhaive8 жыл бұрын
Completely agree!!
@Meth-and-Taxes8 жыл бұрын
+MrGp59 Blame the British Labour party at the time for causing anti -monarchy sentiment that made the king fearful of allowing Tsar Nicholas II and his family asylum.
@lexigrimhaive8 жыл бұрын
+Steve Paxton okie doke.
@maragathm8 жыл бұрын
What happened to the french royal family was clear on everyone mind. I don't know what george feared maybe he felt a violent uprising would come and they too will be blamed and killed. It shows you the ideology of game of thrones, power lies where men believe it is. Tsar or a king or a dictator is only as powerful as there are those that follow him.
@HarryB-lb1fb8 жыл бұрын
George V helped them! The IF escaped in a covert operation the night before. They did not die, they were not killed! George V knew exactly where they were.
@ChrisBreemer8 жыл бұрын
An immensely involving documentary, many thanks for posting it ! I never realized there was so much filmed material of the Romanovs. It is a sad and heartbreaking story, but moral judgement is too easy. Yes, they had it coming, it was inevitable, the dynasty was doomed, they brought it on to themselves. No, they did not deserve this gruesome and callous murder, especially not the children, these was no need for this barbarism. Russia could have deposed of their monarchy in a more civilized manner.
@johncronin95408 жыл бұрын
I agree with you on the murders, especially of innocent children. And the fact is that Nicholas was never charged, prosecuted, convicted and sentenced. But it is important to remember that there were TWO Revolutions, not one. Kerensky TRIED to implement a western-style democracy. What undermined his efforts was the ongoing war, and Germany allowing Lenin to return to Russia. The entire 20th Century history of Russia, Europe, and the World might have been very different had Kerensky's government lasted to the end of WWI. But it is not easy to develop immediate democracy in a nation that had only ever had autocratic government. It took centuries to develop in England, which had its own shares of revolts and civil wars along the way. It certainly did not happen overnight. An interesting parallel is the Irish struggle for Independence from Britain, and subsequent civil war. It happened at roughly the same time period as Russia, but because of the existence of a democratic and Enlightenment tradition in Britain, Ireland gained its independence as a democracy, with those western values.
@Cerbie8 жыл бұрын
In a way I can understand why hey killed the children. Typically most opposing groups would want children of their enemies murdered that way there will be no trouble from them down the line. I don't see the son posing much threat because with his hemophilia he would probably end up harming himself. If you look at the daughters one would assume they are harmless because they are just "women", but they are all beautiful and were charming and sweet. Imagine what would happen had they aged and found suitors/husbands with power. They could exact revenge on the people who annihilated their family. If you look back to the ancient Romans killing of the children was the norm. They didn't want the children to grow up to cause problems. This is only my take on things. It saddens me about what happened. Some of what happened could've probably been avoided. I wish they would've been allowed to live in exile or sent to another country.
@ChrisBreemer8 жыл бұрын
@John Cronin- Yes, fascinating to speculate how history could have gone had Kerensky gotten his chance (which he might ot might not have seized, I don't think he was a particularly strong leader). Great topic for an "alternate history" novel a la Robert Harris' Fatherland. This is only one of the many ways WWI changed the face and history of Europe, more so than WWII.
@ChrisBreemer8 жыл бұрын
@Kay Kvartek- Sure, it makes sense in a coldly logical way, and has many precedents in history. The Bolsheviks wanted to close the book forever and did not want to be seen lenient or sentimental. It was also part personal revenge from Lenin for the Tsarist regime hanging his brother.
@reinadegrillos8 жыл бұрын
Also, French revolutionaries killed the son of Louis XVI, and exiled the daughter, Madame Royal, after having them prisoners for years. The norm is you kill all those who can come again to reclaim the throne.
@akshaygupta46063 жыл бұрын
Its so disturbing and shocking. I have read the history of many countries and people but this one really broke 😭 my heart. For 2 days I've been watching the videos of Russian Revolution and the Tsarist Russia. Although I knew some of that history but when I discovered this story after watching this video and a 1996 movie Rasputin, then I came to know that saddest part of the history. Those were so beautiful, lovely and innocent children. The love of Tsar for his wife and children and the videos of those lovely children playing with each other really touched my heart. Till the end those ideal parents did everything for the comfort of their vulnerable children. How divine their relationship with each other was! Though they were not the perfect rulers but each one of them had a heart also the Tsarina and her daughters took care of the wounded soldiers. That was the bloodiest century!
@auntkaz4225 жыл бұрын
This needs to be updated with the fact that the remains of Akexai and Marie were located and that all of the bodies were consecrated.
@justinwillingale20863 жыл бұрын
I consecrated the princesses before they died
@SymphonyBrahms2 жыл бұрын
@@justinwillingale2086 Disgusting.
@kateharder6458 жыл бұрын
i can't finish watching this. it's breaking my heart.
@AJ-jv1wh5 жыл бұрын
@wakenbaker-uk oh u mean Lenin and Stalin? Yeah totally agree. 😂😂😂
@AJ-jv1wh5 жыл бұрын
@wakenbaker-uk lol it's relevant. You may have intended on describing the Tsars but you made an appt description of Lenin and Stalin too both who proved to be the same , if not much more terrible than Nicholas had been.
@AJ-jv1wh5 жыл бұрын
@wakenbaker-uk yeah I KNOW this video is about the tsar but I'm just saying what you said perfectly described Lenin and Stalin, the supposed "liberators" lol. Ease up, man. Jeez 😂😂✌️
@marcinbelka18684 жыл бұрын
It is very good that these degenerates and their spoiled brats have been murdered, there really is no one to cry for here.
@annetteryan51103 жыл бұрын
You're breaking my heart by reminding me of how hearbreaking this biographical documentary is of Czar Nicholas and his family's struggles.. this is quite difficult for me.. *+* *May they R.I.P. +*
@achenarspire92410 жыл бұрын
Fascinating archival footage !! Thanks for uploading this !
@art.demirjian97215 жыл бұрын
How wonderful to hear about the History of the pass from reliable and respectful teachers - such as the one in this video, whom always ready to protect the integrity of all those characters who played role in all those events of the pass - some cheerful and others were dreadful. But no matter what the circumstances were - introducing all those people in a dignified manner must be considered the most important priority to inform us the events of the pass. My special thanks for the one who prepared this video for having an absolute respect toward the individuals of the pass in every position. Bravo!
@deb72194 жыл бұрын
Nicholas just DID NOT GET IT! His people were starving!!! His wife had him thinking only of their family and NO ONE ELSE! I feel so bad for what happened to that family in the end. But Nicholas should NEVER have been Czar. He had not a clue. So very sad. For everyone,
@kristinebailey65548 ай бұрын
Agree, she was his downfall! And her poor innocent children, OMG.
@michaeljohndennis22316 ай бұрын
She was a German princess which put her in an even worse position than Catherine the Great - Nicholas was a weak Czar - the similarities with the French Revolution in the late 1780’s are huge, such as an Austrian Princess becoming Marie Antoinette of France with a weak king of France, just like how the son of an Austrian border guard became a homeless painter, fought in WW1 and became Adlof Hitler in WW2
@jocelyngail41965 жыл бұрын
this 3 part series is the best I've seen Thanks
@FMHammyJ9 жыл бұрын
I often wonder how World history would have developed if the Czar had instituted wide sweeping and real reforms after the failed revolution of 1905.....and then reigned over the Russian Empire as a constitutional monarch and not as an absolute one....
@Jurgen_Ibro9 жыл бұрын
+FMHammyJ Probably we wouldn't have nor Germany nor Israel now days, and the others from the other side of the Atlantic would not piss the world off every time the situation gets calm, practically a much better world, and probably Turkey would disappear or move to Asia, and Islam would not get such a big ground in Asia, this is my opinion
@leizhang26055 жыл бұрын
History is not 'if'
@sohappyicoulddie1234 жыл бұрын
@@Jurgen_Ibro less Islam and no Nazis? Sounds perfect
@BettyCraig-x8l4 ай бұрын
He believed in his autocracy. He didn't believe his people could rule themselves. Hated the Duma.
@Eazy-ERyder Жыл бұрын
This was a fantastic documentary. The best one I have seen to date. I hope I can find more of the same by these creators and directors.
@maryoleary50444 жыл бұрын
look at the faces, the expressions, the type and quality of people, whatever side they're on. Quality of kindness!
@AJ-jv1wh5 жыл бұрын
Lmao people thought the Tsar was bad ? They basically jumped out of the Frying pan and into the fire with the monsters that were Lenin and Stalin
@normalizedinsanity48735 жыл бұрын
Stalin the butcher was a counter revolutionry who gained gained powerr due to western invasion 1n 1918
@vivalapalestine72355 жыл бұрын
They weren’t that “good” either . You must look at the angle of the amounts of starving people who were dying because of the horrible policies and the money they pocketed for unnecessary splendor . You must look at this in a historical way. The Bolsheviks were not angels either , but In there time in history they won ... that’s just what happens . The brutal way which was done , was disgusting indeed .
@Handiman5445 жыл бұрын
It's so easy in hind-sight to see the future. But it's like a plane crashing. If the passengers knew it would crash, they never would have gotten on the plane in the first place. People back then thought Lenin was their salvation. No one sees the future until the future becomes the present.
@syourke35 жыл бұрын
Lenin and the Bolsheviks seized power in a coup in October, 1917. It was Not a popular revolution like in February, 1917, when the Russian people and the soldiers rose up and overthrew the Czar.
@annagagliardi20465 жыл бұрын
@josefina bananos LOL!
@alexandriapizano2413 жыл бұрын
Wow!! This documentary is 👏👏👏 I learned so much and feel like I was watching history in real time thank you!!
@mikecacioppo563911 ай бұрын
Victims of wealth, privilege and nepotism. 👑
@rosaoddin4338 Жыл бұрын
How tragic, what cruel disillusionment and pain the Czar and his family suffered.
@alli-kat23295 жыл бұрын
their letters to each other r beautiful x
@walboyfredo60255 жыл бұрын
49:00 a little bit incorrect they used Prince Michael of Kent DNA sample, adding to that he fluent in Russian and he's the spitting image of Czar Nicholas.
@SymphonyBrahms Жыл бұрын
They used DNA from Prince Philip. His family is closely related to the Romanovs.
@Primordicus10 жыл бұрын
God keep the souls of those tens of millions of Russians and other peoples of the Soviet era who had to suffer the ruthless, murderous, abominable policies of the Bolsheviks. May they rest in peace.
@spazzy6910 жыл бұрын
And what about the tens of millions of Russians who died as a result of the Tsar's ineptitude, neglect and abominable policies? Who is keeping their souls?
@Primordicus10 жыл бұрын
It's true as you imply: the Russian upheavals of 1917 did not come from nowhere but from the sufferings of millions of Russians over hundreds of years. The deaths, deportations and destruction of the Communist era, however, far surpassed the Tsars in scale and systematic nature. Moreover, the communists had an ideology that rationalized mass murder and theft in a way that Christianity never did. Thank God for liberal democracy! I am so glad that the communist era in Russia is over. I never thought I'd live to see the day.
@Retro-Future-Land10 жыл бұрын
spazzy69 A lot of that was inherent to Russian living more than the Tsars themselves. The USSR is thankfully resigned to the dustbin of history and may it never arise again. The filthy, satanic Bolsheviks will be turning in their graves when they see the resurgence once again of the Russian Romanovs. You see they failed to kill all the royalty and even now they live on, ready for the day the people call for them again. :)
@absolutetruth44777 жыл бұрын
hope u are still alive and enjoy the new rise of mother russia.
@ColumRogers7 жыл бұрын
Watch Ryder Still waiting for that Romanov resurgence 😂😂😂😂
@jenaam81289 жыл бұрын
The amazing thing about these programs "last of the Czars" is that they 're pretty intertaining,and I'm not the "morbite type, thanx for posting...
@SagesseNoir8 жыл бұрын
The Czar didn't even get a kangaroo trial such as King Louis XVI or Marie Antoinette received during the French Revolution. And even the Jacobins didn't kill the children of the king and queen.
@farahnuradeen67648 жыл бұрын
That's because the French Revolution was French and not a Zionist Manipulation
@SagesseNoir7 жыл бұрын
The Russian Revolution was Russian. There was no Zionist plot.
@Whitneypyant7 жыл бұрын
The French did kinda killed Marie Antoinette’s son and took out his heart.
@mamavswild5 жыл бұрын
They killed the little boy through neglect and rough treatment
@Itried20takennames4 жыл бұрын
The Jacobins did take and neglect/abuse the young Dauphin to death...so not quite.
@CoxJoxSox10 жыл бұрын
You can take a man out of peasantry but you can't take the peasantry out of the man.
@MrKmanthie5 жыл бұрын
Nick Doe how true, how true!
@brucemarsico65 жыл бұрын
Just like.....You can take the sweaty socks off the feet but the feet will still stink!
@lindawatkin44119 жыл бұрын
A happy and carefree family with many of their subjects starving.PLEASE!
@SgtButtface6 ай бұрын
They would have fared better if you were in charge
@josephel42926 жыл бұрын
My heart aches that the family suffered such a sad and tragic end
@Sybaris1004 жыл бұрын
Not as tragic as his subjects.
@josephel42924 жыл бұрын
@@Sybaris100 true
@Omar-yi2mv4 жыл бұрын
The family did not deserve their suffering. I understand the revolution was necessary, and I understand that people were under great strain, but Maria, Olga, Tatiana, Anastasia, and Alexei did not deserve to suffer. Their lives were brutally and heartlessly torn from them in a battle they had no part in. I pray they are resting in heaven together, happy and liberated from life’s storm
@elisabethdakak8784 жыл бұрын
@@Sybaris100 Your comment is awfully mean.
@sabineb.56164 жыл бұрын
@@Sybaris100 , I agree! The story is tragic, and I do not think the last Romanows were evil. They were a very loving and ordinary family, and they were born into circumstances they had not chosen and they could not cope with. They did not deserve to die! But there were many more victims and tragic stories amongst the people who were ruled by an unjust and antiquated system which definitely had run it´s course. There is a channel with the name "Romanov Royal Martyrs". This is absolutely ridiculous. As tragic as their fate is, the Romanows were no martyrs. They were no saints after all! They were neither better nor worse than their subjects. And in many ways their brutal demise was Nikolaus´ and Alexandra´s own fault. They had so many opportunities to leave Russia! Throughout his reign Nikolaus was inept and his judgement was unfortunately very poor. In the end it cost him his and his family´s life. I feel very sad about their children, though! They became collateral victims.
@wandah94685 жыл бұрын
Germany's secret weapon, delivered in a sealed train..."the government fell like a ripe peach from a tree." Wow, can I quote that? Fantastic series, subscribed!!!!😍
@ceejay17945 жыл бұрын
wanda H that phrase was concise and incredibly descriptive. Sadly, said everything.
@rajeshmohan10022 жыл бұрын
The Germans took one fourth of Russian resources by the Brest treaty which was signed by Lenin.
@SymphonyBrahms2 жыл бұрын
And the kaiser lost his throne even after the betrayal of the Russians.
@angelbabysqueaky39852 жыл бұрын
The killing of Nicholas and his family were truly 😥 tragic. They had such a barbaric ending and disposals of their bodies was horrible. Cut up, acid, and burned. So sad. The Russians also ceded lands that they had held for 300 yrs. back to Germany..Thank you for all the information about what happened to the Tsars family and the revolution. You did a great job.
@Jimaybob2 жыл бұрын
I think it was rather justified given the death and suffering the royal family had inflicted on its own people
@DaBIONICLEFan2 жыл бұрын
@@Jimaybob It was nothing compared the the death and suffering inflicted by those who would come after. Nicholas II was a bad ruler yes, a flawed person but also easily led, unprepared and naive, very devoted to his family. Not a wholly irredeemable person, he nor his family deserved that barbaric fate. Maybe the people who murdered them did!
@thomasjefferson611 жыл бұрын
We are told constantly that Nicholas II was a bad Czar. If he was, compared to whom? Which Czar was a good Czar? Nicholas I? Alexander II? Or was it the father of Nicholas II, Alexander III, under whom autocracy seemed to work? In point of fact Nicholas II was much like the other monarchs of Europe at the time (and a much better family man than most). Nicholas II had the temperament to be a constitutional Monarch like his cousin, George V of England. His tragedy was to be born heir to an autocratic state, for which his father did little to prepare him. Russia, a land of mostly illiterate and uneducated peasants, simply could not go from autocracy to democracy in just a few years. Democracy requires liberty, and liberty is the deep, rich soil in which only a humane democracy can flourish, and that soil can take centuries to develop. The abolition of the Russian monarchy and the murder of the Czar did not bring Russia a better system, but a worse one.
@andrewpytko29386 жыл бұрын
He was weak, and did not deserve to rule.
@SagesseNoir6 жыл бұрын
I don't know if the Czar as an individual was worse than any other ruler. But the Czarist system was probably the most repressive in Europe before the rise of Hitler and Stalin.
@bhavanisingh8526 жыл бұрын
Long live the King of Russia, the King Tsar Nicholas was really great King, god bless the King Tsar Nicholas and his family
@SagesseNoir6 жыл бұрын
@ But keep in mind that the Czarist regime was repressive by standards of its own time; it was probably the most repressive regime in Europe. Not only more repressive than democracies in France or England, but also more repressive than the monarchies in Germany and Austria. The Czar was aware of alternatives existing in other countries, but rejected those options and care little for the Duma.
@SamuelJamesNary6 жыл бұрын
Thomas Jefferson - The assessment of Nicholas II's reign is one that is based both on the results of reign and the actions taken. Personally, Nicholas was a good and personally just person, and for the most part he did have good intentions. However, personal goodness does not make a good leader. In this the measure of "good" and "bad" will often depend on what was achieved. For Peter and Catherine the Great, one could point to the building of St. Petersburg and the expansion of Russia, along with some degree of modernization, for Alexander I one could point to the defeat of Napoleon I, and for Alexander II one could point to the emancipation of the Serfs. For Alexander III, while he was a highly autocratic Tsar, Alexander III did manage to maintain some successful policy and stability through his life... And in this, Nicholas II never lived up to any of that. While personally kind and well intentioned, Nicholas was as ambitious as Catherine, nor as intellectual as Peter, nor as liberal as Alexander II. To a great extent, Nicholas had the potential to be a great Tsar if he began to liberalize the government on taking the throne and allow for reforms to come into being that would lessen his workload and allow for more equity to enter Russia... Essentially to follow in his grandfather's path. However, Nicholas, remembering the assassination of Alexander II and seeing the policy successes of his father, Alexander III, chose not to do that. On taking the throne, Nicholas said, "I remain just as dedicated to the principles of autocracy as my dead father." And that's where Nicholas's personal nature clashed with the system he dedicated himself to... If one is to be an autocrat... or a dictator (if one isn't a noble), a great deal of force is required. Alexander III retained power and policy successes as he was far more willing to send the army to curb such sentiment, and often did so with a great degree of force. And being a big man, there was the impression that Alexander III could and would dominate the room. Later Soviet dictators, particularly Lenin and Stalin, essentially copied this by being cruel and forceful... taking things to the point eradicating enemies. This was something that Nicholas II really couldn't and didn't do. There were revolutionaries executed, yes, but Nicholas too a far gentler approach than his father did in similar situations which essentially let many of the revolutionaries of 1917 live. Stalin, for example ran a criminal gang responsible for murder, robbery, and intimidation during the 1905 Revolution... Had he lived, Alexander III would have had Stalin hung. Nicholas only sent Stalin to Siberia in exile. In this, Nicholas dedicated himself to an autocratic style of rule and lacked the necessary cruelness to actually survive with such a policy to make sure the people would be too intimidated to even try revolution... and by taking an autocratic style, he couldn't win over the common man in a way that wouldn't leave them open to the measures taken by the Bolsheviks in 1917... And it's that that made Nicholas a bad Tsar. Lenin and Stalin weren't any better... and one could easily make the case that they were worse with regard to how they treated the Russian/Soviet people... but they were pretty much a result of Nicholas's failures.
@siegridthomas96745 жыл бұрын
This narration is so beautiful....one has a much better understanding of what did happen...so very, very sad
@lilwil-ns3uo3 жыл бұрын
I have just come upon this 3-part documentary and find it to be a very fine telling of this particular time in history. Very compelling and with the historical footage and comments from people from that era is very unique. I have always been a history buff and now with the discovery of the Romanov bodies and burials, it has sparked my interest to learn as much as possible, both good and bad, about this subject.
@cathyofsharick321111 жыл бұрын
Thinking that I have seen most all of the film clips of the Romanovs, this a lovely surprise. There is so in this doc that I haven't seen before. I am fascinated with this unfortunate time in history. Thanks for posting the three episodes.
@IZn0g0uDatAll Жыл бұрын
Mike Duncan makes a comment that i find interesting: Charles I lost his head because he was so unbelievably stubborn, inflexible and rigid. Louis XVI lost his head because he was so weak, had no spine whatsoever, agreed with the last person he spoke with and wanted to please everyone. Nicolas II managed to combine both traits and be at the same time disastrously weak and disastrously rigid. This is why monarchy is such a terrible idea. Some people are fine but don’t have the qualities to rule a hot dog stand, let alone a country.
@pyromania10187 ай бұрын
He got so fed up that he didn't mourn Nicholas when the latter died, even if he felt the execution was unnecessary.
@gutsfinky6 ай бұрын
As my dad 77 year old dad would say, Nicky "couldn't run a vacant lot."
@johnjones67569 жыл бұрын
Irrespective of politics, social inequality, war etc the story of the fall of the Romanovs is a sad one.
@josecipriano30483 жыл бұрын
Not if you're a Russian peasant in the 1910s.
@SymphonyBrahms2 жыл бұрын
@@josecipriano3048 The peasants loved the Tsar. It was the Bolsheviks who hated him.
@Stoogewriter3 жыл бұрын
I love this documentary. I felt so sorry for the children. They were innocent victims & killed because of their parents. Terribly sad!
@haylabox16622 жыл бұрын
They shouldn’t have been killed.
@maxanderson9293 Жыл бұрын
Sins of our fathers
@SymphonyBrahms Жыл бұрын
None of them should have been killed, the children and the parents.
@pattyruge19636 жыл бұрын
Thank you for uploading, best documentary I have seen of the last Tsar of Russia and his family 👍
@bibiinn10211 жыл бұрын
Excellent documentary - thank you for sharing.
@troubledsole91045 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I am always interested in learning more about history that I know little about.
@maryoleary50444 жыл бұрын
The photos and period films are fascinating; also great script, narration told with compassion.
@blahblahguess83368 жыл бұрын
thanks for posting and subtitles
@waverider85495 жыл бұрын
"Russia loves to feel the whip"..... Bloody hell, she had no clue
@joseeduardotschen91864 жыл бұрын
I know! How could she say those things!... and she was so "spiritual", "pious" and "religious". This doesn't make her any different from the bolchevikes.
@Bollthorn4 жыл бұрын
That was the problem, NONE of them had a clue. They were buffeted by so many nobles and family they lived in their own little bubble and knew nothing of the outside world, or life outside of oppulance and luxury. Combine that with the fact Nicholas was never taught how to rule and his weak-willed disposition, and there was no way things were ever going to end well.
@kendra853910 жыл бұрын
Thank you for uploading this documentary. It was amazing, informative, and highly depressing. I hope the members of the Romanov family who were killed, along with the millions that suffered during WWI are at peace
@ozohirogi25773 жыл бұрын
Whether it’s all historical fact or biased to whatever degree, it’s still absolutely tragic and just leaves you completely distraught.
@mspea15069 жыл бұрын
Whatever the revolutionaries planned, the lives of the Russian people didn't improve with the abdication of Nicholas II and the murder of him and his family. They simply substituted one autocrat with another. Millions of Russians continued to starve and die under the leadership of both Lenin and Stalin. Political opponents continued to be imprisoned and executed. There was no "people's government" after Nicholas, just as there had not been one before. They may have deposed the Czar, but they were left with a series of dictators that in many ways were worse. The Russian people have waited a very long time to have even a hint of a participatory government, and that wasn't until 1991, with the fall of the Soviet Union and the establishment of the Russian Federation. But, even the 2012 election of Vladimir Putin has been called into question, and it could be that with Putin, Russia is once again headed toward an autocratic government. So, it's possible that the 1918 revolution was a waste of time and lives and gained the people nothing.
@evaannavonbehne86056 жыл бұрын
Ms Pea Sadly, you are so right!
@plasticvision6 жыл бұрын
sorry, nope
@makskandelaki88425 жыл бұрын
tell you from where.? call at least one country in the world - where everything is ideal.? see the world it is imperfect.! all of us are sinners.! potrebeleniye and consumers.! further. шо in Europe there is no koruptsyiya.? of course is.! everywhere there is an array of problems.!. he Trump шо creates.! life in America. the ordinary person do not cost also cent
@makskandelaki88425 жыл бұрын
@---GRAND DUSHES----OLGA ALEKSANDROVNA ROMANOVA---" As all misses allowed by our surname are stuck out! How many it is written about our barbaric corrective system! But nobody speaks about England where even during reign of the Queen Victoria of the person who stole a mutton leg or loaf of bread hung up or sent for penal servitude. Told about our prisons so much, but nobody mentions conditions of keeping of prisoners in Spain and Austria, not to mention Germany. But only one mention of Siberia affected residents of the western countries as a red rag on a bull. In fact, despite existence of police, censorships and all rest, citizens of the Russian Empire had much more freedoms, than the population of Austria and Spain, and, certainly, were more free, than now, under the sign of a sickle and a hammer. For some reason nobody finds time to remember grandness and complexity of tasks which faced three great reformers - Peter the Great, Catherine the Great and Alexander II.""
@carloynwebb28965 жыл бұрын
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
@frankieanakuntan5053 жыл бұрын
RIP King Tsar Nickholas and family.God still with you and family.
@DBEdwards5 жыл бұрын
Wonderful. I learned much watching. Crucial world history. Thanks for posting
@bittybitty82336 жыл бұрын
BEAUTIFUL NARRATION ! ENJOYED THIS VERY MUCH....
@nancyhobson97105 жыл бұрын
The Czar and fam living like lords and people going hungry, always a recipe for revolution
@faraabdiyev84364 жыл бұрын
It breaks my heart, can't stop thinking about this miserable royal family, sobbing through the nights
@nonabliss9 жыл бұрын
So the Russian people did not like or trust the Empress Alix because she was German? Wasn't Catherine the Great German too and married into the Russian monarchy just as Alix did?
@astrinymris99536 жыл бұрын
That analogy probably wouldn't have helped Alix. Though the Russians of Catherine's time revered her, her son blackened her record retroactively after her death. Alix had initially wanted to take "Catherine" as her Orthodox new baptismal name, but Nicholas and Empress Marie managed to dissuade her.
@broganmckoko6 жыл бұрын
It's important to remember that during World War 1 anti-german sentiment was huge. Along the same lines as the anti-russian or anti-American sentiment during the Cold War. Germans were collectively known as warmongers who committed several atrocities during the early months of the war. And before hostilities broke out Germans cultivated that reputation of bloodthirsty Hawks I want you to show off their military force. It's the reason why the British royal family adopted the English surname Windsor. It's also why following Germany's surrender, the Victorious Powers enacted overzealous reparations to punish the German people. This in turn created a people even more desperate they allowed themselves to follow someone like Hitler.
@m.woodsrobinson92444 жыл бұрын
@@broganmckoko Exactly.
@joseeduardotschen91864 жыл бұрын
The Empress didn’t work as hard as Catherine the Great. Didn’t even know well The Russian language.
@SymphonyBrahms2 жыл бұрын
@@joseeduardotschen9186 She spoke Russian but with an English accent.
@makeupboss35684 жыл бұрын
Best documentary I’ve seen of the Romanov Dynasty . Interesting and informative, I’ve really enjoyed learning more about this tragic end to Czar Nicholas’s reign. May God grant him and his family eternal peace.
@eddiec45365 жыл бұрын
A great documentary. Thank you.
@chrisdevins11 жыл бұрын
The Czar has a lot in common with Louis the 16th of France. Both were out of touch with the people and could not justify their reign. Both were weak. Both lacked cunning. Louis the 16th's head (and Marie Antoinette's) ended up in a basket. The Czar and family ended up at the bottom of a well. The Czar really showed his arse when he let his girls get butchered like that. He was still the Czar. He should have ruthlessly exterminated all his enemies from Day 1. Look at what Stain did.
@chrisdevins11 жыл бұрын
He should have killed Lenin instead of shipping him off to Siberia.
@nunrapierbabykiller761411 жыл бұрын
Chris Devins I agree, his mercy was not returned.
@ericcarlson506810 жыл бұрын
pretty sure Lenin was not in prison in Germany. at the time of the "sealed train" (it wasn't sealed at all, if you research it), Lenin and his cadre were in Swtitzerland
@hazelwalsh32696 жыл бұрын
Chris Devins wrong place... wrong time!!
@ЕвгенияЮндина-ч3ш4 жыл бұрын
@HBB this is lie! Stop spreading this lie! Imperial family WERE murdered! Brutally and cruelly. They didn't deserve it.
@SagesseNoir7 жыл бұрын
Was this in part Lenin's revenge for the execution of his older brother?
@tovaritchboy5 жыл бұрын
Totally
@karenmerritt35525 жыл бұрын
SagesseNoir Yes it was
@904czv45 жыл бұрын
Pretty much.
@carloynwebb28965 жыл бұрын
Of course Lenin wanted to kill the Romanovs because the father of Nicholas the second executed Lenin's older brother
@lampshadethisforshadowthat9235 жыл бұрын
Char from Gundam salutes him
@antoniusbl10 жыл бұрын
Men my father watches this video every freaking day.
@huberlitvac133310 жыл бұрын
thanks for uploading this. i think it is the best romanov documetary ive seen till now.this is an amazing real story. with esplendor,love,social revolution and drama. one of the most interesting chapters of modern european history. i think the tzar was just too kind to be a real emperor as his antecesors. i see him as a loving head of family. a man who cared more for his role of a father and husband as of an emperator. everyone is capable of making mistakes.and the fact of the heir being illed has took great part on this . and i personally cannot judge him. the ``EXECUTION`` its unaceptable. monarchy has been wrapped away from a country with the most GLORIOUS monarchy of the world.i mean. its something like CUBAN COMMUNISTS invade the UNITED STATES kill obama and all the members of government and took care of the most prominent country of our age. trying to change everything even their religion believes. this happened to the imperial russia. bolcheviks came and tried to turn everything. thats what they called it ``REVOLUTION`` the tzarist russia its extinted. all the greatness was thrown away. and the biggest empire of the modern world changed forever.
@Njoofene10 жыл бұрын
Nobody gives a shit about America. Stop stealing other people's history or trying to connect Americans to Europeans. You are American and Europeans are Europeans. I agreed with some of your sentiments until you started waffling about America, as you Yanks like to do. Get lost.
@Njoofene10 жыл бұрын
Max K You are not Europeans. You are Americans. Stop stealing other people's history. Concentrate on your recent history or lack of.
@illuminotmereloaded68962 жыл бұрын
If you put the closed captions on, which I almost never do, at around 30:00 when Ralph is narrating from Nicholas' diary, the captions read "We left Saskatchewan at 6:10 in the morning." If only that were the case.
@TheDfarhie6 жыл бұрын
Ever since I read RK Massie's Nicholas and Alexandra, and later saw the epic motion picture of the same name in high school, I began a life-long fascination with everything Romanov. Been to many a Faberge exhibit, collected a whole library of pre and revolutionary Russia History books, but I am an amateur scholar not lettered. Nicholas II was an anti-Semitic child-like man who did not want to be czar, but was forced into the job by protocol and custom. He regularly persecuted the Jews of Russia with pogroms and other insults. Alexandra was a religious zealot and her dependence on Grigori Rasputin for comfort and guidance was pure ignorance and superstition. She wasn't a spy for the Germans and as it has been pointed out before, she was more English than German. She genetically doomed the Romanov dynasty to extinction. That being said, I cannot fault the children for his crimes. Rest in peace OTMA, Alexei and all the other Romanovs who were slaughtered in one big act of vengeance.
@joseeduardotschen91864 жыл бұрын
I also read that book, others and some of Helen Rappoport. Finished disliking Alexandra. The revolution was boiling since Alexander II or earlier. This outcome was inevitable. Maybe not expected their extermination and that way. On the positive side, we are so interested in the Russian history thanks to them and their tragic ending.
@lannalane42474 жыл бұрын
It sounds a bit like you are blaming Alexandra for passing on hemophilia, you know she didn't do that on purpose,
@harrietharlow99294 жыл бұрын
My own opinion is the same as yours. Nicholas had plenty of blood on his hands. I believe Alexandra was insane--ok considering the whole thing with Alexei's haemophilia, it might be understandable--but she was not a well woman mentally. The government should never have been left in her hands when Nicholas left for the front (not that he should have gone to the front as he didn't help things all). And Rasputin only made things worse. If anything, he made Alexandra's fanaticism worse. I've always maintained that the children should not have suffered for their parent's crimes. Even Alexandrta should have been allowed to leave the country.
@tammyloustorydickerson4447 Жыл бұрын
@@harrietharlow9929you blame Him and Her for everything.... So you agree that they should've been killed, and disposed of the way they were done???.... So it's okay that they were done this way???... And the children were killed... By their own people..... That shows how awful the people were that did this and you are taking their side??... The mother was grasping at straws to save her son.... She wasn't crazy... Listen to her diary... I do not hear the words of insanity....I hear the words of LOVE
@harrietharlow9929 Жыл бұрын
@@tammyloustorydickerson4447 Did you actually read and comprehend what I wrote. I said that at the very least, Alexandra and the children should have been exiled.
@patcomerford62603 жыл бұрын
A Happy New Year and thank you for this third brilliant upload!
@Markel8711 жыл бұрын
Thank You for uploading this.
@justbe1451 Жыл бұрын
The best ever documentation I've watched & I've watched many on this period. I wish you had more on Russian history, I'm interested in mid 17th century & earlier. Thank you for this knowledge! 💛
@onesmoothstone56808 жыл бұрын
appreciate your posting this !
@kizcat989510 жыл бұрын
Does anyone know what the film is called that shows Vasily Vitalyevich Shulgin recounting the events in the royal carriage (shown in part from 15:34 in this clip)?
@SymphonyBrahms Жыл бұрын
It's called, "Vasily and the Royal Carriage".
@Patsy_Parisi Жыл бұрын
The documentary never addresses the fate of the last Czar’s second cousin, an amateur chef who earned the sobriquet “Noodles Romanov.”
@bluefaery1865 Жыл бұрын
Sounds cheesy 🧀
@Brahmananda Жыл бұрын
absolutely loved this 3 part documentary. thank you
@kkallebb8 жыл бұрын
15:25 - 17:05 -- Subtitles would have been helpful.
@soniandah-sekou15874 жыл бұрын
I Know
@Marko31234 жыл бұрын
William S. I kno I’m like wait I’m missing something wtf
@bernadettegrech73034 жыл бұрын
A very sad ending to this loving family. Why did they have to be murdered in such a brutal way? I m very sorry for them but the documentary is very good with real authentic film, photos and also the memories of those Russian ladies and gents. Very well done to all and thank you.
@meeeka10 жыл бұрын
Also someone wondered why the Nicky-Alicky correspondence was in English: Alix may have been born in Germany but she was brought up in England by Queen Victoria. So English was Alix's first language. She learned to speak Russian well---but with a heavy English accent.
@rbharvesters74044 жыл бұрын
I know thousands of incident people have been murdered over the years. Its always very sad but it just seems all the more shocking when you see their lives on film. Really sad what happened to them. The girls especially seem so innocent. I will never understand how anyone could kill them. Crazy mad men!
@akshaygupta46063 жыл бұрын
It's really a tragic end. I am sad for those innocent children.
@rbharvesters74043 жыл бұрын
@@akshaygupta4606 Yes i agree! It makes me sad when i think about what happen to them. They were very sweet and innocent. Men are capable of such unbelievable evil.
@akshaygupta46063 жыл бұрын
@@rbharvesters7404 Yes brother I understand but its so disturbing and shocking. I have read the history of many countries and people but this one really broke 😭 my heart. For 2 days I've been watching the videos of Russian Revolution and the Tsarist Russia. Although I knew some of that history but when I discovered this story after watching this video and a 1996 movie Rasputin, then I came to know that saddest part of the history. Those were so beautiful, lovely and innocent children. The love of Tsar for his wife and children and the videos of those lovely children playing with each other really touched my heart. Till the end those ideal parents did everything for the comfort of their vulnerable children. How divine their relationship was!
@philsooty54214 жыл бұрын
When you lose the will of the people you're finished, it was a horrific way to go, poor children murdered and in a terrifying way, but the Tzar and his wife where really to blame! Whilst they lived a life of luxury the people where starving! That's the truth.
@juliusmaloney10 жыл бұрын
The tragedy of the Romanov's was the specific personalities involved and the constant errors in judgement. Once the focus became about the Tsarevich and what Russia he would inherit the family signed its own death warrant. The letting in of Rasputin, the inability of Nicolas to compromise his autocratic outlook and the inappropriateness of Alexandra as Regent while Nicolas played soldiers rather than lead the country meant the Russian people were left without leadership and guidance. Much like Marie Antoinette, Tsaritsa Alexandra demanded that Nicolas hold onto power for the sake of Alexei when it would have been safer to allow a proper constitutional model of monarchy be put in place, much like the British Royal family had. Perhaps then the massacre of the Ipatiev house need never have taken place.
@juliusmaloney10 жыл бұрын
*****. Thanks :)
@annagagliardi20465 жыл бұрын
A constitutional monarchy is much safer for royals. They have all the trappings of power but the difficult decisions belong to the elected heads of state.
@arami1874 жыл бұрын
If only Russia was a Constitutional Monarchy. What a sight we would had seen.
@joseeduardotschen91864 жыл бұрын
I like what you say that "Nicolas played soldiers". Which is exactly true! He was not prepared to lead an army. Army and country as well.
@KiwiKiwi9024 жыл бұрын
The Russian takeover all the wars financed guess who.. the Rothchilds. They are created Hitler Lennin Stalin communism sick abd evil elites abs many morr
@lastjordangarage6 жыл бұрын
A year or two latter the bodies of Alexi and his missing sister (not Anastasia) were found a short distance from the other bodies and thus made the family complete. They are now consecrated and buried with their relatives in the church !
@catzenhouse Жыл бұрын
I don't think that Alexie and Marie are indeed buried with their family yet - the burials have been blocked by the Russian Orthodox Church as the Church concluded that there was not enough exhaustive proof that the remains were the Tsarevich and the Grand Duchess.
@ytrez20115 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Great documentary. How sad.
@shannonfick71703 жыл бұрын
I feel for anyone who is shot and bayoneted to death surrounded by the horrified shrieks and deaths of those they love most. I’ve gotten to know a lot about the Romanovs these past couple of years, and it just sounds like one big tragedy. Nicholas couldn’t have the one thing he wanted, a life as a farmer with a loving family. Neither could Alexandra: A life of privacy away from the judgmental eyes of the court with completely healthy children. Nor could Olga, a romance with a foreign soldier. Nor could Alexei, a chance to actually grow up and do what other little boys could and prove himself as Czar. Nor could any of their sisters, with lives suited to their own talents and desires. It’s just sad. Except for the fact that they all had each other, right to the very end.
@SymphonyBrahms2 жыл бұрын
Alexei wouldn't have lived very long with hemophilia. Most hemophiliacs died in their twenties during that era.
@JamesSmith-ro2tz Жыл бұрын
Why to they revere Lenin’s corpse? Should be burned and the ashes scattered.
@michaellewis1703 Жыл бұрын
I do feel for the children. No children deserve that. But they were standing on the shoulders of their family heritage and past of living in the most obscence oppulence while the Russian people starved and died in the streets. Disgusting. So i don't want to hear about a royal familes woes. They had it coming for a long time.
@buttercxpdraws8101 Жыл бұрын
Love the use of primary sources. Couldn’t have happened to a more deserving family. What a grim faced woman that Alexandra was!
@Ballox11 ай бұрын
TF?
@jjrufus46708 ай бұрын
Whatever pysco path, you are probably a liberal, and think Black Lives Matter is a really good group of people. 🤦🏼♀️
@jamesfitzhugh98562 жыл бұрын
Yes, thank you. I knew several (I did not know how many) of the Romanov family survived. Those who had successfully escaped to their houses in the Crimea were rescued by a British Warship including. Among those rescued were the Czar's Mother, and the two Grand duchess who were sisters to the Czar. One of whom came to Canada, the Grand Duchess Olga) but the fact that there were no survivors who had the right of succession. The Czar and Czarevich were brutally murdered and the next in line, the Grand Duke Michael was also murdered with his secretary. That was the end of the Dynasty. Yes, there were other Romanovs who survived but most were unimportant and very distant claimants to the Throne which no longer existed.
@Zakhev3422 жыл бұрын
the only bad part about this documentary is that the narrator didnt have a pop filter so you can hear all the clicks and crackle in their speech when they talk.
@pamfrank39624 жыл бұрын
This documentary is extremely interesting. Told in a manner which makes you feel as if you were actually a part of this sad time in the life's of the Russian people as well as the Tsar
@dagmastr122 жыл бұрын
Yeah 75 years of communism for their troubles....
@achenen84064 жыл бұрын
Having seen this video felt on the shoes of the Tzars.Cried pitily for the family.really they deserved to be Saints.dor without them the piety to God until now was lost.well continue praying.so touched by the betrayal done!.God bless!
@LolFishFail10 жыл бұрын
Though they represented autocracy, At least people had individual freedoms, It's hard to think that the country fell into darkness with the soviet union being born... How terribly sad.
@Retro-Future-Land10 жыл бұрын
Yes, people really learned true evil when that happened. Not just Russia, but look at where communism spread to afterwards!
@divineperigrinefalcon18917 жыл бұрын
Gaming with Mikey! Freedoms? starvation, no education, illiteracy, sent to Siberia if you complained about working conditions. No representation. For those who make peaceful revolution impossible, will make violent revolution inevitable. President John. F. Kennedy 1961. China, Cuba, Iran, Nicaragua etc.etc.etc.
@toddmiller56565 жыл бұрын
@Ri Mo You commies have been saying this since 1917 yet the Soviet Union collapsed, China and Vietnam are going free market economy and It's only a matter of time until Cuba follows suit. Do real research rather than spouting silly rhetoric!
@SymphonyBrahms Жыл бұрын
@@toddmiller5656 Socialism! Power to the people. Socialism forever!
@rebeccaherschman16355 жыл бұрын
I love this doc. It's probably the most accurate one I've ever seen. The ones that they make today do not express the complete brutallaity of Lenin and how evil and dangerous he really was. One can see the evil in his face.
@SymphonyBrahms Жыл бұрын
It is now known from the discovery of secret papers that Lenin knew and approved of the murder of the Romanovs. He was an evil man, but fate caught up with him, he had a stroke in 1923 and died in 1924. They should take that fake wax effigy of him and melt it.
@bilbob762411 жыл бұрын
one of the best docs. about the tsar's family
@gunterzabernigg94404 ай бұрын
The music is not loud enough - you can still hear some of the words spoken
@maxbertini701711 жыл бұрын
@ sam kulik you nailed it. If the Czar had been able to break free of the mental gilded cage the aristocracy was trapped in he might have been able to head off the revolution... Or maybe just push it until his hemophiliac son died without producing an heir or some other sort of alternate history.
@416mcp11 жыл бұрын
I remember learning that the Russian people were starving and Czar was buying fabrege (spelling?) jeweled eggs for his wife. Can see why the people protested and wanted him and his family out.