The Last Days of the Romanovs
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Оглавление
Н. Соколов. The Last Days of the Romanovs
The Last Days of the Romanovs
Table of Contents
ILLUSTRATIONS
PART I. Transcript of the Depositions of Eye-Witnesses of the Crime, Taken from the Archives by M. George Gustav Telberg, Minister of Justice at Omsk
DEPOSITIONS OF EYE-WITNESSES. I. EXAMINATION OF M. GILLIARD
II. EXAMINATION OF MR. GIBBES
III. EXAMINATION OF COLONEL KOBYLINSKY
IV. EXAMINATION OF PHILIP PROSKOURIAKOFF
V. EXAMINATION OF ANATOLIE IAKIMOFF
VI. EXAMINATION OF PAVEL MEDVEDEFF
RESOLUTION:
VII. RECEIPT OF BELOBORODOFF FOR THE ARRESTED RUSSIAN IMPERIAL FAMILY
PART II. The Narrative of Mr. Robert Wilton, Special Correspondent of THE TIMES (London) Based Upon the Original Dossier of the Investigating Magistrate Nicholas Alexeievich Sokolov
THE NARRATIVE OF MR. ROBERT WILTON. CHAPTER I. PROLOGUE
CHAPTER II. THE STAGE AND THE ACTORS
CHAPTER III. NO ESCAPE: ALEXANDRA MISJUDGED
CHAPTER IV. RAZPUTIN THE PEASANT
CHAPTER V. CAPTIVES IN A PALACE
CHAPTER VI. EXILE IN SIBERIA
CHAPTER VII. THE LAST PRISON
CHAPTER VIII. PLANNING THE CRIME
CHAPTER IX. CALVARY
CHAPTER X “WITHOUT TRACE”
CHAPTER XI. DAMNING EVIDENCE
CHAPTER XII. ALL THE ROMANOVS
CHAPTER XIII. THE JACKALS
CHAPTER XIV. BY ORDER OF THE “TSIK”
CHAPTER XV. THE RED KAISER
CHAPTER XVI. EPILOGUE
PART III
I. THE MEMBERS OF THE IMPERIAL FAMILY AT THE OUTBREAK OF THE REVOLUTION
II. CHRONOLOGY OF THE DOCUMENTS
III. EXPLANATION OF RUSSIAN NAMES MENTIONED IN THE DOCUMENTS
IV. ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF NAMES
Отрывок из книги
N. Sokolov
Published by Good Press, 2021
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We suffered very severely, but at present I do not want to speak about my personal suffering.
In the latter part of August I was visited by Tchemodouroff. His first words were: “Thank God, the emperor, her majesty and the children are alive—all the others are killed.” He told me also that he was in the rooms of the Ipatieff house where “Botkin and others” were shot. He told me that he had seen the bodies of Sedneff and Nagorny, whom he recognised by their clothes and that their bodies were put in a coffin and buried. He told me that all the others were obliged to dress themselves in soldiers’ uniforms and had been taken away. It was difficult for me to understand Tchemodouroff, as he talked very wildly.
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