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Russia: Ceremony marks killing of tsar and family.
BBC On Line ^ | July 16, 2003 | staff writer

Posted on 07/17/2003 7:14:40 AM PDT by yankeedame

Last Updated: Wednesday, 16 July, 2003, 16:54 GMT 17:54 UK

Church marks killing of Russian tsar


The church stands on the site where the Romanovs were shot

The Russian Orthodox Church has consecrated a golden-domed church on the site where Russia's last tsar and his family were killed by Bolshevik revolutionaries 85 years ago.

The ceremony in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg was attended by hundreds of people, including cellist Mstislav Rostropovich and the Grand Duchess of the Romanov dynasty, Maria Vladimirovna.

Nicholas II, his wife Alexandra and his five children were shot dead in 1918 after the Bolshevik revolution overthrew the Tsarist system and installed communism.

The Church on the Blood was built at a cost of 328 million roubles (about US$1m), much of it donated by large companies, according to the Itar-Tass news agency.

It stands on the site of the house of an engineer named Ipatyev, where the Bolsheviks guarded the tsar and his family for 78 days before executing them in the cellar. The house was demolished in 1977.

A wife of one of Nicholas's relatives, Olga Kulikovskaya-Romanova, dedicated an icon called The Virgin Mary with Three Hands to the church. It was found at Ipatyev's home following the killing of the Romanovs.

Years of controversy

Russian Orthodox Patriarch Alexy II was too ill to travel to Yekaterinburg, 1,500 kilometres (900 miles) east of Moscow.

But in a message to the faithful who attended the consecration, he said it was "a possible historic turn" for Russia and called for unity between the Russian Orthodox church, the state and the Russian people.


The tsar was believed by the church to have a divine right to rule

The patriarch said it was important "that at the place where the blood of the holy regal martyrs was spilled, where an attempt to destroy Russia was undertaken, should begin a revival of the glorious traditions under which both the authorities and ordinary citizens try to co-ordinate their affairs with God's precepts... to build the kind of fatherland that would correspond to the ideal of holy Russia".

The remains of Nicholas II, his wife and three of their five children, Tatiana, Olga and Anastasia, were unearthed from a mining pit near Yekaterinburg in 1991.

They were buried at the Peter and Paul Fortress in Saint Petersburg in 1998 after years of argument about their authenticity and several genetic tests.

The remains of two of the children have never been found


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
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1 posted on 07/17/2003 7:14:40 AM PDT by yankeedame
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To: yankeedame; FormerLib; The_Reader_David; crazykatz; don-o
Orthodox ping (to those I know)

Beautiful church! anyone know where we can see more photographs?
2 posted on 07/17/2003 7:22:02 AM PDT by OldCorps
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To: All
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3 posted on 07/17/2003 7:23:12 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: OldCorps; Petronski; newberger
sorry, missed your names
4 posted on 07/17/2003 7:23:34 AM PDT by OldCorps
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To: RussianConservative
ping!
5 posted on 07/17/2003 7:36:19 AM PDT by BrooklynGOP
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To: MarMema; TexConfederate1861
.
6 posted on 07/17/2003 7:37:16 AM PDT by Chancellor Palpatine
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To: yankeedame
I read that the Romanov women sewed jewels into their clothes, and when they were shot at many bullets bounced off which made the "process" longer then it should've been.
Pretty horrible way to die.
7 posted on 07/17/2003 7:37:51 AM PDT by BrooklynGOP
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To: BrooklynGOP
thanks.
8 posted on 07/17/2003 7:38:52 AM PDT by RussianConservative (Hristos: the Light of the World)
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To: RussianConservative; All
Today is the feast day of the Holy Royal Martyrs of Russia (according to the Russian typicon)

Holy Royal Martyrs pray for us!
9 posted on 07/17/2003 8:49:57 AM PDT by OldCorps
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To: crazykatz; don-o; JosephW; lambo; MoJoWork_n; newberger; Petronski; The_Reader_David; Stavka2; ...
Ping
10 posted on 07/17/2003 9:32:36 PM PDT by FormerLib
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To: OldCorps
What I've read of Tzar Nicholas--his piety and loving concern for the Russian people plus martyrdom--makes him imvho a candidate for the most underappreciated of twentieth century heroes(at least here in the West).
11 posted on 07/18/2003 6:04:52 AM PDT by IGNATIUS
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To: BrooklynGOP
read that the Romanov women sewed jewels into their clothes, and when they were shot at many bullets bounced off which made the "process" longer then it should've been. Pretty horrible way to die.

The Bolshevik gunmen had to go in and finish off the princesses with bayonets. Very brave and heroic of the Bolsheviks- killing unarmed teenage girls.

The Communists were very good at tearing things down and destroying countries. I fear it will be at least another generation before Russia is a fully functioning society.

12 posted on 07/18/2003 6:24:48 AM PDT by Modernman
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To: IGNATIUS
What I've read of Tzar Nicholas--his piety and loving concern for the Russian people plus martyrdom--makes him imvho a candidate for the most underappreciated of twentieth century heroes(at least here in the West).

A good man who loved his people and family. Unfortunately, he was completely unprepared to deal with the challenges that he and his country were presented with. Of course, in all fairness, a lot of the problems in Russia during and right after WWI were the results of outside forces.

How different would have the rest of the 20th century have been if the Germans had not allowed Lenin to take a train back to Russia?

13 posted on 07/18/2003 6:28:01 AM PDT by Modernman
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