The Life and Tragedy of Alexandra Fedorovna

&

Tsar Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II

Alexandre Fedorovna of Hesse and the Molloys are 17th cousins 2 times removed. Nicholas II Alexandrovich of Russia and the Molloys are 18th cousins 1 time removed. Their common ancestors are John "of Gaunt" Prince of England and Catherine De Roet.

Alexandre Fedorovna of Hesse and Nicholas II Alexandrovich of Russia were 2nd cousins. Their common ancestors are Ludwig II of Hesse and Wilhemina of Baden.

On the night of July 17, 1918, Nicholas II, Tsar of All the Russias, richest man in the world, ruler of one-sixth of all its land, was shot to death with his family by Communist revolutionaries in a Siberian cellar. Bullets ricocheted off the 19 pounds of hidden jewels the tsaritsa and her four daughters had stitched into their corsets, drawing out the butchery. The servants were killed, even the little dog.

By all accounts, the rule of Nicholas II was ruthless, feudal, isolated and extravagant. He was believed to be the richest man in the world while he lived, with seven palaces and 15,000 servants. When his regime collapsed in March 1917, he was forced into internal exile. Though he was the first cousin of the reigning British Monarch, George V, the British government led by Lloyd George was opposed to an offer of asylum, virtually signing the czar’s death warrant.

The motive for this massive, ongoing cover-up of the actual fate of the Romanovs seems to be based on greed. Tsar "Nicholas was in theory the richest man in the world with eight magnificent palaces, a staff of 15,000 and crown property estimated at between eight and ten billion pounds." Surviving Romanovs would have laid claim to that property, much of it consisting of billions of dollars worth of gold and precious gems. But if the false claim that the Tsar and his family had all died at Ekaterinburg came to be accepted, then "someone else" could claim the vast treasure. Likely suspects for the "someone else" would be the British royals, the German royals, and the Rockefellers. Maybe they "divied up the loot" between themselves. We are talking here about perhaps the greatest robbery ever to have occurred in the history of the world.

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Table of Contents

Introduction by Bob Atchison

The Empress and her Family

The Life of Alexandre Fedorovna of Hesse

The Empress at home with - her Friends

Early Surroundings, 1872-1879

Last years of peace, 1913-1914

Childhood, 1879-1888

Wartime, 1914

A Young Princess, 1888-1893

The Empress's War Work, 1915

Engagement, 1894

Tsarskoe Selow with out the Emperor, 1915 - 1916

Marriage and first year in Russia, 1894-1895

Visits to Headquarters and Elsewhere, 1916

The Empress in her new home

Before the Storm

The Coronation, 1896

Warning Voices, 1916-1917

Journeys in Russia and Abroad, 1896

Rasputin's Murder-The last days of Sovereignty,

First Charities, and life from, 1896 to 1901

Revolution, March 1917

The Empress and Queen Victoria - New Friendships

The Emperor"s Abdication, March 15Th, 1917Arrest of the Empress

Foreigm tripes, and life from 1901 to 1904

Prisoners at Tsarskoe Selo, March-August 1917

The Russo-Japanese War and Birth of Heir 1904

Five Weary Months, March-August 1917

Gatherings Clouds, 1905

Tobolsk, August 1917 to April 1918

On the Standart, 1905-1912

Ekaterinburg, April to July 1918

A Mother's Agony - Rasputin