The Daily Telegraph

Murdered Tsar’s remains exhumed to confirm fate of children missing from death pit

- By Roland Oliphant in Moscow

RUSSIAN investigat­ors have exhumed the remains of Tsar Nicholas II and his wife Alexandra in an attempt to end the mystery surroundin­g the family’s murders nearly a century ago.

Forensic experts took DNA samples from Tsar Nicholas, his wife and his grandfathe­r, to help establish the fate of the “missing” victims, the couple’s son Alexei and his sister Maria.

The investigat­ive committee be- lieves that human remains found in 2007 belong to Alexei and Maria but is conducting the new study after the Russian Orthodox Church raised doubts over the fate of the pair.

Nicholas, Russia’s last Romanov Tsar, was deposed during the revolution of 1917 and sent into exile to Ekaterinbu­rg, in the Ural mountains, with members of his family and household servants.

On July 17, 1918, they were led into a cellar, lined up as if for a family photograph, and murdered by a Bolshevik firing squad. Witnesses said those who did not die immediatel­y were finished off with bayonets.

The remains were doused with acid and buried in an unmarked pit, where they lay undiscover­ed until located by amateur researcher­s in 1979.

In 1991 the bodies of Nicholas, Alexandra and three daughters were exhumed and buried in St Petersburg.

An investigat­ion in 1993 used DNA samples to confirm that among the remains were those of the Tsar. But two bodies were missing: those of son and heir Alexei and his sister Maria.

In 2007, two more sets of remains – believed to be those of the missing siblings – were discovered nearby.

Further tests confirmed the findings as genuine, but the Orthodox Church queried the results and refused to allow the remains to be interred with the rest of the family. As a result, they have remained in store ever since.

The case is especially significan­t because the family have been canonised. Yet because an early investigat­ion concluded that the bodies had been entirely destroyed, sceptics doubt that the remains are genuine.

The current investigat­ion is meant to satisfy the Church so that a burial can finally go ahead later this year.

“The exhumation was done in the presence of the Orthodox Church. The necessary samples were taken from the remains of Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna,” said the head of the investigat­ion team.

 ??  ?? Bullets and bayonets: Tsar Nicholas II with Alexandra and their five children in 1915
Bullets and bayonets: Tsar Nicholas II with Alexandra and their five children in 1915

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