Alexander
III with his wife and their children © wikipedia.org / Wikipedia
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Russia is planning to
exhume the remains of Tsar Alexander III, the father of the last Russian
emperor Nicholas II in an attempt to prove the remains of Nicholas II's last
two children belong to the slain Tsar’s family. It was requested by
Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church.
Forensic
experts told Russian media the process is likely to start in the second half of
November 2015. However, opening the vault of the Russian Tsar who died back in
1894 may be quite complicated.
“It [the burial vault] contains not only a
coffin with the Tsar's body but also a separate grave with the tsar's embalmed
vital organs,” Marina Logunova, senior research associate at the St. Petersburg
State History Museum, told TASS.
RT report continues:
Also
Alexander III’s impressive height – 1.93 meters – could create additional
problems, Logunova added.
"It
can be assumed that the burial vault is larger than the tombstone, and that can
create risks for the nearby graves….”
If
the experts prove the remains found in Ekaterinburg are genuine and related to
Alexander III, then one more riddle of the slain Tsar family would be solved.
At that point, all seven members of the Tsar’s family will be buried together.
Nicholas
II, his wife and five children, including his only son and heir, Alexey, were
killed in 1918 following the 1917 Revolution. Their bodies were thrown down a
mine shaft and then quickly buried somewhere near Ekaterinburg in the Urals.
For
almost a century no one knew where exactly the Tsar family was buried. However,
in 1991 the remains of Nicholas II, his wife and three daughters were
discovered in a mass grave near Ekaterinburg.
Two
years later, in 1993, investigators opened a case into the murder of the
Romanov family to identify the suspected remains of the Tsar’s family and their
retinue. The case was closed in 1998 “owing to the deaths of the
perpetrators of the crime.”
However,
the case was re-opened in 2007 when new evidence appeared – the remains of
Nicholas II’s last two children were discovered - daughter Maria and his only
son Aleksey who suffered from hemophilia.
Though the Church has
declared Nicholas II, his wife and three daughters as saints, it still won’t
recognize the identities of Alexey and Maria.
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