Iconic Corpse: The Romanov Family

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  • čas přidán 18. 10. 2019
  • Everybody has OPINIONS about the Romanov remains...
    Thank you Patron deathlings, who make this all possible!
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    **CREDITS**
    Mortician: Caitlin Doughty
    Producer & Writer: Louise Hung (@LouiseHung1)
    Editor & Graphics: Landis Blair (@landisblair)
    **SELECTED SOURCES/ADDITIONAL READING**
    The Romanovs: The Final Chapter
    Massie, Robert K. (1995) New York, NY: Ballantine Books
    The Last Days of the Romanovs: Tragedy at Ekaterinburg
    Rappaport, Helen (2008) New York, NY: St. Martin's Press
    "Resurrecting the Czar"
    www.smithsonianmag.com/travel...
    "Romanov rumors are put to rest"
    www.latimes.com/archives/la-x...
    "The identification of the Romanovs: Can we (finally) put the controversies to rest?"
    www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    "Mystery Solved: The Identification of the Two Missing Romanov Children Using DNA Analysis"
    journals.plos.org/plosone/art...
    "DNA PROVES BONES BELONG TO LAST CZAR"
    www.washingtonpost.com/archiv...
    "Stockholm Syndrome in Ekaterinburg?"
    www.historiamag.com/stockholm-...

Komentáře • 8K

  • @BubblewrapOracle
    @BubblewrapOracle Před 4 lety +3776

    Yurovsky: "rifles would be too loud"
    *uses grenades on the corpses*

    • @msstarlight4770
      @msstarlight4770 Před 4 lety +11

      Your comment doesn't quite make sense, but it's still funny. 😄👍👍

    • @jedithekitten8891
      @jedithekitten8891 Před 4 lety +10

      Ms Starlight Why?

    • @msstarlight4770
      @msstarlight4770 Před 4 lety +67

      @@jedithekitten8891 because the rifles were too loud to be used inside in the small basement room because people could have hearing loss & disorientation, etc, from that. The grenades were used outside & thrown down a pit. I understand the commenter was trying to make a joke, but it doesn't work.

    • @jedithekitten8891
      @jedithekitten8891 Před 4 lety +7

      Rat Lord ok

    • @Cissy2cute
      @Cissy2cute Před 4 lety +24

      @@msstarlight4770 The grenades weren't used until they were deep in the forest. So it has no relevance to what happened in the Ipatiev house.
      It was a firing squad that killed most but bullets began bouncing off the Grand Duchesses Marie and Anastasia. This was due to the jewels they had sewed into their corsets, causing bullets to bounce off. The shooters did not know this and some were very superstitious, wondering if God was saving the young women. They switched to bayonets. How horrible their final minutes must have been!

  • @klisterklister2367
    @klisterklister2367 Před 4 lety +4025

    "We were working on moledular genetic testing at one time, then mr Stalin shot the entire team. As a result, we began lagging behind" i want this quote embroidered

    • @ciel9112
      @ciel9112 Před 4 lety +301

      "(Cheerfully) Stalin did do things like that. It's one of the problems with Stalin." Caitlin is Iconic

    • @lindseybailes2706
      @lindseybailes2706 Před 4 lety +31

      I didn't know I needed it....but I do.

    • @nazzynaz1905
      @nazzynaz1905 Před 4 lety

      Lou a

    • @kritkratt6383
      @kritkratt6383 Před 4 lety +2

      Klister Klister 😂

    • @JohnP538
      @JohnP538 Před 4 lety +23

      Genetics proves that people are different, communism says everyone is the same. Stalin searched for an alternative and settled on the theories Trofim Lysenko. That decision led to 50 years of Russian crop failures and mass starvation.
      www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/12/trofim-lysenko-soviet-union-russia/548786/

  • @doncarlin9081
    @doncarlin9081 Před 2 lety +1480

    I'm glad you mentioned the servants and the physician, in almost all accounts even in that poorly rated Netflix series they get glossed over. They were just as much victims as the Czar and his family.

    • @sourfrog21
      @sourfrog21 Před 2 lety +58

      I’m writing a paper on the Romanovs and their execution, until now I didn’t really know who else was executed along with the family, just that “some servants” were. I’ll be sure to include them in my paper!

    • @juliemachnik608
      @juliemachnik608 Před 2 lety +102

      I know one of the Romanov descendants was upset that the servants were not buried with the family...stating their loyalty to the family to the horrific end was unmatched. Many Romanov blood relatives had abandoned them, denounced them while the servants stayed, begging the question "Who IS family, after all?" But, that concept apparently wasn't good enough for the Russian Orthodox Church, either.

    • @coldwar45
      @coldwar45 Před rokem +25

      More IMO. They were just servants, they had no power in anything at all.

    • @kylieknight2365
      @kylieknight2365 Před rokem +5

      It was also the chef

    • @Ruimas28
      @Ruimas28 Před rokem +28

      ​@@coldwar45
      It is a bit more complex than you might think.
      At least the doctor was formally offered a chance to leave. By Yurovsky´s own reports.
      If you want to take everything else from Yurovsky as true, and it looks like mostly it is, then the doctor was very much aware they were about to die.
      In fact, it does seem the family had more of a feeling they were about to die too. There is the report of how they all kneeled and did not sing in their very last religious service. The priest for that service reported this and reported he felt them all like already somewhat away.
      Back to the servants, there was a kitchen boy who was removed from the house a bit before the execution. Which also points out that maybe they did offer the other staff to leave too. Tough, Yurovsky seems to only have reported about the doctor.
      Additionally, the family had more staff which did not travel with them to their final stay. Some of that staff remained alive and even wrote memoirs which are part of the current day knowledge we have on the family.
      In this very video you had Pierre Gilliard mentioned has visiting the wanabe Anastasia years after. This Pierre was none other than the kids former french teacher. He had been with the family up till their imprisonment at Tobolsk. Lucky him, he did not go with them in their last journey to the Ipatiev house.
      Here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Gilliard

  • @missyrose2154
    @missyrose2154 Před 2 lety +376

    For me the fascination comes from so many things … the fairy tale lives of the Romanovs, the love story between Nicholas and Alexandra, The innocence of the children , the creepiness and “super strength” of Rasputin, the family’s grisly murders , fake Anastasia’s and of course the long held mystery of if one of the girls survived before their skeletons were ultimately recovered. If it didn’t really happen you would think it was all made up in a book…

    • @mousermind
      @mousermind Před 10 měsíci +5

      *fake Anastasias
      You don't add an apostrophe, because that would make it singular possessive or a contraction, not plural.

  • @SouthernGothicYT
    @SouthernGothicYT Před 4 lety +5036

    Florida man is chosen over the FBI to identify the Romanov remains. We live in the best timeline

    • @lildramatic4760
      @lildramatic4760 Před 4 lety +106

      i mean a timeline where kids weren’t shot would be nice. maybe one where Russia got its act together before nicholas even took the throne?
      but yeah. florida man > FBI? maybe. that’s the scary part.

    • @SouthernGothicYT
      @SouthernGothicYT Před 4 lety +76

      @@lildramatic4760 Being facetious on the "best" part. More like craziest but whatever floats your boat

    • @lynnharvard2927
      @lynnharvard2927 Před 4 lety +116

      Florida man is a well known forensics anthropologist- I have read his book on all the cases he worked on, and he very much knew what he was doing(The book is "Dead men do tell tales", its a very good read ^_^)

    • @felixhenson9926
      @felixhenson9926 Před 4 lety +41

      Largely because they were trying to build communism and America is not the biggest fan of that and has a teensy tendency to screw with those sorts of plans.

    • @lynnharvard2927
      @lynnharvard2927 Před 4 lety +7

      @@felixhenson9926 yeah XD plus this was when we were getting out of the cold war, I do beleive...so.. theres also that XD

  • @graybe.x
    @graybe.x Před 4 lety +2570

    "We were working on molecular genetic testing at one time... Then Mr. Stalin shot the entire team. As a result, we began lagging behind" So passive agressive I love it

    • @BBFirefly420
      @BBFirefly420 Před 4 lety +67

      I couldnt help but laugh at this. 😂

    • @julianndavis9415
      @julianndavis9415 Před 4 lety +13

      Graybe not that Stalin anything WRONG mind you. Just sayin

    • @viridianstar
      @viridianstar Před 4 lety +39

      Graybe It’s so wonderfully Russian.

    • @hoho7029
      @hoho7029 Před 4 lety +4

      say it on tinder- bam gang bang

    • @usagi2934
      @usagi2934 Před 4 lety +3

      Probably has happened before

  • @zanderisamazing5043
    @zanderisamazing5043 Před 2 lety +540

    I have to admit to being heartbroken when I heard Anastasia had definitely died and had lain in an unmarked grave for so long. It was a hopeful story that she had escaped

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield Před 11 měsíci +12

      And all those sightings turned out to be false

    • @daniel_sc1024
      @daniel_sc1024 Před 10 měsíci +23

      When you read what actually happened, it's impossible to believe anyone could have survived, much less escaped.

    • @hollydaugherty2620
      @hollydaugherty2620 Před 4 měsíci +2

      if you knew anything at all about Anastasia and her siblings, you would know she wouldn't have wanted to live after losing her family.

    • @belphegor_tv
      @belphegor_tv Před 2 měsíci +1

      No one who actually studied what happened thought that she was alive.

  • @RatchelRach
    @RatchelRach Před rokem +129

    The story of Anastasia seems like a happily ever after fairy tale but when you know the truth it's actually really tragic

  • @laundromat003
    @laundromat003 Před 4 lety +3690

    “Stalin did do things like that... it’s one of the problems with Stalin” LOLOL

    • @kstewskis
      @kstewskis Před 4 lety +70

      laundromat understatement of the century!

    • @katelynlong4190
      @katelynlong4190 Před 4 lety +31

      I literally laughed out loud at that

    • @davidmarquardt2445
      @davidmarquardt2445 Před 4 lety +37

      Stalin's political philosophy was that there was no problem that could not be solved through the application of high velocity lead poisoning, aka; a bullet in the head!
      Also the Ural Mountains run in a north/south line and are considered the geographic boundary between Europe and Asia, so west of the Ural's is Europe/east Asia. Some 42 years later Yekaterinburg (later Sverdlovsk) pops up in history again when the U-2 was shot down on May 1st 1960.

    • @melmelhodgepodge3800
      @melmelhodgepodge3800 Před 4 lety +92

      It's kinda funny, if Stalin didn't kill all the doctors in Russia he probably would have survived his stroke.

    • @melmelhodgepodge3800
      @melmelhodgepodge3800 Před 4 lety +58

      @@laundromat003 the irony around his death was so thick it probably was the clot that caused the stroke.

  • @breannaperkins88
    @breannaperkins88 Před 4 lety +5000

    I don't remember his name but there was this famous composer who loved Shakespeare's Hamlet so much that when he died he donated his skull to The Royal Shakespearean Theatre so they could use it for the "Alas, poor Yorick" scene. So, if you know who he is, I would like him to be your next Iconic Corpse please.

    • @arianedennison2395
      @arianedennison2395 Před 4 lety +247

      Nice suggestion I must say! I hope she does look into it for us. That topic sounds interesting

    • @Llixgrijb
      @Llixgrijb Před 4 lety +591

      Great suggestion! It was pianist Andre Tchaikowsky.

    • @breannaperkins88
      @breannaperkins88 Před 4 lety +44

      @@Llixgrijb Thank you

    • @adhdswamphag
      @adhdswamphag Před 4 lety +19

      Cool suggestion!

    • @fenris610
      @fenris610 Před 4 lety +97

      omg i've never heard of this! that's a dedicated stan if i've ever seen one 😂

  • @Arthur_url
    @Arthur_url Před 10 měsíci +49

    This video made me way more sad that I thought it would, damn :/ That picture of the basement wall completely destroyed sent chills down my spine. I hope they're resting in a better place now, no one deserves to die like that, specially the children

    • @femcel_estia8013
      @femcel_estia8013 Před 8 měsíci

      I'm sure the anti semite family who planned pogroms did not diserve to be shot

    • @authorofone
      @authorofone Před měsícem

      That wall did not look like that immediately post execution. It was torn apart because Lenin wanted to know exactly how many bullets were fired etc.

  • @herenyahope8745
    @herenyahope8745 Před rokem +17

    That little video clip of the sisters running with Alexi between them breaks my heart. A sweet little sick boy doted on by his sisters. Say what you will about the czar but a dictators children don’t deserve the same punishment unless they are adults and actively involved in their parents crimes

  • @stellarstarrs3219
    @stellarstarrs3219 Před 4 lety +6004

    I was named after the movie Anastasia. Boy, imagine my horror when I found out what actually happened to Anastasia

    • @pyroshayniac1090
      @pyroshayniac1090 Před 3 lety +222

      Did your inner goddess stamp her foot in indignation?

    • @NoNo-pg5rq
      @NoNo-pg5rq Před 3 lety +152

      For a few years now, I was planning to name my future daughter after Anastasia since I have a bond with the Century Fox movie

    • @stellarstarrs3219
      @stellarstarrs3219 Před 3 lety +193

      @@NoNo-pg5rq most people don't know about the Romanovs and just see it as a really pretty name

    • @NoNo-pg5rq
      @NoNo-pg5rq Před 3 lety +93

      Stellar Starrs I think I discovered the name Anastasia after the movie. But yeah it’s still a really pretty name

    • @renataapatataa8853
      @renataapatataa8853 Před 3 lety +44

      Grandmama,, its me

  • @L_R2106
    @L_R2106 Před 4 lety +8726

    Scientists: we tested the two new bodies for Romanov DNA.
    The church: yep.
    Scientists: the two new bodies match the Romanovs.
    The church: yep.
    Scientists: therefore, the two new bodies must be the missing Romanov children.
    The church: that makes sense.
    Scientists: so put them in the family tomb.
    The church: but they're not Romanovs.

    • @RezaChity-G
      @RezaChity-G Před 4 lety +181

      That is funny

    • @ciel9112
      @ciel9112 Před 4 lety +389

      I see that incognito Spongebob reference, and I salute you

    • @teogonzalez7957
      @teogonzalez7957 Před 4 lety +336

      Theodore Macewko sir... this is a Wendy’s.

    • @yoongischubbycheeks2544
      @yoongischubbycheeks2544 Před 4 lety +77

      Tereigh Keating-Hart....sir you’re talking to an empty cup

    • @KittyFAN13
      @KittyFAN13 Před 4 lety +16

      @Theodore Macewko Say sike, right now.

  • @cybergyaru8144
    @cybergyaru8144 Před 7 měsíci +28

    As a Russian I’m very thankful ❤ you made this legend feels so real and vibrant! You are an amazing person and talented speaker! Love your videos with my whole heart ❤️

  • @emo-chan8015
    @emo-chan8015 Před 7 měsíci +52

    I had great grandparents who were Ukrainian. My great great grandfather was a cosack. They got out of Russian on 1903 Great timing. I'm glad that you mentioned the four retainers who died with them. They get ommited from history a lot. I have always been fascinated with the deaths of the Romanovs. And even more so about what happened to the bodies of the three servants and the doctor after they were found. I had heard that the relatives of the tzar had said "these people died with the family, they should be buried with them ". Or were the servants buried in separate graves? I've looked on the internet but found nothing. Would you happen to know what their fate was?

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 Před 4 lety +2989

    The funny thing about the legacy of the Romanovs is that for near a century, the Soviet Union wanted to erase the Romanovs from history and yet when their remains are found, the family were canonized as saints. Guess the Romanovs had their last laugh.

    • @besos4169
      @besos4169 Před 4 lety +27

      The romanov are dead and rotten under ground FUCKING LMAO

    • @besos4169
      @besos4169 Před 4 lety +10

      The romanovs are dead and rotten underground

    • @peacheekeen5244
      @peacheekeen5244 Před 4 lety +227

      Paloma Rufete yea but their legacy isn’t

    • @jtdavis598
      @jtdavis598 Před 4 lety +243

      @@besos4169 So is the Soviet Union.

    • @crackedstar9992
      @crackedstar9992 Před 4 lety +45

      @@jtdavis598 🔥🔥🔥

  • @taiyo888
    @taiyo888 Před 3 lety +2352

    Its also rumored that Yurovsky's men also got really drunk before the execution to better deal with what they were about to do, so their aim was made even... more awful.

    • @LammasDeluge
      @LammasDeluge Před 3 lety +222

      That always gets to me when people talk about executing someone. What happens to you, mentally and spiritually, when your job is to kill people?

    • @jimwilliams4532
      @jimwilliams4532 Před 3 lety +200

      I can't blame them. If I had to kill those children or be killed myself knowing they would die anyway I would have had to have been drunk first and probably would have been a drunk for life dealing with it.

    • @LammasDeluge
      @LammasDeluge Před 3 lety +88

      @@jimwilliams4532 Honestly, I would have just shot myself at that point. I would rather die than live the rest of my life as an alcoholic, trying to drink away the memories of murdering children.

    • @Lordovich
      @Lordovich Před 3 lety +101

      @@LammasDeluge One of Stalin's executioners lost it for a little bit during the worst of the purges, and during the Katyn massacre, where they killed thousands in just a few days, they had to drink very hard. I would wager a guess that it takes a severe mental toll on most people.

    • @LammasDeluge
      @LammasDeluge Před 3 lety +81

      @@jimwilliams4532 Actually, I've decided that if I was in that situation, I would shoot at my commander. At least try to take out the evil fuck if I'm going to kill myself anyway.

  • @maryanneslater9675
    @maryanneslater9675 Před 2 lety +68

    I read Dr. William Maples book _Dead Men Do Tell Tales_ back in the '90s. He was a good storyteller too. I remember he wrote that he was sure the Russian anthropologist had mixed up some of Nicholas' bones with those of his valet, but added that the arms and hands of the valet had served Nicholas in life and it was all right if they did so in death. I also remember that he was impressed with Alexandra's dental work -- gold and porcelain crowns. Nicholas was scared of dentists and his teeth were bad.

    • @rdwright6708
      @rdwright6708 Před rokem +6

      According to Dr. Maple's book, Alexandra's dental work was actually PLATINUM! The servants could afford merely gold.

  • @smartpersonjdt
    @smartpersonjdt Před 3 lety +86

    I loved the movie Anastasia as a kid and it lead me to research into what really happened to her. All these years later I'm still reading books and watching films and documentaries about the Romanovs. Very interesting video and very informative! I'll have to check out your other content!

    • @emo-chan8015
      @emo-chan8015 Před 7 měsíci

      The truth is vastly different from the movies isn't it?

    • @WhistleAndSnap
      @WhistleAndSnap Před 4 měsíci +3

      Oh hey, me too! Fascinated to this day. It just resonates with me, ya know? It's amazing, actually, how as I learn and grow and the world around me changes, my feelings on the subject have also metamorphosed. I have a lot less sympathy for Nicholas II and Alexandra than I used to. Nicholas was a shitty dude in quite a few respects - it goes beyond mere incompetence. He actively hated Jewish people and was privately pleased with the brutal pogroms that took place against them in Russia. He also held a grudge against Japan, viewing the Japanese people as small, effeminate, and weak. He spread those bigoted views to his kids, who cheerfully parroted his bullshit during the Russo-Japanese War, saying stuff like they hoped all the Japanese people died and that they were strange "little people" who did bad things, sinking the Russian peoples' ships and killing their sailors.
      I don't blame the kids for that - they were being fed propaganda during a time of war, and they were very young at the the time, and very sheltered. Plus, when their governess Margareta Eager explained to one of the daughters, Olga, that the Japanese people weren't all bad, and specifically the women and children didn't deserve death (which is still not a great viewpoint, but it's a step up from 'i hope all the Japanese die') Olga actually listened, took it to heart, and admitted she didn't realize the Japanese were also people - she thought they were more like monkeys or something.
      So... yeah. I could go on and on about the bullshit of Nicholas and Alexandra. I still feel bad for them though, and acknowledge that they were human. They had redeeming qualities, but we definitely shouldn't gloss over the bad shit.

    • @smartpersonjdt
      @smartpersonjdt Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@WhistleAndSnap Yeah that kind of speaks for itself. Nicholas and Alexandra were so incompetent and ignorant about the people that they supposedly served it's insane, but their story is so interesting because so many factors came together to create the perfect storm that ended up destroying their lives. It's been romanticized a lot but the actual raw history of it is still very fascinating.

  • @wwehurricane1
    @wwehurricane1 Před 3 lety +4140

    This year on the anniversary of the massacre, the church announced their "additional testing" had confirmed the identities of the remains. Now, hopefully, the family can be laid to rest.

    • @mirjanbouma
      @mirjanbouma Před 3 lety +72

      That would be nice.

    • @stacyrussell460
      @stacyrussell460 Před 3 lety +225

      That would be the honorable thing to do. Then they'll finally be together again & perhaps at peace. After more than 100 years, they deserve that much.

    • @LammasDeluge
      @LammasDeluge Před 3 lety +206

      @Right Hand I learned about the fate of the Romanov family when I was 10 years old because I was very determined to try to figure out why the world is so fucked up and decided I had to look at major shifts of power throughout history. I remember I was so incredibly horrified to know what was done to those children out of anger at their parents. The fact that people are so willing to kill people they believe have wronged them is already insane, but to kill innocent children too? To believe a child can be worthy of death because of a "tainted bloodline"? The murder of Marie Antoinette's children was just as insane. Revolutions start with good reasons and good intentions, but always lead to the most cruel acts of violence in the name of progress.

    • @LammasDeluge
      @LammasDeluge Před 3 lety +44

      @Right Hand I'm an atheist, but I can definitely relate to the desire for justice against cruel people.

    • @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult
      @AmandaVieiraMamaesouCult Před 3 lety +134

      @@LammasDeluge And they killed the servants too. Weren't they supposed to act in service of the working class?

  • @geowynleda4641
    @geowynleda4641 Před 4 lety +3835

    That wasn't an execution, that was a massacre.

    • @munadorgham5287
      @munadorgham5287 Před 4 lety +156

      Yep. While watching I thought "this is one of the most clumsy 'executions' i have ever seen! Wtf!?"

    • @unhappybacon3292
      @unhappybacon3292 Před 4 lety +26

      @@munadorgham5287 So you've seen clumsy executions before? Tell me more!

    • @munadorgham5287
      @munadorgham5287 Před 4 lety +86

      @@unhappybacon3292 I plead the fifth

    • @unhappybacon3292
      @unhappybacon3292 Před 4 lety +7

      @@munadorgham5287 Hmmmmmm

    • @Mastermint
      @Mastermint Před 4 lety +5

      is there a difference?

  • @milozimben
    @milozimben Před 2 lety +33

    "So there are these two skeletons found in the same place as all the other Romanovs, they are in the perfect age ranges to be Alexei and Maria, and our examinations put the likelihood of that being the case at 8,000,000,000,000 to 1 for Alexei and 4,000,000,000,000 to 1 for Maria"
    Russian Orthodox Church: "Yeah, not convinced"

  • @jacoboleary9076
    @jacoboleary9076 Před 2 lety +244

    All this horror is even more heartbreaking because, ultimately, things never really got better for the Russian people, and all these years later they're back to absolute rule. At least they've got vodka?

    • @AldoSchmedack
      @AldoSchmedack Před 2 lety +4

      Communism sucks!

    • @thedriszen8350
      @thedriszen8350 Před 2 lety +19

      All the more reason for those of us in the west, who have come to value our democratic equality/values, to resist our own growing radicalism and extremes on both sides.

    • @jacoboleary9076
      @jacoboleary9076 Před 2 lety

      @@thedriszen8350 take your both sides bulls**t elsewhere

    • @peacenow42
      @peacenow42 Před rokem +3

      which unfortunately is basically their number one cause of death in men in particular.

    • @peacenow42
      @peacenow42 Před rokem +3

      @@thedriszen8350 all the more resean for us to practice tolerance

  • @pyroshayniac1090
    @pyroshayniac1090 Před 4 lety +785

    That's just sad. As a person, to another person. It's a terrible way to die.

    • @vilwarin5635
      @vilwarin5635 Před 4 lety +61

      Yeah, it would´ve been more human just to tell them to look at the wall and shoot them in the head. That bloodbath seemed more like a revenge than anything else.

    • @pyroshayniac1090
      @pyroshayniac1090 Před 4 lety +29

      @@vilwarin5635 Hearing it described just broke my heart for the family.

    • @chriscash7779
      @chriscash7779 Před 4 lety +8

      ...history....it can be ugly. But, by now, some have learned better n some have not. One of those damn things in the world. You know??? Take care.🤗🤔🧐✌

    • @TobiBaronski
      @TobiBaronski Před 4 lety +13

      Fuck communists

    • @anonymous-vg7kc
      @anonymous-vg7kc Před 4 lety +3

      @@TobiBaronski fuck you

  • @xianbc
    @xianbc Před 4 lety +1771

    I'd really like to see you cover the Jonestown dead. Most of the coverage of Jonestown discusses what happened up until the deaths but what happened after is just as intriguing.

    • @JustPeachy998
      @JustPeachy998 Před 4 lety +109

      That's an excellent idea! While I know about Jonestown, your comment made me realize I don't have a clue as to what happened after! I could tell you about Jim Jones' childhood, his former jobs, how the cult began, rose, and ended....yet I couldn't tell you what happened to the deceased. Caitlin, I hope you'll consider xlanbc's idea because it's an awesome one!

    • @seaturtlepoppy7679
      @seaturtlepoppy7679 Před 4 lety +46

      I know that only maybe six were actually identified with maybe a couple of autopsies. Everyone else was loaded one on top of the other and carried away. There is a memorial in Oakland, CA but I highly doubt any remains are there. I wouldn’t be surprised if they were buried in a mass grave and/or cremated. “Raven” is a really good book (forgot author and too lazy to look up) and “The Road to Jonestown” by Jeff Guin is on my TBR list. And there are numerous documentaries - I think Netflix or Prime has one that uses a lot of re-enactments so it’s more like watching a regular show (or was that the History Channel ...?). This is my very long winded way of saying “Maybe these will have an answer.”

    • @xianbc
      @xianbc Před 4 lety +13

      @@seaturtlepoppy7679 thanks I'll check.those out. I've actually read quite a bit about it, I'd just love to see Caitlin's take.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před 4 lety +37

      @Shirley Bailey - The Johnstown flood was indeed horrid. However, the Jonestown mass murder/suicide was a different event altogether, also horrid.

    • @caramellopippop7190
      @caramellopippop7190 Před 4 lety +39

      She actually covered it in her podcast "Death in the Morning." It was episode "Don't Drink the Koolaid." :)

  • @marielfalk4537
    @marielfalk4537 Před 2 lety +42

    To be fair, the British monarchy was fighting for it's own survival, as were most monarchies at that time. The two cousins were very close and King George did not easily make the decision to refuse refuge in England to the Romanovs.

    • @moesypittounikos
      @moesypittounikos Před 5 měsíci +3

      I doubt the Royal family was bothered abou public opinion back then. They had the power to bring their Russian relatives to the UK but a higher power blocked them.

    • @frances-if5fp
      @frances-if5fp Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@moesypittounikosWhat higher power?

    • @SymphonyBrahms
      @SymphonyBrahms Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@frances-if5fp The Prime Minister and Parliament forbade the king to bring the Romanovs to England .And in England, the Prime Minister and Parliament have all of the power. The king or queen are only ceremonial. It's been that way since 1688, when the Parliament deposed KIng James and appointed William and Mary to rule.

    • @frances-if5fp
      @frances-if5fp Před 3 měsíci

      @@SymphonyBrahms Thank you 👍🏽

  • @doxielvr8336
    @doxielvr8336 Před 2 lety +12

    If I had had a teacher like Caitlin when I was in school, I might have actually liked learning about history. As it was, it was taught in an incredibly uninspiring and boring way, which led me to avoid taking history classes whenever I could. Way to go Caitlin. You've reawakened a hunger I didn't even know I have.

  • @Ravierave
    @Ravierave Před 4 lety +696

    Absolutely awful. I can’t imagine the panic and fear they must’ve felt

    • @kaeragriffin4323
      @kaeragriffin4323 Před 4 lety +46

      Truly. Twenty minutes? Jesus.

    • @camvin575
      @camvin575 Před 4 lety +22

      I no, the terror they must've felt is disturbing to think about.

    • @Ravierave
      @Ravierave Před 4 lety +8

      quærēns I mean sure, yea, in order for a revolution to occur it helps to fully dispose of the previous rulers. But uh....it’s not like the starvation and stuff exactly went away after the regime change 😬

    • @Sirzhukov
      @Sirzhukov Před 4 lety +5

      @@Ravierave this is a bit condescending, don't you think? It is easy to judge from the position of your modern, sheltered first world man, for sure. Now think about the horrible, oppressive regime that persisted for generations, with total technological and political stagnation. Heck, even with the military stigma of the Paper Tiger. Royal family had to go. It wasn't the first monarchy that was executed with utmost prejudice and bolsheviks weren't the ones who came up with the idea to shoot the Family either. And, yes, USSR was totally an improvement compared to the previous regime. For a western man, who had years of political and social development behind his back, it was still a totalitarian despotism, no question in that. But for Russians it was certainly the move forward.

    • @KittyFAN13
      @KittyFAN13 Před 4 lety +11

      @@Sirzhukov Still doesn't mean that the Romenov's deserved every single bullet put into them.

  • @SahajSoldier
    @SahajSoldier Před 3 lety +2520

    I bet the guard who's intuition was telling him to let the family free felt terrible after he learned their fate.

    • @greywolf7577
      @greywolf7577 Před 3 lety +220

      I guess, but even if they escaped the house, where would they go? Everyone for a hundred miles around hated them. They wouldn't have been able to make it anywhere safe before being captured or killed.

    • @lunaticedits637
      @lunaticedits637 Před 3 lety +165

      @@greywolf7577 and who knows, even if anastasia escaped she could have had an even worse death by the hands of people who hated the czars. (raped and then killed)

    • @spiderlegs50
      @spiderlegs50 Před 3 lety +35

      I couldn't have that hanging over my head like a dark cloud.......

    • @robinlrice
      @robinlrice Před 3 lety +111

      @@greywolf7577 they were most definitely not hated by "most people" around... their biggest critics were in St Petersburg, due to propaganda by the terrorist organization, aka the Bolsheviks.

    • @matheusd.rodrigues429
      @matheusd.rodrigues429 Před 3 lety +33

      @@robinlrice The Tsar himself said he would go anywhere but Yekaterinburg.

  • @_Fizel_
    @_Fizel_ Před 2 lety +24

    I just realized after watching this several times that the reason that people believed a daughter escaped is because they knew that Alexei would have been killed as well because of his heritage. Even though two bodies were missing, which one was for sure Alexei because it would have been very obvious he wasn't in the initial grave.

  • @alexisrodriguez2801
    @alexisrodriguez2801 Před 2 lety +19

    I just want to say that this is by far one of the most entertaining videos about historical figures that I have ever seen.
    EXCELLENT WORK.

  • @ladygrace7585
    @ladygrace7585 Před 4 lety +1104

    Those children really didn't deserve any of what happened to them, and I hope those last two children are eventually buried with their family

    • @Dotnotaspeck
      @Dotnotaspeck Před 4 lety +38

      They were. They were also canonized and interred in Church of the Resurrection in the Kremlin (I was there in 1993 and saw their coffins) . Anastasia had just been added to that about 2 months before I got there if I remember right. It was very beautiful.

    • @JohnSmith-ft4gc
      @JohnSmith-ft4gc Před 4 lety +3

      @Jason Voorheese How were they criminals? They wrote the laws, just like the capitalists do now.

    • @JohnSmith-ft4gc
      @JohnSmith-ft4gc Před 4 lety +35

      @Otto Sump Do the lives of common russians dead because of the autocracy even rate to you? The children were both products & victims of their birth - they did NOT deserve to die. But neither did striking workers or soldiers conscripted to fight against workers in other countries.
      The Tsar had the most capacity to look deeper into what was going on & he chose not to. He was THE most powerful man in the country prior to the revolution - yet STILL you absolve him of responsibility. This continuing worship of royalty demonstrates the need to extinguish it. Wars of restoration have to be prevented as far more lives of people with far less responsibility would die.
      The royal family were a liability to peace.

    • @JohnSmith-ft4gc
      @JohnSmith-ft4gc Před 4 lety +9

      @Jason Voorheese The uploader covered that. The bolsheviks were in charge of the territory they controlled militarily. A Civil War is a state of emergency. The Royals continued existence if freed could be a cause of restoration war. Their lives were insigificant in comparison to the lives their continuing existence would put in peril. They had to die. Deal with it.
      If the children were too young to understand & remember, they could have been adopted out & spared.

    • @JohnSmith-ft4gc
      @JohnSmith-ft4gc Před 4 lety +27

      @Jason Voorheese "....a group of jews...."
      Oh - you're one of THOSE people. The person that brought about that dark era of history was Stalin, and he was one of you - he didn't like jews either.

  • @remyn.9198
    @remyn.9198 Před 4 lety +1385

    My god, what happened to this family was extremely cruel. I cannot even imagine how terrified they were especially the children.

    • @jennifermcgoldrick6323
      @jennifermcgoldrick6323 Před 4 lety +81

      Remy N. They had the opportunity to leave months earlier but the mother wouldn’t leave because some of the children had been ill (I forget if it was tb or what, plus the boy was a hemophiliac). Ended up being a deadly decision. By the time they were ready to leave, their cousins in England, George VI and family, were afraid to help them.

    • @remyn.9198
      @remyn.9198 Před 4 lety +56

      @@jennifermcgoldrick6323 This story just hurts my heart, they should have at least spared the children.

    • @jennifermcgoldrick6323
      @jennifermcgoldrick6323 Před 4 lety +47

      Remy N. Yes, but when it comes to royals they never do. Look what’s happening in Saudi Arabia right now. No one should ever want to be a royal, not that the children had any choice in the matter.

    • @FillaneAmmisto
      @FillaneAmmisto Před 4 lety +89

      @@remyn.9198 sadly it wasn't an real option. Keeping the children alive would give them the possibility to claim the right to the throne one day and since the royal family still had support and relatives in other countries, the new government couldn't risk to keep any flame of hope alive.
      Revolutions in Europe were damn cruel. The French one was even bloodier than the russian

    •  Před 4 lety +15

      welcome to communism

  • @starlite04
    @starlite04 Před rokem +16

    The way the Romanovs were murdered was just horrific.

    • @tysondennis1016
      @tysondennis1016 Před 7 měsíci

      Imagine that killer’s smug ass face being the last thing you see.

  • @RoxxiRockstar
    @RoxxiRockstar Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks so much for this. I've been looking for a comprehensive synopsis of this story for years. I know you make it look easy but you did all the work science and history. Love it and love you!

  • @laureljade3476
    @laureljade3476 Před 3 lety +1116

    "we were working on molecular genetic testing at one time, then Mr. Stalin shot the entire team...as a result, we've been lagging behind"

    • @kugelblitzkrieg
      @kugelblitzkrieg Před 3 lety +114

      Luckily, Stalin got what he deserved. Because of the Doctor’s Plot executions and the fear his underlings had toward him, he died of a stroke with nobody there to help him.
      He literally got a taste (or more accurately the lack of a taste) of his own medicine.

    • @ifacro
      @ifacro Před 3 lety +78

      They were stallin'

    • @minstrelcat1951
      @minstrelcat1951 Před 3 lety +28

      @@ifacro I feel bad for gigglesnorting so loudly at that 🤣🤣

    • @BiG-JuPO1O1
      @BiG-JuPO1O1 Před 2 lety +33

      @@kugelblitzkrieg That what Stalin gets lol. Lenin did say to never let Stalin get anywhere near in power before he died.

    • @ciaobella65
      @ciaobella65 Před 2 lety

      🤣🤣

  • @elinakhaneeva458
    @elinakhaneeva458 Před 4 lety +772

    You’ve actually done a decent job pronouncing my hometown’s name, Caitlin! Yes, you have a fan from Yekaterinburg and I would be honored to have you come visit and take you to some places connected with Romanov’s last days. :)

    • @TheChelseaCate
      @TheChelseaCate Před 4 lety +5

      Elina Khaneeva HEY! I know you!!! haha ❤️❤️❤️

    • @saoirserosenstock8144
      @saoirserosenstock8144 Před 4 lety +3

      My best friend Maria Zatsova was adopted from there! X

    • @elizabethsisco4946
      @elizabethsisco4946 Před 4 lety +4

      That would be so cool. Russia and England are on my bucket list

    • @michellebaker6302
      @michellebaker6302 Před 4 lety +3

      @@elizabethsisco4946 Add Ireland! My fave place ever. Going back in not too long! Gorgeous, friendly, full of history.

    • @fotofemale1
      @fotofemale1 Před 4 lety +3

      Elina, I actually know someone from there too, but I thought it was pronounced like Yehk-a-terin-burgh. No?

  • @tessmccue9859
    @tessmccue9859 Před 2 lety +1

    OUTSTANDING RESEARCH AND PRESENTATION!! Kaitlin..you knocked this on out of the Ballpark!! WOW!

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for the extra links to investigate! I love reading more in-depth on subjects I watch videos about!

  • @faisalfajar4119
    @faisalfajar4119 Před 3 lety +1417

    "they trusted Yurovsky" somehow give me goosebumps, it's just very sad.

    • @taraswertelecki3786
      @taraswertelecki3786 Před 2 lety +20

      Yet I can see from photos of him that I would not trust him for a moment.

    • @ashsummermakaio4756
      @ashsummermakaio4756 Před rokem +8

      To comfort you, and humanize Yurovsky, the Romanov family (except from the kids) weren’t innocents. The horrible things they made the people go through was enough to fill them with rage to the point of celebrating something like this. Think of the French Revolution.

    • @peacenow42
      @peacenow42 Před rokem +17

      @@ashsummermakaio4756 the children had done no such things. Why you want to make Yurovsky seem more 'human' is beyond me, care to explain?

    • @ashsummermakaio4756
      @ashsummermakaio4756 Před rokem +2

      @@peacenow42 I'm not justifying what was done to the kids, read it again. I'm just explaining how someone can be so cold blooded to the point of doing something like this. And I want to humanize him because he was a human.

    • @peacenow42
      @peacenow42 Před rokem +9

      @@ashsummermakaio4756 I think you had no intention of justifying what happened to the kids by humanizing their murderer. But you did. That's my opinion only. With all due respect.
      He was a monster. The Czar had resigned. Yurovsky tried to gain their trust. He tricked them. He allowed them no time to even say their goodbyes. This is NOT how humans should behave nor should we ''humanize'' them posthumously without risking another human thinking it is ok to behave like this monster did. Words are powerful and have consequences. I do not mean to offend you but as I look around me right now I see people behaving just as monstrously. If you had said you wanted to humanize him to prevent such tragedies, this I could understand.

  • @cheeserocks89
    @cheeserocks89 Před 4 lety +770

    As a kid, the Anastasia movie gave me so much hope she had survived. Imagine my heartbreak when I found out that she died so terribly with her family. Yep, I was a wreck. I loved this episode!!

    • @seaturtlepoppy7679
      @seaturtlepoppy7679 Před 4 lety +15

      Katherine - that sounds incredibly sad. How old were you when you found out?

    • @cheeserocks89
      @cheeserocks89 Před 4 lety +55

      @@seaturtlepoppy7679 I was about 10, I was doing a report on her and I found a book that had all the gory details.

    • @seaturtlepoppy7679
      @seaturtlepoppy7679 Před 4 lety +12

      Katherine - I can see how that would have left an impact on you.

    • @theresacherco9543
      @theresacherco9543 Před 4 lety +7

      I also thought that to as a kid

    • @earthrocker48
      @earthrocker48 Před 4 lety

      Katherine you should see the sadness in the fandom of the History anime of Hetalia. The Russia character is so loved and we all cry when the movie is mentioned.

  • @heidicrimmings9615
    @heidicrimmings9615 Před 2 lety +1

    I've just discovered this. WOW. I've always been fascinated with this story...Thank you.

  • @WCM1945
    @WCM1945 Před 2 lety +30

    So sad, that the cruelty was extended so far beyond their deaths. And disappointed about Anastasia, I so wanted her to be real.

    • @emo-chan8015
      @emo-chan8015 Před 5 měsíci +1

      She was real. The legend wasn't.

  • @josephschultz3301
    @josephschultz3301 Před 3 lety +3427

    Guard: "All of my evil thoughts about the Tsar disappeared after I had stayed a certain time. I began to pity them as human beings. I kept saying to myself, 'Let them escape. Do something to let them escape.'"
    That's just fucking heartbreaking, yo.

    • @YouDontKnowAsMuchAsYouThinkUDo
      @YouDontKnowAsMuchAsYouThinkUDo Před 3 lety +29

      Welcome to THE REAL WORLD. Life is not a Martha Stewart episode...never has been, never will be.

    • @skarlettsapphire4065
      @skarlettsapphire4065 Před 3 lety +254

      @@YouDontKnowAsMuchAsYouThinkUDo Doesn't mean we've gotta keep it that way tho.

    • @Mollymauking
      @Mollymauking Před 3 lety +150

      @@YouDontKnowAsMuchAsYouThinkUDo username checks out.

    • @reneeshires5501
      @reneeshires5501 Před 2 lety +2

      @@YouDontKnowAsMuchAsYouThinkUDop

    • @MatthewChenault
      @MatthewChenault Před 2 lety +68

      Now repeat that same scene for decades and for countless millions of people and you can appreciate the true scale of the atrocities the Soviets inflicted upon Russia.

  • @rachelhall5522
    @rachelhall5522 Před 4 lety +316

    Sad that the last two are not buried with the rest of their family.

  • @marvlb
    @marvlb Před 2 lety +6

    You do unbelievable historical research and the presentation is top notch, but in reality I’d be spooked to be around you in person!

  • @shaelynnmoon8842
    @shaelynnmoon8842 Před rokem +4

    Just my 2nd video but really love your channel. Totally love the way you mix history in with your death stuff. I learned a lot I didn't know before.

  • @roecocoa
    @roecocoa Před 4 lety +271

    My power-barfing hazes have never led anywhere this interesting.

    • @AvgJane19
      @AvgJane19 Před 4 lety +7

      You and your barf will get there... one day

    • @DieAlteistwiederda
      @DieAlteistwiederda Před 4 lety +4

      I got food poisoning twice and one of them I was so delirious that I just kind of came up with that awesome plot for a story I kind of might have hallucinated during that power barfing haze and exhaustion.

    • @Hunter-co3hg
      @Hunter-co3hg Před 4 lety +4

      Mine led me into a deep investigation of Johnny Gosch

    • @chriscash7779
      @chriscash7779 Před 4 lety +1

      ...zat like power pooping???🤗💩🎃😂🕊👻💩

    • @maneckineckbeard1749
      @maneckineckbeard1749 Před 3 lety

      Have you tried going to India? It's like a power-barfing pilgrimage spot!

  • @lutinlaut
    @lutinlaut Před 3 lety +1875

    I can only imagine the terror cursing through the fathers veins when he got shot, his last thought probably just panic aimed towards the well-being of his family. I know too little about politcs and what either side of the afflicted patries did to anger the other or such, but I am so very sad that five children had to die so tragically and brutally.

    • @pedrocavalcantesantana7378
      @pedrocavalcantesantana7378 Před 3 lety +91

      From all the people in this story, the father is the only one who doesn't deserve any of your pitty

    • @oscarc.3597
      @oscarc.3597 Před 3 lety +180

      @@pedrocavalcantesantana7378 The father was a really incompetent leader, but he was not a bad person.

    • @pedrocavalcantesantana7378
      @pedrocavalcantesantana7378 Před 3 lety +67

      @@oscarc.3597 tell that to the people who were shot in the street due to him

    • @oscarc.3597
      @oscarc.3597 Před 3 lety +79

      @@pedrocavalcantesantana7378 He didn't give the order.

    • @pedrocavalcantesantana7378
      @pedrocavalcantesantana7378 Před 3 lety +35

      @@oscarc.3597 it happened ynder his order, due to his incompetence

  • @markrosenberger6602
    @markrosenberger6602 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow!
    Thank you so VERY much for your time and effort! I find this so very fascinating!

  • @gotohellenwaite6371
    @gotohellenwaite6371 Před 2 lety +3

    The world needs history teachers like you! Thank you

  • @shanetaylor563
    @shanetaylor563 Před 4 lety +685

    Caitlin: If your thing is genetic mutation and DNA testing, we'll link those sources below
    Me, a molecular biologist: awwww yissss

    • @diamondsngunns88
      @diamondsngunns88 Před 4 lety +6

      🔥🔥🔥

    • @chriscash7779
      @chriscash7779 Před 4 lety +2

      LMFAO!!!!! 🤗🕊🦅

    • @litbopeep5726
      @litbopeep5726 Před 4 lety +3

      Woah youre smart.
      Im a stripper lol.

    • @BarbieBando
      @BarbieBando Před 4 lety +20

      Lit BoPeep *Strippers can be smart too 🖤💯*

    • @litbopeep5726
      @litbopeep5726 Před 4 lety +13

      @@BarbieBando yeah i know. This ones not though😞
      I legit cant even read a map. I forget my right from my left. I cant read an old fashioned clock with the lines. I count on my fingers alot. I cant whistle. Dont know how to ride a bike. Never pumped gas in my life. And i barely learned the difference between youre and your because someone on youtube made fun of me for it in a really mean way so i figured id better remember.
      "You're" goes where "you are" would fit and anywhere else you can put "your"☺
      But the fact im proud of that just proves my point....now that i think about it.
      So yeah. Strippers can be smart but alot i know me included arent and even if we were no one would believe it.
      I try and read the biggest books I can find, i Really do, but all i learn from them is that i know less than i thought and so i actually think theyre making me even more dumb, theyre just making me realize _how_ dumb i am.
      sorry for the rant. I'm sure u were just trying to be nice lol

  • @cuteladybug8622
    @cuteladybug8622 Před 3 lety +1567

    Not only did they pour acid on their bodies to disfigure them, but they also mashed their faces with gun butts to make identification more difficult. Those poor people.🥺

    • @JamieM470
      @JamieM470 Před 2 lety +227

      I remember reading that they did that to kill them. The daughters were both stabbed with bayonets and bludgeoned to death because all that jewelry was stopping the bullets.
      It took them 20 minutes to finally kill them. They were children. Horrifying.

    • @squiddiewalsh2324
      @squiddiewalsh2324 Před 2 lety +32

      What the bolsheviks did by silencing other leftist and Anarchist parties was fucked, but no sympathy for a monarch. I wouldn’t have executed them. But as an Anarchist I don’t feel sorry for an oligarch losing their power.

    • @rachelclark7782
      @rachelclark7782 Před 2 lety +28

      They also chopped the two bodies buried together up with axes.

    • @peggedyourdad9560
      @peggedyourdad9560 Před 2 lety +34

      @@squiddiewalsh2324 I feel like they should've just been ran out of the country.

    • @DJATOMICA95
      @DJATOMICA95 Před 2 lety +138

      @@squiddiewalsh2324 as an anarchist, you should be against punitive justice as a whole. They had no power, they were literally in prison. Murdering them had nothing to do with removing them from power.

  • @michaelpugh1169
    @michaelpugh1169 Před rokem +3

    Caitlin is the greatest I really enjoy her wacky sense of humor but yet also serious intellect and knowledge.

  • @audrabyrd2814
    @audrabyrd2814 Před 2 lety +9

    You have taught me a lot in the past couple of days. I enjoy your sense of humor and morality that you have towards death. It is really amusing to me, and you help shed the awkward tension that topic can bring up. I appreciate your contribution of knowledge and humor to us simple folk who do not know anything about these topics(:

    • @loisreese2692
      @loisreese2692 Před 2 lety +1

      @Audra Byrd I stumbled onto Caitlin's channel more than 2 years ago and feel as you do about her and the channel content. Isn't she great? 😁

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@loisreese2692 .. I think she's very compassionate and her humor although a little dark,, isn't disrespectful..

  • @caramelcoffees
    @caramelcoffees Před 4 lety +604

    it's always been interesting to me that genealogy is so much easier to scientifically trace through the maternal line yet it's the fathers who pass on their name. many family trees are based on patrilineage too despite maternity being much easier to prove haha. i wonder how many more generations we'd be able to trace ourselves back :)

    • @BellRumFreak
      @BellRumFreak Před 4 lety +2

      I love your ice princess pic.

    • @diana-cy4kj
      @diana-cy4kj Před 4 lety +49

      caramel coffee Good old misogyny...

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Před 4 lety +10

      Y haplotypes follow only the male lineage, so it's not hat hard anymore to trace the patrilineal line.

    • @patrickmccurry1563
      @patrickmccurry1563 Před 4 lety +10

      That idea is how we get the so called mitochondrial Eve concept. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitochondrial_Eve

    • @remalm3670
      @remalm3670 Před 4 lety +31

      ... "You only know who your Mother is and can only guess at who your Father is" ...

  • @angelinakarp8471
    @angelinakarp8471 Před 4 lety +604

    I am sad that all of the Romanovs aren't buried together in St. Petersburg.

    • @gracehaven5459
      @gracehaven5459 Před 4 lety +55

      Me too, I wish they could just rest in peace and be buried properly even if not in the cathedral :'( it's so sad what happened to the children, it is never the childrens fault for the actions of their parents, they could have grown up and done great things but well never know now, what a horribly way to die it wasn't even quick 😫

    • @dawndonivan3089
      @dawndonivan3089 Před 4 lety +32

      I'm a member of the Russian Orthodox Church in America, formally ROCOR and I think it's awful the family is not buried together. I watched the burial of the family and retainers years ago. How much more proof do they want? !

    • @JustPeachy998
      @JustPeachy998 Před 4 lety +22

      @@dawndonivan3089 'Needing more proof' is just a cover when in reality it's purely political. Burying the final family members would be a front page news story across the globe. Putin doesn't want the headlines, nostalgia, or the accompanying journalistic analysis of Russian leaders of the past. In his authoritative regime, it's all about keeping control and avoiding stirring up sentiments that could be critical. Unfortunately, the church is toeing the line. It makes me sad.

    • @gracehaven5459
      @gracehaven5459 Před 4 lety +14

      @Shirley Bailey you are probably right but it's the principal of the matter, ya feel? Like it just seems wrong to keep people's remains in a lab to me, it's so impersonal

    • @dawndonivan3089
      @dawndonivan3089 Před 4 lety +7

      @@JustPeachy998 Yeah. It was Boris Yeltsin that was present at the first funerals. My understanding is Vladimir Putin didn't attend the 100 year anniversary of their death even though it was a big event at Yekaterinburg.

  • @BernardGreenberg
    @BernardGreenberg Před rokem +1

    You are a fascinating, riveting, totally-engaging story-telling master! And this grim story of murders and all kinds of repulsive human behavior is leavened by humor and cuteness and grace at every turn. Haven't found and Romanov bones, but I discovered your _oeuvre_ on CZcams today, and that's enough for me. You're terrific!

  • @briannalitz2802
    @briannalitz2802 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing I love you and your videos. Your story telling keeps me so intrigued!

  • @Rachel-fi4sc
    @Rachel-fi4sc Před 3 lety +932

    It may also be because of the name Anastasia itself, and how fitting it is for her story? The name Anastasia is derived from the ancient Greek name Anastasios (Ἀναστάσιος), which means "resurrection", from the elements "ana" ("up") and "stasis" ("standing"). The name also bears a similarity to the ancient Greek "Athanasius", meaning "immortal", from "a" ("anti" or "not") and "thanatos" ("death").
    For her to be horrifically put to death, only to later sit up and scream... Is it any wonder she is so immortalized?

    • @Eleni1002
      @Eleni1002 Před 3 lety +106

      Actually, both Anastasia and Anastasios come from the word "Anàstasis" which means ressurection. As for the word "Athanasia" (immortality), it has nothing in common with Anastasia. It might look similar and even sound kinda similar, but grammatically speaking, they don't have anything in common.

    • @aeronalto1065
      @aeronalto1065 Před 2 lety +32

      @@Eleni1002 That's interesting. It's surprising to me that the Greek words for "resurrection" and "immortality" aren't related, especially since they sound so similar. Do you have any sources on their etymology? (I'm not doubting you, I'm just a linguistics nerd and would like to learn more.)

    • @elfhchan
      @elfhchan Před 2 lety +35

      @@aeronalto1065 Think of these two like this:
      Anastasia for example translates to resurrection, meaning someone who has died and was brought back to life. It is a very common name in Greek Orthodox societies because it holds a more religious meaning (Jesus Christ and all that) and is commonly given to girls born around Easter time.
      Now as for the name Athanasia, it translates to eternally alive, it uses the -a- deprivation (A- deprivation + the word thanasia derived from Thanatos the Greek word for death) to signify the immortality of the person who is given this name.
      As you can see, even though these words may sound similar, they do not share the same exact meaning and they are not etymologically related. I hope I helped a bit more and sorry for the lengthy comment hehe ^^

    • @anastasiaromanot6626
      @anastasiaromanot6626 Před 2 lety +12

      As an atheist, this has always cracked me up so much!

    • @ghedebaronsamedi
      @ghedebaronsamedi Před rokem +4

      Dawn of the Dead: Romanov Resurrected
      Anastasia is back. And she hungers for flesh!
      Coming soon to a theatre near you.

  • @NotMykl
    @NotMykl Před 4 lety +1307

    Never kill the kids, just...never kill the kids.

    • @ReptilianTeaDrinker
      @ReptilianTeaDrinker Před 4 lety +264

      Never kill anyone. Killing adults is horrible too. Adults are human as well. Murder in general is disgusting and awful and all killers should be put to justice.

    • @mcwyman7928
      @mcwyman7928 Před 4 lety +222

      Politically, it made sense for the Communists. If they let any of the children live, they could have garnered enough support from the rest of the world to get them reinstated on the throne. As far as their cause went, horrible as it was, they really had no other options.

    • @moifikea8288
      @moifikea8288 Před 4 lety +67

      Always kill the kids. Especially the sons

    • @ahideeflitcraft5487
      @ahideeflitcraft5487 Před 4 lety +117

      If movies and books have taught me anything is if you want to wipe families out you have to kill everyone including the kids. Kids grow up, kids learn revenge.

    • @beckywiththegoodhair5244
      @beckywiththegoodhair5244 Před 4 lety +100

      Ok kill the kids, let the dog live :)

  • @fetamean
    @fetamean Před 2 lety +1

    It seems like I find video essay channels like yours every day. Don't mind me as I binge all of your content.

  • @rainbowpanda7744
    @rainbowpanda7744 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for covering this. I have a test on this tomorrow. Love your books btw😊

  • @lcolsen22
    @lcolsen22 Před 3 lety +945

    It's really haunting to see the videos of the children playing and just being innocent children.

    • @felipedeodonoju3953
      @felipedeodonoju3953 Před 2 lety

      :’/

    • @wasserruebenvergilbungsvirus
      @wasserruebenvergilbungsvirus Před 2 lety +1

      So were the countless children who starved and died under Romanov rule. But nobody cares about them, because they don't have a heartwarming story to their deaths.

    • @lcolsen22
      @lcolsen22 Před 2 lety +15

      @@wasserruebenvergilbungsvirus how can a child's death be heartwarming?

    • @Luca-nu2zg
      @Luca-nu2zg Před 2 lety +27

      @@wasserruebenvergilbungsvirus just because those things happened under Romanov rule doesn’t mean it was their fault

    • @MySerpentine
      @MySerpentine Před rokem

      Yeah, but all kinds of monsters were children.

  • @kellyhoulton2998
    @kellyhoulton2998 Před 4 lety +1044

    Such a haunting story. While I understand that Nicholas was completely out of touch with his people, the murders of him and his family - and doggie too - haunt me. And the ensuing cover-up. It is all so awful. Thank you, Caitlyn, for handling it quickly and covering such an expanse of information so succinctly. Truly horrific times.

    • @rach3092
      @rach3092 Před 3 lety +21

      Like really they were too spoiled and out of touch, they did NOT need to be murdered in such a horrible way! Sure things were going on, but it's a bit barbaric to murder anyone like that. Fuckin Nazis I swear.

    • @vampgirl92496
      @vampgirl92496 Před 3 lety +9

      @@rach3092 They where murdered by untrained thugs. Remind any one of what would happen if those thugs who started CHAZ got any control?

    • @ownpetard8379
      @ownpetard8379 Před 3 lety +4

      Jimmy the dog survived. "Read" (scanned something) recently. Ended up in Scotland? I think.

    • @GalaxyGal-
      @GalaxyGal- Před 3 lety +2

      He was at the wrong place at the wrong time. If they kept them alive, he'd be a symbol for the whites to gain new life.

    • @sadar171
      @sadar171 Před 3 lety +15

      Own Petard From what I’ve read Jimmy (Anastasia’s dog) was killed in the basement with her. One of the other dogs was shot outside the home for barking. Alexei (the heir’s) dog survived as she had run away. She was later found on the streets and lived a very interesting life before living out her days at Windsor Castle. Obviously I’m not sure of the truth of this (and who knows if it was the same dog), but it’s a sad story all around.

  • @madaraaradam7799
    @madaraaradam7799 Před 2 lety +3

    This was the best video about Romanovs I have ever seen!

  • @marybrewer7310
    @marybrewer7310 Před rokem

    This is the most intense video I've ever seen. Better than what I saw on TV. Thanks 😊

  • @judithfurmston3731
    @judithfurmston3731 Před 4 lety +866

    I'm a simple gal. I see Death Mother, I click play.

  • @bibundtinafurimmer7659
    @bibundtinafurimmer7659 Před 4 lety +138

    Wow. That is a heavy one. It’s really sad that they thought they were leaving and then were murdered

    • @Cat-tastrophee
      @Cat-tastrophee Před 4 lety +17

      Not to mention they were happy to go and fully cooperating. It kind of turns my stomach.

    • @WritingSch
      @WritingSch Před 4 lety +4

      Finally someone also understands how utterly creepy it was. Not only horrific, but incredibly creepy

    • @maneckineckbeard1749
      @maneckineckbeard1749 Před 3 lety

      The sadistic cruelty of it is truly almost incomprehensible.

  • @greagior
    @greagior Před měsícem

    I very much appreciate your work. Thank you Ma`m

  • @maryannswanson3832
    @maryannswanson3832 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for such a great presentation on the history of this family. Of course I have heard of them through the years and have been curious about their deaths, I have never done any research. But your telling of it, is most informative, funny and totally interesting! I'm gonna' watch it again right now. 😁🤔😎🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🦉💗

  • @jovis6995
    @jovis6995 Před 3 lety +661

    _"Stalin did stuff like that. That was one of the problems with Stalin"_ I snorted 😂

    • @kurtnulf3362
      @kurtnulf3362 Před 2 lety +18

      Stalin would stay up late at night making lists of people to have killed If Hitler was not around Stalin would be the number 1 mass murder of the 20th century

    • @dinofelis9343
      @dinofelis9343 Před 2 lety +13

      Pretty sure the "number one" is Mao.

    • @taraswertelecki3786
      @taraswertelecki3786 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dinofelis9343 Yes, the Chinese Communists killed more people than anyone else in history, other than Islam, which killed easily 300 million over the past 1,400 years, whereas the CHICOMS killed well over 100 million Chinese.

    • @justsomeguywithamustache
      @justsomeguywithamustache Před 2 lety +2

      @@kurtnulf3362 Stalin killed much more than Hitler, it's just how Hitler is better known, that's why they see him as the greatest genocide of the 20th century when that should be Mao Zedong.

    • @maryanneslater9675
      @maryanneslater9675 Před 2 lety +7

      @@dinofelis9343 -- Stalin is partly responsible for those who died of starvation under Mao. Stalin lent Mao his favorite scientist, Trofim Lysenko, who came up with a three-point plan to increase crops in China. Lysenko was a Dunning-Kruger failure of a scientist who was only good at kissing up, so his three-point plan caused massive crop failures and famine.

  • @bperry573
    @bperry573 Před 4 lety +332

    My father died on October 15th 2019 and I discovered these videos about two weeks after the fact.
    THANK YOU CAITLIN.
    I had never dealt with the death of anyone close to me before this. I was scared of going through the process. I almost avoided it but am happy that I didn't. My dad is not a ghoul. He is not a zombie. He is not a scary skeleton. He was a person who died. His passing has helped me to understand my own life that much more.
    Your Vlogs about death, and the many different things that happen when it happens, has made it easier for me to accept my fathers passing.
    For that, I do not have the words to thank you.
    Thank you for bringing a realistic conversation up about that one act that we all (the living) go through. Always looking forward to your newest vlogs.

    • @THEKINGDOGE__
      @THEKINGDOGE__ Před 4 lety +17

      My father passed away on Nov 9th, 2019. Giving you nothing but hugs and peace. I know how hard it is. Thank you Caitlin for normalizing death for us. I used to have anxiety about death, especially immediately after my dads death. Since watching your videos it's become MUCH less taboo and is something special I share with him. I've even spoken to my 5 year old about it. I'd like to give him the gift of not fearing such a natural process of life.

    • @RavenMacy
      @RavenMacy Před 4 lety +12

      @@THEKINGDOGE__ My sympathies to you both , my dad passed Nov. 9th 1993 , I was 13 years old , I choose not to go to his viewing ( looking at the body before burial) I wasn't scared I just didn't want to remember him died and lifeless , still stand by that ( my choice) . Death is natural, may they all rest in peace ❤

    • @frankmaxfield7025
      @frankmaxfield7025 Před 4 lety +2

      @@RavenMacy my uncle committed suicide on November 9 1993. I too was 13 years old

  • @sherryldickens1129
    @sherryldickens1129 Před 2 lety +4

    I’ve never enjoyed history or the bizarre as much as hearing it from you!!! Please keep it up!😂

  • @kimarmes2536
    @kimarmes2536 Před 2 lety +1

    I love binge watching your videos keep up the great work

  • @creatrixcorvusarts876
    @creatrixcorvusarts876 Před 4 lety +389

    “This can only end in tears...”- Bartok the bat, ‘Anastasia’ the movie
    (P.s. whose lips and nostrils are those on that plaque behind you?)

    • @omorocca4946
      @omorocca4946 Před 4 lety +32

      It's something she bought from an artist who recreated illness marks and sores. I don't remember the illness this piece shows.

    • @Greta2002
      @Greta2002 Před 4 lety +2

      @@omorocca4946 what's the artist?

    • @omorocca4946
      @omorocca4946 Před 4 lety +5

      @@Greta2002 here 😁
      czcams.com/video/n3EAVCNftB0/video.html

    • @arcudielizabeth433
      @arcudielizabeth433 Před 4 lety +6

      Its syphilis!

    • @RenzXVI
      @RenzXVI Před 4 lety +10

      Camels can close their nostrils.

  • @AlbredaWelde
    @AlbredaWelde Před 3 lety +606

    14:47 "They chose some guy in Florida over the US government." Umm, William Ross Maples was a significant contributor the the field of forensic anthropology. He was a great man for the job and most likely far more qualified than anyone that the Feds would have put forward. He also worked as an independent scientist, not an agent of the US government. Which was something probably far more appealing to the paranoid among those making the decisions. The University of Florida "Maples Center for Forensic Medicine" being named after him and the fact that his writings/work are still studied by forensics students just might give you the idea that more than just some Russian bureaucrats valued his skill.

    • @azuxiv
      @azuxiv Před 3 lety +105

      I'm probably in a positive mood this morning but I thought she was saying it in a good way, also Florida man meme hehe. Alas, great info and respect for William Ross Maples.

    • @hlowrylong
      @hlowrylong Před 3 lety +9

      Love this story ... GO GATORS!
      My university has a wealth of important research studies & programs with the commitment to knowledge. UF is more than just Gatorade, and “Florida Man” could be repeated in every state. We all have plenty of dumdums.
      🐊🐊🐊

    • @HeatherHolt
      @HeatherHolt Před 3 lety +2

      @@azuxiv I agree

    • @piecesofgold1086
      @piecesofgold1086 Před 3 lety +26

      i mean he did also spend the better part a year trashing the reputation of the molecular genetic scientist Dr Peter Gill, who actually performed the DNA testing to identify the bones, bc Maples was pissed he didn’t get to do it first.

    • @JamieM470
      @JamieM470 Před 2 lety +15

      "The most terrifying words in the English language are 'I'm from the government, and I'm here to help.'"
      -Ronald Reagan
      US federal govt is completely and totally corrupt, and screws up absolutely everything it touches.
      I don't blame them a bit for not wanting to involve the US govt. Smart move, IMO.

  • @blackbolt3685
    @blackbolt3685 Před 3 lety +2

    I only knew of this family because of the Unsolved Mystery episode,btw,I love your videos,they're like,history lessons tastefully done,with a little humor in them,I stumbled across one video earlier today,and,it snowballed into a marathon 😁,now I'm a new subscriber,now,I'm going to get back to watching your videos

  • @stefanrijos63
    @stefanrijos63 Před rokem +1

    Wow… this one was SUPER packed with information. A very sad story.

  • @robertcranston529
    @robertcranston529 Před 3 lety +1109

    When I was in collage, I took a Russian Lit class. What I remember most were the stories of our professor who was a White Russian. It was fascinating, She told of how each of them carried a cynide pill. If they were captured they would take the pill, killing themselves, rather than risk divulging any information. She told us how she met and married her husband. It sounded so romantic, but she corrected us and explained how their marriage was based on their trust of one another, not on love.

    • @iuliya95
      @iuliya95 Před 3 lety +9

      what do you mean by "white russian"? There are literally no black russian people

    • @robertcranston529
      @robertcranston529 Před 3 lety +239

      White Russians were the group opposing the revolution.

    • @minstrelcat1951
      @minstrelcat1951 Před 3 lety +140

      @@iuliya95 Its not about skin colour. White or black Russians are more to do with politicosociological groups. But you're right, I can see why that would be confusing.

    • @iuliya95
      @iuliya95 Před 3 lety +22

      @@robertcranston529 I see now, but it really has another name: The white guard (Belaya gvardiya).

    • @iuliya95
      @iuliya95 Před 3 lety +25

      @@minstrelcat1951 yeah, now I understand the point, there were “white” and “red” guards

  • @kiwikoopa6806
    @kiwikoopa6806 Před 4 lety +279

    I understand that revolutions are bloody and whatnot but killing kids, including a disabled kid, is just so brutal it made me feel weird. How terrifying and awful their final moments must have been.

    • @Edmonton-of2ec
      @Edmonton-of2ec Před 4 lety +9

      lumipaint I seriously doubt they would've tried to put Alexei on the throne if they discovered his haemophilia. He would have been to ill to rule

    • @emboline7369
      @emboline7369 Před 4 lety +6

      @@aluminium4303 inbreeding is a b*!@h

    • @LucretiaPearl
      @LucretiaPearl Před 4 lety +34

      That was & occasionally still is the way of governments & monarchies & angry mobs. They don't see a kid as an innocent so much as an enemy, a witness or a possible FUTURE enemy. Some people get stuck in mob mentality & make evil decisions under that influence, some people are just plain evil to the core.

    • @sarasthoughts
      @sarasthoughts Před 4 lety +4

      War fucking sucks and humans put politics over life itself.

    • @d.d.d.a.a.a.n.n.n
      @d.d.d.a.a.a.n.n.n Před 4 lety +11

      The White Russians absolutely would have used the Romanovs as figures to rally around, even if the former czar and his family didn't want that. The Bolsheviks thought they didn't have any better option, unfortunately.

  • @renata31000
    @renata31000 Před 3 lety +4

    You are such a great story teller!!!

  • @jenniferfells6882
    @jenniferfells6882 Před 3 lety +4

    Thanks for the great video loveybug your spot on the correct information!

  • @Andresfin
    @Andresfin Před 4 lety +158

    When I was younger I was legitimately obsessed with the Romanov family. I got to see the Musical Anastasia a couple months ago and it reminded me why I loved the idea of her escaping it's really tragic that her entire family was murdered because of her father. I wish the Palace was open so I could go see it but it is under construction.

    • @PaleMagnolia
      @PaleMagnolia Před 4 lety +4

      Me too! I had a full-blown obsession with the Romanovs. Also, the Titanic disaster, but that's a story for another time.

    • @bdoglance
      @bdoglance Před 4 lety +2

      well, it goes deeper then just her father, basically when you really get into the history of it all you'll see that the fall of the tzar was basically guaranteed to happen. even before Nicholas II became tzar there had already been attempted assassinations on the royal family, One I believe was even a train bombing. If you ever watch the documentary of Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna life (the last grand duchess) I believe they touch on that a bit.

    • @jenneacoleman-cubero2365
      @jenneacoleman-cubero2365 Před 4 lety

      @@bdoglance Didn't Nicholas's father execute Lennin's older brother?

  • @Supaawesomeification
    @Supaawesomeification Před 3 lety +1517

    “But if that’s your thing, we’ll link the resources below”. Me, a geneticist, YEET

    • @bleed8812
      @bleed8812 Před 3 lety +17

      hey, do you mind me asking how one becomes a geneticist? cuz i want to be one and ive been struggling to find out how

    • @Supaawesomeification
      @Supaawesomeification Před 3 lety +92

      @@bleed8812 short answer, a lot of school. That said, you’ve got a few options.
      You could end up working for the gov like at the CDC, industry like a company for profit, a university as a prof and/or researcher, or even as a medical doctor who also does research.
      You’ll need at least a bachelors to get your foot in the door (like working as a lab tech/research associate) and what you’ll be able to do will increase with more schooling. Idk about masters (running joke is you can’t do much with them) but with a PhD you can do just about anything. The path I’m working toward rn is grad school for my PhD -> post doc program (basically you run your own research in someone else’s lab) -> my own lab at a university (I wanna be a prof eventually).
      Idk where you are in your academic career but I’d research colleges with good science programs (I went to UCLA and majored in MIMG which is basically genetics) and/or grad schools with good genetics programs. You don’t have to have everything figured out right away. Take your time. Talk to people. Maybe find a nice prof who’d be willing to mentor you. Possibilities and pathways to that goal are varied and more or less endless

    • @bleed8812
      @bleed8812 Před 3 lety +55

      @@Supaawesomeification i really didnt expect a long answer like this from some random youtube comment so thanks alot for taking the time out of your day to do this :D
      i guess i have a better idea of what to look for now i really appreciate it

    • @Supaawesomeification
      @Supaawesomeification Před 3 lety +47

      @@bleed8812 lol I tend to go overboard with explaining things but I’m glad you appreciate it. Best of luck! And remember, it’s ok to change your mind. I went to school with genetics as my goal and fell in love with virology. There will be ups and downs and maybe you’ll end up somewhere unexpected but I’m confident it’ll all work out in the end. Hope you have a good rest of your day!

    • @judyfrancis4515
      @judyfrancis4515 Před 3 lety +21

      @@Supaawesomeification Very kind of you to help the budding geneticist!👏

  • @sillygooselol2757
    @sillygooselol2757 Před 3 lety +6

    ... I had an EXTREMELY accurate dream about this a few months ago, with absolutely no knowledge on the subject. I must of fell asleep listening to a similar video haha

  • @Reverse2057
    @Reverse2057 Před rokem +2

    I learned about this story because of the episode from The Crown covering the murder of this family, and I went on a Wikipedia dive about the family's execution. Nice to see it covered from this angle too!

  • @karmillaschreger6546
    @karmillaschreger6546 Před 4 lety +157

    OK, honestly, this is by far one of the most chilling stories out there. Despite the fact that I already knew the story, hearing it again and letting it sink in just one more time makes it unbearably tragic.

    • @taylorsaidspeaknow
      @taylorsaidspeaknow Před 4 lety +5

      right! i feel like everytime i research more into the romanovs even when i come up with similar info each time, i still feel like i learn something new or yet another crazy thing that happened. it's so interesting

    • @kristinhazell3840
      @kristinhazell3840 Před 4 lety +2

      Yes, the story of that family is tragic but considering the general state of the country and how many people lived miserable lives and died horribly that the tsar could have helped but didn't, the Romanov family's death is by far not the biggest tragedy. It is just that the names and faces of the millions that died have been forgotten and are therefore not as emotionally charged as the Romanov's.

  • @tatiannamiller9683
    @tatiannamiller9683 Před 4 lety +921

    I'm named after one of the daughter Tatiana my mom always thoughr the name was beautiful it keeps me close my Russian heritage

    • @8LyJu8
      @8LyJu8 Před 4 lety +21

      Same. Most people don't realize because I'm from a catholic country where most women are called "Maria", but I was originally going to have just my middle name (the one people uses), but she added Maria because of Romanova.

    • @margauxlaurent6324
      @margauxlaurent6324 Před 3 lety +15

      Im french and my sister is called Tatiana too. I wish I was called Anastasia lol.

    • @tatianap-a8683
      @tatianap-a8683 Před 3 lety +10

      I’m not Russian but I was named Tatiana too

    • @samuel-zb4qn
      @samuel-zb4qn Před 3 lety +3

      My step aunt is named olga

    • @kathrinnikitin
      @kathrinnikitin Před 3 lety +6

      For me it’s the same with Anastasia!

  • @tigerlilly5579
    @tigerlilly5579 Před 3 lety

    My favorite video of yours. Keep them coming!

  • @Chatty-Cathy823
    @Chatty-Cathy823 Před 2 lety +1

    I subscribed. I love the history you share. Since you started CZcams about 10 years ago, I have a lot of catching up to do. 😮 I would love to hear “your story” - how did you get started, did you go to college, etc. Thanks for making death interesting! ❤️❤️❤️😄😄😄

  • @theghostofchristmaspast293
    @theghostofchristmaspast293 Před 4 lety +156

    The Romanov family has always intrigued me, I always felt the fate of the family too tragic.

    • @rosestrife1498
      @rosestrife1498 Před 4 lety +34

      Honestly it just makes me really mad. I understand this was Russia and I understand why they wanted to execute them.
      But what I don't understand was why they had to kill the entire family and the servants. They really could have just executed Nicholas and sent the family into exile. They could have sent away the servants. They could have sent away the romanovs save Nicholas and then just executed Nicholas. But they literally killed helpless women and children which puts them on the wrong side of History.

  • @whatsanenigma
    @whatsanenigma Před 4 lety +151

    Just FYI, Dr. Maples wrote a book before he passed away, called 'Dead men do tell tales". There is a whole chapter about his work on the Romanov case, and all the chapters are really interesting.

    • @permaquilter9111
      @permaquilter9111 Před 4 lety +4

      I have that book too. It's fascinating!

    • @actuallyNo...
      @actuallyNo... Před 4 lety +6

      He was a brilliant man. I am thoroughly disgusted by the lack of intelligence in the people that follow this channel.
      I've seen some dumb shit comments here before, but it just keeps getting worse in every new video that is put out. You would think anyone listening & halfway grasping this multi-MULTI-faceted, long story here (OR OTHERWISE BUT ESPECIALLY WATCHING THE WHOLE DAMN VIDEO)would be smart enough to know better. "You Would Think", being the operative key to that narrative.

    • @218curl
      @218curl Před 4 lety +4

      Yes, it's a fascinating book. Dr. Maples has solved many police mysteries based on what he found at the scene of a death. All "deathlings" would enjoy reading his book.

    • @laurakuhn8743
      @laurakuhn8743 Před 4 lety +1

      I really enjoyed that book

  • @amethystemerald5495
    @amethystemerald5495 Před 2 lety +7

    I was always fascinated by the fact that his own family in England ditched him. The hurried up and took the name of Windsor.

    • @albuszx
      @albuszx Před rokem +1

      I think parliament put a stop to the whole thing, and who can blame them, the Romanovs were historically a mess, and the UK government wanted no part on the problem Russia's autocracy had created for themselves. Just like the BrRF can't be blamed for changing the family name, who would want to be associated with Charles Edward Coburg-Gotha, and by association, Wilhelm II?!

    • @cb4883
      @cb4883 Před rokem

      They are to blame for their deaths They are selfish and still are

  • @bronwynevans150
    @bronwynevans150 Před 2 lety +19

    Thanks for this video. Didn't they also use Prince Michael of Kent to test DNA? His grandfather was King George V, who was a first cousin of Nicholas. He also went to the burial ceremony of the family members in Russia. He has learned Russian, too, seeing as his grandfather and grand uncle were such really good friends. I'm about to watch a few more of your videos.

    • @ultron374
      @ultron374 Před 11 měsíci +2

      And his face is similar to Nocholas II and George V

    • @SymphonyBrahms
      @SymphonyBrahms Před 3 měsíci

      They used the DNA of Prince Philip. His mother was a Romanov.

  • @oliveoil5309
    @oliveoil5309 Před 4 lety +177

    I always feel so bad for those innocent children :(

  • @mjnc3672
    @mjnc3672 Před 4 lety +1455

    When Czar Nicholas' cousin King George of England turned down the Romanov's request for asylum in England, the family's fate was sealed.

    • @765respect
      @765respect Před 4 lety +88

      You would think he could have given them safe passage to the Americas!

    • @wolfchacer0139
      @wolfchacer0139 Před 4 lety +183

      Had he known the result I'm sure he would have acted different, saddest part is that realization came too late for him. We always think we have time and time is the one thing we have no guarantee on.

    • @marymcsherry1965
      @marymcsherry1965 Před 4 lety +54

      And then they bought the Russian royal family jewellery for a song from some female survivors in exile...so much for family

    • @bigjavo36
      @bigjavo36 Před 3 lety +45

      There was a world war going on. Ironically Kaiser Wilhelm was also their cousin.
      But yeah there was a world war going on so I don’t fault king George for not wanting to deal with extracting the Russian royal family from Russia in the midst of both revolution and world war. Across a war torn Europe multiple front lines to Britain and the across the ocean where german u boats were lurking to America.

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 Před 3 lety +38

      The Czar family had connections to the danish royal family but apparently fleeing to Denmark wasn’t an option either. Czar Nicolai 2. was a son of the danish Princess Marie Sophie Frederikke Dagmar, or Marija Fjodorovna, daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark.
      Princess Dagmar survived the revolution and moved back to Denmark in 1919 and died there in 1928 80 years old.

  • @nannys_3045
    @nannys_3045 Před 2 lety

    Caitlin your voice is so calming!

  • @scottc6639
    @scottc6639 Před rokem

    just found your channel. really like you’re doing. great delivery!