Execution of the Imperial Family
On the night of
July 16/July 17, 1918, a squad of
Bolshevik secret police Cheka led by Yurovsky executed Russia's last Emperor, Tsar Nicholas II, along with his wife
Alexandra Fyodorovna of Hesse, their four daughters,
Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and
Anastasia, and their son
Alexei. Along with the family, four other servants were also killed. All were shot in a half-cellar room (measured to be 25 feet x 21 feet) of the
Ipatiev House in
Yekaterinburg, a city in the
Ural Mountains region, where they were being held prisoner. The execution squad comprised three more local Bolsheviks and seven soldiers. The latter were Hungarians, prisoners-of-war. As Communists they had joined the Red Army and were serving in the 1st Kamishlov Rifle Regiment. They didn't speak Russian and talked with Yurovsky in German. They were chosen because the local Cheka feared that Russian soldiers would not shoot at the tsar and his family. One of them was the future Hungarian politician
Imre Nagy.
In a detailed report of the killings prepared in 1934 and held in the Soviet archives, Yurovsky stated that he had shot the Tsar and his son himself, while his comrades killed the other members of the royal family. The killings were said to be have been botched by the firing squad; the bullets failed to kill the family, and the jewelry sewed into the daughters clothes acted as a bullet proof vest. The daughters were finished off with close range shots to the head, after attempts to
bayonet them also failed. Recently, it has been discovered that Yurovsky himself killed
Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia with a single bullet through the back of her head.
To prevent the development of a cult for the dead Tsar, the bodies were removed to the countryside. The bodies of Nicholas and his family were long believed to have been disposed of down a mineshaft at a site called the Four Brothers. Initially, this was true; they had indeed been disposed of there on the night of 17 July. The following morning, when rumors spread in Yekaterinburg regarding the disposal site, Yurovsky removed the bodies and concealed them elsewhere. When the vehicle carrying the bodies broke down on the way to the next chosen site, he made new arrangements and buried most of the bodies in a sealed and concealed pit on Koptyaki Road, a since-abandoned cart track 12 miles north of Yekaterinburg.