Resurrecting the Czar
In Russia, the recent discovery of the remains of the two missing Romanov children has pitted science against the church
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Kate Brooks
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
In the spring of 1979, Avdonin told me, he and several fellow geologists, hoping to locate the remains, obtained permits to conduct scientific research in the area. The ruse worked, and they quickly came across a place marked by planks laid in the earth. “There was nobody else around,” he told me. “We took shovels and we started digging.”
Avdonin spied the first bones—“three skulls, with bullet holes. We took them out of the soil. And we covered the place where we were digging, to leave no traces.”
Avdonin said he kept the skulls while he tried to find someone who could conduct forensic tests on them. After a year without success, he said, “we put the skulls back in the grave, because it was too dangerous to keep them.” Had he and the other men been discovered, “we could have easily been put in prison, or just disappeared.”
The men vowed to keep their findings secret, and they did so for ten years. But in 1990, in the last days of the Soviet regime, Avdonin wrote to Boris Yeltsin, at the time the chairman of the Supreme Council of Russia. While serving as Communist Party boss in Sverdlovsk in 1977, Yeltsin had carried out a Politburo order to destroy the Ipatiev house. (A Russian Orthodox church has recently gone up on the site.) But since then Yeltsin had morphed into a democrat, and Avdonin now felt he could trust him. “I told him where the remains lay,” Avdonin told me. “And I asked him to help me bring them back to history.” Yeltsin wrote back, and the next year, investigators from the Sverdlovsk region’s prosecutor’s office, using Avdonin’s information, exhumed nine skeletons from a single, shallow grave.
The bones had been found. Now it was the job of the scientists to make them speak. The Russian government, and Peter Sarandinaki of the U.S.-based Search Foundation, which promotes forensic study of the Romanov remains, asked pre-eminent forensic experts to help identify the skeletons. They included Peter Gill of the Forensic Science Service in Birmingham, England, Pavel Ivanov of the Genetic Laboratory in Moscow and later Michael Coble of the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory in Rockville, Maryland.
A human cell contains two genomes, or sets of genes: mitochondrial DNA, passed down by the mother, and nuclear DNA, inherited from both parents. Nuclear DNA, unique to each individual, provides the most powerful identification tool. But because only one set of nuclear DNA exists in a cell, it is often difficult to obtain an intact sample, particularly from aged sources. By contrast, mitochondrial DNA has hundreds to thousands of copies per cell; more of these molecules are likely to survive.
In this case, the scientists were fortunate: they succeeded in extracting nuclear DNA from all nine skeletons. They found striking similarities in five of them—enough to conclude that “the bones belonged to one family, and it looked like parents and three kids,” says Evgeny Rogaev, a Russian-born geneticist at the University of Massachusetts, who was brought into the investigation.
The scientists also compared mitochondrial DNA from the female adult skeleton, presumably Alexandra, with that of a living DNA donor: Britain’s Prince Philip, who shared a common maternal ancestor—Queen Victoria—with the czarina. It matched.
In 1994, Ivanov, the Moscow-based scientist, obtained permission from members of the Romanov family to exhume Georgy Romanov, the czar’s younger brother, from his grave in St. Petersburg. (Georgy had died suddenly in 1899, at age 28.) Ivanov found that Georgy’s mitochondrial DNA was consistent with that of the adult male skeletal remains. Both samples also showed evidence of an extremely rare genetic mutation known as heteroplasmy.
The evidence led the forensic experts to one conclusion: the bones were those of Nicholas II, Alexandra and three of their five children. “The DNA testing was clear and convincing,” Coble says.
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Comments (26)
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There are still blood relations to the Romanov dynasty living today. My aunt has had a professional DNA test done and it has proven that we have Nicholas the II's blood coarsing through our veins. We are of blood relation. Anybody can retest us and prove it again.
Posted by Savannah Floystad on December 13,2012 | 01:06 PM
Very sad end of tsar nicholax 2 and royal family.
Posted by jahangir azam alizai on October 25,2012 | 01:07 AM
Sirs
INTERESTING COMMENTS AND CLAIMS AND ONE IN PARTUCLER THE COMMENTS OF THE DENTIST AND ONE OF HIS PATIENTS CLAIMS.
I CAN WITH PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE OF NICHOLAS 11 AND HIS SON ALEXI BOTH INHERITED FROM BIRTH RARE GENETIC MARKINGS ON ONES UPPER PART OF THEIR BODY CERTAIN VISIBLE dna ANCESTOR MARKING/MARKINGS, SUCH MARKINGS ARE THE SAME IN EVERY WAY AS FEW PAST AND PRESENT ROYALS.
ONE DOES NOT HAVE TO BELIVE WHAT I HAVE COMMENTED ON BUT i DO HAVE PHOTO PROOF OF CERTAIN ROYALS RELATED TO NICHOLAS 11 INHERITING THE SAME.
I WELCOME ANY COMMENTS AND IF PROOF IS NEEDED AS SAID ABOVE I CAN PROVIDE
Posted by Frederic von Ebert on March 3,2012 | 03:48 PM
Did you know that Richard Halliburton interviewed one of the Czar's killers in 1933 ? The account takes up 45 pages of his book "Seven League boots"
Posted by Lewis Brackett on September 27,2011 | 08:50 PM
There remains to be some DNA work done on Olga Filatov and his father Vasily Filatov. Until this is done the search is not complete. Also, there needs to be some DNA work on president Medvedev, as his namesake Pav Medvedev, a Boschevik, and Mikhail Medvedev, another namesake, and a Bolschevik, were in some ways connected with the assasination of the Royal family. The recent lookalike identities of President Medvedev and Tcar Nicholas is stunning. What is that connection? It is said that the one Medvedev, Mikhail, that he was vomiting during the execution. Could he have been emotionally connected to one or others of the royal family? If so, could he have helped them to excape? A young man, although a revolutionary may still have heart strings stronger than his political and ideological convictions. These kinds of things make history worth reading, and fiction best sellers. Therefore Vasily and Oleg Filatov need to have DNA comparisons made by experts who have no vested interests in the results.
Posted by Ronald S. Hand on June 26,2011 | 05:48 PM
For many years I personally treated a gentleman who claimed to be the Tsarevitch. I am a Dentist and I was very concerned about the hereditary blood disease that was common for some of the male Romanoffs. He showed me a letter from a prominent NY MD that showed that the individual I was treating had a blood disease, but that it was not Hemophillia. He was successfully treated over many years, including surgery, as long as special precautions were taken. Although, he looked the part with his handlebar mustache, and supplied me with numerous affadavits, photos and Imperial stationary, it was hard to believe that the communists were so inefficient as to leave one of the Romanoffs alive when they murdered the rest of them. His story was interesting to me because my parents had emigrated form Russia in the 1920's and I had majored in Russian history while i was in college.
Posted by Daniel Nachmanoff on June 3,2011 | 01:36 PM
Interesting article, if somewhat simplified, and has some errors. The heir to the Russian throne was titled the "tsarevitch," not crown prince. Nicholas was Tsar before he married Alexandra - she had arrived in the Crimea to meet his family, and his father, the ill Tsar Alexander III died very soon afterward. Nicholas insisted on marrying her immediately after the funeral. The first ten years of his reign were not entirely uneventful, having inherited an empire seethng with discontent from his father. Then there was the Khodynka Field disaster at his coronation, in which hundreds were crushed to death. The disastrous and humiliating loss of the Russo-Japanese War.
The murder of Nicholas and his family did not end imperial rule; that happened when he abdicated seventeen months previously. Nor did he abdicate because the Duma (parliament) wanted him to; the final straw for Nicholas was receiving cables from all his military commanders stating they no longer supported him and begged him to abdicate. For the first five months after abdicating, the family lived under house arrest in their palace. Then, the Provisional Government of Kerensky sent them to the Siberian town of Tobolsk, where they stayed for almost nine months. The Romanovs were in the custody of the Bolsheviks, in the Ipatiev House, for only four months (not nine) before they were executed. And, finally, Sokolov was not the original investigator, only being appointed the following February, picking up after previous investigators already conducted valuable investigations.
Many monarchists and Romanovphiles view the imperial past with rose-colored glasses, but people forget or gloss over the Tsar and his wife's obstinent adherence to autocracy; both the Tsar's and his government's antisemitism; the brutal repressions; or that the vast majority of the populace lived under abject poverty. It was not a glorious time for most Russians.
Posted by Daniel Cooter on February 16,2011 | 11:43 PM
Fascinating history, the communism birth has been the most destructive force we have had, we need more articles and exposure to the damaging effects not only in Russia ( Lenin and Stalin were responsible for the deaths of over $30 million people) & if you add Communist MAO in China ( responsible for over 80 Million deaths) it is overwhelming to see how destructive Communism ( Socialism roots) has been.
Posted by TRUTH on February 5,2011 | 02:52 AM
For Michael G. Walsh:
Nicholas and Alexandra by Robert K. Massie:
http://www.amazon.com/Nicholas-Alexandra-Robert-K-Massie/dp/0345438310
Posted by Reader Services on December 15,2010 | 02:25 PM
Thank you for the article. Very informative. Even for some one like myself, who has a vast collection of books about life and most tragic end or the Russian Royal Family.
One of them - a book by a White Russian commander, acting as a judicial investigator, Nikolai Sokolov: Murder of the Royal Family. Originally printed in 1923. Mostly a dispassionately professional account CSI style.
But it is stirring very powerful emotions. During the perestroika years I was working as a translator with the Russian celebrities, dignitaries, etc. I gave the Sokolov's book to one of the Russians from the delegation - a member of the communist party. He finished it in one night. Upon returning the book, he said that he is renouncing his affiliation with the communist party and would like to join the Russian Orthodox church. He didn't want to wait. He got baptized here, in US.
It's impossible to remain indifferent after reading about the Russian Royal Family, their tender love for each other, their forgiveness to all, who hated them and their amazing dignity under the most humiliating and cruel circumstances.
Posted by Rini A. on December 12,2010 | 04:19 PM
I do not see the Romanovs as being martyrs to anything but an ideal of absolute power and the idea that absolute power corrupts absolutely. They were kept in power by the church and lost it because of it and the fact they would not change. The idea that Nicholas was going to institute change is stupid. He would have been overthrown by the other power groups and the church as they did not wish to give up power. I believe that if they were not killed and the Russian revolution did not happen they would be speaking German now and Hitler's greater Germania would be in place. Russia was weak and a nothing, little if any industrial power base and what we would call a third world country. The between the war period and the Stalin era would not have been much different in terms of human rights, etc. It would have just had the blessing of the Church. From what I see the nobility had about the same attitude that lead to the French kings losing power. 'Let them eat cake.'
Posted by C D Tupper on December 5,2010 | 02:33 PM
I love history and Byzantine and Russian history are my favorites. The article was interesting but I still don't understand why the Russian Orthodox Church opposes the findings. If it is the bodies of the martyred family (which it obviously is) they really should be given a proper Orthodox burial or whatever ceremony befitting them. The Czar, his family, and all the weight of the history that they represent deserve better that to be kept indefinitely in some forensic storage.
Posted by Ethan Williamson on November 19,2010 | 12:38 PM
Article lacked logic. It failed to explain what sinister motivation the church might have to deny that the bodies are relics. We're not denying the martyrdom of St. Nicholas and his family. We're not denying who murdered them. The church just isn't certain that the bodies that have been found are those of the saints, believing an older report that the bodies were destroyed. It's not that we dislike the idea of relics! A few miracles might help clear the fog and convince us. Eventually, the church may change its mind. In the meantime, we deeply honor the saints, which is a lot more than most scientists can claim.
Posted by Marianna Friesel on November 11,2010 | 03:44 PM
Very good and most interesting. Anything about Russia is very interesting since I have very little history knowledge about the country. What we have mostly today is newspaper articles printed as news.
Thanks for this very fine story!! I enjoyed!!
Posted by Chester Priest on November 10,2010 | 04:07 PM
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