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  1. Body of Prokopy Lyapunov was reportedly buried at Temple of Prophet Elijah on Vorontsov Field [Wikidata], but at some point later reburied at Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius by his son Vladimir, along with many other prominent figures who lived at the Time of Troubles (e.g. Dmitry Troubetskoy).

  2. Prokopy Petrovich Lyapunov was a prominent 17th century Russian nobleman (dvoryanin), voivode of, allegedly, a Rurikid origin who practically became a head of Pereyaslavl-Ryazansky lands nobility in the end of 1590s; he took part in wars during power vacuum in succession crisis that happened in early 1598 in Tsardom as result of confusion about ...

  3. May 1, 2024 · Some 2,000 years ago, the famous philosopher’s burial was recorded on a papyrus scroll housed in the Roman city of Herculaneum, according to a statement from Italy’s National Research Council.

  4. Oct 18, 2018 · In 1979, with the help of Yurovsky’s son, he finally found the grave near the site of the mansion in Yekaterinburg, Russia where the family had been imprisoned. They began to exhume bones...

  5. Gravestones of Petr Savvich Lyapunov, a father of Prokopy Lyapunov, and his family members were evidently destroyed by Bolsheviks in around 1937 in Isady, Ryazan Oblast familial estate. By 1961 their original familial mansion ( manor house ) was also demolished.

  6. The Kremlin Wall Necropolis is the former national cemetery of the Soviet Union, located in Red Square in Moscow beside the Kremlin Wall. Burials there began in November 1917, when 240 pro-Bolsheviks who died during the Moscow Bolshevik Uprising were buried in mass graves.

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  8. Nov 19, 2022 · On July 17, 1918, the reigning members of Russia's last ruling royal family, the Romanovs —Tsar Nicholas II, his wife Tsarina Alexandra, and their five children, Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia,...