Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Ipatiev House, Yekaterinburg, (later Sverdlovsk) in 1928. Ipatiev House (Russian: Дóм Ипáтьева) was a merchant's house in Yekaterinburg (later renamed Sverdlovsk in 1924, renamed back to Yekaterinburg in 1991) where the former Emperor Nicholas II of Russia (1868–1918, reigned 1894–1917), his family, and members of his household were murdered in July 1918 following the Bolshevik ...

  3. Nov 25, 2022 · This, of course, was only the beginning. The room in Ipatiev House where the Romanovs were murdered. In April 1918, the family was moved one last time, to Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg. Named for ...

    • Leena Kim
    • 3 min
    • lkim@hearst.com
  4. 4 : Room of Anna Demidova. 5 : Dining room (three views) 6 : Passage with adjoining room. 7 : Bathroom and WC doors. 8 : Stairs used to access ground house (two views) 9 : Stairs from entrance door of the house. 10 : Cellar room where the Romanovs were murdered. - Ipatiev house ground -. Inside views of Ipatiev house's rooms.

  5. Nov 6, 2015 · In spring of 1918, the Romanov family was moved to Ekaterinburg, a city in Russia’s Urals. There they were held captive in a house which belonged to engineer Ipatiev, where they would ultimately be killed. The words “Ipatiev house” have since become associated with the murder of the Russian imperial family.

  6. Ipatiev House, with the palisade erected just before Nicholas, Alexandra and Maria arrived on 30 April 1918. On the top left of the house is an attic dormer window where a Maxim gun was positioned. Directly below it was the tsar and tsarina's bedroom. The Church of All Saints in 2016 (top left), where the Ipatiev House used to be.

    • 16–17 July 1918
  7. Hosted by Ikoula - 175/177 rue d'Aguesseau - 92100 Boulogne Billancourt - 01 84 01 02 50. This web site is a virtual museum about the captivity and the tragic end of the Romanov in 1918. It presents notably a 3D reconstitution of their last place of detention, Ipatiev House, in Yekaterinburg.

  8. When White Army forces took Yekaterinburg just over a week later, Ipatiev regained his house but promptly decided to emigrate. A year later, in mid-July 1919, Yekaterinburg was retaken by the Red ...

  1. People also search for