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The Romanovs: the Final Chapter Paperback – October 1, 1996
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“Riveting . . . unfolds like a detective story.”—Los Angeles Times Book Review
In July 1991, nine skeletons were exhumed from a shallow mass grave near Ekaterinburg, Siberia, a few miles from the infamous cellar room where the last tsar and his family had been murdered seventy-three years before. But were these the bones of the Romanovs? And if these were their remains, where were the bones of the two younger Romanovs supposedly murdered with the rest of the family? Was Anna Anderson, celebrated for more than sixty years in newspapers, books, and film, really Grand Duchess Anastasia?
The Romanovs provides the answers, describing in suspenseful detail the dramatic efforts to discover the truth. Pulitzer Prize winner Robert K. Massie presents a colorful panorama of contemporary characters, illuminating the major scientific dispute between Russian experts and a team of Americans, whose findings, along with those of DNA scientists from Russia, America, and Great Britain, all contributed to solving one of the great mysteries of the twentieth century.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House Trade Paperbacks
- Publication dateOctober 1, 1996
- Dimensions5.45 x 0.81 x 8.18 inches
- ISBN-100345406400
- ISBN-13978-0345406408
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
“Compelling . . . a fascinating account.”—Chicago Tribune
“A masterpiece of investigative reporting.”—San Francisco Examiner & Chronicle
From the Publisher
--Stacey Witcraft, Advertising Manager
From the Inside Flap
--The Washington Post Book World
"RIVETING . . . UNFOLDS LIKE A DETECTIVE STORY."
--Los Angeles Times Book Review
In July 1991, nine skeletons were exhumed from a shallow mass grave near Ekaterinburg, Siberia, a few miles from the infamous cellar room where the last tsar and his family had been murdered seventy-three years before. But were these the bones of the Romanovs? And if these were their remains, where were the bones of the two younger Romanovs supposedly murdered with the rest of the family? Was Anna Anderson, celebrated for more than sixty years in newspapers, books, and film, really Grand Duchess Anastasia?
The Romanovs: The Final Chapter provides answers, describing in suspenseful detail the dramatic efforts in post-Communist Russia to discover the truth. This unique story, written by Pulitzer Prize winner Robert K. Massie, presents a colorful panorama of contemporary characters, illuminating the major scientific dispute between Russian ex
From the Back Cover
--The Washington Post Book World
"RIVETING . . . UNFOLDS LIKE A DETECTIVE STORY."
--Los Angeles Times Book Review
In July 1991, nine skeletons were exhumed from a shallow mass grave near Ekaterinburg, Siberia, a few miles from the infamous cellar room where the last tsar and his family had been murdered seventy-three years before. But were these the bones of the Romanovs? And if these were their remains, where were the bones of the two younger Romanovs supposedly murdered with the rest of the family? Was Anna Anderson, celebrated for more than sixty years in newspapers, books, and film, really Grand Duchess Anastasia?
The Romanovs: The Final Chapter provides answers, describing in suspenseful detail the dramatic efforts in post-Communist Russia to discover the truth. This unique story, written by Pulitzer Prize winner Robert K. Massie, presents a colorful panorama of contemporary characters, illuminating the major scientific dispute between Russian experts and a team of Americans, including Drs. William Maples and Michael Baden--fiercely antagonistic forensic experts whose findings, along with those of DNA scientists from Russia, America, and Great Britain, all contributed to solving one of the greatest mysteries of the twentieth century.
"AN ADMIRABLE SCIENTIFIC THRILLER."
--The New York Times Book Review
"COMPELLING . . . A FASCINATING ACCOUNT."
--Chicago Tribune
"A MASTERPIECE OF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING."
--San Francisco Examiner & Chronicle
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Down Twenty-three Steps
At midnight, Yakov Yurovsky, the leader of the executioners, came up the stairs to awaken the family. In his pocket he had a Colt pistol with a cartridge clip containing seven bullets, and under his coat he carried a long-muzzled Mauser pistol with a wooden gun stock and a clip of ten bullets. A knock on the prisoners’ door brought Dr. Eugene Botkin, the family physician, who had remained with the Romanovs for sixteen months of detention and imprisonment. Botkin was already awake; he had been writing what turned out to be a last letter to his own family.
Quietly, Yurovsky explained his intrusion. “Because of unrest in the town, it has become necessary to move the family downstairs,” he said. “It would be dangerous to be in the upper rooms if there was shooting in the streets.” Botkin understood; an anti-Bolshevik White Army bolstered by thousands of Czech former prisoners of war was approaching the Siberian town of Ekaterinburg, where the family had been held for seventy-eight days. Already, the captives had heard the rumble of artillery in the distance and the sound of revolver shots fired nearby on recent nights. Yurovsky asked that the family dress as soon as possible. Botkin went to awaken them.
They took forty minutes. Nicholas, fifty, the former emperor, and his thirteen-year-old son, Alexis, the former tsarevich and heir to the throne, dressed in simple military shirts, trousers, boots, and forage caps. Alexandra, forty-six, the former empress, and her daughters, Olga, twenty-two, Tatiana, twenty-one, Marie, nineteen, and Anastasia, seventeen, put on dresses without hats or outer wraps. Yurovsky met them outside their door and led them down the staircase into an inner courtyard. Nicholas followed, carrying his son, who could not walk. Alexis, crippled by hemophilia, was a thin, muscular adolescent weighing eighty pounds, but the tsar managed without stumbling. A man of medium height, Nicholas had a powerful body, full chest, and strong arms. The empress, taller than her husband, came next, walking with difficulty because of the sciatica which had kept her lying on a palace chaise longue for many years and in bed or a wheelchair during their imprisonment. Behind came their daughters, two of them carrying small pillows. The youngest and smallest daughter, Anastasia, held her pet King Charles spaniel, Jemmy. After the daughters came Dr. Botkin and three others who had remained to share the family’s imprisonment: Trupp, Nicholas’s valet; Demidova, Alexandra’s maid; and Kharitonov, the cook. Demidova also clutched a pillow; inside, sewed deep into the feathers, was a box containing a collection of jewels; Demidova was charged with never letting it out of her sight.
Yurovsky detected no signs of hesitation or suspicion; “there were no tears, no sobs, no questions,” he said later. From the bottom of the stairs, he led them across the courtyard to a small, semibasement room at the corner of the house. It was only eleven by thirteen feet and had a single window, barred by a heavy iron grille on the outer wall. All the furniture had been removed. Here, Yurovsky asked them to wait. Alexandra, seeing the room empty, immediately said, “What? No chairs? May we not sit?” Yurovsky, obliging, went out to order two chairs. One of his squad, dispatched on this mission, said to another, “The heir needs a chair . . . evidently he wants to die in a chair.”
Two chairs were brought. Alexandra took one; Nicholas put Alexis in the other. The daughters placed one pillow behind their mother’s back and a second behind their brother’s. Yurovsky then began giving directions—“Please, you stand here, and you here . . . that’s it, in a row”—spreading them out across the back wall. He explained that he needed a photograph because people in Moscow were worried that they had escaped. When he was finished, the eleven prisoners were arranged in two rows: Nicholas stood by his son’s chair in the middle of the front row, Alexandra sat in her chair near the wall, her daughters were arranged behind her, the others stood behind the tsar and the tsarevich.
Satisfied by this arrangement, Yurovsky then called in not a photographer with a tripod camera and a black cloth but eleven other men armed with revolvers. Five, like Yurovsky, were Russians; six were Latvians. Earlier, two Latvians had refused to shoot the young women and Yurovsky had replaced them with two others.
As these men crowded through the double doors behind him, Yurovsky stood in front of Nicholas, his right hand in his trouser pocket, his left holding a small piece of paper from which he began to read: “In view of the fact that your relatives are continuing their attack on Soviet Russia, the Ural Executive Committee has decided to execute you.” Nicholas turned quickly to look at his family, then turned back to face Yurovsky and said, “What? What?” Yurovsky quickly repeated what he had said, then jerked the Colt out of his pocket and shot the tsar, point-blank.
At this, the entire squad began to fire. Each had been told beforehand whom he was to shoot and ordered to aim for the heart to avoid excessive quantities of blood and finish more quickly. Twelve men were now firing pistols, some over the shoulders of those in front, so close that many of the executioners suffered gunpowder burns and were partially deafened. The empress and her daughter Olga each tried to make the sign of the cross but did not have time. Alexandra died immediately, sitting in her chair. Olga was killed by a single bullet through her head. Botkin, Trupp, and Kharitonov also died quickly.
Alexis, the three younger sisters, and Demidova remained alive. Bullets fired at the daughters’ chests seemed to bounce off, ricocheting around the room like hail. Mystified, then terrified and almost hysterical, the executioners continued firing. Barely visible through the smoke, Marie and Anastasia pressed against the wall, squatting, covering their heads with their arms until the bullets cut them down. Alexis, lying on the floor, moved his arm to shield himself, then tried to clutch his father’s shirt. One of the executioners kicked the tsarevich in the head with his heavy boot. Alexis moaned. Yurovsky stepped up and fired two shots from his Mauser directly into the boy’s ear.
Demidova survived the first fusillade. Rather than reload, the executioners took rifles from the next room and pursued her with bayonets. Screaming, running back and forth along the wall, she tried to fend them off with her armored pillow. The cushion fell, and she grabbed a bayonet with both hands, trying to hold it away from her chest. It was dull and at first would not penetrate. When she collapsed, the enraged murderers pierced her body more than thirty times.
The room, filled with smoke and the stench of gunpowder, became quiet. Blood was everywhere, in rivers and pools. Yurovsky, in a hurry, began turning the bodies over, checking their pulses. The truck, now waiting at the front door of the Ipatiev House, had to be well out of town before the arrival in a few hours of the July Siberian dawn. Sheets, collected from the beds of the four grand duchesses, were brought to carry the bodies and prevent blood dripping on the floors and in the courtyard. Nicholas’s body went first. Then, suddenly, as one of the daughters was being laid on a sheet, she cried out. With bayonets and rifle butts, the entire band turned on her. In a moment, she was still.
When the family lay in the back of the truck, covered by a tarpaulin, someone discovered Anastasia’s small dog, its head crushed by a rifle butt. This little body was tossed into the truck.
The “whole procedure,” as Yurovsky later described it, including feeling the pulses and loading the truck, had taken twenty minutes.
Two days before the executions, Yurovsky and one of the other executioners, Peter Ermakov, a local Bolshevik leader, had gone into the forest looking for a place to bury the bodies. About twelve miles north of Ekaterinburg, in an area of swamps, peat bogs, and abandoned mine shafts, there was a place known as the Four Brothers because four towering pine trees had once overlooked the site. Around the stumps of these old trees, and among the birches and pines which grew there now, were empty pits, some shallow, some deeper, from which coal and peat had once been dug. Abandoned, some had filled with rainwater and become small ponds. The largest of these, named after a peasant prospector, was called Ganin’s Pit. Nearby, other smaller, deeper mines were nameless. It was to this place that Yurovsky brought the bodies.
Already deep in the forest, jouncing through the darkness along a muddy, rutted road, Yurovsky’s truck suddenly encountered a party of twenty-five men on horseback and in peasant carts. Most were drunk. They were factory workers from the town, some of them members of the new Ural Regional Soviet, tipped off by their comrade, Ermakov, that the Imperial family would be coming down that road. But they had expected to see the family alive; Ermakov had promised his friends the four grand duchesses as well as the thrill of killing the tsar. “Why didn’t you bring them alive?” they shouted.
Yurovsky, in control, calmed the angry men and ordered them to shift the bodies from the truck into the carts. In the process, the workers began stealing from the victims’ clothing and pockets. Yurovsky halted this by threatening an immediate firing squad. Not all of the bodies would fit into the small carts, and some remained on the truck; in tandem, this macabre procession continued into the forest.
In the darkness, surrounded by dense pines and birches, the party could not find the Four Brothers. Yurovsky sent horsemen up and down the road looking for the turnoff to the site. When the sun began to rise and the forest grew light, they located it. The road became only a track, and soon the truck had wedged itself between two trees and could go no farther. More bodies were heaped into the carts. At six in the morning, the procession reached the Four Brothers. Ganin’s Pit, nine feet deep, had a foot of water in the bottom. Not far away, in another, narrower mine shaft, cut thirty feet into the earth, the water was deeper.
Yurovsky ordered the corpses laid out on the grass and undressed. Two fires were built. As the men were stripping one of the daughters, they found her corset torn by bullets. From the ripped slash gleamed rows of diamonds sewed tightly together—the “armor” which initially had shielded her from bullets and astonished her executioners. Sight of the jewels excited the men; again, Yurovsky moved quickly and dismissed all but a few, sending them back down the road. The undressing continued. Eighteen pounds of diamonds were collected, mostly from the corsets worn by three of the grand duchesses. The empress was found to be wearing a belt of pearls made up of several necklaces sewed into linen. Each of her daughters wore around her neck an amulet bearing Rasputin’s picture and a prayer by the peasant “holy man.” These jewels, amulets, and anything else of value were placed in sacks, and everything else, including all clothing, was burned.
The naked bodies lay on the grass. All had been violently disfigured. At some point in the carnage, perhaps in maniacal rage, perhaps in a deliberate attempt to make the corpses unrecognizable, the faces had been crushed by blows from rifle butts. Nevertheless, as the six women—four of them young and, twelve hours earlier, beautiful—lay on the ground, their bodies were touched. “I felt the empress myself and she was warm,” said one of the party later. Another said, “Now I can die in peace because I have squeezed the empress’s ——.” The last word in this sentence is crossed out.
Once the bodies were stripped, the jewels collected, and the clothing burned, Yurovsky was almost finished. He ordered the bodies thrown down the smaller, deeper mine shaft. Then, attempting to collapse the pit, he dropped in several hand grenades. By ten in the morning, his work was done. He returned to Ekaterinburg to report to the Ural Regional Soviet.
Eight days after the murders, Ekaterinburg fell to the Whites and a group of White officers rushed to the Ipatiev House. The building was mostly empty. Toothbrushes, pins, combs, hairbrushes, and smashed icons were scattered on the floors. Empty hangers hung in the closets. Alexandra’s Bible still was there, heavily underlined, containing dried flowers and leaves pressed between its pages. Many religious books also remained, along with a copy of War and Peace, three volumes of Chekhov, a biography of Peter the Great, a volume of Tales from Shakespeare, and Les Fables de la Fontaine. In one bedroom, the officers found a smooth-edged board on which the tsarevich had eaten and played games in bed. Nearby was a handbook of instructions for playing the balalaika. In the dining room near the fireplace stood a wheelchair.
The room in the cellar seemed sinister. A few traces of dried blood still clung to the baseboards. The yellow floor, thoroughly mopped and scrubbed, bore scratches and dents from bullets and lunging bayonets. The walls were scarred by bullet holes; from the wall against which the family had been standing, large pieces of plaster had fallen away.
An immediate search for the family led nowhere. Not until six months later, in January 1919, did a thorough investigation begin when Admiral Alexander Kolchak, “Supreme Ruler” of the White Government in Siberia, assigned Nicholas Sokolov, a thirty-six-year-old professional legal investigator, to the task. As soon as the snow melted, Sokolov began working at the Four Brothers. The track through the forest still showed deep ruts from the carts and the truck. The earth around the pits had been trampled by horses’ hooves. Cut branches and burned wood floated on the surface of Ganin’s Pit and the narrow mine shaft. The walls of the deeper pit showed evidence of grenade explosions. There were traces of two bonfires, one at the edge of the narrow mine, the other in the middle of the forest road.
Sokolov ordered the water pumped out of Ganin’s Pit and the nameless mine shaft and began to excavate. In Ganin’s Pit he found nothing, but from the other he collected dozens of articles and fragments. In this grim work he was assisted by two of the tsarevich’s tutors: Pierre Gilliard, whose subject had been French, and Sidney Gibbes, who had taught English. Both had remained in Ekaterinburg after the Imperial family was sent to the Ipatiev House. Among the evidence identified and cataloged by these heartbroken men was the tsar’s belt buckle; a child’s military belt buckle which the tsarevich had worn; a charred emerald cross which the Dowager Empress Marie had given to Empress Alexandra; a pearl earring from a pair always worn by Alexandra; the Ulm Cross, a jubilee badge adorned with sapphires and diamonds, presented to the empress by Her Majesty’s Own Uhlan Guards; a metal pocket case in which Nicholas always carried his wife’s portrait; three small icons carried by the grand duchesses; the empress’s spectacle case; six sets of women’s corsets; fragments of the military caps worn by Nicholas and his son; shoe buckles belonging to the grand duchesses; and Dr. Botkin’s eyeglasses and upper plate with fourteen false teeth. There were also a few charred bones, partly destroyed by acid but still bearing the marks of an ax; revolver bullets; and a severed human finger, slender and manicured as Alexandra’s had been.
Sokolov also collected an assortment of nails, tinfoil, copper coins, and a small lock, which puzzled him until they were shown to Gilliard. The tutor immediately identified them as part of the pocketful of odds and ends always carried by the tsarevich. Finally, at the bottom of the pit, mangled but unburned, the investigators found the decomposed corpse of Anastasia’s spaniel, Jemmy.
But other than the finger and the charred bones in the pit, Sokolov found no human bodies or bones. He interrogated one of the executioners and numerous corroborating witnesses and established that eleven people had been killed at the Ipatiev House. He knew that the bodies had been brought to the Four Brothers. He learned that on the day following the murders, two more trucks carrying three barrels had gone down the Koptyaki road into the forest. He discovered that two of those barrels had been filled with gasoline and one with sulfuric acid. Accordingly, Sokolov concluded that on July 18, the day after the execution, Yurovsky had destroyed the bodies by chopping them up with axes, dousing them repeatedly with gasoline and sulfuric acid, and burning them to ash in bonfires near the mine shafts. These ashes and bones he declared to be the remains of the Imperial family, the site of the bonfires to be their grave.
Reverently, Nicholas Sokolov placed the physical results of his investigation—the charred bones, the finger, and the principal personal articles—inside a suitcase-sized box. In the summer of 1919, when the Red Army surged back into Ekaterinburg, Sokolov traveled across Siberia to the Pacific and went by boat to Europe. His box, later to become an object of mystery and contention, went with him.
When in 1924 he published his conclusion, skeptics argued that it was not possible to burn eleven corpses so completely in a bonfire. Nevertheless, Sokolov’s story was buttressed by his simple, seemingly indisputable statement: there were no bodies.
For most of the twentieth century, this is what the world believed.
Product details
- Publisher : Random House Trade Paperbacks; Reprint edition (October 1, 1996)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0345406400
- ISBN-13 : 978-0345406408
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.45 x 0.81 x 8.18 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #135,992 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #53 in Historical Russia Biographies
- #164 in Royalty Biographies
- #261 in Russian History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Robert Massie is the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Peter the Great, Nicholas and Alexandra, Dreadnought and The Romanovs: The Final Chapter. He lives in Irvington, New York.
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Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They appreciate the historical accuracy and interesting details about Russian history. However, opinions differ on the research quality - some find it meticulous and informative, while others feel there is too much detail. There are mixed views on the storyline - some find it an excellent addition to the Romanov saga, while others consider it sad and unfortunate.
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Customers find the book engaging and interesting. They appreciate the author's storytelling style and consider it a good follow-up to Nicholas and Catherine the Great. Readers also mention that the chapters on the imposters are worth reading.
"As other reviewers have said, this is a great follow up to Massie's other book "Nicholas and Alexandra"...." Read more
"...The book of The Romanovs: The Final Chapter shows history that has had a great impact in the world today...." Read more
"...An exciting, must read for all those interested in the Romanov history and tragedy!" Read more
"...the allure of publishing this as a follow-up to the brilliant previous novel, but given the number of questions that remained unanswered at the time..." Read more
Customers find the book's writing style engaging and easy to read. They appreciate the clear, concise account of the historical events. The author does an excellent job in explaining the details and providing a detailed account of the story. Overall, customers praise the book as a well-written and informative account of history.
"...The Romanovs" is engagingly written and reads like a murder mystery...." Read more
"...I find his writing style to be something I have a hard time putting down, once I've started reading...." Read more
"...classic biography of the Imperial couple since it completes the telling of their tragic story...." Read more
"...Taking away from future findings this book is a well written, both a revision of Massie's initial ending to his first book..." Read more
Customers find the book's historical accuracy fascinating and interesting. They appreciate the author's ability to bring Russian history to life in a realistic way. The last Tsar and his family are also mentioned as intriguing subjects. Politics and history are considered a good combination, with a modern perspective providing an interesting insight into the Romanov family.
"...The fall of the Romanovs had a great impact in Russia, since after the execution the tsarist autocracy was over and the revolution began influencing..." Read more
"This is another excellent book about the Romanov family, written by Massie...." Read more
"...Especially enjoyable is the author's ability to render historical fact in such a way as to make for riveting reading...." Read more
"...It was a very sad time for the Russian upper class and especially royalty...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's research quality. Some find it well-researched and informative, providing detailed evidence about the Romanov family's final days. However, others feel the book provides too much information and technical descriptions are difficult to understand.
"...Technical details of DNA analysis are explained clearly in layman's terms so that the reader can understand what the investigators were doing...." Read more
"Scrupulously researched and recorded...." Read more
"...Sometimes, however, there is almost too much information -- Massie's recounting of the tug of war among royal Russian exiles can be incredibly..." Read more
"...His astonishingly detailed research is evident in the minutia he is able to reveal about his characters without making it tedious...." Read more
Customers have different views on the storyline. Some find it an excellent addition to the Romanov saga, an interesting follow-up, and an important ending after reading the other Massie novels. Others feel the story is not as interesting as the other three mentioned books, and it's a sad and unfortunate human story.
"Scrupulously researched and recorded. The Romanov pretenders are discussed in detail, and much of the identification of the murdered royal family..." Read more
"...It goes into detail about the death and disposal of the Romanov family at the beginning of the Bolshevik revolution...." Read more
"...novel was more scientific than the others, by necessity, with less of a story line, yet it is aptly named "the Final Chapter," and is an..." Read more
"I gave this book four stars. This is very interesting and gives more insight to what really happened...." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2010As other reviewers have said, this is a great follow up to Massie's other book "Nicholas and Alexandra". It might not be as meaningful if you have not read "Nicholas and Alexandra" first.
"The Romanovs" is engagingly written and reads like a murder mystery. Technical details of DNA analysis are explained clearly in layman's terms so that the reader can understand what the investigators were doing. The narrative can drag in places but so far I have had trouble putting it down. Excellent read.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2013The Romanovs: The Final Chapter by Robert K. Massie.
The Random House Publishing Group. (London, 1995). 320 pp.
Nicholas the II was the last czar of Russia, because of his weakness as a ruler and the countries public unrest, Nicholas and his family, the Romanovs, were executed. Yakov Yurovsky, the leader of the executioners, told them that because of the unrest of the town they had to be taken to an inner courtyard. They were told to line up so they could take a picture and immediately started shooting. "Blood was everywhere, in rivers and pools."(Massie) After the killing Yurovsky ordered the corpses laid on the grass and undressed. He also ordered the bodies to be thrown down a mine shaft and he threw a couple of grenades so that the pit would collapse. For most of the twentieth century, this is what the world believed.
After the execution many things where said, for example, that they were still alive and had escaped safely, that they were dead and that only some had escaped. People claiming to be from the royal family was very common and some investigations were held but nothing close to the truth. Alexander Advonin was not planning on finding the remains of the Romanovs but it somehow happened. The finding of the nine bodies was an investigation carried out over many years that although it faced many obstacles became very successful. The bones where very hard to put together and find out who was who because they had been burned with sulfuric acid so that their faces would deform.
Since Abramov and his team didn't have enough money they determined the identity of the skulls with their own method. They used combinatorial mathematics, taking four factors: gender, age, race and height and then added other evidence and factors like a wide face, narrow face, prominent chin, a weak chin, etc. They obtained results by measuring probability and seeing different combinations of factors. The way they determined who belonged to which corpse was unique and extremely interesting. Another thing that captured my attention was how the women surivived longer then the men of the family. "Bullets fired at the daughter's chests seemed to bounce off, ricocheting around the room like hail." Marie and Anastasia were against the wall covering their heads with their arms until after a while the bullets finished them. Demidova, the other daughter, survived the first fusillade and the executioners instead or reloading they chased her with bayonets. When they finally took her down they shot her more than thirty times. While they were being laid on a sheet, one of the daughters cried out but was murdered in a moment. When Yurovsky's men where stripping one of the daughters they found her corset with rows of diamonds sewed tightly together, this "armor" had shielded her from the bullets.
The book of The Romanovs: The Final Chapter shows history that has had a great impact in the world today. The Tsar's mistakes caused a great unrest among the people, for example, after the Revolution of 1905 was followed by the Bloody Sunday the people started seeing another image of the Tsar. Also, when Russia entered the First World War the Russians started having concerns about the economy and some people even planned behind the Tsar. The failures of the Tsar led to public unrest and opposition to the government increased. This eventually lead to the execution of the Romanov Family. This book also explains the research and advances they have made ever since the family was massacred, this has helped us understand what really happened. The fall of the Romanovs had a great impact in Russia, since after the execution the tsarist autocracy was over and the revolution began influencing many other countries to turn against their government and become independent.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2010This is another excellent book about the Romanov family, written by Massie.
The book starts out by going over the Romanov's final days and their eventual demise. It continues by looking into various aspects of the tragedy, including the coverage of numerous Anasthasia imposters in later years. There were extra pages about one woman in particular, Anna Anderson, who, though she had many detracters, had many people fooled into believing that she was really the Tsar's youngest daughter. However, in this book we discover that recent DNA testing has proven that, with out a doubt, this woman was NOT Anasthasia after all!
An exciting, must read for all those interested in the Romanov history and tragedy!
- Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2014Based on how quickly I devoured Nicholas & Alexandra, I am surprised that finishing this took as long as it did. The book started out interesting enough but by the end I felt like I had been slogging through a thick fog ultimately not reaching the destination toward which I thought I was heading. It's also unfortunate that "The Final Chapter" was written well before the final chapter of the Romanov saga was really known. I understand the allure of publishing this as a follow-up to the brilliant previous novel, but given the number of questions that remained unanswered at the time, it seems like it was published very pre-maturely.
Perhaps hindsight really is 20/20, but not only were there many unanswered questions it also often seemed as though Massie was digging for content to fill the pages. I was pleased early on when it seemed as though this would make some real and emotional connections back to the family with whom I was so enrapt last week; it was particularly vindicating to read the medical examiner's opinion mirror mine when he, speaking of how it was possible to carry out such a tragedy, explained that, "[The murderers] depersonalize the victim and make him or her into a symbol, something other than an individual human being. [The murderer] is killing the regime, the tsar, getting rid of the whole hated past and creating a new world order." From there, however, the mystery of actually discovering and disinterring the bones of the Imperial family from the mass grave came to an end quite quickly. The political intrigue of when and how to bring this truth forward held my attention for a while, but mostly I felt the pain that Alexander Avdonin expressed at the inability of scientists and politicians to work together toward a common goal. “These remains,” Avdonin said, “should be the source of unification of our people, who were split by the revolution. But they still cause division. These remains could unite the churches – our church and the church abroad – but they do not. They could unite the scientists, but, again, nothing is working out.” The frustration that must have been felt by all of those involved was very clearly conveyed, but it was created a very jarring and not wholly enjoyable reading experience.
If one-third of the book relayed the intrigue of locating the Tsar and his family, and one-third was dedicated to the petty squabbles and smoothing of egos in an attempt to actually *do* something apart from bicker, it felt like the last one-third was devoted solely to the question of Anna Anderson. This, more than anything else, greatly hindered my enjoyment of the book. While she certainly played a part in the story of the missing Romanov children I felt like Massie devoted entirely too much time to her story and the intricacies of the legal battles surrounding her available DNA. This is especially true considering this book came out prior to 2007, thus precluding any chance of having a true resolution to the story. While I am glad the details of what happened have been preserved for posterity, the minutia of Virginia medical law held little to no interest for me. This is certainly not served by the fact that most anyone (I imagine) who has enough interest in the Romanovs to read this book would likely already know the fate of Anna Anderson… there is no mystery to be solved, and the legal battles just droned on and on to the point where I very nearly skipped to the next section… I simply did not find her saga to be compelling enough to warrant devoting nearly 100 pages to scientific one-upmanship and familial infighting.
“It’s a question of the truth,” said Michael Thornton at the press conference that finally unmasked Ms. Anderson. Richard Schweitzer echoed the sentiment when questioned about his reluctance to accept the findings presented there. “I’m looking for the truth,” Schweitzer said, and that was really the only thing that kept me motivated through the end of this book. Once the Anna Anderson debacle was finally laid to rest Massie takes us on a journey through the living (at the time) members of the Romanov family and the question of who, if anyone, is truly now head of the family and pretender to the throne. This, while somewhat interesting, also just felt rather like the author was searching for material… a way to flesh out what really likely could have been trimmed to a couple of long-form magazine articles. This look at the present state of affairs among the surviving Romanovs was certainly more interesting than the Anna Anderson piece, but when I reached the end of the book, I wasn’t satisfied at all. There were simply too many questions remaining to be answered – Chiefly, “What happened to Anastasia? (or Marie, if you prefer)” I wish that this new edition of the book had been published with an addendum. While I think this probably worked very well as a follow-up in the mid-90’s, “The Final Chapter” has not, unfortunately, weathered the last twenty years as well as I had hoped. It was still a good read; I am glad I worked my way through it, but the magic, suspense, and emotion of Nicholas & Alexandra was almost wholly absent from this work.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2017I have all of Massie's other works on Russian history and figures. I find his writing style to be something I have a hard time putting down, once I've started reading. He goes in depth on some of Russia's most fascinating people and influential leaders. His works on "Peter The Great" and "Catherine The Great" are extremely interesting, and novels I find I re-read, from time to time.
Top reviews from other countries
- good but recived totally different colorReviewed in India on December 26, 2024
1.0 out of 5 stars Worst papar and cover
Cover and papar of worst quality ..smalll book badly overcharged price.
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Juan MorenoReviewed in Mexico on August 12, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente lectura
Narración muy interesante y amena de cómo ocurrió el descubrimiento de los restos de la familia de Nicolas II y cómo se comprobó que realmente eran los ellos, todo en medio de los riesgos que representaba hacer esto durante el régimen soviético. Muy recomendable.
- Lavinia SebestyenReviewed in Germany on April 6, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book just as any by Robert K Massie
If you read Nicholas and Alexandra you should also read this book.
- Eddie OzolsReviewed in Australia on November 4, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Research
A dispassionate history of the end of the Russian czars and the empire. Well researched and up to date. Massive is a great historian.
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Lis GskReviewed in Brazil on October 22, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente livro!
O autor faz um relato contundente, com farta pesquisa, sobre a intimidade e a tragédia da morte dos Romanov, que de fato está ainda revestida de tristeza e mistério.