Commemorated on July 17
Saint Nicholas, the last Russian Tsar, was born in 1868. As a child, he was very religious, guileless and free from malice.
Nicholas
II was crowned as Tsar in 1894, following the death of his father Tsar
Alexander. He began his reign with lofty hopes for peace, urging other
nations to reduce the size of their armies, and to seek the peaceful
settlement of international disputes. The Peace Conference at the Hague
in 1899 laid the groundwork for the League of Nations and the United
Nations.
He married Princess Alice of Hesse, who converted to
Orthodoxy and took the name Alexandra. Their children were Olga (1895),
Tatiana (1897), Maria (1899), Anastasia (1901), and Alexis (1904).
The
glorification of St Seraphim of Sarov took place on July 19, 1903, and
Tsar Nicholas attended the ceremonies at Sarov with his family. At that
time he was given a letter written by St Seraphim more than seventy
years before, which seemed to disturb him. Although the Sovereign never
revealed the letter’s contents, it is believed that it was a prophecy of
the bloodshed that would engulf Russia in less than fifteen years.
St
Nicholas was executed by the Soviets at Ekaterinburg on July 4, 1918
along with his family and servants. The prisoners were awakened late at
night and ordered to get dressed for travel. They went down to the
cellar of the home in which they were being held, waiting for the word
to leave. The Tsar sat on a chair in the middle of the room holding his
son Alexis in his lap, while his wife and daughters stood around them.
The
executioners entered the room and read out the order for their
execution. Sts Nicholas and Alexandra died under the hail of bullets,
but the children did not die right away. They were stabbed and clubbed
with the butts of rifles. Their bodies were taken to an abandoned mine,
cut into pieces, then piled in front of the mine. Sulphur and gasoline
were poured on the bloody mound and set on fire. When the fire went out
two days later, whatever remained of the bodies was thrown into the mine
and grenades were tossed into it. Then the ground was plowed so that no
trace of the disposal of the bodies remained.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2012(with 2011's link here also and further, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!)
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