Google
×
Ganinan Yama is where the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas 2 of Russia and his family were dumped down a mineshaft in the forest, after they were brutally murdered in Yekaterinburg. The Romanov remains were hidden or buried here for 73 years.
Sep 24, 2023
An extensive report concluded that the royal family's remains had been cremated at the mine since evidence of fire was found and charred bones, but no bodies.
People also ask
Dec 28, 2010 · After the Romanov family was shot and stabbed to death, the bodies were removed to two nearby derelict mine shafts where the remains were burned ...
Apr 11, 2022 · Following the murders, the regicides secretly transported their bodies to the abandoned Isetsky mine, located near the Four Brothers tract, ...
Oct 3, 2021 · The family of Nicholas II were shot in the Ipatiev House in Ekaterinburg on the night of 16/17 July 1918. The bodies were then taken out of the ...
Missing: death | Show results with:death
There is a widespread legend that the remains of the Romanovs were completely destroyed at the Ganina Yama during the ritual murder and a profitable pilgrimage ...
The burial was discovered in the late 1970s at Porosyonkov Log on the Old Koptyakovskaya Road, a few kilometres from Ganina Yama. An official exhumation took ...
Aug 18, 2018 · The Romanovs, Russia's last Royal Family, were murdered by the Bolsheviks in Yekaterinburg, Russia on the night of July 17, 1918.
Feb 5, 2017 · There were pictures, too, of the seven churches at Ganina Yama, one church for each murdered member of the Imperial family, who were canonised ...
Aug 3, 2008 · The monastery, also known as Ganina Yama, is built on the grounds surrounding the mine shaft where bones of the Romanovs were found in the 1970s.