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Showing posts with label mad monk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mad monk. Show all posts

Friday, September 28, 2007

Remains Are Those of Romanovs

Scientists have tentatively confirmed that the bones found in Russia back in July appear to be that of the missing two children of the last Tsar's family.

The Romanovs were jettisoned from their throne and royalty during the Revolution. The family was shot, their bodies doused with acid, and then buried. The remains were discovered in 1991.

For years, several people claimed to be the "missing" heir, Anastasia, but none of the claims turned out to be true.

Full test results are still awaited, but experts say preliminary results appear to confirm that the remains are that of Alexei, heir to the throne, and Maria, his elder sister.

Alexei was a Hemopheliac and tended to by "The Mad Monk," Vladmir Rasputin. Rasputin was widely considered to possess Supernatural powers and there is actually a lot of circumstantial evidence to support that fact - not least of which being that he did, in fact, "cure" Alexei of his Hemophelia and was the only one who could stop the child's incessant bleeding on more than one occasion.

Rasputin was a hard-drinking womanizer and braggart and his boasts of an affair with the Tsar's wife led directly to both his death and the Revolution which killed the family.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Tsar's Lost Children Found?

Archaeologists believe they have found the remains of two of the missing children of Russia's last tsar. While remains were found and ceremoniously reburied in 1998, two of the family were missing. In years prior, some had stepped forward, claiming to be one or more of these children, but various medical tests revealed otherwise.

We report this here because one of the children, Alexei, is known to have suffered from haemophelia and was treated by "The Mad Monk," spiritualist, Rasputin. Rasputin is known to have possessed some form of Supernatural gifts and was said to have quite a way with the ladies: he tended to sexually assault and even rape them while his wife and many children stayed at home. Rasputin was a heavy drinker and, by most accounts, cruel man. He was conspired against and killed by a coterie of people, though no one is sure exactly what killed him: he was poisoned, stabbed, shot, and drowned.

When pulled from the river, his hands were fashioned in a divine form and tests indicated he had survived for much longer than normal in the icy waters. Recent investigations suggest at least one more unknown assailant -- most likely a soldier or highly-trained servant of some capacity -- was the final arbiter of The Mad Monk's fate.