Monday 3 March 2014

The Royal Martyr

Almost a hundred years ago today the Emperor of the Russian Empire, Tsar Nicholas II is believed to have allegedly written and signed what later turned out to be a faked abdication document thus leaving Monarchy formerly unrevoked in Russia. That unlawful document, consisting of three pieces of telegramm paper, was the only document in the history of the Russian Empire allegedly signed with a pencil by the Emperor. There is a doubt though that it was indeed the hand of the Tsar that held the pencil when the forged document was being "signed". The events of those days and of the following years are shrouded in lies and deception.

As of today, it has been established that abdication-related documents, that until recently were considered to have been written and signed by Tsar Nicholas II and verified by the "signature" of Count Vladimir Borisovich Frederiks, who had served as Imperial Household Minister between 1897 and 1917 under Nicholas II, were fakes all along.

But it can be attested that it was his hand that held the pencil with which the Tsar had underlined, in those most trying hours, the following lines: "And, behold, ye are risen up in your fathers' stead, an increase of sinful men,to augment yet the fierce anger of the Lord toward Israel" (Num. 32:14); "And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually". (Gen. 6:5).

Thus, the Tsar did not abdicate the Throne in March, 1917. Both as a Christian and an Emperor, he had no right to such an abdication, as it would be a dereliction of his duty as a Head of State and also a violation of the Conciliar decree of 1613 and of the law of succession. The conspirators had failed to force the Tsar Nicholas II to go through a fully "formal" and "legitimate" abdication process, so they had to resort to forgery.

Instead, on March 3 1917, Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich was forced to sit down with the so-called Interim Committee to discuss the conditions of his “abdication.” Having no legal rights to the Throne at that moment, nor to the make any of suchlike decisions, he signed a “manifesto” composed for him by the Freemasons Nabokov, Milyukov, Guchkov, and Kerensky. Later that very day, Tsar Nicholas II wrote in his diary: “It appears that Misha has abdicated. His manifesto has a four-tail ending for electing a constituent assembly in six months. God knows who advised him to sign such an abomination.”

In the evening of March 3rd, after receiving the news of Michael Alexandrovich’s “abdication,” the Emperor gave General Alexeyev a telegram, which later was tampered with by the uneasy conspirators, who decided to use the two-piece telegram text to forge a three-piece document that would look like a "formal abdication" on the part of the Tsar also. The forged document never made public though at that time, but it exists and attests to the fact that the Royal Monarchy remains formally unrevoked in Russia.

Therefore, Russia remains formally and spiritually not only Royal Monarchy but Russian Empire, as well.




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