The imperial Romanov family (former
Tsar Nicholas II, Empress
Alexandra, their children
Olga,
Tatiana,
Maria,
Anastasia, and
Alexei, and their loyal retainers Dr. Evgeny Botkin, Anna Demidova, Ivan Kharitonov and Alexei Trupp) were murdered en masse in a ground-floor room of their final place of imprisonment, Yekaterinburg’s
Ipatiev House, by
Bolshevik gunfire, bayonets, and blows in July 1918, and their bodies allegedly buried in the Siberian Koptyaki forest, a short distance from Yekaterinburg, near a spot historically known as the Four Brothers, that night. This was the legend, known to many local residents, including the young Avdonin, who had vivid childhood memories of one of the assassins,
Pyotr Ermakov, roaming the environs of his hometown and bragging of the deed. Ermakov was famous both for his drinking and for his stirring addresses at schools and Pioneer gatherings about how he and his Bolshevik comrades had so bravely struck down the Tsar whom the revolutionaries had named "Nicholas the Bloody". Various members (
Yurovsky, Ermakov,
Medvedev) of the squad of assassins—who by one account outnumbered the eleven victims—vied for years for the honor of having personally shot the Tsar; documents, filmed interviews, and some of the weapons used in the murder themselves, complete with signed statements, were proudly donated to state museums and archives. Gradually, however, as the
Joseph Stalin regime systematically persecuted and killed so many of the original revolutionaries, this sort of discourse became unthinkable. Sverdlovsk itself was essentially closed to foreigners. == Interest in graves' location ==