Russia’s Last Tsars
Executive summary by darmansjah
ON JULY 22, 1963, Mikhail Romanov begrudgingly took the
crown under the vaulted ceiling of Moscow’s Cathedral of the Assumption. The
16-year-old ended Russia’s political instability and launched its final
imperial dynasty. It’s the 400th anniversary of the House of Romanov
(and 95th year since the murder of its last monarch, Nicholas II),
and the family’s legacy remains indelible. As Moscow Times reporter Jonathan
Earle puts it, the Romanovs “represent a lost authenticity, one of
centuries-old traditions and sophisticated elites that produced Pushkin, Tolstoy, and Chekhov.” That bygone era can
be traced around Moscow. At the Palace of the Romanov
Boyars (Mikhail’s probable birthplace), painted leather walls and carved
furniture shed light on 17th-century aristocracy. Within the Kremlin
walls, Mikhail I commissioned the Cathedral of the Assumption’s gilded icons
and is entombed at the Cathedral of the Archangel. Not far away, Icon House
shows relics such as a Winter Palace gala ticket for the tricentenary.
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