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The execution of the Romanov family at Yekatarinberg.

Roger W Byard
Published in: Forensic science, medicine, and pathology (2020)
The brutal execution of Tsar Nicholas II, his wife and five children at Yekaterinberg in July 1918 was followed by apparently inept attempts to conceal the bodies. Despite this, the skeletons remained undiscovered until 1979. Even after anthropological and DNA analyses, the absence of two of the children in the grave raised doubts as to the identity of the remains. The discovery of the skeletal fragments of a young woman aged between 18 to 25 years and a boy aged between 10 to 14 years in a shallow grave near the primary burial site in 2007 enabled full DNA investigations of the remains to be undertaken in association with analyses of living Romanov descendants. Autosomal short tandem repeat (STR) testing revealed the sex and familial relationships within the group, and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) testing of the two hypervariable regions (HVI and HVII) showed links between the Tsar and Tsarina and living maternal relatives. The same point heteroplasmy in both the Tsar and his brother, Georgii provided further supportive evidence. There appears little doubt that the skeletal remains in the two graves outside Yekaterinburg are those of Tsar Nicholas, his wife and their five children. The genetic analyses and the features of the fragmented remains are all very consistent with the tragic story of the last days of the Romanov family and with the subsequent desecration and destruction of their bodies.
Keyphrases
  • mitochondrial dna
  • copy number
  • young adults
  • circulating tumor
  • cell free
  • single molecule
  • genome wide
  • early onset
  • single cell
  • case report
  • high throughput
  • weight loss
  • circulating tumor cells