The testimony of the soldiers strikes a more sinister note. Two of them witnessed most of the daily happenings at Ipatieff’s house, but they display certain evidences of pity and of having been well-disposed towards the prisoners whose murder they condemned. Indeed these men are most insistent that the crime was committed by the “Letts.” The third soldier (Medvedeff) took an active part in the murder.

The narrative of Mr. Robert Wilton which supplements the translations of the official records is, we think, a document of incalculable value. Written by a man who for sixteen years was correspondent for the London Times in Russia, and who not only speaks Russian but was present throughout the investigation of the scene of the murder and during the search for the relics, his story has a poignancy and an intrinsic value that cannot be overestimated.

It is proper here to explain to the reader that the contents of this volume as represented by the Official Depositions in Part I and Mr. Robert Wilton’s Narrative in Part II came into existence quite independently and without the design, originally, of publishing them together. Mr. Wilton, who escaped from Siberia after the fall of the Kolchak Government, took with him one of three copies of the dossier of the official investigation. Upon this original source he based his story, adding to it certain facts which he had personally gathered. By a most fortunate circumstance, George H. Doran Company, who were preparing for the press the depositions secured by M. George Gustav Telberg, learned of Mr. Wilton’s narrative, and arrangements were immediately made to combine the records in one volume.

As the two parts of the book are from different sources, no effort has been made to secure uniformity in certain minor variations in the spellings of proper names. The Index in Part III adopts the spelling used by Mr. Wilton, but the reader will readily recognize the same persons and places in Mr. Telberg’s translation in Part I.

It will be seen by comparing the two parts that, so far as the depositions here published go, they entirely bear out and give, so to speak, chapter and verse for Mr. Wilton’s narrative; and we have every reason for stating that, if and when the rest of the dossier becomes public, similar affirmation will be given to the whole of his thrilling story, which presents clearly, succinctly, a full and absolutely authentic account of this great human tragedy—the greatest perhaps of all time.

CONTENTS

PART I: Transcript of the Depositions of Eye-Witnesses of theCrime, Taken from the Archives by M. George Gustav Telberg,Minister of Justice at Omsk.
CHAPTER PAGE
[I ][Examination of M. Gilliard][15]
[II][Examination of Mr. Gibbes][38]
[III][Examination of Colonel Kobylinsky][61]
[IV][Examination of Philip Proskouriakoff][139]
[V][Examination of Anatolie Iakimoff][160]
[VI][Examination of Pavel Medvedeff][195]
[VII][Receipt of Beloborodoff for the Arrested Imperial Family][206]
PART II: The Narrative of Mr. Robert Wilton, Special Correspondentof The Times (London), Based Upon the Original Dossier of theInvestigating Magistrate, Nicholas Alexeievich Sokolov.
CHAPTER PAGE
[I][Prologue][211]
[II][The Stage and the Actors][222]
[III][No Escape: Alexandra Misjudged][232]
[IV][Razputin the Peasant][243]
[V][Captives in a Palace][253]
[VI][Exile in Siberia][263]
[VII][The Last Prison][276]
[VIII][Planning the Crime][291]
[IX][Calvary][303]
[X][“Without Trace”][318]
[XI][Damning Evidence][333]
[XII][All the Romanovs][352]
[XIII][The Jackals][369]
[XIV][By Order of the “Tsik”][380]
[XV][The Red Kaiser][394]
[XVI][Epilogue][404]
PART III:
[I][The Members of the Imperial Family at the Outbreak of the Revolution][415]
[II][Chronology of the Documents][417]
[III][Explanation of Russian Names Mentioned in the Documents][420]
[IV][Alphabetical Index of Names][422]

ILLUSTRATIONS

[H.I.M. Nicholas II, Emperor of Russia][Frontispiece]
PAGE
[The Martyred Family][64]
[Razputin Wounded at His Village Home][64]
[Alexandra’s Despair Over Razputin’s Death][65]
[Empress Alexandra Feodorovna and the Tzarevich Alexis Nikolaevich in Livadia (Crimea)][65]
[The Tzarevich Alexis and His Spaniel Joy, in the Park at Tsarskoe][65]
[Grand Duchess Olga][96]
[Grand Duchess Tatiana][96]
[Grand Duchess Maria][97]
[Grand Duchess Anastasia][97]
[Empress Alexandra Feodorovna in Tobolsk][192]
[The Ipatiev House in Ekaterinburg (General View)][192]
[Yankel Yurovsky, the Murderer][192]
[The Ipatiev House, Showing the Fence Stockade Around the House][193]
[The Tsar Sawing Wood in the Courtyard of the Governor’s Palace, Tobolsk][193]
[Bed-Room of the Emperor and the Empress in the Ipatiev House][193]
[Dining-room in the Ipatiev House][256]
[The Grand Duchesses’ Room in the Ipatiev House][256]
[The Commandant’s Room in the Ipatiev House][257]
[The Hall and Drawing-room in the Ipatiev House][257]
[The Ipatiev House: the Room in the Basement Where the Imperial Family Was Murdered][288]
[Yankel (Jacob) Sverdlov, the Red Tsar][288]
[The Empress’s Great Diamond Pendant][288]
[A Cross Belonging to the Empress][288]
[Pearl Earring Belonging to the Empress][288]
[Ikons (Holy Images) Belonging to the Empress and Her Daughters][289]
[The Entrance to the Shaft Near Ekaterinburg][289]
[Plan of Ipatiev’s House and Grounds and of Upper and Basement Floors][307]
[New Environs of Ekaterinburg, Showing Road By Which the Bodies of the Members of the Imperial Family were Carried, and the Pit Where the Ashes Were Buried][321]
[“Faithful unto Death”][384]
[The Faults of the Earlier Inquiry][384]
[At the Ganina Mine][385]
[The Pyre at the Birch Tree][385]
[The Hand of the Red Jew Murderers][385]
[Alexandra’s Good Luck Sign][408]
[The Mysterious Inscription in the Death Chamber][408]