alr
Bot till proven otherwise
Posts: 14
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Post by alr on Dec 13, 2022 20:28:07 GMT
'The Romanovs’ Murder Case: The Myth of the Basement Room Massacre' by T. G. Bolen The author wrote that the Tsarina used the code 'Medicine' for jewels and scoffs that the bolshies must have been dumb not to figure it out, whilst ignoring the telegrams sent by United States intelligence officer, Homer Slaughter(!), contain the possible code word 'Gold' for the Romanovs
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lol
Really good at convincing us he’s not a bot
Posts: 144
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Post by lol on Mar 27, 2023 23:20:10 GMT
Do you know that Miles figured that the Romanovs moved to Vladivostok or somewhere near there? And Natalie Wood was Anastasia or her daughter?
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Post by Michael on Oct 9, 2023 11:43:10 GMT
lol I did her once that Helen Mirren was a Romanov, which seems to have some support even in the mainstream. How is this for a sign? OPALS FIT FOR A ROMANOV at the premiere of Catherine the Great, should that be Catherine the great x grandmother? With her dramatic navy trousers had to get that reference in, do they get to take a shot (at a peasant) every time they slip a pun in. All of this from the aptly titled website The Court Jeweller. This threas has the following comment first As best I can tell, she would be a Countess. Her name was inherited from her grandmother would be Ilyena Vasilevna Mirronov. Helen’s great aunts were left behind in 1915 in Smolensk Russia. Her great great grandfather was said to be a Tsar Paul I of Russia. Helen’s father immigrated from Russia to England. I got most of that from Google so if you find something different feel free to elaborate.
Even wiki is very much clear that Mirren is Russian nobility, which makes you wonder what they are hiding on the other side, where the eastender mother Kathleen "Kitty" Alexandrina Eva Matilda Rogers, I can hear Miles' eyes rolling from here at that working class English name, whose grandfather was the butcher to Queen Victoria. And this struck me, from wiki: she was among the British cultural icons selected by artist Sir Peter Blake to appear in a new version of his most famous artwork—The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover—to celebrate the British cultural figures of his life that he most admired.
Anyway, I digress. Strange, I missed the Miles paper on the Romanovs I will have to check it out.
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