Friday, November 23, 2018
New books arriving soon...
Sunday, October 28, 2018
V Royal Gatherings in The Hague
This year, for the fifth such gathering, EUROHISTORY and Hoogstraten English Bookstore welcome participants to Royal Gatherings in The Hague!
Saturday, November 10:
9:45 – 10:00 – Opening remarks
10:00 – 10:45 – W. Vermeulen: "Ludwig, a disappointed King."
11:00 – 11:45 – G.J. Frisch: "King Georg V of Hannover."
12:00 – 14:00 – Lunch
14:00 – 14:45 – S. Zimmermann: "Carol & Elisabeth of Romania."
15:00 – 15:45 – M. Bloks: "Carolina of Orange-Nassau."
16:00 – 16:45 – A. Béeche, "The Duke – Carl Eduard of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha."
SATURDAY DINNER:
At 7:30pm we will host "Long-table dinner at the Bookstore" @ Noordeinde 39. The price is €35 per person. The menu is French cuisine and the price includes: Main course (also a vegetarian option), drinks, (wine, soda, etc.), and coffee/tea with cakes.
Please let us know if you are planning to join this dinner!
Sunday, November 11:
10:00 – 10:45 – D. Salvia Ocaña – "The Roya House of the Two Sicilies."
11:00 – 11:45 – K. Tice: "The Kaiser's Daughters-in-Law."
12:00 – 14:00 – Lunch
14:00 – 14:45 – H. Vickers: "Queen Mary."
15:00 – 15:45 – S. Symons: "The House of Hesse and their Schlößer."
16:00 – 16:45 – A. Béeche, "The Kaiser's Fall and Arrival at Amerongen."
If you wish to attend the gathering, we may still be able to fit you in. Simply contact us ASAP at: aebeeche@mac.com
See you in The Hague, Arturo & Annet
Friday, September 7, 2018
ROYAL GATHERINGS BY THE BAY 2018 October 6-7, 2018
ROYAL GATHERINGS BY THE BAY 2018
October 6-7, 2018
Greetings Eurohistory subscribers and followers – As we are four weeks away from our yearly gathering in the San Francisco Bay Area, we are able to share with you some of the topics that we will present to those attending the conference!
This year's lectures will cover:
1. The Royal House of Bavaria
2. THE DUKE: Carl Eduard off Saxe-Coburg & Gotha
3. The Fall of the Kaiser
4. The Kidnapping and Execution of the Duke d'Enghien, Heir to the legacy of the Princes de Condé
5. The Wedding of Nicholas de Roumanie and Alina Maria Binder
6. Love was Onboard – The Agamemnon Cruise
7. The German Revolution
8. The Tragic End of the Romanov Dynasty
We are expecting a couple of pending commitments. When these are settled, we will reveal those topics as well!
As usual, the conference is being held at:
If you wish to join us, don't hesitate to contact us at Eurohistory's office: 510-236-1730 or by emailing us at: aebeeche@mac.com or eurohistory@comcast.net
We look forward to seeing you here!
Regards, Eurohistory
Sunday, August 12, 2018
Sunday, July 15, 2018
Imperial Russia: Centennial of the Assassination of the Imperial Family
This evening (July 16-17) we reach the fateful centennial of the martyrdom of the Russian Imperial Family.
On the evening of July 16/17, 1918, Tsar Nicholas II, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, Grand Duchess Olga Nicholaevna, Grand Duchess Tatiana Nicholaevna, Grand Duchess Marie Nicholaevna, Grand Duchess Anastasia Nicholaevna, and Tsesarevich Alexei Nicholaevich, accompanied by four loyal servants, were assassinated by Yakov Yurovski and his posse in the basement of the Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg, the most Bolshevik city in post-Tsarist Russia.
The Imperial Family were kept under various forms of house arrest for nearly 17 months, starting immediately after the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II. This imprisonment brought them from the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoe Selo, to the Governor's Mansion in Tobolsk, ending inside the lugubrious prison that the Ipatiev House eventually became.
At times, the Imperial Family were treated with respect and deference. Contact with the outside world was sporadic. Visitors were few and far between. Members of the former ruling dynasty were kept at bay. Some messages managed to get to them; replies managed to get out. It was nearly 17 months of difficulty for the Tsar and his entourage. They arrived in Tobolsk with a retinue of nearly 40 staff. By the time Yurovsky sealed their fate, only four loyal servants remained. They would also be martyred in that small basement in Yekaterinburg.
Tsar Nicholas and ten other victims met a harrowing end at the hands of their jailers. Barrages of bullets came in deadly waves. Smoke filled the room. The stench of gunpowder, blood and flesh ... the presence of death overpowering. Those who were not killed by the bullets, were stabbed and rifle butted. It was a frenzy of brutality; a vicious culmination to a heinous act.
The bodies were disposed later that early morning. Their whereabouts remained unknown for over six decades. When finally found, the site was kept secret for fear of Soviet retaliation.
In death, Tsar Nicholas II and his legacy were vilified, as was the entire tsarist period. Was he an effective ruler? That is a question over which entire books have been written. As a political leader, Nicholas II left much to be desired. yet, he was a product of his environment. As a husband, although loving, devoted, and loyal, he allowed his love for his wife to cloud his better judgement. As a father, Nicholas II seems to have excelled. His children were devoted to him, just as he was devoted to them. As Head of House Russia, Nicholas II failed. Many have criticized other Romanovs for seeking to save themselves from the revolutionary tsunami that engulfed Mother Russia. Yet, as Head of House, Nicholas II forgot that he was responsible for the survival of his dynasty. He isolated himself from other Romanovs. He caused an unbridgeable rift within the dynasty. He ignored their warnings. He led the Romanovs into an abyss of death, poverty and exile.
And yet, Nicholas II did not deserve to die in the manner that Yurovsky and his minions secured his horrific ending. His wife, their children, and those four loyal servants, did not deserve to meet the death that was reserved for them.
Let us not forget as we observe this dreadful centennial that many other members of the dynasty met equally harrowing deaths.
The night after the murders in Yekaterinburg, six other Romanovs met a brutal end in a forest outside there town of Alapaievsk. This second group of martyrs included: Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna, Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich, Prince Ioann Konstantinovich, Prince Konstantin Konstantinovich, Prince Igor Konstantinovich, and Prince Vladimir Pavlovich Paley, as well as Sister Barbara, Elisabeth Feodorovna's faithful companion. Their end was just as vicious as that met by the Yekaterinburg martyrs.
Nearly a month before the ghastly events of Yekaterinburg, Grand Duke Michael Nicholaevich and his faithful secretary were brutally assassinated outside Perm.
And yet, the Bolshevik butchery was not at an end...
In January 1919, four other Grand Dukes were executed inside the walls of the Peter and Paul Fortress: Paul Alexandrovich, Dimitri Konstantinovich, Nicholas Mikhailovich, and George Mikhailovich.
Today, as we remember the victims of Yekaterinburg, Alapaievsk, Perm, and Petrograd, we must be reminded that violence begets violence. Imperial Russia, as difficult as it was for many, does not compare in the brutality and reign of terror that ensued. Modern Russia deserves better than what it has...for the reign of Putin is far worse than the Romanovs ever inflicted on their subjects.
May They Rest in Peace ...
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Funeral of Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma
Family and friends of the late Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma gathered at the Hotel des Invalides (Paris) this morning to bid farewell to his earthly remains.
Besides his close family, other royals in attendance included: Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg and his brother Prince Jean, the Prince and Princess of Venice, as well as Prince Dushan of Yugoslavia. Several of the late prince's Danish descendants traveled to France to pay their respects to their father and grandfather.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
Eurohistory: Issue CXVII, Volume 21.1 Printing!
Dear Subscribers and Readers,
It is with much pleasure that we announce that Issue CXVII, Volume 21.1 is printing. This is the first issue of our 22nd year of publication!
Inside Issue CXVII you will find the following articles:
1. The Return of Prince Nicholas of Romania, by Seth Leonard (with the cooperation of Nicholas and Alina-Maria de Roumanie)
2. An Imperial Bicentennial: The Tsar Liberator, by Coryne Hall
3. Grand duke Adolf Friedrich VI of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, by Marlene Eilers Koenig
4. WHO IS IN THE PHOTOGRAPH: The Family of there Infante don Carlos, by Arturo E. Beéche
5. Wittelsbach castles and palaces in Bavaria, by Susan Symons
6. Book Reviews
7. Royal News
Subscribers have been sent renewal forms, which have been arriving here at our office. Please do not delay so you can be on the mailing list for this next issue!
Subscription information:
credit card information to:
Rest of the World: $75.00
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