The Russian Revolution: How the Tsars Lost Everything — Fexingo History

The Crown Jewels: Romanov Diamonds and Bolshevik Plunder

8 min · 23 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Crown Jewels: Romanov Diamonds and Bolshevik Plunder

Descripción

In this episode, we trace the fate of the Russian imperial crown jewels after the revolution. When the Bolsheviks seized power in 1917, they inherited one of the most spectacular treasuries in Europe—including the 189-carat Orlov Diamond, the Shah Diamond, and the legendary imperial crown made for Catherine the Great. But what happened to these symbols of tsarist power? Some were sold abroad to fund Soviet industrialization; others were locked away for decades in the Kremlin Diamond Fund. We follow the jewels through the chaos of civil war, the secret sale of crown assets by Lenin's government, the mysterious disappearance of the Imperial Easter eggs during the Stalin era, and the eventual re-emergence of some pieces in the 1960s. Along the way, we meet the jeweler Carl Fabergé, the Bolshevik commissar who inventoried the treasury, and the British dealer who bought Romanov diamonds at rock-bottom prices. A story of splendor, survival, and the strange afterlife of an empire's glittering remains. #RomanovDiamonds #RussianCrownJewels #BolshevikTreasure #OrlovDiamond #ShahDiamond #ImperialCrown #CarlFaberge #DiamondFund #Kremlin #SovietLooting #History #FexingoHistory #RussianRevolution #TsarNicholasII #CatherineTheGreat #Romanovs #EasterEggs #Bolsheviks Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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127 episodios

Portada del episodio The Bolsheviks' War on the Orthodox Church

The Bolsheviks' War on the Orthodox Church

In episode 127 of The Russian Revolution, Lucas and Luna explore the Bolsheviks' systematic campaign against the Russian Orthodox Church. From the nationalization of church lands and the closure of monasteries to the execution of clergy and the desecration of relics, they trace how Lenin and his commissars sought to destroy an institution that had been intertwined with the state for centuries. Key figures include Patriarch Tikhon, who was placed under house arrest; the Cheka's targeting of priests; and the 1918 execution of Metropolitan Vladimir of Kiev. The episode also covers the 'Renovationist' schism, a government-sponsored movement aiming to create a loyalist church. Listeners will learn about the Decree on the Separation of Church and State, the 1922 campaign to confiscate church valuables, and the violent 'Shuya incident' that sparked mass protests. The conversation ends with a reflection on how this persecution shaped Soviet religious policy for decades. #RussianRevolution #Bolsheviks #RussianOrthodoxChurch #PatriarchTikhon #Cheka #RenovationistSchism #DecreeOnSeparation #ShuyaIncident #MetropolitanVladimir #AtheistCampaign #SovietHistory #1918 #EasternEurope #Lenin #Trotsky #History #FexingoHistory #ReligionUnderCommunism Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

28 de jun de 20268 min
Portada del episodio The Czechoslovak Legion: An Army Crosses Siberia

The Czechoslovak Legion: An Army Crosses Siberia

In the chaos of the Russian Civil War, a force of 40,000 former prisoners of war fought their way across Siberia to reach Vladivostok. The Czechoslovak Legion, formed from Czech and Slovak volunteers, became the unlikely masters of the Trans-Siberian Railway, capturing the Bolsheviks' gold reserve in Kazan and clashing with Red partisans in the taiga. This episode follows the Legion's epic journey from the Battle of Zborov to the 'Anabasis' eastward, their alliance with Admiral Kolchak, and the final evacuation from Vladivostok in 1920. We explore figures like Milan Rastislav Štefánik, Radola Gajda, and the controversial betrayal at the Ipatiev House. A story of nationalism, survival, and the birth of a new state. #CzechoslovakLegion #RussianCivilWar #TransSiberianRailway #MilanRastislavŠtefánik #RadolaGajda #BattleOfZborov #Vladivostok #KazanGold #Anabasis #WhiteMovement #AdmiralKolchak #IpatievHouse #SiberianIntervention #Czechoslovakia #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope #Revolution Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Portada del episodio The Volga Flotilla: River War That Shook the Revolution

The Volga Flotilla: River War That Shook the Revolution

In 1918, as the Russian Civil War raged, a forgotten fleet fought for control of the Volga River. This episode follows the rise and fall of the Volga Military Flotilla — a ragtag assembly of armed steamships crewed by Bolshevik sailors, commanded by the flamboyant Fyodor Raskolnikov. We explore the pivotal Battle of Kazan (September 1918), where the flotilla's riverine assault recaptured the city from the White Czech Legion and Komuch forces, securing the Volga route for Soviet supplies. Along the way, we meet Larisa Reisner, a poet and intelligence officer who became the flotilla's commissar, and uncover the ill-fated Perm operation that ended in disaster. The episode examines how control of Russia's great river arteries — often overlooked in land-based narratives — was decisive in the early civil war, and how the flotilla's tactics foreshadowed modern amphibious warfare. Specific terms include: Volga Military Flotilla (Volzhskaya Voennaya Flotiliya), Fyodor Raskolnikov, Larisa Reisner, Komuch, Battle of Kazan, White Czech Legion, and the Kama River. #RussianRevolution #VolgaFlotilla #FyodorRaskolnikov #LarisaReisner #BattleOfKazan #Komuch #WhiteCzechLegion #CivilWar #RiverWarfare #BolshevikNavy #KamaRiver #RussianHistory #1918 #Soviet #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope #RevolutionaryWar Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
Portada del episodio The Siberian Exile of the Romanovs: Tobolsk to Ekaterinburg

The Siberian Exile of the Romanovs: Tobolsk to Ekaterinburg

After Nicholas II abdicated in March 1917, the former tsar and his family were not immediately executed. Instead, they were sent into internal exile, first to the remote Siberian town of Tobolsk and later to Ekaterinburg. This episode follows the Romanovs' journey east, their daily life under house arrest, the growing hostility of the Bolshevik regime, and the political calculations that led to their execution in July 1918. We explore the role of local soviets, the shifting attitudes of the guards, and the controversial question of whether Lenin personally ordered the killings. Drawing on memoirs, diplomatic cables, and Soviet-era documents, we reconstruct the final months of Russia's imperial family. #RomanovExile #Tobolsk #Ekaterinburg #IpatievHouse #NicholasII #TsarinaAlexandra #TsarevichAlexei #GrandDuchesses #Lenin #Sverdlov #WhiteArmy #CzechoslovakLegion #YakovYurovsky #RussianRevolution #Siberia #HouseArrest #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

26 de jun de 20268 min
Portada del episodio The Cheka's First Prison Camp: Solovki and the Gulag's Birth

The Cheka's First Prison Camp: Solovki and the Gulag's Birth

Long before the vast Gulag archipelago, the Bolsheviks' new secret police—the Cheka—needed a place to hold their growing number of prisoners. They found it on the remote Solovetsky Islands in the White Sea, where a 15th-century Orthodox monastery became the first Soviet concentration camp. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Solovki camp (Slon) was established in 1923 under Cheka chief Felix Dzerzhinsky, the daily life of prisoners including bishops, scholars, and former tsarist officers, and how this isolated experiment in 're-education through labor' laid the brutal groundwork for Stalin's later Gulag system. They discuss the camp's notorious 'barracks of the damned,' the forced labor harvesting timber and cutting granite, the psychological pressure of 'commune' life, and the strange cultural output—including a camp museum and theater—that prisoners produced. The episode also touches on early international reports that filtered out despite Soviet censorship, and the tragic irony that a place founded as a spiritual refuge became a prototype for political repression. #Solovki #Cheka #Gulag #FelixDzerzhinsky #SolovetskyIslands #WhiteSea #Slon #SovietPrisons #PoliticalRepression #RussianRevolution #ConcentrationCamp #OrthodoxMonastery #1923 #ForcedLabor #NKVD #Stalin #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

26 de jun de 20267 min