Vergiftung des Zaren Nikolaus I.
Extent and Medium
1 online resource (1 page)
Creator(s)
- Sifriyat Ṿiner (Tel Aviv) (custody)
- Ben-Itto, Hadassa (collector)
Scope and Content
The author of this document refutes Fleischhauer's claim that Nicholas I was poisoned by a Jew, by citing Nikolai Evgenevich Markov's article published in the antisemitic newspaper Novoie Wremia on the 18th of February 1923. The article is entitled as 'Ist das ein Rätsel?' (Is this a mystery?) in which N. Markow explains that he is in possession of all manuscripts of the Czar since 1870. After the defeat of the Russian army in the Crimean War in 1855, Czar Nicholas I was unable to live with the shame and decided to commit suicide. He asked his doctor for poison. The doctor did not dare to disobey and gave him the poison. At his deathbed, the Czar explained to his son Alexander II that his doctor was not a Jew. Also the claim that Alexander III had been poisoned by his doctor is wrong. Although his doctor was a Jew, nobody, not even the anti-Semites, has ever claimed that he killed the Czar. This claim only came up as part of the propaganda after the revolution.
Ist das ein Rätsel Markov, N. E. Nowoje Wremja
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Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Mode of access: WWW
Note(s)
Electronic text and image data. Tel Aviv : Tel Aviv University. Wiener Library 2017
Title viewed 16.03.2017
Also available in microfilm: Der Berner Prozess um die "Protokolle der Weisen von Zion" ...Strafsache Schweizerischer israelitischer Gemeindebund und Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Bern gegen die Gauleitung des Bundes national-sozialisticher Eidgenossen und weitere Angeschuldigte ...; Frame 2162;
People
- Markov, N. E. (Nikolaĭ Evgenʹevich), 1866-1945
- Nicholas I, Emperor of Russia, 1796-1855
- Fleischhauer, Ulrich, 1876-1960
Subjects
- Antisemitism--Russia.
- Antisemitism--Germany--History--20th century.
- Nazi propaganda.
- Conspiracies
- Bern Trial, Bern, Switzerland, 1934-1935