Unfortunately-persecuted Tsarist family inspires Swedish castle lord
Double room with warm red colours and Russian details. View of the castle courtyard.
At Tsar Nicholas II's coronation in 1894, panic breaks out among the masses and several people are trampled to death. As a result, the crustaceans begin to speak of bad omens. Tsar Nicholas's reign will also be marked by accidents such as the sinking of the Russian Pacific Fleet by the Japanese or the assassination of his prime minister. When the unlucky persecuted tsar finally has a son after four daughters, the heir to the throne is born. The son, however, carries the deadly haemorrhagic disease. Even today, the world talks about the execution of the entire tsarist family by the Bolsheviks in 1918, and about the fact that the remains of daughter Anastasia and son Aleksei were never found. In 2001, the Tsarist family was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church. Knut Henrik Littorin lives and works in Moscow. On one occasion he also stayed in the Tsar's Palace and found inspiration for the Salon Kremlin at Bjertorp Castle.