Michael Romanov is the name that might be used to refer to any of several members of the House of Romanov, the ruling dynasty of the Empire of Russia from 1631 to 1917.
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Michael, Philaret's son, was chosen in 1613 as czar of Russia; his election ended a turbulent period in Russian history.
Godunov's revenge to the Romanovs was terrible: all the family and its relatives were deported to remote corners of the Russian North and Ural, where most of them died of hunger or in chains.
Alexandra Fyodorovna brought to the Romanov family a mutated gene of her grandmother, Queen Victoria, which was responsible for her son's (the long-awaited heir to the throne, Alexei) hemophilia.
The House came to power with the election of MichaelRomanov as ruler of Russia in 1613 following a period of exceptional anarchy known as the "Time of Troubles".
Bolshevik authorities killed the last Romanov monarch, Nicholas II, and his immediate family in the cellar of the Ipatiev House in Ekaterinburg, Russia on July 17, 1918.
Michael II (son of Alexander III, to whom Nicholas II abdicated the Crown.