Where did the real Peter go? 1. Liar "Peter the First Romanov" - aka Anatoly

One of the reasons that gave rise to the version of the substitution of Tsar Peter I was the research of A.T. Fomenko and G.V. Nosovsky

The beginning of these studies was the discoveries made during the study of an exact copy of the throne of Ivan the Terrible. In those days, the zodiac signs of the current rulers were placed on the thrones. Thanks to the study of the signs placed on the throne of Ivan the Terrible, scientists have found that the actual date of his birth differs from the official version by four years.

Scientists have compiled a table of the names of Russian tsars and their birthdays, and thanks to this table it was revealed that the official birthday of Peter I does not coincide with the day of his angel, which is a blatant contradiction in comparison with all the names of Russian tsars. After all, names in Rus' at baptism were given exclusively according to the calendar, and the name given to Peter breaks the established centuries-old tradition, which in itself does not fit into the framework and laws of that time.

Photo by Stan Shebs from wikimedia.org

A. Fomenko and G. Nosovsky, based on the table, found out that the real name, which falls on the official date of birth of Peter I, is Isaac. This explains the name of the main cathedral of Tsarist Russia. Thus, the Brockhaus and Efron dictionary says: “St. Isaac’s Cathedral is the main temple in St. Petersburg, dedicated to the name of St. Isaac of Dalmatia, whose memory is honored on May 30, the birthday of Peter the Great"


Image from lib.rus.ec

All lifetime portraits of Peter 1

Let us consider the following obvious historical facts. Their totality shows a fairly clear picture of the replacement of the real Peter I with a foreigner:

1. An Orthodox ruler was leaving Russia for Europe, wearing traditional Russian clothes. Two surviving portraits of the tsar from that time depict Peter I in a traditional caftan. The Tsar wore a caftan even during his stay at the shipyards, which confirms his adherence to traditional Russian customs. After the end of his stay in Europe, a man returned to Russia who wore exclusively European-style clothes, and in the future the new Peter I never put on Russian clothes, including the attribute obligatory for the tsar - royal vestments. This fact is difficult to explain with the official version of a sudden change in lifestyle and the beginning of adherence to European canons of development.

2. There are quite good reasons to doubt the difference in the body structure of Peter I and the impostor. According to exact data, the height of the impostor Peter I was 204 cm, while the real king was shorter and denser. It is worth noting that the height of his father, Alexei Mikhailovich Romanov, was 170 cm, and his grandfather, Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov, was also of average height. The height difference of 34 cm stands out very much from the overall picture of real kinship, especially since in those days people over two meters tall were considered an extremely rare phenomenon. Indeed, even in the middle of the 19th century, the average height of Europeans was 167 cm, and the average height of Russian recruits at the beginning of the 18th century was 165 cm, which fits into the general anthropometric picture of that time. The difference in height between the real Tsar and the false Peter also explains the refusal to wear royal clothes: they simply did not fit the newly minted impostor.

3. In the portrait of Peter I by Godfried Kneller, which was created during the Tsar’s stay in Europe, a distinct mole is clearly visible. In later portraits the mole is missing. This is difficult to explain by the inaccurate works of portrait painters of that time: after all, portraiture of those years was distinguished by the highest level of realism.


Image from softmixer.com

4. Returning after a long trip to Europe, the newly-minted tsar did not know about the location of the richest library of Ivan the Terrible, although the secret of finding the library was passed from tsar to tsar. Thus, Princess Sophia knew where the library was located and visited it, and the new Peter repeatedly made attempts to find the library and did not even disdain excavations: after all, the library of Ivan the Terrible contained rare publications that could shed light on many secrets of history.

5. An interesting fact is the composition of the Russian embassy that went to Europe. The number of people accompanying the tsar was 20, and the embassy was headed by A. Menshikov. And the returning embassy consisted, with the exception of Menshikov, only of Dutch subjects. Moreover, the duration of the trip has increased many times over. The embassy went to Europe with the tsar for two weeks, and returned only after two years of stay.

6. Returning from Europe, the new king did not meet with his relatives or his inner circle. And subsequently, in a short period of time, he got rid of his closest relatives in various ways.

7. The Sagittarius - the guards and elite of the tsarist army - suspected something was wrong and did not recognize the impostor. The Streltsy revolt that began was brutally suppressed by Peter. But the Streltsy were the most advanced and combat-ready military units that faithfully served the Russian tsars. Sagittarius became by inheritance, which indicates the highest level of these units.


Image from swordmaster.org

In Moscow they gossiped: “The sovereign is not of Russian breed, and not the son of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich.” The clear proof was that the Tsar favored the Germans, which meant he was one of them himself. They only argued about when and who replaced the monarch.

For “indecent speech” they were flogged, tortured, sent to hard labor and into exile, but they could not eradicate the rumors.
According to one version, the boy was replaced by the Germans in infancy. The Tsarevich’s “mothers” gaped, and that’s when the “German little boy” ended up in their arms instead of Pyotr Alekseevich.

According to another, the child was replaced by Tsarina Natalya Kirillovna herself, fearing that her husband would stop loving her if she gave birth to a girl. Allegedly, the queen put a child from a German settlement in a cradle, and gave the daughter to someone. Peter allegedly learned about the substitution from his mother when she was dying.

Evil tongues even found the “real” father of Peter I, who was supposedly an associate of the reformer Tsar Franz-Lefort. This is precisely what explained the general’s closeness to the tsar, his appointment as admiral, and then as head of the Grand Embassy.

According to another version, the king was replaced during a trip to Europe. This happened in Riga, where the real Peter was either walled up in a wall, or “the German king was put in a barrel and thrown into the sea,” and instead of him an impostor came to Russia.
There was a version that the king was tortured in prison by the Swedish queen Christina, who replaced Peter with her man.

It is alleged that Peter I, according to the memoirs of his contemporaries, changed dramatically after returning from the Great Embassy. Portraits of the king before and after his return from Europe are given as evidence of the substitution. It is alleged that in the portrait of Peter before his trip to Europe he had a long face, curly hair and a large wart under his left eye. In portraits of the king after his return from Europe, he had a round face, straight hair and no wart under his left eye. When Peter I returned from the Great Embassy, ​​he was 26 years old, and in his portraits after his return he looked about 40 years old. It is believed that before the trip the king was of heavy build and above average height, but still not a two-meter giant. The king who returned was thin, had very narrow shoulders, and his height, which was absolutely established, was 2 meters 4 centimeters. Such tall people were very rare at that time.

In addition, there is a version, shared by a number of Russian historians, that Peter I died in 1691 during military exercises due to an accident. Allegedly, those around him were very afraid of losing their position, so they went for a replacement. The head of the conspiracy was Prince Fyodor Romodanovsky. On his order, they found a “replacement”, the Dutch shipbuilder Jaan Musch, who had come to Russia, and who was supposedly very similar to the tsar. Russia is actually Prince Romodanovsky, hiding behind a foreign impostor. After his death, in 1717, the new environment decided to put an end to the only heir of the real Peter - Tsarevich Alexei, who fled to the Holy Roman Empire. He was lured from there to Russia, and soon died in prison. Thus, according to this version, the Romanov dynasty was interrupted.

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In March 1697, Peter 1 went on a year and a half trip abroad to study various sciences and wrote tender letters from there to his beloved wife and missed everything Russian. But he returned from there a completely different person!

He even lost his relatives upon returning to Russia!

He suddenly calls the Russian population animals, and, without even seeing his family, he orders his wife and sisters to be imprisoned in a monastery, and essentially in prison.

Destroys his own Moscow Streltsy army, in which, by the way, persistent rumors were already spreading that the Tsar had been replaced...

Even before Peter’s arrival, his mentors and friends die under mysterious circumstances.

Then Peter will order the death of his son Alexei! For what? So that no one exposes the substitution?

Fragment from the book: “The Return of Paradise to Earth” Part II, § 11. Satanic coup in Russia, series “In Search of the Hidden”, V.A. Shemshuk:

The most effective way to manage us is to replace the leader.

I never thought that I would have to write on this topic, so I did not specifically try to remember all the sources of information that I encountered as a collector of rare books. Passion for rare books, as my experience has shown, is far from a safe activity; my library was robbed four times. After the fourth time, I no longer kept the books, but tried to better remember what I managed to read.

Meeting with people of the old Orthodox faith from whom it was possible to learn something, penetrating into special storage facilities under various pretexts, I received more and more evidence of the satanic coup that had taken place in Russia. Let me present the essence here without much reference to sources, because naming the books means signing a death warrant for them.

In his work “Antichrist” he noted a complete change in the appearance, character and psyche of Tsar Peter I after his return from the “German lands”, where he went for two weeks and returned two years later. The Russian embassy accompanying the Tsar consisted of 20 people, and was headed by A.D. Menshikov. After returning to Russia, this embassy consisted only of the Dutch (including the well-known Lefort), only Menshikov remained from the old composition.

This “embassy” brought a completely different tsar, who spoke Russian poorly, did not recognize his friends and relatives, which immediately betrayed the substitution: This forced Tsarina Sophia, the sister of the real Tsar Peter I, to raise the archers against the impostor.

As you know, the Streltsy rebellion was brutally suppressed, Sophia was hanged on the Spassky Gate of the Kremlin, the wife of Peter 1 was exiled to a monastery by the impostor, where she never reached, and he summoned his wife from Holland.
False Peter killed “his” brother Ivan V and “his” little children Alexander, Natalya and Lavrenty immediately, although the official history tells us about this in a completely different way. And he executed his youngest son, Alexei, as soon as he tried to free his real father from the Bastille.

Peter the impostor made such transformations with Russia that it still comes back to haunt us. He began to act like an ordinary conqueror:

crushed Russian self-government - “zemstvo” and replaced it with a bureaucratic apparatus of foreigners, who brought theft and drunkenness to Russia and intensively propagated it here;

transferred the ownership of the peasants to the nobles, thereby turning them into slaves (to whiten the image of the impostor, this “event” is blamed on Ivan IV);

defeated the merchants and began to plant industrialists, which led to the destruction of the former universality of people;

defeated the clergy - the bearers of Russian culture and destroyed Orthodoxy, bringing it closer to Catholicism, which inevitably gave rise to atheism;

introduced smoking, drinking alcohol and coffee;

destroyed the ancient Russian calendar, rejuvenating our civilization by 5503 years;

ordered all Russian chronicles to be taken to St. Petersburg, and then, like Filaret, he ordered them to be burned. Called in German “professors”; write a completely different Russian history;

under the guise of fighting the old faith, he destroyed all the elders who lived more than three hundred years;

prohibited the cultivation of amaranth and the consumption of amaranth bread, which was the main food of the Russian people, which destroyed longevity on Earth, which then remained in Russia;

abolished the natural measures: fathom, finger, elbow, vershok, present in clothing, utensils and architecture, making them fixed in the Western manner. This led to the destruction of ancient Russian architecture and art, to the disappearance of the beauty of everyday life. As a result, people ceased to be beautiful, since divine and vital proportions disappeared in their structure;

replaced the Russian title system with a European one, thereby turning peasants into an estate. Although “peasant” is a title higher than the king, as there is more than one evidence of;

destroyed Russian writing, which consisted of 151 characters, and introduced 43 characters of the writing of Cyril and Methodius;

disarmed the Russian army, exterminating the Streltsy as a caste with their miraculous abilities and magical weapons, and in the European manner introduced primitive firearms and piercing weapons, dressing the army first in French and then in German uniforms, although the Russian military uniform was itself a weapon. The new regiments were popularly called “amusing” ones.

But his main crime is the destruction of Russian education (image + sculpture), the essence of which was to create in a person three subtle bodies that he does not receive from birth, and if they are not formed, then consciousness will not have a connection with the consciousnesses of past lives. If in Russian educational institutions a person was made into a generalist who could, from bast shoes to a spaceship, do everything himself, then Peter introduced a specialization that made him dependent on others.

Before Peter the impostor, people in Russia did not know what wine was; he ordered barrels of wine to be rolled out onto the square and given to the townspeople for free. This was done to remove the memory of a past life. During the period of Peter, the persecution of infants born who remembered their past lives and could speak continued.

Their persecution began with John IV. The mass destruction of babies who had the memory of a past life placed a curse on all incarnations of such children. It is no coincidence that today, when a talking child is born, he lives no more than two hours (but there are still rare exceptions).

After all these deeds, the invaders themselves were reluctant to call Peter great for a long time.

And only in the 19th century, when the horrors of Peter the Great had already been forgotten, a version arose about Peter the innovator, who did so much useful for Russia, even brought potatoes and tomatoes from Europe, supposedly brought there from America. Nightshades (potatoes, tomatoes) were widely represented in Europe before Peter the Great. Their endemic and very ancient presence on this continent is confirmed by the great diversity of species, which took more than one thousand years.

On the contrary, it is known that it was during the time of Peter that a campaign was launched against witchcraft, in other words, food culture (today the word “witchcraft” is used in a sharply negative sense). Before Peter there were 108 types of nuts, 108 types of vegetables, 108 types of fruits, 108 types of berries, 108 types of nodules, 108 types of cereals, 108 spices and 108 types of fruits, corresponding to the 108 Russian gods.

After Peter, there remained only a few sacred species used for food, which a person can see for himself. In Europe this was done even earlier. Cereals, fruits and nodules were especially destroyed, since they were associated with human reincarnation.

The only thing that Peter the impostor did was to allow the cultivation of potatoes (potatoes, like tobacco (!), belong to the nightshade family. The tops, eyes and green potatoes are poisonous. Green potatoes contain very strong poisons, solanines, which are especially dangerous to the health of children.), sweet potato and ground pear, which are rarely eaten today.

The destruction of sacred plants that were consumed at a certain time led to the loss of the complex divine reactions of the body (remember the Russian proverb “every vegetable has its time”).

Moreover, the mixing of nutrition has caused putrefactive processes in the body, and now people, instead of fragrance, exude a stench. Plants - adaptogens - have almost disappeared, only weakly active ones remain: “root of life”, lemongrass, zamanikha, golden root. They contributed to a person’s adaptation to difficult conditions and kept a person youthful and healthy. There are absolutely no metamorphosing plants left that promote various metamorphoses of the body and appearance; for about 20 years the “Sacred Coil” was found in the mountains of Tibet, and even that has disappeared today.

The campaign to impoverish our diet continues and at the present time, kalega and sorghum have almost disappeared from consumption, and it is prohibited to grow poppy.

Of many sacred gifts, only names remain, which are given to us today as synonyms for famous fruits. For example: gruhva, kaliva, bukhma, lily of the valley, which are passed off as rutabaga, or armud, kvit, pigva, gutey, gun - disappeared gifts that are passed off as quince. Kukish and dulya back in the 19th century meant a pear, although these were completely different gifts; today these words are used to describe the image of a fig (also, by the way, a gift). A fist with an inserted thumb used to denote the mudra of the heart, but today it is used as a negative sign. Dulya, fig and fig were no longer grown because they were sacred plants among the Khazars and Varangians.

Already recently, millet began to be called “millet”, barley - barley, and millet and barley cereals disappeared forever from human agriculture.

What happened to the real Peter I?

He was captured by the Jesuits and placed in a Swedish fortress. He managed to deliver the letter to Charles XII, King of Sweden, and he rescued him from captivity.

Together they organized a campaign against the impostor, but the entire Jesuit-Masonic brethren of Europe, called to fight, together with Russian troops (whose relatives were taken hostage in case the troops decided to go over to Charles’s side), won a victory near Poltava.

The real Russian Tsar Peter I was captured again and placed away from Russia - in the Bastille, where he later died. An iron mask was placed over his face, which caused a lot of speculation in France and Europe. The Swedish king Charles XII fled to Turkey, from where he again tried to organize a campaign against the impostor.

It would seem that if you killed the real Peter, there would be no hassle. But that’s the point, the invaders of the Earth needed a conflict, and without a living king behind bars, neither the Russian-Swedish war nor the Russian-Turkish war, which in fact were civil wars that led to the formation of two new states, would have succeeded : Turkey and Sweden, and then a few more.

But the real intrigue was not only in the creation of new states. In the 18th century, all of Russia knew and said that Peter I was not a real tsar, but an impostor.

And against this background, it was no longer difficult for the “great Russian historians” who arrived from the German lands: Miller, Bayer, Schlözer and Kuhn, who completely distorted the history of Russia, to declare all the Dmitry kings False Dmitrys and impostors, not having the right to the throne, and some not They managed to criticize, they changed the royal surname to Rurik.

The genius of Satanism is Roman law, which forms the basis of the constitutions of modern states. It was created contrary to all ancient canons and ideas about a society based on self-government (self-power).

For the first time, judicial power was transferred from the hands of the priests to the hands of people without clergy, i.e. the power of the best was replaced by the power of anyone.

Roman law is presented to us as the "crown" of human achievement, but in reality it is the pinnacle of disorder and irresponsibility. State laws under Roman law are based on prohibitions and punishments, i.e. on negative emotions, which, as we know, can only destroy. This leads to a general lack of interest in the implementation of laws and to the opposition of officials to the people. Even in the circus, work with animals is based not only on the stick, but also on the carrot, but man on our planet is valued by the conquerors below animals.

Let us remember how the Byzantine historian Procopius of Caesarea wrote about the Slavs: “They had all the laws in their heads.” Relations in ancient society were regulated by the principles of kon, from where the words “canon” (ancient - konon), “from time immemorial”, “chambers” (i.e. according to kon) came to us.

Guided by the principles of kon, a person avoided mistakes and could incarnate again in this life. The principle is always higher than the law, since it contains more possibilities than the law, just as a sentence contains more information than one word.

The word “law” itself means “beyond the law.” If a society lives by the principles of law, and not by laws, it is more vital. The commandments contain more than the story and therefore surpass it, just as a story contains more than a sentence. The commandments can improve human organization and thinking, which in turn can improve the principles of law.

In contrast to Roman law, the Russian state was built not on prohibitory laws, but on the conscience of citizens, which established a balance between incentives and prohibitions.

As the wonderful Russian thinker I.L. wrote. Solonevich, who knew from his own experience the delights of Western democracy, in addition to the long-lived Russian monarchy, resting on popular representation (zemstvo), merchants and clergy (meaning pre-Petrine times), democracy and dictatorship were invented, replacing each other after 20-30 years.

However, let’s give him the floor: “Professor Wipper is not entirely right when he writes that modern humanities are only “theological scholasticism and nothing more”; this is something much worse: it is deception. This is a whole collection of deceptive travel signals, luring us to the mass graves of hunger and executions, typhus and wars, internal ruin and external defeat. The “science” of Diderot, Rousseau, D’A-Lambert and others has already completed its cycle: there was famine, there was terror, there were wars, and there was the external defeat of France in 1814, in 1871, in 1940.

The science of Hegel, Mommsen, Nietzsche and Rosenberg also completed its cycle: there was terror, there were wars, there was famine and there was defeat in 1918 and 1945. The science of the Chernyshevskys, Lavrovs, Mikhailovskys, Milyukovs and Lenins has not yet gone through the entire cycle: there is famine, there is terror, there have been wars, both internal and external, but defeat will still come: inevitable and inevitable, another payment for the verbiage of two hundred years, for the swamp lights , kindled by our rulers of thoughts over the most rotten places of the real historical swamp.”

The philosophers listed by Solonevich did not always come up with ideas that could destroy society: they were often suggested to them...

One of the reasons that gave rise to the version of the substitution of Tsar Peter I was the research of A.T. Fomenko and G.V. Nosovsky

The beginning of these studies was the discoveries made during the study of an exact copy of the throne of Ivan the Terrible. In those days, the zodiac signs of the current rulers were placed on the thrones. Thanks to the study of the signs placed on the throne of Ivan the Terrible, scientists have found that the actual date of his birth differs from the official version by four years.

Scientists have compiled a table of the names of Russian tsars and their birthdays, and thanks to this table it was revealed that the official birthday of Peter I does not coincide with the day of his angel, which is a blatant contradiction in comparison with all the names of Russian tsars. After all, names in Rus' at baptism were given exclusively according to the calendar, and the name given to Peter breaks the established centuries-old tradition, which in itself does not fit into the framework and laws of that time.

Photo by Stan Shebs from wikimedia.org

A. Fomenko and G. Nosovsky, based on the table, found out that the real name, which falls on the official date of birth of Peter I, is Isaac. This explains the name of the main cathedral of Tsarist Russia. Thus, the Brockhaus and Efron dictionary says: “St. Isaac’s Cathedral is the main temple in St. Petersburg, dedicated to the name of St. Isaac of Dalmatia, whose memory is honored on May 30, the birthday of Peter the Great"


Image from lib.rus.ec

All lifetime portraits of Peter 1

Let us consider the following obvious historical facts. Their totality shows a fairly clear picture of the replacement of the real Peter I with a foreigner:

1. An Orthodox ruler was leaving Russia for Europe, wearing traditional Russian clothes. Two surviving portraits of the tsar from that time depict Peter I in a traditional caftan. The Tsar wore a caftan even during his stay at the shipyards, which confirms his adherence to traditional Russian customs. After the end of his stay in Europe, a man returned to Russia who wore exclusively European-style clothes, and in the future the new Peter I never put on Russian clothes, including the attribute obligatory for the tsar - royal vestments. This fact is difficult to explain with the official version of a sudden change in lifestyle and the beginning of adherence to European canons of development.

2. There are quite good reasons to doubt the difference in the body structure of Peter I and the impostor. According to exact data, the height of the impostor Peter I was 204 cm, while the real king was shorter and denser. It is worth noting that the height of his father, Alexei Mikhailovich Romanov, was 170 cm, and his grandfather, Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov, was also of average height. The height difference of 34 cm stands out very much from the overall picture of real kinship, especially since in those days people over two meters tall were considered an extremely rare phenomenon. Indeed, even in the middle of the 19th century, the average height of Europeans was 167 cm, and the average height of Russian recruits at the beginning of the 18th century was 165 cm, which fits into the general anthropometric picture of that time. The difference in height between the real Tsar and the false Peter also explains the refusal to wear royal clothes: they simply did not fit the newly minted impostor.

3. In the portrait of Peter I by Godfried Kneller, which was created during the Tsar’s stay in Europe, a distinct mole is clearly visible. In later portraits the mole is missing. This is difficult to explain by the inaccurate works of portrait painters of that time: after all, portraiture of those years was distinguished by the highest level of realism.


Image from softmixer.com

4. Returning after a long trip to Europe, the newly-minted tsar did not know about the location of the richest library of Ivan the Terrible, although the secret of finding the library was passed from tsar to tsar. Thus, Princess Sophia knew where the library was located and visited it, and the new Peter repeatedly made attempts to find the library and did not even disdain excavations: after all, the library of Ivan the Terrible contained rare publications that could shed light on many secrets of history.

5. An interesting fact is the composition of the Russian embassy that went to Europe. The number of people accompanying the tsar was 20, and the embassy was headed by A. Menshikov. And the returning embassy consisted, with the exception of Menshikov, only of Dutch subjects. Moreover, the duration of the trip has increased many times over. The embassy went to Europe with the tsar for two weeks, and returned only after two years of stay.

6. Returning from Europe, the new king did not meet with his relatives or his inner circle. And subsequently, in a short period of time, he got rid of his closest relatives in various ways.

7. The Sagittarius - the guards and elite of the tsarist army - suspected something was wrong and did not recognize the impostor. The Streltsy revolt that began was brutally suppressed by Peter. But the Streltsy were the most advanced and combat-ready military units that faithfully served the Russian tsars. Sagittarius became by inheritance, which indicates the highest level of these units.


Image from swordmaster.org

Was Peter I a Russian person? This question is not as absurd as it seems at first glance. And they first started asking it not now, but more than three hundred years ago, but mostly in a whisper.


    Coincidence in timing of the substitution of Tsar Peter I (August 1698) and the appearance of a prisoner in the “Iron Mask” in the Bastille in Paris (September 1698). In the lists of Bastille prisoners, he was listed under the name Magchiel, which may be a distorted entry of Mikhailov, the name under which Tsar Peter traveled abroad. His appearance coincided with the appointment of a new commandant of the Bastille of Saint-Mars. He was tall, carried himself with dignity, and always wore a velvet mask on his face. The prisoner was treated respectfully and kept well. He died in 1703. After his death, the room where he was kept was thoroughly searched, and all traces of his presence were destroyed.



    The Orthodox Tsar, who preferred traditional Russian clothing, left for the Grand Embassy. There are two portraits of the tsar made during the trip, in which he was depicted in a Russian caftan, and even during his stay and work at the shipyard. A Latin returned from the embassy, ​​wearing only European clothes and never again wearing not only his old Russian clothes, but even the royal attire. There is reason to believe that Tsar Peter I and the “impostor” differed in body structure: Tsar Peter was shorter and denser than the “impostor”; the size of his boots was different; the “impostor”, with a tall height of more than 2 meters, had a clothing size corresponding to modern size 44.


    In the portraits of Peter I (Godfried Kneller), taken during the Great Embassy, ​​Peter has curly hair, short, in brackets, not at the shoulders, as “Peter the Great” later wore, a mustache that is slightly breaking through, a wart on the right side of his nose. There are no warts on the lifetime portraits of “Peter the Great”. The age of “Peter the Great,” as confirmed by lifetime portraits dating back to 1698-1700, is no less than 10 years older than Tsar Peter.


    The impostor did not know the location of the library of Tsar Ivan the Terrible, although this secret was passed on to all the kings, and even Tsar Peter’s sister, Princess Sophia, knew and visited this place. It is known that “Peter the Great” tried to find the library immediately after returning from the “Great Embassy” and even carried out excavations in the Kremlin for this purpose.


    After returning from the Great Embassy, ​​“Peter the Great” hid surrounded by conspirators, did not appear in public and did not even visit his closest relatives until the bloody executions of the Streltsy were carried out, and the bloody “initiation” of the impostor’s new associates took place (Surikov’s painting is not corresponds to historical reality). It was precisely the investigation into the “streltsy revolt” that began at the direction of, probably Lefort, and perhaps Golovin, and the subsequent executions that, in fact, became a coup d’etat, the purpose of which was primarily the destruction of the old armed forces that could oppose the impostor. Secondly, this became the bloody “baptism” of the new nobility - the “new Russians”, who for the first time in Russia played the role of executioners.


    In memory of the suppression of the “streltsy revolt,” a medal was struck for the destruction of the streltsy, which depicted Samson standing over the defeated serpent. All inscriptions are in Latin only. It is known that Samson was from the line of Dan, from where, according to prophecies, the Antichrist should come. It is also noteworthy that “Peter the Great,” unlike Tsar Peter I, wore long hair, which is a sign of descent from the Danish family. Later, on the occasion of the victory in the Battle of Poltava, a medal with the image of Samson was also knocked out. Even earlier, a medal was struck on the occasion of the “Great Embassy”, which depicts a horseman slaying a serpent. The image is not typical for those times - St. George the Victorious was always depicted without a headdress and without armor, and on the medal he was a full-fledged knight of the Western European model.



    The people at that time spoke directly about the replacement of the Tsar abroad, but these rumors and attempts to clarify this were brutally suppressed and were called a conspiracy or rebellion. It was with the aim of preventing such rumors that the Secret Order was formed.


    A change in attitude towards his wife, with whom he lived in harmony for eight years. For those around the “tsar” and historians, the true reason for Peter’s cooling towards his wife after returning from abroad is unknown. There are only versions that the queen allegedly participated in a conspiracy against her husband, which, generally speaking, is incredible (did she encourage the archers to act against her husband’s beloved tsar?) and another that Peter became interested in Anna Mons. The relationship with Anna Mons, who in fact was always Lefort's mistress, was invented by rumor. Although the king gave royal gifts to her family for some services. The proof of this is that upon returning from abroad and sending her wife into exile, Anna Mons does not enjoy his attention, and after the sudden death of young Lefort, Anna Mons is completely under house arrest. Since 1703, Catherine has been living with the “tsar”. The “tsar” did not meet with his wife, Queen Evdokia, after his return, and she was immediately sent to a monastery. In exile, Queen Evdokia is in strict isolation, she is even forbidden to talk to anyone. And if this is violated, then the culprit is severely punished (Stepan Glebov, who was guarding the queen, was impaled).


    Debauchery. The strange behavior of the “tsar” is noted after his return from abroad. So he always took a soldier to bed with him at night. Later, after the appearance of Catherine, he simultaneously kept concubines. Similar debauchery existed in the royal palace only under the impostor False Dmitry.


    The abolition of the Patriarchate in Rus' and the subordination of the management of the church to secular power through the Synod, the organization of an amusing Council of the choice of the Patriarch. An attempt to “Protestantize” the Orthodox Church and even bring it under subordination to the Vatican. Subordination of the management of the Orthodox Church to a person from the Vatican, who is entrusted with reforming the Church. Tries to oblige priests to convey what they say in confession if the penitent talks about plans against the king or other crimes.


    Destruction of Russian folk traditions, fight against them. Establishing the superiority of Latin Western culture over traditional Russian. Organization of Masonic lodges (1700).


    The introduction of tobacco smoking in Rus', considered the greatest sin in Orthodoxy. Encouragement and enforcement of drunkenness.


    The murder of Tsarevich Alexei, although in Orthodox traditions for disobedience, from the point of view of his father, he could only be sent to a monastery, as Tsarevich Alexei asked for this.


    The transfer of the capital of Russia from Moscow to St. Petersburg to the very outskirts of the Russian Empire, while the traditions of all states were to place the capital in the center of the state. Perhaps St. Petersburg was conceived by him or his advisers as the capital of a future united Europe, in which Russia, within the borders of Muscovy, was to be a colony?


    The division of the Russian people into nobles and serfs by birth, the introduction of serfdom, in its meaning, corresponding to the creation of a slave state with slaves from its people, in contrast to ancient states that made slaves only prisoners of war.


    Weakening and even freezing of the development of the Russian economy due to the tightening of ruinous taxes, the introduction of serfdom, convict industry and serf factory workers, the cessation of development of the regions of the Northern Urals, Arkhangelsk, and Eastern Siberia, for almost 150 years until the abolition of serfdom in 1861.


  • Tsar Peter visited Arkhangelsk and the Solovetsky Monastery, where he personally made a wooden cross in memory of salvation in the storm. He liked it there. “Peter the Great” consigned Arkhangelsk to oblivion. He visited Arkhangelsk only once, in connection with the outbreak of the Northern War, to inspect defensive capabilities, but at the same time he tried to avoid meeting old friends and acquaintances.