PHOTO EXHIBITION “EMPEROR NICHOLAS II” 04 – 30.09.2025



PHOTO EXHIBITION “EMPEROR NICHOLAS II” is visiting the attraction complex “In Love with the Wind” Castle from 04.09.2025 to 30.09.2025 in the Great Throne Hall!

Visitors to the “In Love with the Wind” Castle can visit it for free every day from 9 am to 5 pm.

The exhibition was created in 2021 by the “Morning Dawn” Creative Collective and has since been presented in over ten cities in Bulgaria and the Republic of North Macedonia. It is dedicated to the last Russian emperor Nikolai Romanov II and his family, as well as to the era of the beginning of the last century in Russia – the era of the fall of the Russian Empire. Each photo, in addition to photos of the royal family, has a text that explains the photograph and turns the exhibition into a real story about the era.

The photographs are divided into several themes, the main of which are:
1. The achievements of the Russian Empire during the reign of Emperor Nicholas II;
2. The relations of purity and love between the members of the royal family, through quotes from their letters;
3. The highest values ​​​​of the members of the royal family
4. Grigory Rasputin – saint, healer, predictor.

The purpose of the exhibition is to restore historical justice in relation to the last Russian monarch, whose reign brought Russia to one of the first places in economic development, and to the first place in terms of economic development rates.

The last Russian royal family is a rare diamond in the crown of the Russian Empire, which everyone has poured mud on. But even under the layer of mud, the diamond remains pure and beautiful.
The last Russian emperor goes through his Way of the Cross. His fate is one of the most difficult fates known to us from history. Throughout his life, he ruled his country, knowing the predictions of the martyrdom that awaited him and his children. The entire family, along with his faithful servants, was killed on the night of July 16/17, 1918 in Yekaterinburg. After their murder, a long, hundred-year period of godlessness began in Russia.

From a mystical point of view, the Russian Tsar was the last “evil-restraining” ruler. With his death, faith in God was not abolished, but with him died the last state in which Orthodox Christianity was elevated to the rank of the Supreme Law in the life of both the Tsar and the people. Together with the last Russian Tsar, the concept of “conscience” disappeared from world politics.