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Tammet, Eino

Eino Tammet (aka Ernst Weerman and Aleksey Tammet-Romanov;? - July 26, 1977 ) - an impostor posing as “the miracle of the saved Tsarevich Alexei ”.

Eino Tammet
Portrait
Date of death

Content

Short Biography

Throughout the first half of his life, this man bore the name Ernst Weerman, was born, he apparently in Russia . His parents, in all probability, were Estonian peasants Josef Weerman and his wife Paula. In 1920, his family moved to Estonia, Tallinn , to his father’s homeland. The future applicant appropriated the pseudonym Eino Tammet in 1937 , working as a journalist in an Estonian newspaper, and traveled quite a lot as a journalist. His supporters claim that his pseudonym is translated from Estonian as “royal oak” - which is a clear allusion to his “true origin”, and his place of residence was chosen again with subtext - not far away was a house built “by his ancestor Peter the Great ”.

During the occupation of Estonia by Nazi forces, he had to give up journalism and earn a living by drawing and selling postcards. Soon, however, he discovers a new source of income by painting and selling portraits of Hitler to the German rear.

At this time, he marries for the first time - in Finnish , in order to be able to legally emigrate, and indeed, receives permission to leave Estonia, where fighting is already underway. At the very beginning of 1944, on a ship overflowing with refugees, under the escort of Allied planes, he departed for Finland, and not having calmed down on this, later moved to Sweden . Here he divorces his first wife in court, and marries a second time. In this marriage two sons are born, but neither they nor the second wife know who the husband and father really are. With this second family in 1952 he moved to Toronto ( Canada ).

In the mid -1950s, he moved to the city of , near Vancouver , where he opened a small dance studio. Here, in July 1956, he meets his future third wife. In 1970, he marries a third time, and in this marriage lives happily until his death.

Claims

In 1972, he finally decided to "reveal his secret" to his 26-year-old youngest son. Mrs. Sandra Romanov, his third wife, assures that the stepson revealed to her a secret. Also, according to her, from the very beginning it seemed to her that from her future husband she “breathed nobility”, hearing her stories about imperial time, she was amazed at the accuracy of the details. It also did not go unnoticed that Eino Tammet collects books about the royal family. Talking about the execution of the royal family, he joked that since 1918, " Alexey turned into a ghost." Therefore, having heard the truth from the stepson, Sandra insisted that her husband finally publicly announce his real name, which he finally made in a letter to Canadian Prime Minister Het in 1971 , fearing, among other things, that the impostor Michal Golenevsky would be declared by Alexei.

The second time he made himself known by signing his “real name” in a telegram addressed to the English Queen Elizabeth II , regarding the death of her uncle, Duke of Windsor. Following this, he was visited by a certain KKKP officer who arranged a genuine interrogation for the applicant, then returned again with additional questions, and finally left, apparently satisfied with the information received, warning his interlocutor that he should live quietly and not draw attention to himself. Mrs. Romanov assures that at that time her husband received a letter adorned with the English royal coat of arms addressed to “Alexei Romanov, Esq. ”, With a brief gratitude of the Queen.

Before his death, he announced to his wife that it was “too late for him to assert his rights”, and transferred this duty to her and the children. Starting from this time, Mrs. Romanov prepared the material, and finally in the 1990s she already publicly announced the true name and origin of her late husband.

Interestingly, in his own words, the applicant saw Anna Anderson during the Hamburg process, and immediately became convinced that she had nothing to do with his sister Anastasia .

The applicant died on June 26, 1977, a month before the Ipatiev House was destroyed by a decision of the Soviet government, which, according to his supporters, is by no means a coincidence.

His children are full of desire to defend for themselves the rights to the Russian crown.

In 1993, trying to verify with the help of science the true identity of her deceased husband, the widow of Tammet-Romanova sent for examination his tooth, which was removed in 1962 . However, the tooth "mysteriously disappeared."

The book, written by a widow and Canadian journalist John Kendrick who helped her, failed to find a publisher; therefore, in order to attract public attention, Kendrick opened a website dedicated to future sensation.

The story of “miraculous salvation”

Judging by the way Eino Tammet’s story is set out, his “release” was the result of a secret conspiracy of the Moscow government with the Germans, and perhaps it was included as a secret item in the Brest Peace that was not included in official papers.

Therefore, during the execution, when it was agreed within the executioner team who would shoot at whom, Yurovsky chose the prince to be his target, but loaded the revolver with blank cartridges. The quick-witted child managed to pretend to be dead and escaped only with deafness in one ear and a slight concussion .

Then, when the bodies were taken to the place of burial, and the truck got stuck in the mud, Yurovsky stopped an Estonian peasant by the name of Weermann, passing by, and ordered two or three “convolutions” to be loaded onto his cart. Having determined that one of them was a living boy, Weerman decided to save him.

Apparently, however, the Estonian was also part of the conspiracy, because most recently a son of about the same age died from typhus . Cesarevich inherited the name of the deceased - Ernst Weermann, and stayed in a hospitable family. Kendrick also insists that Paula, the peasant's wife, was a distant relative of the chief marshal, Count Benckendorff, and thus let him remotely communicate with the royal family.

However, there was one difficulty in identifying Tammet and Alexei - the applicant never had hemophilia , which, as you know, the prince suffered. However, Kendrick managed to get around this difficulty by saying that the diagnosis was wrong and Alexei actually suffered from thrombocytopenia , which gave similar symptoms, but later faded away. Traces of this disease were allegedly found in the applicant.

Literature

  • Applicant website (eng.)
  • Page dedicated to the self-proclaimed Romanovs
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tammet,_Eyno&oldid=100483607


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Clever Geek | 2019