Yes
No, Anastasia Romanov did not have any goals. All she wanted was to help her family, and keep her family safe.
anastasia romanov was important to her family because she was there last daughter and at the same time .... they didnt want to lose her.
Anastasia Romanov was killed purely because she was a Romanov. When the Bolsheviks eventually came to power after Tsar Nicholas abdicated, Lenin ordered that Nick and his family were to be killed to end the Romanov dynasty and family line.
Anastasia's family, the Romanov didn't get kicked out of Russia. They were murdered
1918, she was murdered with her family
Mostly in the Kremlin winter Palace- in St. Petersburg- not Moscow. Anastasia spent little time in Muscovy and disliked the city. By the way Kremlin in Russian means a fortified manor house or palace and there are several. the Winter palace is in St. Petersburg, and this is where Anastasia was born on June l8,l90l.
Quite recently, DNA testing confirmed that Anastasia Romanov was killed with the rest of her family. There were bones (or bone fragments) found from each family member of the Romanovs.
No, Anastasia was killed with the rest of her family on July 16 (17th?) 1918
Romanov All Russian Tsars after Michael I claimed the name Romanov, and it was politically acknowledged. However, according to the technical laws of descent, the right to the name Romanov was lost after the reign of Catherine the Great due to marriages by Empresses. The legitimate name of the family was Holstein-Gottorp, sometimes called Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov.
Anastasia Romanov, the youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II, was rumored to have escaped the assassination of her family in 1918, though there is no definitive evidence to support this claim. After the Bolsheviks executed the Romanov family, various individuals claimed to be Anastasia, leading to speculation about her survival. The most famous of these claimants was Anna Anderson, who spent decades maintaining that she was the lost princess. In 2007, DNA testing confirmed that the remains of the Romanov family, including Anastasia, had been found, effectively debunking the escape theory.
She did not live long enough to marry anybody. She died with the rest of her family when she was 17.
It is pretty much universally accepted now that Grand Duchess Anastasia Romanov died together with the rest of her family on July 17, 1918 when they were executed by the Bolsheviks. Numerous pretenders to the Romanov fortune came forward, but all have been shown to be fakes (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anastasia_Romanov#False_reports_of_survival_and_identification_of_Romanov_remains) and DNA evidence has now confirmed that Anastasia died and was buried with her family.