The title Czar, sometimes spelled Tsar, was given to the monarch of Russia; it is derived from the title Cesar, the ruler of the Roman Empire. Some memorable Czars include Ivan the Terrible, Catherine the Great, and Nicholas II, who was the last Czar before the Bolshevik Revolution.
The Czars were the Russian monarchs. Their religion was Russian Orthodoxy, a type of Christianity. Their race was Russian, Slavic, or Caucasian, whichever term is preferred.
Romanovs
The famous Russian jeweled eggs are called Fabergé eggs. Fifty large ones were made by the House of Fabergé for the Russian czars. Thousand more were miniature and could be worn around the neck as an Easter decoration.
You are gonna have to be a little more specific. Czars were the Russian leaders, such as Mikhail Gorbachev and Joseph Stalin.
Russian rulers were called czars. Also, at the time, there were barons, earls, dukes, archdukes, and etc.
The Czars were the Russian monarchs. Their religion was Russian Orthodoxy, a type of Christianity. Their race was Russian, Slavic, or Caucasian, whichever term is preferred.
Romanovs
The Romanov Family
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Prior to the revolutions of 1917, the Russian leaders were called Czars or Tsars.
Some former Russian rulers were called tsars or czars.
All pre 1917 Russian rulers were czars. It's the Russian term for 'king'.
The famous Russian jeweled eggs are called Fabergé eggs. Fifty large ones were made by the House of Fabergé for the Russian czars. Thousand more were miniature and could be worn around the neck as an Easter decoration.
Because of the transliteration from Cyrillic, the plural czars is also spelled tzars or more properly tsars, when it applies to the Russian hereditary rulers.
Russian society was taken charge by Autocrats, also called Czars with absoloute power
Russian heads of state before 1917 were called Tsars or Czars.
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