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Timeline
The following timeline provides a simple chronological listing of events relating to Nicholas II of Russia.
1914
17 July | President Poincaré leaves Paris on visit to Emperor. |
20 July | President Poincaré arrives at Kronstadt and is personally welcomed by Emperor. |
24 July | Serbia makes appeal to Emperor. |
27 July | Wires to Belgrade that Russia cannot be indifferent to fate of Serbia. |
29 July | Tries to stop general Russian mobilisation 11 p.m. |
1 August | King George wires Emperor stating that Germany recommended British proposals to Austria on 30 July, but that Russian mobilisation was reported during Austrian Cabinet meeting. |
1 August | Wires to King George that he had to mobilise on account of Serbia; but though he had promised the Kaiser he would not move troops during negotiations, Germany had suddenly declared war. |
1915
1 August | Issues fine manifesto. |
4 September | Speech at first meeting of Special Conference of National Defence. |
5 September | Takes supreme command of the Russian forces. |
7 September | Exchanges messages with President Poincaré. |
The Great War On This Day and its associated Index.
Sources: Various material contemporary with the war have been used to compile
Text has been transcribed from two out-of-copyright sources: Chronology of the War (1918-1920), and History of the Great War – Principle Events 1914-1918 (1922). Spelling of place names are original to British use at the time. Some typos have been altered or corrected for consistency. Duplicate or identical events between these sources have been amalgamated; as a result the date and wording may differ to the original texts.
Images come from scans or photographs of original sources, Wikimedia Commons, and the Imperial War Museum's online collections under the IWM Non-Commercial Licence. Attribution is given separately to the latter and do not come under the general licence of this site.
Advisory note: The information in these sources may not accurately represent up-to-date histories, present-day spelling of place names, or geographical boundaries. In some instances the language used may appear sexist or derogatory to the modern reader, and in rare cases, images may depict distressing scenes.
For further details and a full list of sources, click here.
Images come from scans or photographs of original sources, Wikimedia Commons, and the Imperial War Museum's online collections under the IWM Non-Commercial Licence. Attribution is given separately to the latter and do not come under the general licence of this site.
Advisory note: The information in these sources may not accurately represent up-to-date histories, present-day spelling of place names, or geographical boundaries. In some instances the language used may appear sexist or derogatory to the modern reader, and in rare cases, images may depict distressing scenes.
For further details and a full list of sources, click here.