Russia Beyond
17.5K subscribers
4.54K photos
2.34K videos
5.62K links
Our chat: https://t.iss.one/+tM-XKGpzJMcxODAy

Questions or suggestions: @pulya

We are the world’s largest community of people interested in Russia - be it culture, travel, history, learning the language and so much more!
Download Telegram
How did the image of ‘Father Frost’ change in Russia?

The symbol of the New Year, Ded Moroz, was completely different in Slavic mythology. He was a deity who could freeze a person or a harvest to death and they tried to appease him with offerings.

Ded Moroz only began to be associated with the onset of Christmas and New Year in the second half of the 19th century. On some old postcards, you can see an old bearded old man in a red coat and with a Christmas tree.
But, Ded Moroz only became the central and positive character in the 1930s, when the USSR made the main winter holiday New Year's Eve, not Christmas.

A kind old man together with his granddaughter ‘Snegurochka’ (‘Snow Maiden’) now visits children on New Year's Eve and brings them presents.
Ded Moroz on postcards was depicted not only together with New Year presents and children, but also side by side with the achievements of Soviet industry and science.

Nowadays, different regions of Russia have their own symbolic New Year wizards.
The official residence of the Russian Ded Moroz, meanwhile, is in Veliky Ustyug in the Russian North.

📸 Archive photo, MAMM/MDF/russiainphoto.ru, Davod Sholomovich, Evgeny Biyatov/Sputnik, Boris Klipinitzer, Nikolai Zhiganov/TASS, Pavel Kuzmichev

🤓 Russia Beyond
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
How the Soviet home front lived & worked during World War II

People in the rear worked tirelessly to ensure that the Red Army did not need anything.

At the same time, they used every free minute to enjoy their usual life: go to the theater or a concert, visit the zoo or listen to the opera.

💥 Russia Beyond
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
How the architect of the Pearl Harbor attack fought against Russia

On December 7, 1941, the people of the United States experienced a severe shock – Japanese aircraft dealt a powerful blow to their Pacific Fleet at the Pearl Harbor naval base in the Hawaiian archipelago.

For Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the author of this devastating attack, dealing painful blows to great powers was nothing new. During the Russo-Japanese War, Yamamoto served on the ‘Nissin’ armored cruiser and took part in the defeat of the Russian squadron in the ‘Battle of Tsushima’ on May 27-28, 1905.

During the battle, the ‘Nissin’ was hit 11 times and the future admiral also got his share: “With a deafening roar, the shell crashed into the remaining 8-inch bow gun… Poisonous smoke enveloped the bow of the ship and I was almost blown away by the force of the violent explosion. I hobbled a few steps – and then discovered that… two fingers of my left hand had been torn off and were hanging by just skin.”

Isoroku was incredibly lucky. If he had lost another finger in addition to his middle and index fingers, he would have been immediately dismissed from the armed forces.

In the end, the injuries did not prevent Yamamoto from making a successful military career in the navy and the Russo-Japanese War became good combat training for him.

Credit: Public Domain

💥 Russia Beyond
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Check out this woolly Russian babushka ‘angel’ 👼

Video by: @cottonolki

💥 Russia Beyond
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Salekhard in 3 Russian words

Salekhard is the only city in the world located on the Arctic Circle. Here are three of its main symbols.

1⃣ СТЕЛА «66-Я ПАРАЛЛЕЛЬ» (Stela ‘66th parallel’)

This monument was installed in honor of Salekhard’s unique location on the Arctic Circle. In the evening, the stela is illuminated with multi-colored lights, reminiscent of the Northern Lights.

2⃣ ОБДОРСКИЙ ОСТРОГ (Obdorsky Ostrog)

The Obdorsky Ostrog (fortress) was founded in 1595. It was one of the first in Siberia and marked the beginning of Salekhard. In the early 19th century, the fort was deemed unnecessary and demolished, but was rebuilt in 1992.

3⃣ МАМОНТ «МИТЯ» (Mammoth ‘Mitya’)

In prehistoric times, mammoths lived on the site of Salekhard. Nowadays, a sculpture of one of these giants has been installed there. At night, ‘Mitya’ has” glowing tusks and, on New Year’s Eve, he is dressed in a giant Father Frost costume.

#russiancities

💥 Russia Beyond
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Teriberka, Russia's northern winter wonderland

Video by: @andrewbazanov_photo

💥 Russia Beyond
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Why was Joseph Brodsky awarded the Nobel Prize for literature?

In this photo, the then 47-year-old emigre poet is literally glowing: a dream has come true! On December 10, 1987, he was awarded with the Nobel Prize in Stockholm.

“For an all-embracing authorship, imbued with clarity of thought and poetic intensity,” the Nobel Prize committee explained its choice.
Brodsky, indeed, had created a new poetic language, liberating it from any kinds of formalization or frames – the vocabulary and the syntax of the poet were not restrained by anything.

In his homeland, Brodsky was bullied, forced to undergo psychiatric treatment and prosecuted for “parasitism”. His poems were banned from publication and’ in 1972’ he left the USSR for the United States.
Overseas, he became better known as an essayist, publishing in English in magazines. Brodsky also lectured at American universities.

Many critics believe that, like most Russian authors, Brodsky was awarded the Nobel Prize only because he was a political exile. Nevertheless, even in emigration, Brodsky himself tried to avoid the image of a victim of the regime and was very apolitical.
In Russia, he was recognized only after his death in 1996. He was dubbed by many as “the last great Russian poet” and even “the Pushkin of our time”.

📷 Legion Media

💥 Russia Beyond
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM