Forwarded from Gateway to Russia
How St. Petersburg is decorated for the New Year 2026!
The main Christmas tree on Palace Square, a scarlet heart and illuminations on the Griboedov Canal and crowns on Nevsky Prospect.
๐ท Alexander Demyanchuk, Valentin Yegorshin / TASS, Viktoria Viatris, Alexei Danichev / Sputnik
๐ Gateway to Russia
The main Christmas tree on Palace Square, a scarlet heart and illuminations on the Griboedov Canal and crowns on Nevsky Prospect.
๐ท Alexander Demyanchuk, Valentin Yegorshin / TASS, Viktoria Viatris, Alexei Danichev / Sputnik
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๐ #OTD January 4, 1934 marked the birth of Zurab Konstantinovich Tsereteli, one of the most recognizable masters of monumental art of the 20thโ21st centuries.
Peopleโs Artist of the USSR and Russia, President of the Russian Academy of Arts, and recipient of the highest state awards, he became a figure who had a significant influence on the development of the global art scene.
Among his most famous works are the Peter the Great Statue, the Friendship Forever Monument, the War Memorial Complex on Poklonnaya Gora, as well as numerous projects dedicated to historical memory, peace, and justice.
In 1993, the Zurab Tsereteli Studio Museum opened in Moscow, and in 2016, his House-Museum was inaugurated in Peredelkino.
#Tsereteli #Culture #Russia
Peopleโs Artist of the USSR and Russia, President of the Russian Academy of Arts, and recipient of the highest state awards, he became a figure who had a significant influence on the development of the global art scene.
Among his most famous works are the Peter the Great Statue, the Friendship Forever Monument, the War Memorial Complex on Poklonnaya Gora, as well as numerous projects dedicated to historical memory, peace, and justice.
In 1993, the Zurab Tsereteli Studio Museum opened in Moscow, and in 2016, his House-Museum was inaugurated in Peredelkino.
#Tsereteli #Culture #Russia
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Forwarded from Gateway to Russia
Winter in Soviet Moscow โ๏ธ โ
The city covered with snow and falling snowflakes... In his images, the capital appears very different: sometimes austere and frosty, sometimes sunny and soft.
๐ธ Boris Kosarev/Maria Kosareva family archive
๐ Gateway to Russia
The city covered with snow and falling snowflakes... In his images, the capital appears very different: sometimes austere and frosty, sometimes sunny and soft.
๐ธ Boris Kosarev/Maria Kosareva family archive
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Forwarded from Russian MFA ๐ท๐บ
Fearless seamen, who were tasked with an important strategic mission, which consisted of engaging the German garrison in combat to distract it from Feodosia, performed deceptive tactical manoeuvre hampering a huge number of the German troops along the Koktebel shore at the time when the main Red Army forces attacked on the Kerch peninsula.
Despite the enemyโs superiority in manpower and equipment, the Koktebel landing was carried out successfully, with the main mission being completed.
Soviet Red Nave seamen showed unparalleled courage and heroism: under harsh and fierce weather conditions (a five-category storm and a -20ยฐC frost), engaging combat being waist-deep in the icy water, the seamen were fighting to death, selflessly assisting their comrades to defend Crimea against the Nazi invaders.
Thanks to the heroic feat of Soviet seamen in Koktebel, the Red Army was given the opportunity to reach Feodosia on land and firmly entrench on the Kerch bridgehead. On January 5, a group of Red Army soldiers landed in Yevpatoria, having driven the Romanian invaders out of the city.
๐ The success of the Koktebel landing turned the tide in the Battle of Sevastopol โ the Nazis hastened to redeploy some of their divisions to Kerch so as to deter the Red Army attacking. Thus, the defenders of Sevastopol gained the necessary time: the city garrison could regroup the forces and throw all their strength to fend off the enemy.
***
The Koktebel landing
December 1941
On the night of December 28-29, 1941, during the Kerch offensive, a reconnaissance unit of 29 volunteering Red Navy seamen reached the Koktebel Bay on board of the D-5 'Spartakovets' submarine. Once arrived at the destination of the mission, the unit received an order โ to land ashore and launch an assault on the Nazi-occupied Koktebel village, while the main Red Army ground forces were reaching Feodosia.
In the early morning of December 29, at 3:30 a.m., the Soviet seamen launched the attack. Despite dense machinegun fire and enemy mines, the unit broke through the sheer hell โ the seamen reached the shore and engaged in combat with the German and Romanian troops. Our seamen's surprise attack tied down the enemy garrison in Koktebel for several days until the main Red Army forces approached.
By January 1, the Red Army assault group, which successfully landed in Feodosia, finally reached Koktebel and joined their comrades โ the heroic seamen who were selflessly fighting till the end. Together they crushed the enemy and further continued liberation of Crimea.
The heroic Victory in Koktebel was achieved at a high cost: according to various estimates, only 10 out of the 29 seamen survived.
***
In 1975, marking the 35th Anniversary of the Great Victory, in Koktebel (Republic of Crimea) a monument to the Heroic 29 Red Navy seamen was unveiled. The memorial stone bears the inscription:
To the soldiers who participated in the landing and died for the Crimean land during the Great Patriotic War.
๐ฏ The monument is located beside the mass grave where the seamen, who perished in the Koktebel operation, found their eternal rest.
#Victory80 #WeAreProud #WeRemember
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๐ #OTD on January 5, 295 years ago, the first streetlights appeared in Moscow.
In 1730, the Senate of the Russian Empire issued a decree on the manufacture of glass lanterns for lighting Moscow in winter.
๐ฎ The money for the installation of the first 520 oil lamps was allocated by the treasury, but the residents themselves had to turn them on and keep in good order. They functioned from September 1 to May 1, 18 times a month, when the moon did not emerge in the night sky.
By the end of the 18th century, street lighting had improved, and the number of lighting poles had increased to 6,500. And in 1880, the first electric lanterns appeared in Moscow.
๐ก Muscovites were able to fully illuminate their homes only 30 years later, when the first central power plant was opened on the Raushskaya embankment.
#History
#Russia
In 1730, the Senate of the Russian Empire issued a decree on the manufacture of glass lanterns for lighting Moscow in winter.
๐ฎ The money for the installation of the first 520 oil lamps was allocated by the treasury, but the residents themselves had to turn them on and keep in good order. They functioned from September 1 to May 1, 18 times a month, when the moon did not emerge in the night sky.
By the end of the 18th century, street lighting had improved, and the number of lighting poles had increased to 6,500. And in 1880, the first electric lanterns appeared in Moscow.
๐ก Muscovites were able to fully illuminate their homes only 30 years later, when the first central power plant was opened on the Raushskaya embankment.
#History
#Russia
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