#grozniy
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petitebonaparte · 1 year ago
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All of the sources for oprichnina and some individuals from there are like
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spotkay-anastasia · 2 years ago
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Art with two minor, but very important characters from my new LVBP setting ( « Lubov vsemu bozjestvennomy - protivoestestvenna ( Love for everything divine is unnaturaland ) »). The title of the novel is a reference to the song « Legend of the Goddess of Thunderstorms » by Pyrokinesis.
Angel ( or maybe not ) - Angelina Dobrolyubova.
Chertiha ( Chert ) - Stanislava Dikova.
( Chert — in Slavic mythology, an evil spirit, mischievous, playful and lustful. Under various nicknames and synonyms, he is a character of a huge number of fairy tales of Eastern Europe, the most popular character of Russian demonology. )
On art, this couple in their semi-human forms.
Initially, I wanted to start by drawing a comic book, but I realized that my weak phone wouldn't pull it, and so I risked trying to write... something like a typical cringe novel???
Now only the first chapter has been published, and I do not know if there will be an English translation. Perhaps in the future, when I finish writing a novel, I will definitely hire translators to translate into English. But if someone wants to make an amateur translation, you can contact me, and I will be happy to help with the translation of proverbs, estates, etc.
Short description:
« 15 years have passed since the mysterious death of the family of Knyaz Makarii Grozniy ( Grozniy - the Terrible ), Spassky Makarii Yaroslavovich. It is rumored that the Knyaz crossed the road even to the pagan gods themselves, in which the common people continued to believe centuries after the Baptism of Rus. Why did heaven hate the princely family? And did not the pagan deities lose their power and authority, and did not leave these lands? The solution to this mystery Makariy Yaroslavovich took with him to the grave.
His younger sister, Knyazjna Nastasia Spasskaya, is reborn in the family of the Volkhv's in the body of an unmarried scoundrel who has to fight with her boyar aunt every day for the right to be a free woman.
This is a story about the Knyazjna and the dark side of her family. »
( Volkhv's - In the Old Russian tradition, ministers of pre-Christian pagan cults, astrologers, magicians and soothsayers who performed divine services and sacrifices, to whom the ability to conjure the elements and predict the future was attributed. )
relationships: geth, slash and femslash.
genres: comedy, adventure, romance, fairy tale, fantasy (Slavic), horror.
rating: NC, maxi.
warnings: cannibalism, specific bed scenes, scenes of cruelty, obscene expressions, incest, rape (no romanticization!!!).
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mechaseraph · 11 months ago
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Holding my hardrive D like that painting of Ivan Grozniy holding his son. BABYGIRL YOU ARE YOUNGER THAN SYSTEM DRIVE ONLY ~350GB OUT WHOLE 1TB IS OCCUPIED IN YOU BABYGIRL YOU HEAR ME DON'T DIE
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thunder-stuck · 2 years ago
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Said Zakayev aka `\u041c\u0430\u043b\u043e\u0439` from Grozniy, Russia, confirmed KIA. He took part in Russian invasion of Ukraine starting from 2014. Photo is him with Ukrainian activist from Yasynuvata, Iryna Dovgan'. She was kidnapped and then moved to Donetsk where was publicly mocked and tortured. || 9gagrss || https://ift.tt/VTIodRA https://ift.tt/UsNnAWt ||
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photos-ok81 · 3 years ago
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Rus Kuvvetleri ve Çeçenler arasındaki savaşın ardından Grozni şehri 1995 #tarih #history #renklitarih #colorhistory #historylovers #historypictures #historyhd #foto #fotoğraf #fotografia #picture #nowar #nowarinukraine #ukrayna #nowarrussia #grozniy https://www.instagram.com/p/CaeavQQuvhy/?utm_medium=tumblr
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ibi-damnum-sequitur · 2 years ago
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The making of Sergei Eisenstein's Ivan Grozniy, 1942-1944.
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wesley-de-cornualles · 5 years ago
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Ivan the Terrible, dir. Sergei Eisenstein
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Mikhail Kuznetsov as  Fyodor Basmanov in  Ivan the Terrible (Иван Грозный, Ivan Grozniy)
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teodorakuznetzova · 3 years ago
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Fyodor Basmanov (played by Mikhail Kuznetsov) in Ivan the Terrible (Ivan Grozniy) by Sergei Eisenstein, 1944.
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teddybasmanov · 3 years ago
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Hi Teddy! Did you do anything fun lately? For that music asks, 7, 8 10 please.
Hi!
Not really - mostly just trying to finish my assignments before the exams. But at least the weather is good!
7. a song that reminds you of yourself
Half-jokingly (not the best version, but it took me long enough to find this one):
8. a song that reminds you of a friend
Of one of my high-school classmates. :)
10. a song that makes you tear up
Oh, there are a lot of these, most are from musicals and operas.
Like this one:
And I mean come on, JSC is here of course:
And this:
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ruminativerabbi · 3 years ago
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Ghosts
Like all of you, I’m sure, I have been watching the events unfolding in Ukraine all week with the greatest attention. And, also like all of you, I’ve been surprised over and over in the course of these last days. Who would have thought countries like Sweden, Finland, and especially (time a million) Switzerland would abandon their former inability to join the West in anything that could even slightly irritate Russia to take serious, meaningful steps to help the beleaguered Ukrainians? Who would have expected our own government to shake off its doldrums and spearhead what so far feels like a remarkably successful effort to inflict maximal economic and commercial damage on the Russians and thereby, at least theoretically, eventually to dissuade them from pushing forward with the conquest of Ukraine? Watching China and even Israel—both of whom are so traditionally eager not to step on Russian toes—speaking out, respectively, vaguely and less vaguely on the side of Ukraine—that also came as a huge surprise to me. So it’s been a week of surprises that I’ve watched parade past me when I’ve been ensconced in Joan’s shiva room at her father’s assisted-living facility for long enough to peruse the news on my phone. (For non-Shelter Rockers, my wonderful mother-in-law died last Shabbat and we’ve been here in Toronto since Sunday for her funeral and shiva week. May her memory be a blessing for us all.)
As always, I try to respond to current events by setting them in their historical context. Is Putin a latter-day Hitler trying to swallow up as many of the neighbors as he can without caring if anyone does or doesn’t believe whatever fig-leaf justification he offers up to justify his actions and only having begun with Ukraine, just as Hitler only began with the Sudetenland? Or does he see himself more as a latter-day Lincoln, looking south and attempting to bring back into the union a seditiously self-proclaimed rogue state led by the political heirs of the rebels who wrongly and illegally chose to jump ship when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991? I admit that comparing Putin to Lincoln seems beyond exaggerated. But is that only because I—we—consider the nation that declared its independence in the summer of 1776 to have been a true union, a “real” nation, that the South was treacherously betraying by attempting to go its own way—and thus nothing like the USSR, which was—at best—an archipelago of serf-states held in place by the brute force brought to bear by the only “real” country in the union, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (or, as it was earlier and later called, “just” Russia)?
It’s a more complicated question than it sounds like at first. Putin himself is clearly a complex mixture of things: part schoolyard bully, part oligarch, part Caesar, part self-labelled patriot, and part gangster. I’m sure people with far more extensive grounding than myself in Russian history will find all sorts of themes from Russian history echoing through his rhetoric and his actions (and particularly his actions of this last week). But to me there are three central ghosts hovering over Putin as he pursues this policy of naked aggression towards Ukraine and each, a bit like the angels in Angels in America (and especially the one played by Emma Thompson in the HBO miniseries), guides the action forward without actually playing a role personally in the way the drama unfolds.
The first ghost is that of Ivan the Terrible. (The word “terrible” is not at all right, by the way. The Russian word grozniy means “formidable” or “fearsome,” not terrible in the way the word is used in modern English.) Ivan was the first of the czars, the grand prince of Moscow who, in 1547 proclaimed himself “Czar of All Russia.” It was a carefully chosen title: the Russian word tsar (usually written “czar” in English, or “tsar”) is merely the Russian equivalent of the Latin word Caesar, just in the same way that Kaiser is the German version of that word. And it was a latter-day Caesar that Ivan set out to accomplish the twin foreign-policy initiatives of his years in power: the effort to make Russia safe from the so-called Golden Horde (as the huge Mongol empire to the east was called) and the parallel effort to gain access for Russia to the Baltic Sea regardless of what countries lay in the way. He accomplished the first of these two initiatives, extending Russian control as far east as the Urals and as far south as the Caspian Sea (and thus creating a huge buffer zone between Russia and the Mongol Empire). But he was unsuccessful in his attempt to colonize and annex Lithuania, in those days the sole gateway to the Baltic for Russia. Still, by rejecting the Russian words for “king” or “emperor” and choosing instead to be known as czar, he was signaling—and not especially subtly—that he viewed Russia’s place in his world as something akin to Rome’s place in its, which is to say as the central state of a giant empire and as anything but a nation among nations.
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The second ghost hovering over Putin’s head is Peter the Great, czar from 1685 to his death in 1725 whose self-appointed mission was once and for all to make Russia into a great nation worthy of the role in world leadership he envisaged for it. He invented the Russian navy, completely overhauled the Russian army, created a secular school system devoted to teaching children to think of themselves as citizens of a great world power, and he exerted enough influence on the Orthodox Church to keep it from getting in his way. And, indeed, he made himself into one of the most powerful of world leaders. And he managed to expand Russia decisively, taking over (because he could) large swaths of Finland, Estonia, and Latvia, thus gaining access to the Baltic. And he went to war with Turkey, as a result of which he gained access to the Black Sea. And he founded St. Peterburg (named after himself), Russia’s so-called “window to Europe,” which made him truly a towering figure in Russian history. (He was, by the way, also a towering figure in the literal sense of being six-foot-six.)
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And the third ghost is the specter of Catherine II, called Catherine the Great, who became empress of all Russia upon the death of her peculiar husband, Peter III, and who remained on the throne until her own death in 1796. Catharine saw herself as the “real” successor to Peter the Great. And Russia dramatically expanded under her reign—conquering Poland and then giving away parts of it to Austria and Prussia. She went to war with Turkey and won, securing the entire northern shore of the Black Sea for Russia. (This is basically where Ukraine is today.) And she also seized the Crimea in 1783, making it part of Russia. To learn more, I recommend Robert K. Massie’s book, Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman, which I enjoyed immensely, as did I also his biography of Peter the Great, called Peter the Great: His Life and World. Both volumes are still in print and available as e-books. The best biography of Ivan the Terrible is probably the one by Isabel de Madariaga, published by Yale University Press in 2006.
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In lifetimes of none of the above did Ukraine exist as an independent state. In other words, Putin’s ghosts did not conquer Ukraine because there was no such place: once the Russian Empire existed with its czars and czarinas at the helm, it simply went without saying that the territory that is today independent Ukraine was part of the empire. And that, I think, is the world the ghosts hovering over Putin’s head are urging him to recreate, one in which Russia, the largest nation in Europe (and by far—although Ukraine is second-largest), takes its rightful place as leader of the lesser and smaller nations of Europe, which position of natural power and influence it is being prevented from assuming by the efforts of NATO and the European Union, and by the efforts of our own nation as well, to draw Ukraine away from Russia and to make of it an independent nation in the Western style with ties to the other nations of the world, and Russia among them, that are suggestive not of Ukrainian subservience or servility but of Ukrainian sovereignty, autonomy, and independence.
Where all this will end, who knows? The Russians, it has already become clear, can only lose by winning: having to occupy a gigantic vassal state that will remain openly hostile is not what the Russians can want, but neither—and even more horrifying—would be the specter of actually losing the war they’ve begun and having to retreat. The Ukrainians have played their hand well so far, doing precisely what it took to win the support and admiration of the world. President Zelenskyy has shown himself to be brave, clever, and—crucially—photogenic and appealing. (The man is a trained performer, after all!) The Russian government will not collapse under the weight of criticism levelled against it by the entire rest of the world. But becoming a pariah state can’t have been Putin’s plan either. Perhaps the man needs to look up one last time and see the specters hiding just behind Ivan, Peter, and Catherine—the specters of the emperors of Rome (the real Caesars, after all) who chose to conquer and rule the world only for their empire to collapse in on itself when the weight of the world’s loathing simply became too heavy for it to bear.
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biryusufmasalianlatacagim · 4 years ago
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Ivan Grozniy (1958)- Sergey Ayzenştayn
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skimblebaby · 5 years ago
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Here are some peculiar jellicle names from 5 different unofficial Russian translations of Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats. These are just from The Naming of Cats and they are about 38% less cursed than the names given to cats with their own poems.
I have left some stress marks for you (‘,) to make it easier
M are names for males and F are names for females. N are neutral names suitable for anyone (Russian is a gendered language)
If a name makes no sense, there’s no note
Myshe’growz /Мышегроуз, M ~ Mousegnower but it sounds like an English word intentionally
Moorka’tor / Муркатор, M ~ the one who purrs but it’s made up
La’peest / Лапист, M ~ he who does stuff using his paws/has some remarkable paws, made up
Kogti’leen / Когтилин, M ~ OwlClaws but maybe there’s no owl and it’s just for the rhyme
Jelli’keessa / Джеликисса, F ~ Jellikitty but it sounds like a profession
Sme’tantsiya / Сметанция, F ~ Sourcream which sounds like the name Constance, Constantia
Pri’mankus / Приманкус, M ~ Lurekus (somehow connected with baits/lures)
Mia’ooksa / Мяукса, N ~ Meowksa (the one who meows but with some taste of a foreign language)
,Corico’ploot / Корикоплут, M ~ Coricorascal
Jelli’moda / Джеллимода, F ~ Jellifashion
Mun’kastro / Манкастро, M
Qu’ansoo / Куансу, N
,Bombari’pizza / Бомбарипицца, F
Je’lorum / Джелорум, F but I would say N or ever M if I didn’t know
Sladko’ezhka / Сладкоежка ~ Sweet Tooth, N
Re’voon / Ревун, M ~ Howler
Polo’tyor / Полотёр, M ~ Floor Polisher (???)
Sala’bon / Салабон, M ~ Youngster/Weakling
‘Grozniy Ryk / Грозный Рык, M ~ Formidable Growl (Growltiger, obviously)
‘Sladkiy Leek / Сладкий Лик, N ~ Sweet Face
‘Pegaya ‘Rozhitsa / Пегая Рожица, N possibly just F ~ Piebald Funny Little Face
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anarasel · 5 years ago
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Fyodor Basmanov (played by Mikhail Kuznetsov) in Ivan the Terrible, Part 2 (Ivan Grozniy) by Sergei Eisenstein, 1945.
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originlist · 5 years ago
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“There’s only room for one undying nightmare tsar in all of Russia, and it’s me! I’ll curse sense into Ivan Groznii myself!” It’s nice Koschei’s fired up for once, but his choice of issue to have is a little... something.
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aiiaiiiyo · 5 years ago
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Chechnya city ​​Grozniy. 1995. [968 x 544] Check this blog!
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