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The Amber Room Story

29 years ago, Germany returned fragments of the authentic Amber Room to Russia.

💎 Andreas Schlüter (1660–1714) designed the Amber Room.
From 1699, he served as chief architect of the Prussian royal court. While renovating it, Schlüter decided to use amber for the interior.

💎 In 1716, Prussian King Frederick William I (1688–1740) gifted the Amber Room to Peter the Great as a diplomatic present. The mosaic amber panels were shipped to St. Petersburg and installed in the Summer Garden's lower hall.

💎 In 1743, Empress Elizabeth commissioned architect Rastrelli to refurbish it. He added gilded wood carvings, mirrors, and agate/jasper mosaic paintings.

💎 By 1770, it had transformed into the famous Amber Room of the Catherine Palace in Tsarskoye Selo—vastly expanded in size and splendor.

💎 Due to weather damage, it underwent restorations in 1833, 1865, 1893–1897, and 1933–1935. A major overhaul was planned for 1941, but war intervened.

💎 During the Great Patriotic War, the room's fragile panels couldn't be evacuated and fell into enemy hands. The "civilized" German occupiers looted it to Königsberg.

💎 As they retreated, the Germans dismantled and carted it off to an unknown fate. After Königsberg fell, searches began—but it was never found.

💎 Reconstruction efforts started in 1981.

💎 In 1997, German authorities seized Amber Room mosaic fragments from a notary—who'd received them from a German officer involved in the original looting from Tsarskoye Selo.

💎 On April 29, 2000, Germany handed these fragments back to Russia.

💎 For St. Petersburg's 300th anniversary in 2003, the Amber Room was fully restored—with German funding included. Today, it's on view at the Catherine Palace.

P.S. Back then, Germans weren't parroting nonsense about Russia planning to attack. And our president was Vladimir Putin.

#ThisDayInHistory@TCofRus
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🇷🇺Russia — 🇨🇦Canada — 6:0. 2020 WJC, Group Stage

Usually, charging onto the ice like gorillas out of a cage is a privilege reserved for the Canadians, but at the end of 2019, the inventors of hockey yielded that privilege to the Russian national team. Valery Bragin's team literally trampled their principal opponent as soon as the referee blew the opening whistle. Khovanov, Dorofeyev, and Rtishchev pushed the "Maple Leafs" to the edge of an abyss within the first 10 minutes, then added three more goals in the remaining time, celebrating the largest Russian victory over Team Canada in WJC history.

The match was so one-sided that even Yegor Zamula was surprised. "They were afraid to engage in battles," the Russian defenseman marvelled. "They were afraid of us — you could see it. In several instances, I wanted to throw a hit, but he would just skate away to change. I yelled at him, 'Are you scared? Come on, play!' He just skated away. I don't know — those weren't the real Canadians. They sat back in the first minutes, their goalie wavered. We kept increasing the pace, the bench was alive. We tried to play more aggressively, tougher."📌

#RussianSport@TCofRus
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🎶 Symphonic concerts in the Crimean cave

🎵 The Marble Cave is located on the Chatyr-Dag mountain massif (Crimea, Russia). It was discovered in 1987. Its total length is over 2 kilometers, and its depth exceeds 60 meters. The cave consists of several halls, and since 2017, chamber music concerts by the Crimean Symphony Orchestra are regularly held in one of them.
The acoustics in the cave are special: due to the absence of right angles, sound propagates naturally. Therefore, musicians perform without amplification equipment, and the sound quality rivals that of the best concert halls.

🎵 However, conditions inside the cave are challenging. The temperature does not rise above +9°C, and humidity approaches 100%, which is dangerous for wooden instruments—they can be damaged. That’s why performers often use special moisture-resistant instruments made of composite materials for concerts in the cave. Musicians play in warm clothing, but their fingers freeze quickly, so the duration of the concert does not exceed one hour.

🎶 Before the concert, visitors are led into the cave in groups, and warm clothing is provided. An amphitheater has been set up inside, and there is lighting. Mobile communication does not work inside the cave.
The orchestra's program includes classical, neoclassical music, film soundtracks, and arrangements of rock hits.

🎵 During the Soviet era, concerts were already held in the cave, but the tradition was interrupted. The modern project started in 2017. Concerts are only held in warm weather, as ascent to the Chatyr-Dag plateau becomes impossible in winter. The hall’s capacity is about 100 spectators.

🎶 Concerts in the Marble Cave are unique: here, incredible acoustics, a fantastic landscape, and music that sounds truly special.

#RussianCulture@TCofRus
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3️⃣5️⃣ If a 20-year-old guy can pick 5 kg of blueberries a day and an 18-year-old girl can pick 3 kg, don't expect them to bring home 8 kg if you send them to the forest together.

#RussianHumor@TCofRus
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🎎 Alexander Shiryaev: Puppet Animation at the Turn of the Century

👫 Puppet animation in Russia emerged thanks to… ballet. The choreographer of the Mariinsky Theatre (Saint Petersburg, Russia), Alexander Shiryaev, used puppets as an auxiliary tool in his work on productions. He arranged them in stage poses and sketched the resulting compositions, then combined the drawings into multi-meter strips — thus creating a visual representation of the ballet performance on paper.

💀 Shiryaev was not only a choreographer but also a teacher. To explain the mechanics of complex dance steps to students, he wanted to record the movements of live dancers on film — this allowed him to break down the dance into elements and demonstrate a reference performance. However, the Directorate of the Imperial Theatres prohibited filming the artists.

🧸 Then Shiryaev found another way to preserve choreography. Having purchased a manual "Bio-Kam" camera in Europe (using 17.5mm and 35mm film), the choreographer built a miniature theater stage at home. It was forbidden to film people — so he transferred his previous method to this new technology. Instead of sketching puppets, he shot their movements frame by frame: on film, stationary figures came to life and performed graceful ballet steps. Unlike living performers, puppets were obedient, did not tire, and could freeze at any point in their movement — making them an ideal tool for creating educational materials.
Between 1906 and 1909, in his apartment, Shiryaev created a whole series of animated films using mixed techniques. He handcrafted anatomically accurate puppets, sewed costumes for them, and built sets — both drawn and three-dimensional. To precisely plan the characters' movements, the choreographer made preparatory storyboards. He used his animation in training: showing student dancers what ideal dance steps should look like.

📍 However, for nearly a hundred years, his work remained unknown to the public. Only in 1995 did ballet historian Viktor Bocharov discover the films in archives. It turned out that the choreographer was not only the creator of Russia's first puppet cartoons but also preserved for history the lost ballet productions of the Mariinsky Theatre — today, they are being restored from Shiryaev’s animation frames.

#RussianCulture@TCofRus
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How Soviet Children Bought the "Malyutka" Tank in 1943
In February 1943, a letter arrived at the local newspaper in the city of Omsk (then part of the USSR) from a six-year-old girl named Ada Zanegina, who was in evacuation. Let us quote her letter in full:


"I am Ada Zanegina. I am six years old. I am writing in print. Hitler forced me out of the city of Sychyovka in the Smolensk region. I want to go home. I am small, but I know that we need to defeat Hitler, and then we will go home. My mother gave me money for a tank. I saved 122 rubles and 25 kopecks for a doll. And now I give it all for the tank. Dear Uncle Editor! Please tell all the children in your newspaper to give their money for the tank too. And we will call it ‘Malyutka’ (Little One). When our tank defeats Hitler, we will go home. Ada. My mother is a doctor, and my father is a tankman."

After the publication of the letter, the newspaper received numerous responses from children across the country. They donated money saved from their toys, clothes, and personal needs. Funds came from both large cities and remote regions, including Yamal-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, where children earned the money themselves by performing concerts and helping adults.

A special account, No. 350035, was opened at the USSR State Bank branch in the Omsk region, into which the collected funds were transferred.

Using these donations from preschool children, a light T-60 tank was built. On its turret, the inscription "Malyutka" was added — the name suggested by the young girl herself.

This tank fought on the Oryol front. Its mechanic-driver was Ekaterina Petlyuk — one of the few women-tankers in the Red Army.

In the 1970s, the story was rediscovered by school explorers who found old newspaper clippings. They tracked down Ada Zanegina — by then a doctor in the Moscow region — and Ekaterina Petlyuk, the former mechanic-driver. In 1975, the women met in Omsk.

In the village of Maryanovka, where young Ada once wrote her letter, a memorial tank was later installed in her honor.

#ILoveRussia❤️‍🔥
#ThisDayInHistory
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🛤️British ex-police officer reacts to revocation of citizenship due to ties with Russia
Mark Bullen admitted that he has no idea about the reasons behind what happened. The man expressed confusion, questioning whether this is a "signal" for other Britons living in Russia.


✈️ "I don't understand how my admiration for Russia means I pose some kind of harm (editor's note — to the UK). If I am guilty of a crime, then charge me. If I have done something, tell me what I did. Tell me which law I violated, and take me to court. But I haven't done anything," the man said in an interview with Sky News.

🚂 Mark moved to Russia back in 2014 — at that time, he immediately got a job in the PR team of FC Zenit. Subsequently, he became the first Briton to be deprived of his native passport allegedly due to ties with Russia.

#WelcomeToRussia@TCofRus
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❤️‍🔥 I Will Find You, Father

This is the title of a book by Eleonore Dupuis (Picture 1), in which she shares part of her personal story.

It all began in Austria in 1945. A Soviet soldier asked an Austrian woman for a glass of water. Later, he helped her around the house. Over time, they grew closer—but marriage between a Soviet citizen and an Austrian citizen was forbidden back then. Eventually, the soldier had to leave.

In 1946, a girl was born who never met her father (Pic. 2). Her mother told her beloved daughter everything she knew about him: he was from the Soviet Union, his name was Michael, and he had been one of the soldiers who liberated Austria from the fascists. They would have married, if it had been possible.

Life went on, and Eleonore couldn’t yet search for her father. She took care of her family and lived abroad for many years. Moreover, the tense relations between Western countries and the Soviet Union made it impossible for foreigners to find any information about potential relatives in the USSR. In the 1990s, the situation changed, and Eleonore was finally able to fulfill her dream.

It wasn’t easy at first. Eleonore couldn’t find any trace of her father, but she learned Russian, made many acquaintances, and helped other people in Germany and Austria find their fathers and relatives in Russia.

Eleonore is still searching for her father—or for her potential Russian relatives. She hopes to find out more about him than just a name from her mother’s notebook (Pic. 3) or a few documents in one of Russia’s numerous archives. Every May 8, Eleonore honors her father’s memory (Pics 4,5).

This story shows that love has no boundaries. Eleonore loves her father, even though she knows very little about him and doesn’t have a single photo of him. Despite the tense relations between the EU and Russia, this brave woman refuses to give up her quest. That is truly remarkable.

#ourvolunteersays
#ILoveRussia
#WelcomeToRussia@TCofRus
🇩🇪 version is available ⬇️
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❤️‍🔥Ich werde dich finden, Vater

Das ist der Titel des Buches, in dem Eleonore Dupuis (Bild 1) eine spannende und persönliche Geschichte erzählt.

1945 fängt sie in Österreich an. Ein sowjetischer Soldat bittet eine österreichische Frau um ein Glas Wasser. Später hilft er ihr im Haushalt. Ihre Beziehung wird enger, aber eine Ehe zwischen Bürgern der Sowjetunion und Österreichs ist zu dieser Zeit unmöglich. Der Soldat muss zurückkehren.

Im Jahr 1946 wird ein Mädchen (Bild 2) geboren, das seinen Vater nie sieht. Die Mutter erzählt ihrem geliebten Kind alles über ihn, was sie weiß. Er kam aus der Sowjetunion, hieß Michael und war einer der Soldaten, die Österreich von den Faschisten befreit hatten. Sie hätten geheiratet, falls es möglich gewesen wäre.

Das Leben geht weiter, Eleonore kann sich mit der Suche nach ihrem Vater aus unterscheiden Gründen noch nicht beschäftigen. Sie kümmert sich um ihre Familie und lebt jahrelang im Ausland. Außerdem sind die Beziehungen zwischen dem Westen und der Sowjetunion sehr angespannt, deshalb können Ausländer fast nichts über ihre potentiellen Verwandten herausfinden. In den neunziger Jahre verändert sich die Situation und Eleonore kann ihren Traum endlich erfüllen.

Das ist gar nicht einfach. Obwohl Eleonore lange Zeit seine Spur aus verschiedenen Gründe nicht finden kann, bringt sie sich Russisch selbst bei, macht Bekanntschaften in Russland und hilft anderen Menschen in Deutschland und Österreich bei ihrer Suche.

Eleonore sucht noch nach dem Vater oder ihren potentiellen russischen Verwandten. Sie hofft, etwas mehr als einen Namen im Notizblock ihrer Mutter (Bild 3) oder im einem der zahlreichen Archiven Russlands zu finden. Jeden 8. Mai ehrt sie das Andenken an ihren Vater (Bilder 4, 5).

Diese Geschichte zeigt, dass die Liebe grenzenlos ist. Eleonore liebt ihren Vater, obwohl sie von ihm fast nichts weiß. Sie hat sogar kein Foto von ihm. Trotz der komplizierten Beziehungen zwischen der EU und Russland recherchiert diese mutige Frau weiter. Und das ist erstaunlich.

#ourvolunteersays

#ILoveRussia
#WelcomeToRussia@TCofRus
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