The Colors of Russia
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🌏🇷🇺Ryazan region

Photo: lemur1489

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This Day in History – August 21

👀 On this day in 1935, Soviet and Russian poet, playwright, lyricist, and screenwriter Yuri Entin was born. His songs became a cornerstone of childhood for generations during the Soviet era. Entin earned widespread fame for writing lyrics for some of the most beloved animated films and children’s movies, which were staples on Soviet television—and still appear on screens in Russia today.

The birthday boy himself, Yuri Sergeyevich, once shared his tongue-in-cheek secrets to staying lively and healthy:
- First, he recommends sleeping a little extra during the day. As for sports and exercise? The poet, now in his later years, takes a skeptical view—he’d rather sit them out.
- Second, his creative success comes from writing poetry while lounging on the sofa. In fact, as he revealed in an interview, about 95% of his poems were written this way—lying down or half-reclined.

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📌 Can you guess which one is the Little Mermaid in Copenhagen Harbor, and which one is from Miskhor, Crimea, Russia?

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📌 The first photo shows Copenhagen's harbor, while the second one captures the "Little Mermaid" statue with a child along the coast of Miskhor in Crimea, Russia.

I'll tell you the fascinating legend behind Crimea's mermaid next time!

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The 450-rouble menu (about €4.50)

Check out this €4.50 meal deal shared by a follower from Kaliningrad! For that price, you can get either a pizza and a drink or a salad, soup, hot main, and drink.

Honestly, €4.50 is a steal – you could even split it between two people. When I hit up a Georgian restaurant, I get their €5 set meal for two: salad, soup, and a main. Slightly pricier since it’s Georgian, but still in the same ballpark.


🎤 Over in Moscow and the surrounding region, prices run higher (as you’d expect in a capital city where salaries are better). But you’ve got Stolovayas – Soviet-era self-serve canteens – where meals are still in this affordable range.

Pro tip: There’s a great one not far from Savelovskaya metro station. Pop in if you’re ever nearby!

Source: @lavieenrussie

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Russky Bridge in Vladivostok Russia’s Far East


For decades Russky Island in Vladivostok was home to military installations and closed to the public, so there was no need for regular transport.

In the mid-1990s the island was opened to everyone, and locals began coming to sunbathe and swim on its sandy beaches. The trip could take up to two hours, however, because the island was reachable only by ferry or charter boat. The bridge over the Eastern Bosphorus cut that journey to about 15 minutes and became a genuine boon for residents and visitors alike.

The APEC summit provided the impetus to build a cable-stayed bridge linking the Nazimov Peninsula with Cape Novosilsky on Russky Island. Construction began in September 2008 and progressed rapidly. On April 12, 2012 two construction crews advancing from opposite ends met in the middle of the span.

🔥 Russky Bridge is among the tallest in the world, with towers rising to 324 metres. Its main span is 1,104 metres long, making it the second-longest cable-stayed span on the planet.

The bridge’s original cable-stay system was developed by the French firm Freyssinet International and Company. Journalists later coined a poetic nickname — “a harp for the ocean winds” — since the cables really do resemble strings.

A month after its official opening the structure was formally named Russky Bridge, and it has since become one of Vladivostok’s top tourist sights and an architectural calling card for the city.

Today Russky Island hosts the new campus of the Far Eastern Federal University and student dormitories. The bridge has made life much easier for many students: trips to and from the city centre are now far quicker and more convenient. In September 2016 an oceanarium and a dolphinarium opened on the island. City planners also envision hotels, residential developments, restaurants, museums and beach facilities on Russky to attract both locals and tourists — the place truly deserves it.

Pedestrians are not allowed on the bridge — it is open to vehicular traffic only — so you can admire the city from the height of the bridge only through a car or bus window. The best views of the bridge itself are from the observation plateau on Eagle’s Nest Hill.

@lavieenrussie
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🌏🇷🇺Morning in Steklyannaya Bay. Primorsky Krai

Video: velvet_skinkhv

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Aivazovsky: a singer of sea.

📌 The Russian art school can boast many brilliant names. However, Russian artists of the 19th century are not so well known in the West because their paintings mostly remained in Russia and are not well represented in European or American museums.
There is one exception: Ivan Aivazovsky, one of the greatest masters of maritime art of all time.

Aivazovsky was of Armenian descent. His ancestors moved to Galicia from Western Armenia in the 18th century. He was born in Feodosia, Crimea, and was baptized as Hovhannes Aivazian. Ivan Aivazovsky—the name by which he became known throughout the world—is the Russified version of his name.

Feodosia is a port on the Black Sea. As a boy, Aivazovsky spent a lot of time at sea and developed a deep love for it. His outstanding artistic abilities manifested in early childhood. Not only that, he learned to play the violin and performed at house parties for guests. Mikhail Glinka, a famous Russian composer and a friend of the family, listened to young Ivan at one such party and liked one of the tunes he played so much that he included it in his opera “Ruslan and Ludmila.”
In 1833, Aivazovsky went to St. Petersburg to study at the Imperial Art Academy. He completed his studies with a Great Gold Medal in 1837, marking the beginning of a brilliant artistic career. In 1843, when Aivazovsky was 26, his works were featured in a large exhibition at the Louvre.

Throughout his nearly 60-year career, he created around 6,000 paintings. We are pleased to display two of them here: "The Ninth Wave" (Russian Museum, St. Petersburg) and a self-portrait (Uffizi Gallery, Florence).

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"Beauty will save the world"
🖌 Ivan Aivazovsky - 1
S. Frank - Prelude
I. Ropke - Organ 🎶

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