Best Attractions and Places to See in Kaluga , Russia
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List of Best Things to do in Kaluga
Kaluga Holy Trinity Cathedral
K. Tsiolkovskiy's House Museum
The Tsiolkovsky State Museum of Cosmonautics
Kaluga Park Park of Culture and Leisure
Monument to Tsiolkovskiy (a Man with a Bicycle)
Planetarium
Kaluga Regional Museum of Local Lore
Stone Bridge
St. John the Baptist Temple
Kaluga Regional Art Museum
Russia: Вязьма / Russia: Vyazma
Прогулка по Вязьме: центральная площадь, памятник Лаптю, Троицкий собор, Спасская башня, памятник генералу Ефремову, Иоанно-Предтечев женский монастырь с церковью Одигитрии/Vyazma is a town in Western Russia, first mentioned in a chronicle in 1230. The Holy Trinity cathedral, Spasskaya tower of the Medieval Kremlin and the Hodegetria church are the most famous attracions.
СМОТРИТЕ ТАКЖЕ / SEE ALSO:
Россия: поместье Грибоедовых Хмелита/Russia: Khmelita estate
Москва: Коломенское / Moscow: Kolomenskoye estate
Тула: Музей самоваров / Russia: Tula Museum of Samovars
Тула: Музей оружия / Russia: Weaponry Museum in Tula
Аквариум в Нью-Йорке / New York Aquarium
Россия: Тульский кремль / Russia: Tula Kremlin
Москва: Новоспасский монастырь /Moscow: Novospassky monastery b0EJpjyWk1s
Москва: Бородинская панорама/Moscow: The battle of Borodino panorama museum)
США, Нью-Йорк: Хайлайн-парк / NYC: The High Line Park
США: Нью-Йорк, Пятая авеню / NYC: 5th avenue
RUSSIA: MOSCOW: MUTED MAY DAY CELEBRATIONS
(1 May 2000) Russian/Nat
Small parades of trade unionists and Communists have marched in muted and chilly May Day celebrations in Moscow and across the former Soviet Union.
But the celebration of international workers' solidarity was a pale echo of Soviet-era celebrations with their massive government-organised parades past Kremlin leaders atop Lenin's tomb on Red Square.
Most Russians, who grow much of their own food, used the holiday to plant seedlings at their suburban cottages.
Thousands of Muscovites, battling unseasonably cold weather, joined marches through the Russian capital on Monday to mark the traditional May Day holiday.
This year, May Day competed for public attention with Orthodox Easter Sunday, which fell the day before.
Patriarch Alexy II, head of the Russian Orthodox Church, celebrated Easter week services on Monday in one of the cathedrals in the Kremlin.
As a result, the number of marchers taking part was less than expected.
In all, some 15-thousand people joined a trade union march under blue union banners fluttering in a near-freezing breeze along Tverskaya Ulitsa, a main thoroughfare leading to city hall.
The members and supporters of the Moscow Federation of Trade Unions - traditionally centrist rather than left-wing - were addressed by mayor Yury Luzhkov outside the city hall.
With the favourite target of past Communist parades, former President Boris Yeltsin, in retirement, slogans tended toward demands for higher social benefits and minimum wages.
President Vladimir Putin, elected on March 26, enjoys widespread support, and many Communists appear ready to work with him.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
People always believe and hope, and we think that our hope will coincide with the choice that the people made when they elected Putin president.
SUPER CAPTION: Vladimir Naumov, Marcher
Separately, Communists and other left-wing groups paraded with red Soviet flags, marching past a towering statue of Lenin on Kaluga Square in central Moscow.
Police put the number of Communist marchers at seven-thousand.
The marchers were led by party leader Gennady Zyuganov, who told the crowd that - unlike foreign institutions - the communists and other left-wing movements could improve conditions for the people of Russia.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
While Russia is being damaged on the international scene, its markets are being restricted. The IMF keeps on interfering in the internal affairs of our country.
SUPER CAPTION: Gennady Zyuganov, Communist Party Leader
In Soviet times, the May Day holiday one was one of the main events on the Communist calendar.
Demonstrators used to march through the city centre and across Red Square, where the Communist hierarchy greeted the columns from atop Lenin's mausoleum.
But - despite the end of the Soviet Union and dwindling numbers of marchers - some of those taking part in the celebrations on Monday thought May Day was as relevant now as it was then.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
Today, this holiday is more current than ever, because people are so poor and have their backs against the wall, such that it could end catastrophically for the oligarchs very soon.
SUPER CAPTION: Mikhail, Marcher
Moscow wasn't the only city where May Day was celebrated.
Trade union officials said several thousand people marched in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk and Vladivostok in the Far East, Novosibirsk and Yakutsk in Siberia and a half-dozen other cities.
Marchers in the Siberian town of Kemerovo walked through a thin coating of wet snow.
Celebrations were muted in the former Soviet republic of Belarus, with leaders of left-wing parties laying flowers
at a monument to Lenin.
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Patronal Feast of the Kursk Root Hermitage
Russian church evening ringing bells
Church Bells in Moscow
returning to the theatre on the orthodox christmas eve
Праздничный звон Festive ringing of the bells
Russian Orthodox Bell ringing at the Cathedral of St. Nicholas in Nice, France
Recording and pictures from January, 1st 2017, after the sunday service.
More information of this very beautiful church can be found here:
If you are interested in the art of Russian bell ringing and would like to try it out for yourself, this trip can be recommended to you:
Olympic Torch Relay (Day 37) - Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
Olympic Torch Relay (Day 37) - Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
The Olympic Torch Relay has got under way to Sochi on 7 October 2013. 90% of the Russian population will be within an hour's reach of the Torch Relay route at some time or other, and this means that approximately 130 million Russian citizens will be able to watch or participate directly in the Relay. In total, it will cover more than 65,000 kilometers, including by car, train, plane, Russian troika and even reindeer sleigh.
The Sochi 2014 Olympic Torch Relay is going to be the longest in the entire history of the Olympic Winter Games. During the Olympic Torch Relay, 14,000 torchbearers will carry the Sochi 2014 Olympic torch through 2,900 settlements of 83 regions of the country. The Relay will end with the Olympic Winter Games Opening Ceremony in Sochi on February 7, 2014.