Best Attractions and Places to See in Belgorod , Russia
In this video our travel specialists have listed some of the best things to do in Belgorod . We have tried to do some extensive research before giving the listing of Things To Do in Belgorod.
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List of Best Things to do in Belgorod , Russia
Museum-Diorama Kursk Battle. Belgorod Direction
Picnic Park
Belgorod Zoo
Sobornaya Square
Sculpture Remembrance
Victory Park
Transfiguration Cathedral
Monument to Vladimir The Great
Belgorod State Art Museum
Sundial
Belgorod City Culture and Recreation Park
#Belgorod
#Belgorodattractions
#Belgorodtravel
#Belgorodnightlife
#Belgorodshopping
2018.12.22. 30th Sunday after Pentecost. Vigil
30th Sunday after Pentecost. Holy Hierarch Ioasaph of Belgorod. Vigil
Record of the live streaming video from Russian Orthodox Cathedral of St John the Baptist in Washington, DC
December 22, 2018
Subscribe here: youtube.com/StJohnDC
Тебе поем / We Praise Thee
Тебе поем
Музыка: Стеван Мокраняц
Государственная академическая капелла Санкт-Петербурга
Возглашения: Владимир Миллер
Художественный руководитель Капеллы Владислав Чернушенко
We praise Thee
Music by S. Mokranjac
Sung here by the State Academic Chapel of St Petersburg
Exclamation: Vladimir Miller
Artistic director Vladislav Tchernushenko
This video is dedicated to Natasha.
фотография - Преображенский собор в Сормове, в Нижнем Новгороде.
Photographs of the Transfiguration Cathedral in Sormovo, Nizhny Novgorod.
This three-alter Cathedral was built in the Russo-Byzantine style by the architect P. Malinowski between 1900-1905. In 1927 the Cathedral was closed and the belfry was destroyed. Originally, the building was intended to be blown up, fortunately this was not enforced. Instead the building was used as a warehouse. In 1990 the Cathedral was returned to the Orthodox Church. Between 2013 and 2014 the central part of the Cathedral was painted with frescos - the sacrament of the Eucharist, carrying the cross, crucifix cross, the removal of the cross, the transfiguration, the sacrifice of Abraham, the Annunciation, St. John Damascene, St. Gregory the Theologian………
Visit of Odessa: Yuzhny city Ukraine 2016
Южное 2016 Одесса
South (Ukr Yuzhne, Южне) - A city of regional significance in the Odessa region of Ukraine. Located on the northwest coast of the Black Sea, 35 km from Odessa and Mykolayiv region near the border. Distances by road to Odessa - 47 km. 10 km east of the town is a resort and vineyards Koblevo.
The Life And Death Of Mstislav I of Kiev
Mstislav I Vladimirovich the Great (Russian: Мстислав Владимирович Великий, Ukrainian: Мстислав Володимирович Великий, Belarusian: Мсціслаў Уладзіміравіч Вялікі) (June 1, 1076, Turov – April 14, 1132, Kiev) was the Grand Prince of Kiev (1125–1132), the eldest son of Vladimir II Monomakh by Gytha of Wessex. He figures prominently in the Norse Sagas under the name Harald, taken to allude to his grandfather, Harold II of England. Mstislav's Christian name was Theodore.
As his father's future successor, Mstislav reigned in Novgorod the Great from 1088–93 and (after a brief stint at Rostov) from 1095–1117. Thereafter he was Monomakh's co-ruler in Belgorod Kievsky, and inherited the Kievan throne after his death. He built numerous churches in Novgorod, of which St. Nicholas Cathedral (1113) and the cathedral of St Anthony Cloister (1117) survive to the present day. Later, he would also erect important churches in Kiev, notably his family sepulchre at Berestovo and the church of Our Lady at Podil.
Mstislav's life was spent in constant warfare with Cumans (1093, 1107, 1111, 1129), Estonians (1111, 1113, 1116, 1130), Lithuanians (1131), and the princedom of Polotsk (1127, 1129). In 1096, he defeated his uncle Oleg of Chernigov on the Koloksha River, thereby laying foundation for the centuries of enmity between his and Oleg's descendants. Mstislav was the last ruler of united Rus, and upon his death, as the chronicler put it, the land of Rus was torn apart.
In 1095, Mstislav wed Princess Christina Ingesdotter of Sweden, daughter of King Inge I of Sweden. They had many children:
Ingeborg of Kiev, married Canute Lavard of Jutland, and was mother to Valdemar I of Denmark
Malmfred, married (1) Sigurd I of Norway; (2) Eric II of Denmark
Eupraxia, married Alexius Comnenus, son of John II Comnenus
Vsevolod of Novgorod and Pskov
Maria, married Vsevolod II of Kiev
Iziaslav II of Kiev
Rostislav of Kiev
Sviatopolk of Pskov
Rogneda, married Yaroslav of Volinya
Xenia, married Briachislav of Izyaslawl
Christine died on January 18, 1122; later that year Mstislav married again, to Liubava Dmitrievna, the daughter of Dmitry Zavidich, a nobleman of Novgorod. Their children were:
Vladimir III Mstislavich (1132–1171)
Euphrosyne of Kiev, (c. 1130 – c. 1193) married King Géza II of Hungary in 1146
Through Euphrosyne, Mstislav is an ancestor of King Edward III of England and hence of all subsequent English and British monarchs. Through his mother Gytha, he is part of a link between Harold II of England and the modern line of English kings founded by William the Conqueror, who deposed him.
Review Novhorod-Siverskyi - Огляд Новгород-Сіверський
This video is a brief overview of - the city of #NovgorodSeversky, #Ukraine, fortress, monastery and museum, The Tale of Igor's Campaign.
#The #town was first chronicled in 1044. From 1098 it was the capital of the Siverian Principality, which served as a buffer zone against incursions of the Cumans (Polovtsy) and other steppe peoples. One of the numerous campaigns of local princes against the Cumans produced the great monument of early East Slavic literature, the #Tale of #Igor's #Campaign.
After the town's destruction by Mongols in 1239, it passed to the princes of Bryansk and then to the Grand Dukes of Lithuania. It was ruled by Dymitr Korybut (Kaributas), son of Algirdas. Muscovy obtained the area following the Battle of Vedrosha in 1503, but lost it to Poland after the Time of Troubles. The town finally passed to Russia as a result of the Russo-Polish War (1654-1667). During the Cossack epoch, the town received the status of sotenny (literally, 'relating to a hundred') and later polkovoi (regimental) town; these were military and administrative divisions in the Cossack army and country. Also Novhorod-Siverskyi became a cultural center of Left-Bank Ukraine. It was made the capital of a separate namestnichestvo in 1782–97. Thereafter its importance steadily declined.
During World War II, Novhorod-Siverskyi was occupied by the German Army from 26 August 1941 to 16 September 1943.
The Principality of Novgorod-Seversk was a medieval Rus' principality centered on the town now called Novhorod-Siverskyi. The principality was aligned to the Principality of Chernigov. It may have been created in 1139, the date of one modern authority.In 1185, a large Rus'ian campaign against the Polovtsy ended in defeat for Prince Igor, famously recorded in The Tale of Igor's Campaign. The principality was taken by the principality of Briansk after the Mongol invasions, and then by the Lithuanians when the power of the Golden Horde began to decline. In the fifteenth-century the principality was given to Prince Ivan of Mozhaisk when he fled from Grand Prince Vasily II.
Prince of Novgorod-Seversk was the kniaz, the ruler or sub-ruler, of the Principality of Novgorod-Seversk. It may have been created in 1139, the date of one modern authority, and is most famous for Igor Sviatoslavich, hero of the Old Russian Tale of Igor's Campaign.
The Tale of Igor's Campaign (Old East Slavic: Слово о плъкоу Игоревѣ, Slovo o plŭku Igorevě) is an anonymous epic poem written in the Old East Slavic language. The title is occasionally translated as The Song of Igor's Campaign, The Lay of Igor's Campaign, The Lay of the Host of Igor, and The Lay of the Warfare Waged by Igor.
The poem gives an account of a failed raid of Igor Svyatoslavich (d. 1202) against the Polovtsians of the Don River region. While some have disputed the authenticity of the poem, the current scholarly consensus is that the poem is authentic and dates to the medieval period (late 12th century).
The Tale of Igor's Campaign was adapted by Alexander Borodin as an opera and became one of the great classics of Russian theatre. Entitled Prince Igor, it was first performed in 1890.
According to the Primary Chronicle, before the 11th century the principality was ruled by local tribal elders and voivodes from Kiev who were appointed by the Grand Prince to collect tribute from the local population, manage judicial trials, and defend the land from external enemies. In the years 1024–1036 the principality of Chernigov was passed under the administration of son of the Vladimir the Great, Mstislav of Chernigov, who came there from Tmutorokan. Together with Yaroslav the Wise, Mstislav ruled the Kievan Rus' establishing Chernigov as one of the most important administration centers in Rus'. Upon the death of Mstislav, Chernigov was incorporated into the realm of Kiev.
After Yaroslav the Wise the principality of Chernigov was passed to one of his sons, Grand Prince Sviatoslav, who initiated the Chernigov branch of the Rurikids. During the civil war of the Yaroslavichi, Chernigov was contested between sons of Svyatoslav and Vsevolod. By the decision of the Liubech Congress in 1097, the sons of Sviatoslav, Oleg, Davyd, and their descendants, secured the principality. After that the principality obtained a certain degree of autonomy and was primarily secured after the Oleg's descendants.
The Principality was later split into three main apanage principalities: Chernigov, Novgorod-Seversk, and Murom-Ryazan, while Tmutarakan, due to its remoteness, often became contested and eventually was overtaken. Murom and later the Ryazan principality drifted away from the influence of Chernigov and after some time was contested by the Principality of Vladimir. Nonetheless the influence of Chernigov princes remained large and they retained the title of Kiev Grand Prince for some time. Chernigov was one of the largest economic and cultural centers of Kievan Rus.
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les fetes russes d'Igor et Christine Brakhausen
Mariage Igor et Christine Von Brakhausen cathédrale orthodoxe Alexandre Nevski rue Daru et réception au Cercle Républicain à Paris le 17 novembre 1984