Museum Of Cosmonautics in Moscow, Russia. Real Russia ep.41
Exactly 52 years after the first flight of Yuri Gagarin into the Space, at the 12th of April, 2013 on the Cosmonautics Day holiday, we came again to the Memorial Museum of Cosmonautics.
This time we did it to show more of the Museum itself, from inside and out.
Hope you enjoy!
#russia #moscow #museumofcosmonautics
Exploring the Cosmonautics Museum in Moscow in 360
Join RT’s Peter Scott as he explores the Museum of Cosmonautics. The museum opened its doors to the public on the 10th of April 1981 on the 20th anniversary of Uri Gagarin's historic flight. It was reopened in 2009 after undergoing three years of renovation.
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MOSCOW TOURIST ATTRACTIONS #2: Amazing Things to Do in Moscow, Russia
Check out our new video about TOP 10 surprising things to do in Moscow. It is completely subtitled in English.
Our new selection includes:
Number 10 - Museum of Cosmonautics
Number 9 - Izmailovo Kremlin
Number 8 - Moscow City
Number 7 - Manezh square and building
Number 6 - Gorki Park
Number 5 - GUM (Universal State Store)
Number 4 - Tsaritsyno
Number 3 - Kolomenskoye
Number 2 - Pushkin Museum
3 special mentions:
-- Zero Kilometer
-- Zaryadye Park
-- Moscow Planetarium
Number 1 - Novodevichy Monastery and his famous cemetery
If you looking for practical and reliable information visit our website:
#MoscowCulturalTourism #RussiaCulturalTourism #TheMostBeautifulCitiesintheWorld
Meteor Hits Russia Feb 15, 2013 - Event Archive
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Feb 15,2013 - A small meteorite streaked through the skies above Russia's Urals region. The blast, equivalent to 300,000 tons of TNT, shattered windows, damaged more than 3,000 building and injured over 1,000 people.
8 months after the incident, the meteorite, weighing in at 570 kg, was pulled out of Lake Chebarkul, making it one of the biggest meteorites ever recovered.
Concert In Moscow's Museum of Cosmonautics. Real Russia ep.40
At the 11th of April, 2013 we have visited Memorial Museum Of Cosmonautics in Moscow, Russia for the special concert of many Russian, mostly electronic musicians, organized for orphan kids from social and rehabilitation center Zabota (Care), located in Korolev.
It was something like pre-party for the Cosmonautics Day we celebrate at the 12th of April, since 1961, after Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, made his first flight into Space.
In line-up of the concert was as the beginners, as the stars and even legends of Russian music stage.
Special for Real Russia there also was some exclusives.
We hope you enjoy!
And please remember we are going to get back to Museum next day that to show more of Miseum itself.
#russia #moscow #museumofcosmonautics
Kremlin Moscow Russia VLOG 2020 4K
On this Kremlin Moscow Russia VLOG 2020, we visit the most famous landmark in Red Square to share some travel tips. Moscow Kremlin includes many cathedrals, palaces, churches, world biggest bell and artillery cannon and gardens inside the walls in Red Square in capital of Russia. We also give some information about history, entry tickets, opening hours and useful travel tips.
The walled city is located in the center area and overlooking the Moskva River to the south, Saint Basil's Cathedral and Red Square to the east, and the Alexander Garden to the west. It includes five palaces, four cathedrals, world biggest cannon and bell, surrounded walls and towers. In addition, within this complex is the Grand Palace that was formerly the Tsar's residence in capital city. The complex now serves as the official residence of the President of the Russian Federation and as a museum.
The entry ticket allows you to visit all of the cathedrals and the museums within the walls, except Ivan the Great's Bell Tower. The Ticket Office is located in the Alexander Garden, next to the main entrance at the Kutafya Tower, the only white tower of the site connected to a bridge.
Taynitsky Garden is an urban park located within the walled city. Whole site and the park are the UNESCO World Heritage Site.
If you our Kremlin Moscow Russia VLOG 2020 video, please like, comment or share our video and subscribe our channel to stay tuned for next travels from all around the world.
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Star City: A glimpse of Russian space industry closed town
Star City (Zvyozdny gorodok) is a common name of an area near Moscow, which has since the 1960s been home to the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center.
Credit: RBTH
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Izmailovsky Park 04.06.2009, Moscow, Russia
In 1571-1585 the park was a country estate of a Muscovite boyar Zakharyin-Yuriev. After 1585, the ownership was passed to the Romanov family.[2] Since 1663, it became the official countryside residence of tsar Aleksey Mikhailovich. The very same time the construction and redesign of the estate were initiated.[3]
At first, a dam was constructed on Serebryanka river which resulted in formation of several ponds, namely Lebedyansky, Vinogradny and Serebryany. An artificial island was situated in the middle of the Serebryany pond. Later, the official tsar’s palace was built on that island that existed up until 1855. Christmas church was also built on the Serebryany Island in 1676, which became the cathedral in 1679. There were a lot of gardens with exotic plants and trees, cherished under personal supervision of the tsar. The household buildings also included greenhouses, mills, breweries and other facilities. The organization of the household was so efficient that it alone could fully satisfy the needs of the tsar’s court.[4] One of the biggest zoos in Europe at that time could also be found in Izmaylovo manor.
Century old trees of the Izmaylovsky park
Unfortunately, after the death of Aleksey Mikhailovich the estates were abandoned and a lot of the buildings and facilities fell into decline. When he was a child, Peter the Great used the territory and the gardens for his war games; the remains of the redoubts he built are still partially preserved. He also constructed a Prosyansky (Zhukovski) dam on the Serebryanka river to form a pond, which was later used for the trial sails of the botik “St. Nicholas” that Peter the Great discovered in Izmaylovo.
In 1839, the mansion was used as a hospice and a house for the veterans of the war with Napoleon, as well as a shelter for the windows and a small school for their children. In 19th century a big effort was put into recovery and restoration of the forests and gardens on the territory of the future Izmaylovsky park that continued over the decades.
In 1930, Izmaylovo was given an official status of the park and in 1939 it was renamed after J.V. Stalin.[5] It was one of the best parks in USSR, with a lot of facilities, including a theatre and a cinema. The park’s giant territory allowed for more objects to be installed, thus a pond was to be created in the middle of the park, and a zoo in the eastern part of it. A giant central stadium also named after Stalin was supposed to be the highlight of the park infrastructure and the biggest stadium in the country. The construction, although started, was haltered by the Second World War and never finished.[6]
In 1944, an underground station “Izmaylovsky park” was built to allow good transportation links with the other parts of the city. In 1961 the park was renamed into Izmaylovsky park, falling in line with the general direction of the party against Stalin's cult of personality. The underground station was renamed in 2005 into Partizanskaya.
Stanislav Chermensky. Museum Expositions.
Stanislav Chermensky 1950-2013
Honoured artist of the Russian Federation, twice laureate of the Prize of Moscow in the field of art, member of the Guild of Art Design, one of the leading designers of museum displays and exhibitions, designer, artist.
The activities of Stanislav Chermensky as the leading designer of the museum and exhibition spaces deserve special attention. Each exposition created by Chermensky is unique; each features a new approach to the topic, individual space decisions, the desire to create the image of time or hero of exhibition. He created a number of expositions in the State Historic Museum, State Museum of V.V. Mayakovsky. Iconic museum exhibitions were created in collaboration with A.A.Bakhrushin State Central Theatre Museum: Museum of Schepkin, Festive Square, Theatre-Frontline Diary, Maya for the 80th anniversary of M.M.Plisetskaya, Masquerade yb Meyerhold and Golovin, Russian bass. Happiness of difficult roads..., Gala dinner in the Moscow country estate, etc.
ЧЕРМЕНСКИЙ СТАНИСЛАВ НИКОЛАЕВИЧ 1950-2013 Заслуженный художник Российской Федерации, дважды лауреат Премии Москвы в области искусства, член Гильдии художественного проектирования МСХ, один из ведущих проектировщиков музейных экспозиций и выставок, дизайнер, художник.
Отдельного внимания заслуживает проектная деятельность Станислава Черменского, как ведущего экспозиционера музейных и выставочных пространств. Каждая экспозиция, созданная С.Н. Черменским, неповторима. Каждая отличается новым подходом к теме, индивидуальному решению пространства, стремлению с помощью экспоната создать образ времени или героя экспозиции. Им были созданы экспозиции ряда выставок в Государственном Историческом музее, в Государственном музее В.В. Маяковского. В содружестве с Государственным театральным музеем им. А.А. Бахрушина были созданы экспозиции знаковых музейных выставок: «Дом- музей Щепкина», «Праздничная площадь», «Театрально-фронтовой дневник», «Майя» к 80-летию М.М.Плисецкой, «Маскарад» Мейерхольда-Головина, «Русский бас. Счастье трудных дорог…», «Парадный обед в русской усадьбе».
UN: RT joins UN's in-house broadcast network
RT officially joined the United Nation's in-house international broadcast network, Tuesday. RT's Director General Alexey Nikolov, United Nations Under-Secretary-General Cristina Gallach and Russian Ambassador to UN Vitaly Churkin attended an official ceremony celebrating the signing of the broadcast agreement at the UN headquarters in New York.
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RAW: Russian TU-160 jets perform 13-hour flight over international waters
Courtesy: Russian MoD
Two Russian Tu-160 heavy strategic bombers, accompanied by MiG-31 interceptor aircrafts, conducted a planned flight over the neutral waters of the Barents, Norwegian and North seas, as the Russian Defense Ministry reported on Wednesday.
During the 13-hour flight crews of Tu-160 & MiG-31 performed aerial refueling.
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#RT (Russia Today) is a global #news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.
Ukraine: Former church houses Soviet-era space museum
Inside a traditional Orthodox church topped with a gold cross, instead of icons, visitors can see a lunar rover and the helmet of the first man in space Yuri Gagarin. The 19th-century wooden church in central Ukraine is one of thousands of buildings that were repurposed or simply destroyed during an anti-religion campaign in the Soviet era, and has been the home of the Space museum since the 1970s.
6€ vs 3200€. The cheapest and the most expensive hotel in Moscow, Russia
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6€ vs 3200€. The cheapest and the most expensive hotel in Moscow, Russia
Ararat Park Hyatt, Moscow, Russia -
Neglinnaya Street 4, Meshchansky, 109012 Moscow, Russia
Ararat Park Hyatt has an excellent location 5 minutes from Red Square in the prime shopping area, moments from both TSUM and Detsky Mir department stores. It features superb service.
MG Hostel, Moscow, Russia -
Shmitovsky proesd 12, first floor, Presnensky, 123100 Moscow, Russia
MG Hostel is located in Moscow, just 2.7 km from Arbat Street.
All rooms have a flat-screen TV with satellite channels. You will find a kettle in the room. All rooms include a shared bathroom.
There is a shared kitchen at the property.
Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts is 3.5 km from MG Hostel, and Cathedral of Christ the Saviour is 3.7 km away. Sheremetyevo International Airport is 24.1 km from the property.
Aerial footage of New Moscow
Aerial footage of New Moscow, Russia.
Moscow is situated on the banks of the Moskva River, which flows for just over 500 km through the East European Plain in central Russia. 49 bridges span the river and its canals within the city's limits.
Moscow is the capital city and the most populous federal subject of Russia. The city is a major political, economic, cultural and scientific center in Russia and in Eastern Europe. According to Forbes 2013, Moscow has the largest number of billionaire residents in the world, has been ranked as the second most expensive city in the world by Mercer and is one of the world's largest urban economies, being ranked as an alpha global city according to the Globalization and World Cities Research Network and is also one of the fastest growing tourist destinations in the world according to the MasterCard Global Destination Cities Index. Moscow is the northernmost and coldest megacity and metropolis on Earth, the second most populous city in Europe after Istanbul and the 8th largest city proper in the world, as well as the largest amongst high income economies. It is home to the Ostankino Tower the tallest free standing structure in Europe, Mercury City Tower, the tallest skyscraper in Europe and the Moscow International Business Center. It is the largest city in Russia, with a population, according to the 2010 Census, of 11,503,501. By its territorial expansion on 1 July 2012 southwest into the Moscow Oblast, the capital increased its area 2.5 times; from about 1,000 square kilometers (390 sq mi) up to 2,511 square kilometers (970 sq mi), and gained an additional population of 233,000 people.
Moscow is situated on the Moskva River in the Central Federal District of European Russia making it the world's most populated inland city. The city is well known for its unique architecture which consists of many different historic buildings such as Saint Basil's Cathedral with its brightly colored domes. With over 40 percent of its territory covered by greenery, it is one of the greenest capitals and major cities in Europe and the world, having the largest forest in an urban area within its borders—more than any other major city—even before its expansion in 2012. In the course of its history the city has served as the capital of a progression of states, from the medieval Grand Duchy of Moscow and the subsequent Tsardom of Russia to the Soviet Union. Moscow is considered the center of Russian culture, having served as the home of prestigious Russian artists, scientists and sports figures during the course of its history and because of the presence of many different museums, academic and political institutions and theaters. Moscow is also the seat of power of the Government of Russia, being the site of the Moscow Kremlin, a medieval city-fortress that is today the residence of the Russian president. The Moscow Kremlin and the Red Square are also one of several World Heritage Sites in the city. Both chambers of the Russian parliament (the State Duma and the Federation Council) also sit in within the city.
Source : Wikipedia
This footage is part of the professionally-shot broadcast stock footage archive of Wilderness Films India Ltd., the largest collection of HD imagery from South Asia. The Wilderness Films India collection comprises of 50, 000+ hours of high quality broadcast imagery, mostly shot on HDCAM / SR 1080i High Definition, Alexa, SR, HDV and XDCAM. Write to us for licensing this footage on a broadcast format, for use in your production! We are happy to be commissioned to film for you or else provide you with broadcast crewing and production solutions across South Asia. We pride ourselves in bringing the best of India and South Asia to the world...
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In Moscow Again! Getting Ready For Cosmonautics Day. Real Russia ep.39
For the last weeks we promised you some surprises in upcoming monthes.
So here is the first surprise! We landed to Moscow, Russia again, and this time that to film an episodes devoted to the great holiday - The Cosmonautics Day. We celebrate it every years at the 12th of April, since 1961 when our Russian Cosmonaut, Yury Gararin, made the first flight to the Space ever.
In this video we also will introduce you the new member of our team, Maksim Chepkasov. He is going to be our producer and manager. Phone calls, paper work, documents, agreements - that's his work now. Actually, he will take all this routine on himself now and Sergey Baklykov with Sergey Pichugin will focus more on production.
This way we hope to get more time for more episodes now.
Hope you enjoy!
#russia #moscow #cosmonauticsday
Muzeum vojenského letectva Monino - Air Force Museum Monino
Ústřední muzeum vojenského letectva
Центральный музей Военно-воздушных сил
Central Air Force Museum Monino
Chelyabinsk meteor comes to Moscow
A piece of the famed Chelyabinsk meteor will be in Moscow tomorrow.
It goes on display from Friday at the Central House of Artists until February the 22nd.
But we can take a look at it right now.
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Prime Time Russia is the first TV show for an English-speaking audience in Russia. Weekdays from 8-9pm: the latest news, politics, business, sport and cultural events discussed live. A Russian survival guide, venue reviews -- even business start-up advice.
Great Patriotic War Museum in Minsk _ Belarus
Great Patriotic War Museum in Minsk _ Belarus
The Belarusian State Museum of the History of the Great Patriotic War was the world’s first museum to tell the story of the bloodiest war of the 20th century, and the only one in Belarus created during the years of Nazi occupation.
Today it is one of the most important and biggest war museums in the world, along with the well-stocked museums in Moscow, Kiev, and New Orleans.
…In those terrible years Belarus lost every third resident. More than 3 million people died, including about 50,000 partisans and underground fighters. Throughout the country there were 250 death camps, including the infamous Trostenets, one of the largest after Auschwitz, Majdanek and Treblinka...
History of the Museum
The collection of the world's first museum of the Great Patriotic War was founded in June 1942 when no one could predict how long the war would last...
Future exhibits were sent directly from the frontlines to the special republican commission which was set up to collect the documents and materials about the Great Patriotic War. The commission was working out from Moscow where it was evacuated to during the war. Among the museum’s first assets were the chronicles about the partisan movement, printed and handwritten books, handmade weapons...
For nearly six months there was gap in the frontline near Vitebsk, the so-called Vitebsk Gate. Valuable items, material evidence of the atrocities of the enemy were brought through it to Moscow and were put on display in the State History Museum.
In November 1942 the Muscovites saw an impressive exposition titled as Belarus lives, Belarus is fighting, Belarus will remain Soviet. It stayed open until August 1944 when it was moved to the liberated Minsk.
The museum, the guardian of the memory about the courage and tragedy of the Belarusian people, was given one of the few intact buildings in the destructed and looted Minsk. It opened to the public on 22 October 1944.
The first expositions about the weapons of the partisans and military print media grew bigger with new rarities. Already in 1944 the museum workers explored the place of the Trostenets death camp. In 1949, they participated in the first excavations in the heroic Brest Fortress...
In 1966, the museum moved to a building specially built for it in the central square of Minsk (now Oktyabrskaya Square). A unique open-air exposition of military equipment and weapons was opened in 1977 next to the museum.
New Museum Building
New Museum BuildingOver decades of research into the Great Patriotic War the museum’s collection has grown many times: even now it gains 700—800 priceless rarities every year.
In the 21st century upon the initiative of the Belarus president plans were made to create new premises for the museum that will boast more exhibition space and modern technologies to tell and demonstrate more facts about the tragic war…
Prominent Belarusians took part in designing the premises, including co-author of the designs of the Minsk railway terminal and the National Library, professor of the International Architecture Academy Viktor Kramarenko, and also Leonid Levin one of the creators of the famous Khatyn Memorial, an Honored Architect of Belarus …
The renewed museum was solemnly opened on 2 July 2014 on the eve of Independence Day and was kind of a tribute to the 70th anniversary of Belarus’ liberation from the Nazi invaders.
Panorama of the Pobeditelei Avenue. Procession on Independence DayThe magnificent building with the total area of 15,600m2 was erected in a significant place of the Belarusian capital – in the Heroes Square next to the stela Minsk - Hero City and the museum and park complex Pobeda. Military parades and festive marches took place nearby – along the Pobeditelei Avenue.
The current premises of the museum are impressive not only due to their scale but also symbolism that reflects major milestones of the history of 1941-1945. The composition represents four main blocks to match the number of years of the war and the army fronts that took part in Belarus’ liberation.
The front facade looks like a festive salute: 11 sparkling rays made of stainless steel to symbolize the Great Victory and at the same time 1,100 tragic days and nights of Minsk’s occupation.
The project of new museum premises. The front facadeThe serious sheen of the metal used for the decoration speaks of the war while the golden sparkle of the glass signifies the victory and the greatest treasure that is peace.
The design of the new museum premises gently combines stupendous features and modern technologies. Glass niches are complemented with wide plasma screens. Thanks to laser lights “the rays of the salute” seem to penetrate the night sky underscoring the overall outline of the entire museum premises.
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Moscow Sends in the A-Team! Alexey Texler Made Governor of Chelyabinsk to Clean House!
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The newly elected governor is Chelyabinsk-born Alexey Texler, who until recently was the First Deputy to the Minister of Energy of Russia.
Our story explains the new style he's introduced and why that style is in demand.
Inside an abandoned Soviet base in Hungary
A Soviet military base in Hungary - abandoned since 1990 - could have once housed up to 160 nuclear warheads, according to a blogger and military historian.
A tour through this creepy, derelict facility reveals some secrets of the Soviet regime.
Welcome to Little Moscow.
This is the local name for a former Soviet military base in central Hungary.
Missing windows, smashed panes, rust and decay... Hardly surprising since the site has been derelict for nearly quarter of a century.
Here the Red Army might have once kept a stockpile of nuclear weapons and the facility includes housing and recreational units for up to 300 soldiers and their families.
Lying in a wooded area near the village of Nagyvazsony, 150 kilometres (93 miles) southwest of the capital city of Budapest, it was one of four such storage facilities in Hungary, according to Gyula Hajner, a military enthusiast and video blogger who specialises in ghost towns and abandoned structures.
We are standing on the grounds of the Soviet base known as Little Moscow. Behind me is the last building made of prefabricated panels. It began to be built at the end of the 1960s, after a test by the Soviet army which revealed the problem that the nuclear warheads did not arrive on time. So the Soviet leadership decided that this type of special storage facility would be built in every member country of the Warsaw Pact to avoid the nuclear warheads not arriving on time, says Hajner.
Abandoned by the Soviets in March 1990, a few months after the fall of the Berlin Wall and just weeks before Hungary first post-communist elections, the base looks like a set for a post-Apocalyptic film.
The barracks are similar to the prefabricated apartment blocks found across Eastern Europe and still house outdated kitchen appliances and wrecked furniture.
Many of the military installations are rusted and mouldy, but a large painting of a red flag covered with the faces of communist icons Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels and Vladimir Lenin inside a facility used for assembly and repair of the nuclear arms provides a dash of colour.
We are on the north side of the base, standing outside the only assembly and repair facility. It has several small rooms used for teaching and a large hall where the bombs or bomb-like devices were taken apart to study how they worked, explains Hajner.
Though no official records are available, Hajner has spent years gathering information about Little Moscow from local and Russian sources.
The former base covering 36 hectares (89 acres) was protected by three lines of fences and barbed wire and numerous checkpoints and gates.
According to Hajner, warheads were kept in a pair of bunkers about 100 meters apart, built at diverging angles so that if one was attacked the other could still function. They were protected by two doors weighing 6.5 metric tons.
There were two nuclear storage facilities on the base, set about 100 meters from each other at diverging angles, so that if one was attacked the other could keep functioning. Each facility had four storage areas, each capable of fitting 15 to 18 or even 20 warheads, so the total capacity was of around 150 to 160 (warheads) though this does not mean that there were actually that many. I have no information about this. It could have been 30 or 130, says Hajner.
The abandoned site is an eerie testament to Hungary's recent history, however, it is closed to the public.
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