December 22, 2021 A Sweet Treat "Ancient instincts work – I licked the thing." – Hermitage artist-restorer Galina Fedorova discovers a candy stuck to the ball gown of Grand Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna, sister of Tsar Nicholas II. Art Culture History Quote
December 19, 2021 Lenin Claus Is Coming to Town A delightful Soviet winter tale about children, a big holiday tree, and the true meaning of Christmas: communism. Children History Holidays Russia File
December 05, 2021 The Tales Behind the Frames The stories behind three iconic pieces of Russian art. Art History Media Russia File
November 28, 2021 Dostoyevsky's Brilliant Wife Anna In which we learn about the strong-willed and brilliant Anna Dostoyevskaya, the wife of Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Biographies History Literature Women Russia File
November 26, 2021 Catherine the Great Wants You to Get Vaccinated Catherine the Great's injunction to get vaccinated has recently emerged from a private collection. Art Health History Russia File
November 12, 2021 Something Worse Than Detention An abandoned crypt found on a Russian school's property takes the phrase "bored to death" to a whole new level. Education History Russia File
November 06, 2021 A Not-Comprehensive List of Dostoyevsky 200th Events A thoroughly incomplete list of ways to scratch your Dostoyevsky itch ahead of his 200th birthday. History Holidays Literature St. Petersburg Russia File
November 03, 2021 Gogol in the Middle Russia and Ukraine have a long history of disputes over beloved territory, to say the least… But this time, it’s Gogol. History Int'l Relations Literature Russia File
November 03, 2021 Make Not War Art "In connection with the incident, the State Hermitage was forced to apply to the prosecutor's office of St. Petersburg with a statement to conduct a prosecutor's check and assess the actions of a citizen for possible violations of the legislation of the Russian Federation, including in terms of public insult to the memory of the Defenders of the Fatherland.” – Press Service of the St. Petersburg Hermitage, announcing it would be reviewing an artist’s behavior for potentially insulting the veterans of the Patriotic War of 1812. Art History Law St. Petersburg Quote
November 01, 2021 Russian Terrorists with Febrile Dreams of Flight An excerpt from To Break Russia’s Chains: Boris Savinkov and his Wars Against the Tsar and the Bolsheviks, recently published by Pegasus Books. Espionage History
November 01, 2021 The Timid Path On December 12, 1801, 23-year-old Tsar Alexander I issued an ukaz. This particular decree was not something historians have considered extremely significant in the scheme of Alexander’s reign, but it merits attention for a few reasons. Agriculture History Law
November 01, 2021 Death of an Empress Empress Elizabeth Petrovna breathed her last in December of 1761, in her St. Petersburg palace. By any standard, Peter the Great’s second daughter had lived an unusual life. History St. Petersburg Women