
#TBT: Two Vladimirs, One Country
They could not have been more different, but both these Vladimirs had a huge impact on Russian history.
They could not have been more different, but both these Vladimirs had a huge impact on Russian history.
“For now I’m going skiing for a couple days, I’ll return and will work."
– Dmitri Medvedev, on his relaxation plans now that he’s no longer prime minister.
Yury Luzhkov, who died in December from complications during routine heart surgery, is difficult to pin to a particular pantheon of Russian political figures.
Brezhnev’s traffic ticket goes on sale, Crimea shows up in Astrakhan, and a man gives an all for his cat.
A little-known holiday brings to the fore well-known debates about Russian politics.
"Russia's strict state, with a harsh, or, more exactly, cruel law enforcement system... has raised a generation of citizens to match."
Asya Lisina created a beautiful and somewhat surprising cover for the current issue of Russian Life. We asked her to explain herself...
News on travel, protests, Balashikha, a crooner, and the growing loan bubble.
On September 28, 1989 – just a few months after Boris Yeltsin's triumph at the Congress of People’s Deputies – the police found a muddied and wet Yeltsin near a dacha community outside Moscow.
“Mother Russia” is much more than a stereotype. Everyone has opinions on it, Russian rock musicians included.
As opposition protests rock Moscow, we look at how contemporary artists have interpreted the actions of Russia's riot police.
In which Communists hate Georgian food, a cross is accidentally paved over, and the King of Spades rules Russia.
Russian Life is a publication of a 30-year-young, award-winning publishing house that creates a bimonthly magazine, books, maps, and other products for Russophiles the world over.
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