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#ural mountains
russianfolklore · 4 months
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Oleg Korovin's illustration for book "The Malachite Casket" by Pavel Bazhov.
The Malachite Casket is a book of fairy tales and folk tales of the Ural region of Russia compiled by Pavel Bazhov and published from 1936 to 1945.
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yantyushevphoto · 1 year
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High Hopes
Photographed by Alexander Yantyushev for Cap 74024.
Instagram | Behance | Book
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gorrus · 2 months
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letmeinimafairy · 2 years
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POV: you're driving through the Urals at dawn
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lionfloss · 2 years
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Vasily Yakovlev
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shoegazekid · 8 months
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@uralmountains1 #shoegaze
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wingeddreamduck · 1 year
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Ural mountains -
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xpsx-8 · 10 months
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I am armenian, romani and russian, who grew up in the Ural Mountains. Sometimes it seems to me that I am far from my culture, but I love it so much, I want to be closer and feel part of my peoples.
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sophiemariepl · 2 years
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Western tankies see a Serbian, openly pro-Russian, pro-Kremlin, pro-Putin demonstration in Belgrade and be like: “Is this anti-NATO?” 🤡
Like seriously, we all know that NATO did wrong in history, but not everyone who is against NATO is suddenly all wonderful and perfect. Look at Moscow, look at Beijing, at Pyongyang. Heck, look at Belgrade. Learn about Serbian crimes in the 1990s Yugoslavian war. Serbs literally r@ped thousands of Bosnian Muslim women so that they could impregnate them and breed Serbs that would in the future turn against their Bosnian mothers and create Great Orthodox Christian Serbia in the Balkans. I am not inventing that, this is literally a part of contemporary Serbian nationalism. This is the ideology that motivated them to do so. Hundreds of children in modern Bosnia and Herzegovina live with the stigma of being a child born out of war r@pe and have the word “unknown” in the label in their documents where their biological fathers’ names should be.
Denial of Russian, Serbian or any other country’s crimes just because it is against the West/the US/NATO does not make you smart. It makes you sound like you only care about someone’s suffering as long as their perpetrator is some Western power. It makes you sound like, you are against the g3nocide of Palestinians, but Crimean Tatars, Chechens and Circassians can be subjugated to g3nocide as long as their perpetrator is not the US. It makes you sound like you are against war r@pe crimes of American soldiers in Vietnam (or any other country), but Soviet soldiers could mass r@pe Polish and German girls and women during and after WW2 - just because they were communists and not American. It makes you sound like you are against the destruction of Indigenous lands in the Americas, but as long as the destruction is happening in Sakha (Yakutia), Buryatia, Chuvashia, Khanty-Mansy region or any other part of the Russian Federation where Indigenous people live, you don’t give a sh*t. (Heck, most of you who attack me on this argument assume that I’ve invented the names of those tribes/ethnic groups/nations - like, what’s the problem with opening Google Scholar, leftist Karens?)
Generally, it makes you sound like you have extremely double standards yourselves, just like the ones you criticize. And it doesn't make you any much better than them.
Seriously, people, listening to Eastern Europeans, Central Asians, Siberians, (actual) Caucasians and other post-Soviet people would do you so much good.
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ancientstuff · 2 years
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Experimental archaeology is fascinating. More of this.
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kit10phish · 8 months
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The Dyatlov Pass incident- FAULTy Evidence? Not Proven [Part 12C6]
6. Credibility Issues: Not Proven: https://www.wired.com/story/dyatlov-pass-incident-slab-avalanche/ My Takeaway from the Avalanche Theory Evidence: I’ve seen so many big publications claiming the Dyatlov Pass Incident has been solved according to “science” but I don’t it’s clear cut. The scene did not show evidence of an Avalanche, and the indigenous people said there had never been an…
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View On WordPress
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yantyushevphoto · 2 years
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High Hopes
Instagram | Behance | Book
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phantomrin · 6 months
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Inktober 2023
Day 18 - The Mistress of the Copper Mountain
"And she herself, she jumped up and took hold of the rock with her hands, then she skipped on to it and started running about on all fours like a lizard. And instead of hands and feet she had little green paws and a tail came out and there was a black stripe that went half way down the back, but the head was still a maid's."
(P.P. Bazhov "The Mistress of the Copper Mountain")
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margocooper · 10 months
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Козлобородник луговой (Tragopogon pratensis)
Козлобородник луговой известен еще и под следующими народными названиями: молочник, чертова борода, борода Козлова, какиш, бычок, кочеток, косматик, кудрявка и многими другими. 
Meadow goat beard
Meadow goat beard is also known under the following popular names: milkman, devil's beard, Kozlov's beard, kakish, goby, kochetok, kosmatik, curly and many others.
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siberianstudent · 2 months
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Travels in Siberia: infinite roads, wild animals and lost towns
All Siberia is sea of evergreen trees. Towns are hiding in taiga like small fishes in corals. Roads are endless and driving on them is tiring. But I and my family are a little crazy, so sometimes we live in car :D
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This is the outskirts of the tiny town of Irbit: a water tower and an abandoned farm
Distance of my longest travel is 1748 kilometers. It was the road from Tyumen to Altai mountains. We drove the distance in 2 days. I'll be honest, this experience was very hard for me. After arrival I fell asleep and my sleep lasted about 12-15 hours.
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Fields are often found along the roadsides. Wheat, oats, rye, buckwheat and other crops grow on them. I love sunflowers :)
The reasoning behind why I was so dead tired is impossibility to have a good rest in a car. Our car is medium sized Jeep, so 4 family members couldn't comfortably rest in it 'cause it's so little space in there. We had lunch while driving. We stopped for 20-30 minutes to have breakfast.
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But when I'm full of energy, I can conquer mountains :)
People often find wild animals. Deer and elk run across the road, owls and kites often search for carrion along the roadsides. When driving through the taiga, you need to be very careful. Sometimes wild animals jump out in front of the car. It can end badly.
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This winding line is the road down. Not every car can climb it. Sometimes cars get stuck on it and can't get up.
In the future, I will tell you more about my travels and the places where I have been.
See you soon, friends!
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Reka river by Perebor in the Ural mountain region of Russia
Russian vintage postcard
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