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The Holy New Martyrs of Northern and Western Russia, Belorussia and the Baltic Introduction
THE HOLY NEW MARTYRS OF NORTHERN AND WESTERN RUSSIA, BELORUSSIA AND THE BALTIC INTRODUCTION ..............................................................................................................................3 1. HIEROMARTYR BARSANUPHIUS, BISHOP OF KIRILLOV ................................................5 2. HIEROMARTYR NICON, ARCHBISHOP OF VOLOGDA ....................................................9 3. HIEROMARTYR PLATO, BISHOP OF REVEL (TALLINN).................................................11 4. HIEROMARTYR EUGENE, BISHOP OF OLONETS .............................................................16 5. HIEROMARTYR BENJAMIN, METROPOLITAN OF PETROGRAD .................................17 6. HIEROMARTYR BARNABAS, ARCHBISHOP OF ARCHANGELSK ................................31 7. HIEROMARTYR JOSEPH, BISHOP OF VALDAI ..................................................................32 8. HIEROMARTYR HIEROTHEUS, BISHOP OF VELIKY USTIUG ........................................33 9. HIEROCONFESSOR EUTHYMIUS, BISHOP OF OLONETS ...............................................53 10. HIEROCONFESSOR NICHOLAS, BISHOP OF VELSK ......................................................54 11. HIEROMARTYR ANTHONY, ARCHBISHOP OF ARCHANGELSK..............................55 12. HIEROCONFESSOR MACARIUS, BISHOP OF CHEREPOVETS .....................................61 13. HIEROCONFESSOR BARSANUPHIUS, BISHOP OF KARGOPOL ..................................63 14. HIEROMARTYR JOHN, ARCHBISHOP OF RIGA..............................................................65 -
Russia Cross - Border Cooperation Programme 2014-2020
Annex 1 LATVIA - RUSSIA CROSS - BORDER COOPERATION PROGRAMME 2014-2020 Co-financed by the European Union and the Russian Federation 2 Contents SECTION 1. INTRODUCTION .........................................................................................4 1.1.Regulatory framework ...........................................................................................4 1.2. Programme preparation steps................................................................................4 SECTION 2. DESCRIPTION OF THE PROGRAMME AREA ........................................7 2.1. Programme Territory ............................................................................................7 2.1.1. Core area............................................................................................................8 2.1.2. Adjoining area....................................................................................................8 2.1.3. Major social, economic or cultural centres........................................................9 2.2. Population and demography ...............................................................................11 2.3. Regional economy ..............................................................................................11 2.4. Business development.........................................................................................12 2.5.Tourism................................................................................................................13 2.6. Environment........................................................................................................15 -
Language of Administration As a Border: Wild Food Plants Used by Setos and Russians in Pechorsky District of Pskov Oblast, NW Russia
foods Article Language of Administration as a Border: Wild Food Plants Used by Setos and Russians in Pechorsky District of Pskov Oblast, NW Russia Olga Belichenko 1,* , Valeria Kolosova 1,2 , Denis Melnikov 3, Raivo Kalle 4 and Renata Sõukand 1 1 Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics and Statistics, Ca’Foscari University of Venice, Via Torino 155, Mestre, 30172 Venice, Italy; [email protected] (V.K.); [email protected] (R.S.) 2 Institute for Linguistic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, Tuchkov Pereulok 9, 199004 St Petersburg, Russia 3 Komarov Botanical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Professor Popov St. 2, 197376 St Petersburg, Russia; [email protected] 4 University of Gastronomic Sciences, Piazza Vittorio Emanuele 9, 12042 Pollenzo, Bra (Cn), Italy; [email protected] or [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Abstract: Socio-economic changes impact local ethnobotanical knowledge as much as the ecological ones. During an ethnobotanical field study in 2018–2019, we interviewed 25 Setos and 38 Russians in the Pechorsky District of Pskov Oblast to document changes in wild plant use within the last 70 years according to the current and remembered practices. Of the 71 botanical taxa reported, the most popular were Vaccinium vitis-idaea, Vaccinium oxycoccos, Vaccinium myrtillus, Betula spp., and Rumex acetosa. The obtained data was compared with that of 37 Setos and 35 Estonians interviewed at the same time on the other side of the border. Our data revealed a substantial level of homogeneity within the plants used by three or more people with 30 of 56 plants overlapping across all four groups. -
THE MODERN COMPANY SHOULD BE TRANSPARENT ANNUAL REPORT of JSC IDGC of the North-West As of the End of 2011
ANNUAL REPORT of JSC IDGC of the North-West as of the end of 2011 THE MODERN COMPANY SHOULD BE TRANSPARENT The modern company should be transparent in: ”goals setting and achievement, communication with customers and partners, treatment of internal processes, information supply, analysis of the results and discussion of new ideas. Today, transparency is one of the basic principles and critical success factor. Openness in cooperation, mutual confidence, compliance with legal provisions, professional obligations and established ethical rules are the precondition to long-term and success development. MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS Dear shareholders, partners and colleagues! JSC IDGC of the North-West is a member of the JSC IDGC Holding Group of Companies, the largest infrastructure organization of Russia” owning 80% of distribution grid complex of the country. JSC IDGC of the North-West remains the key element in the public infrastructure of regional centers of the North-West Federal District, which ensures reliable and uninterrupted power supply to consumers. In accordance with IFRS statements, proceeds of JSC IDGC of the North-West for 2011 grew by 15% and amounted to RUR33,288 mln. The growth of proceeds is, in particular, due to the increase of net supply of electric power. Based on the results of the year, net profit amounted to RUR802 mln. The Board of Directors of JSC IDGC of the North-West has a good balance of executive and non-executive directors and thoroughly monitors how the Company’s management achieves -
Toimetised 26 Õdagumeresoomõ Piiriq
ÕDAGUMERESOOMÕ PIIRIQ LÄÄNEMERESOOME PIIRID 2 VÕRO INSTITUUDI TOIMÕNDUSÕQ PUBLICATIONS OF VÕRO INSTITUTE 26 ÕDAGUMERESOOMÕ PIIRIQ LÄÄNEMERESOOME PIIRID FINNIC BORDERS Toimõndanuq Jüvä Sullõv Võro 2012 3 Võro Instituudi toimõndusõq 26 Publications of Võro Institute 26 Toimõndaja / Editor: Jüvä Sullõv Kaasõpilt / Cover design: Diana Allas Inglüse kiil / English: Mari Mets Nõvvoandja / Advisor: Triin Iva Toimõndusnõvvokogo / Advisory board: Ren āte Blumberga (Läti Aoluu Instituut, Läti Ülikuul), Martin Ehala (Talliina Ülikuul), Riho Grünthal (Helsingi Ülikuul), Hasso Krull (Eesti Humanitaarinstituut, Talliina Ülikuul), Karl Pajusalu (Tarto Ülikuul), Péter Pomozi (Eötvös Lorándi Ülikuul), Tiit Rosenberg (Tarto Ülikuul), Janne Saarikivi (Helsingi Ülikuul), Anneli Saro (Tarto Ülikuul), Helena Sulkala (Oulu Ülikuul), Taive Särg (Eesti Kirändüsmuusõum), Heiki Valk (Tarto Ülikuul), Eberhard Winkler (Göttingeni Ülikuul) Võro Instituudi toimõnduisi indeksiirjä om: Publications of Võro Institute is indexed in: Eesti Rahvusraamatukogu digitaalne arhiiv (DIGAR) Toimõndusõ aadrõs / Editorial address: Võro Instituut, Tarto huulits 48, 65609 Võro, Estonia tel +372 78 28750, faks: +372 78 28757 kodoleht: http://www.wi.ee/index.php/toimondusoq e-post: [email protected], [email protected] Trükjä: Bookmill ISBN 978-9949-9329-1-7 ISSN 1406-2534 4 ALOSTUSÕS Võro Instituudi toimõnduisi sari ilmus 1997. aastagast pääle. Aastagast 2007 om välläannõq saanuq alalidsõ toimõndaja ni toimõndamisõ ma- no om haarõt riikevaihõlinõ nõvvokogo. Sarja om naat inne välläand- mist retsensiirmä ja taa pandas kirjä riikevaihõliidsihe raamadunimis- tüihe. Välläandmissagõhus . Edespitengi om plaanit vällä andaq egä aas- taga üts toimõnduisi põhinummõr, miä tulõ vällä rehekuun. Ku kiro- tuisi kogonõs inämb, võidas mano tetäq eräle numbriid. Oodami välläandmisõs kirotuisi , mil om kõrralik ja kimmäs nii oppusõ ku uurmisõ puul. Tuujaos, et umma kirätüüd saataq, piä-i olõ- ma üles astnuq Võro Instituudi konvõrendsel. -
Aleksandra Kuczyńska-Zonik Further Complications with Regard to the Agreement on a Border Treaty Between Estonia and Russia
Editorial Team: Beata Surmacz (Director of ICE), Tomasz Stępniewski (Deputy No. 84 (84/2019) | 27.11.2019 Director of ICE), Agnieszka Zajdel (Editorial Assistant), Aleksandra Kuczyńska-Zonik, Jakub Olchowski, Konrad Pawłowski, Agata Tatarenko ISSN 2657-6996 © ICE Aleksandra Kuczyńska-Zonik Further complications with regard to the agreement on a border treaty between Estonia and Russia The border treaty is one of the most problematic aspects of Estonian-Russian relations. The political consensus developed in Estonia in recent years has been undermined recently by the populist Estonian Conservative People’s Party (EKRE), which has raised the issue of territorial claims against Russia. The controversial statements of EKRE politicians demanding the return of Estonia’s territory before 1940 may weaken the government coalition in Estonia, as well as worsen the already cold Estonian-Russian relations. However, Estonia’s domestic policy does not foresee a split in the coalition against this background. In foreign policy, an opportunity to normalise relations and return to negotiations on a border agreement between Estonia and Russia may be the extension of cross-border cooperation. Background to the border dispute. The border dispute between Estonia and Russia concerns mainly the interpretation of the Tartu Peace Treaty, signed on 2th February 1920 between Estonia and Russia, ending the Estonian-Bolshevik War. Under the treaty, Russia recognised the independence and sovereignty of the Estonian state, leaving within the borders of Estonia, among others, Ivangorod (Leningrad Oblast) and Pechorsky District (Pskov Oblast). After 1940, they were incorporated into the USSR and now belong to Russia. According to Estonia, the Treaty of Tartu is still in force and the border line currently in place between Estonia and Russia is not final. -
Common Peipsi
Economically and Environmentally Sustainable Lake Peipsi area Common Peipsi Priority 2 Common challenges Measure 2.1 Joint actions aimed at protection of environment and natural resources Short summary of the project Lake Peipsi is the largest transboundary lake in Europe, which is shared between Estonia and Russia. Both countries influence the environmental situation of the lake. From the RU side the biggest problem is currently the contamination of Lake Peipsi due to the poor wastewater treatment. On the Estonian side one of the factors that influences the environmental condition of the lake is the lack of harbors, which could receive waste generated by water craft users. Existing harbors do not meet the environmental requirements and the needs of watercraft users. Beside of that, there are currently no appropriate places around Lake Peipsi, where it would be possible to lift out ships to the shore for repairs and maintenance. The project foresees a number of actions for tackling the abovementioned problems. The scope of activities for the RU side will cover the construction of sewage network in Pechory area, construction of wastewater treatment plants in Pskov region and inspection in 16 areas in the Lake Peipsi basin in order to find out, which is the current condition of wastewater treatment plants. To solve problems on the Estonian side 3 harbors will be constructed in Tartu, Mustvee and Räpina and the dock in Kallaste, as well as facilities for mooring of watercrafts, for ship reparation and maintenance, reception of cargo residues and ship-generated waste will be arranged. The project improves environmental situation, creates workplaces, establishes preconditions for the development of water related tourism and increase in water related traffic, encourages entrepreneurship and development of tourism related businesses (e.g. -
CENTRALIZED NATIONAL RISK ASSESSMENT for ESTONIA 2017 – 1 of 77 –
Centralized National Risk Assessment for Estonia FSC-CNRA-EE V1-0 EN FSC-CNRA-EE V1-0 CENTRALIZED NATIONAL RISK ASSESSMENT FOR ESTONIA 2017 – 1 of 77 – Title: Centralized National Risk Assessment for Estonia Document reference FSC-CNRA-EE V1-0 EN code: Approval body: FSC International Center: Policy and Standards Unit Date of approval: 20 September 2017 Contact for comments: FSC International Center - Policy and Standards Unit - Charles-de-Gaulle-Str. 5 53113 Bonn, Germany +49-(0)228-36766-0 +49-(0)228-36766-30 [email protected] © 2017 Forest Stewardship Council, A.C. All rights reserved. No part of this work covered by the publisher’s copyright may be reproduced or copied in any form or by any means (graphic, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, recording taping, or information retrieval systems) without the written permission of the publisher. Printed copies of this document are for reference only. Please refer to the electronic copy on the FSC website (ic.fsc.org) to ensure you are referring to the latest version. The Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC) is an independent, not for profit, non- government organization established to support environmentally appropriate, socially beneficial, and economically viable management of the world’s forests. FSC’s vision is that the world’s forests meet the social, ecological, and economic rights and needs of the present generation without compromising those of future generations. FSC-CNRA-EE V1-0 CENTRALIZED NATIONAL RISK ASSESSMENT FOR ESTONIA 2017 – 2 of 77 – Contents Risk assessments that have been finalized for Estonia ............................................. 4 Risk designations in finalized risk assessments for Estonia...................................... -
Seto People in the Expedition Diaries and Literary Works of a Russian Émigré Leonid Zurov
https://doi.org/10.7592/FEJF2020.79.belobrovtseva SETO PEOPLE IN THE EXPEDITION DIARIES AND LITERARY WORKS OF A RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉ LEONID ZUROV Irina Belobrovtseva Professor, School of Humanities Tallinn University, Estonia [email protected] Abstract: At the beginning of the twentieth century, after the October Revolution, more than one and a half million people left Russia. They lost their homeland forever, and this is why they often visited Estonia, as in this former province of the Russian Empire distinct ‘Russian traces’ could be found. This article examines the role of the émigré writer Leonid Zurov, who carried out archeological, restora- tion, and ethnographic work in the Pechorsky district in 1935, 1937, and 1938. Keywords: archeological and ethnographical expeditions in 1930, Leonid Zurov, Pechory, Russian emigration, Seto people INTRODUCTION The experience of the beginning of the twentieth century was extremely im- portant for Russian emigration: more than one and a half million people left their homeland after the October Revolution of 1917 and were scattered all over the world. In 1920–1940 Russian emigrants, who had no opportunity to return to their homeland, at times visited Estonia, a former province of the Russian Empire, to meet their native culture. One of these Russian emigrants was writer Leonid Zurov (1902–1971), who carried out archaeological, restoration, and ethnographic works in the Pechorsky district in 1935, 1937, and 1938. Zurov was born in the city of Ostrov, Pskovsky district, in 1902. He immigrated to Estonia in the late autumn of 1919 and moved on to Latvia in 1920. According to the Peace Treaty of 1920, both Estonia and Latvia received parts of the Pskov Province, and Pechorsky district was one of the territories left within the borders of Estonia. -
Setu Traditsiooniline Taluarhitektuur Ja Selle Säilivus Tänapäeval
Setu traditsiooniline taluarhitektuur ja selle säilivus tänapäeval Kristiina Tiideberg Tallinna ülikooli doktorant Setu traditsiooniline taluarhitektuur ja selle säilivus tänapäeval Artikkel on seotud sihtfinantseeritava teadusteemaga „Maastikupraktika ja pärand“ (SF010033s07). Sissejuhatus Talupoeglik eluviis ja päritolu on tänapäeva eestlaste identiteedi olulised osised nagu ka taluarhitektuur selle osana. Turismitrükised ja muud väljaanded tutvus- tavad kauneid Eesti maastikke romantiliste vanade taludega. Ka Eesti praegune ametlik pärandkultuuripoliitika on tihti seotud „rahvuslike“ maamaastike mütolo- giseerimisega. Taluehitisi uurisid Eesti teadlased tegusalt 1950.–70. aastail, ent tõsist algust tehti sellega juba enne Teist maailmasõda. Peamiselt võeti vaatluse alla 18.–19. sajandi taluarhitektuur. Üksikuid käsitlusi on ilmunud ka 20. sajandi alguse ning 1920.–30. aastate ehitiste kohta, mil taluhoonete kavandamise võttis üle esimene eesti soost professionaalsete arhitektide põlvkond. 20. sajandil toi- munud muutuste kohta piirkondlikke uurimusi samahästi kui ei ole. Nii korratakse mantrana seisukohti, mis edastavad suuresti 19. sajandi Eesti maa-arhitektuuripilti. Siinne artikkel tugineb autori Tartu Ülikoolis kaitstud magistritööle „Setu maa- arhitektuur 20. sajandi I poolel Meremäe, Värska, Mikitamäe ja Misso valla näitel“, mis põhines enamjaolt autori välitöödel ajavahemikus 2005–20081. Uurimisteema tingis vajaduse võtta kriitilise vaatluse alla küsimus, kuivõrd on Setumaa küla- maastikus traditsiooniline või selliseks peetav -
Session 12 – Sunday – 9:00-10:45 Am
Session 12 – Sunday – 9:00-10:45 am Committee on Libraries and Information Resources Membership Meeting - (Meeting) - Jefferson Ballroom, 3rd Floor 12-01 From Abyssinia to Samarkand: Russian Representations of Race in the Age of Empire - Ascot- Newbury, 3rd Chair: John McCannon, Southern New Hampshire U Papers: Jeanne-Marie Jackson, Johns Hopkins U "A Different Kind of Difference: Gannibal across Time, Race, and Modality" Maria Taroutina, Yale-NUS College (Singapore) "Exotic Aesthetics: Depictions of Blackness in Nineteenth-Century Russian Painting" Ludmila Piters-Hofmann, Jacobs U Bremen (Germany) "The Genie in the Samovar: Representation of the Orient in Painting and on the Stage in Late Imperial Russia" Disc.: Allison Leigh, U of Louisiana at Lafayette 12-02 Asians in Russia: Buddhism, Migration, and Citizenship - Camp, 3rd Chair: Helen Sharon Hundley, Wichita State U Papers: Melissa Andrea Chakars, Saint Joseph's U "Buddhism in Tuva: From the Qing Dynasty to a Russian Protectorate" Griffin Bennett Creech, U of Pennsylvania "Just Across the Border: Buryat Migration to Mongolia and Manchuria, 1918-1924" Edward Christian Holland, U of Arkansas "Khosheutovsky Khurul and the Restoration of Religious Buildings in Post-Soviet Russia" Disc.: Robert W. Montgomery, Baldwin Wallace U 12-03 Transitional Tensions in Modern Slovakia - Canal, 3rd Floor Sponsored by: Slovak Studies Association Chair: Susan M. Mikula Christie, Benedictine U Papers: Juraj Buzalka, Comenius U (Slovakia) "Village Fascists of Postsocialist European Union" Daniel E. Miller, U of West Florida "A Case of Failed Agricultural Collectivization in Slovakia" John Abley Gould, Colorado College "Fragile Dreams: Tales of Liberalism and Power in Central Europe" Disc.: Nicholas Hudac, Charles U in Prague / FAMU (Czech Republic) Carol Skalnik Leff, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 12-04 Technologies of Soviet Safety - Churchill A1, 2nd Floor Chair: Zsuzsa Gille, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Papers: Elena Kochetkova, NRU Higher School of Economics St. -
Wild Food Plants Used by Setos and Russians in Pechorsky District Of
Language of Administration as a Border: Wild Food Plants Used by Setos and Russians in Pechorsky District of Pskov Oblast, NW Russia Olga Belichenko, Valeria Kolosova, Denis Melnikov, Raivo Kalle, Renata Sõukand To cite this version: Olga Belichenko, Valeria Kolosova, Denis Melnikov, Raivo Kalle, Renata Sõukand. Language of Administration as a Border: Wild Food Plants Used by Setos and Russians in Pechorsky District of Pskov Oblast, NW Russia. Foods, MDPI, 2021, 10 (2), pp.367. 10.3390/foods10020367. hal- 03178481 HAL Id: hal-03178481 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03178481 Submitted on 23 Mar 2021 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/349120231 Language of Administration as a Border: Wild Food Plants Used by Setos and Russians in Pechorsky District of Pskov Oblast, NW Russia Article in Foods · February 2021 DOI: 10.3390/foods10020367 CITATIONS READS 0 46 5 authors, including: Olga Belichenko Valeria Kolosova Università Ca'