Live Breaking News & Updates on Russian Imperial Treasury

Stay updated with breaking news from Russian imperial treasury. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Russian humanitarian aid during the Greek revolution


Agathangelos
It matters not a bit that Theokleitos Polyeidis, the monk who composed a set of prophecies under the pseudonym of Agathangelos, predicting the rise and regenesis of the Greek people, probably meant the Germans, when he prophesied that the “blonde nation” would descend from the North to save Hellenism.
In the popular imagination, the blonde Nordic saviour was Russia and it was to Russia, that Greeks looked for deliverance. Sure, the western world may admire Greece’s classical heritage and express the pious hope that a renascent nation would espouse the democratic and other ideals so revered by the West, yet it was from Orthodoxy that the vast majority of pre-Revolution Greeks derived their cultural identity and value system. As such, Russian philhellenism, which encompassed both the classical and Byzantine facets of the Greek experience was much more nuanced and balanced. ....

United States , Vilniaus Apskritis , Perifereia Kentrikis Makedonias , Perifereia Voreiou Aigaiou , Konstantinos Oikonomos , Adam Czartoryski , Theophilus Prousis , Dmitri Bukharov , Theokleitos Polyeidis , Alexandr Golitsyn , Maria Fedorovna , Ioannis Kapodistria , Philiki Etaireia , Tsarist Secret Police , Russian Church , Curator Of Vilna University , Revolution Greeks , Tsar Alexander , With Russia , Orlov Revolt , Ottoman Greeks , Russian Philhellenism , Orthodox Christians , Prince Alexandr Golitsyn , Dowager Empress Maria Fedorovna , Prince Adam Czartoryski ,

"Battalion of Death": Russia's Controversial Women's Battalion in World War I


Battalion of Death : Russia s Controversial Women s Battalion in World War I
The roles of women in World War I took an interesting turn in 1917, when Russia looked to her brave female soldiers to boost morale.
Here s What You Need to Know: Among the so-called Amazons crossing the gender line was Maria “Yasha” Botchkareva.
By spring 1917, Russia had borne the heaviest burden of World War I. Russian reports counted more than six million men killed, wounded, or interned as prisoners of war. This enormous toll had bled the reserve pool of young Russian peasants nearly dry. The Russian Imperial Treasury was effectively bankrupt. Tsar Nicholas was forced to abdicate in March, but the new Russian Revolutionary Provisional Government continued the war against Germany. Its ability to raise morale, however, was scant. Bolshevik antiwar leaflets circulating among the Russian troops already had become one of the German High Command’s most effective weapons on its Eastern ....

New York , United States , United Kingdom , Hrodzyenskaya Voblasts , Belarus General , Sankt Peterburg , David Francis , Mikhailv Rodzianko , George Buchanan , Emmaline Pankhurst , Maria Yasha Botchkareva , Alekseia Brusilov , New York Times , Kolomensk Women Institute , Imperial Army , Associated Press , Russian Orthodox Church , What You Need , World War , Russian Imperial Treasury , Russian Revolutionary Provisional Government , German High Command , War Alexander Kerensky , Socialist Revolutionary , Summon You Not , Feast But ,