MAKSIM BAHDANOVIC LITERARY

MAKSIM BAHDANOVIC LITERARY




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Minsk thumbnail

MinskMinsk (Belarusian: Мінск, pronounced [mʲinsk]; Russian: Минск, pronounced [mʲinsk]) is the capital and largest city of Belarus, located on the Svislach and the now subterranean Niamiha rivers. As the capital, Minsk has a special administrative status in Belarus and is the administrative centre of Minsk region and Minsk district. As of 2024, it has a population of about two million, making Minsk the 11th-most populous city in Europe. Minsk is one of the administrative capitals of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). First mentioned in 1067, Minsk became the capital of the Principality of Minsk, an appanage of the Principality of Polotsk, before being annexed by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in 1242. It received town privileges in 1499. From 1569, it was the capital of Minsk Voivodeship, an administrative division of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. It was part of the territories annexed by the Russian Empire in 1793, as a consequence of the Second Partition of Poland. From 1919 to 1991, after the Russian Revolution, Minsk was the capital of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, which became a republic of the Soviet Union in 1922. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Minsk became the capital of the newly independent Republic of Belarus.

Minsk

Culture of Belarus thumbnail

Culture of BelarusBelarusian culture is the product of a millennium of development under the impact of a number of diverse factors. These include the physical environment; the ethnographic background of Belarusians (the merger of Slavic newcomers with Baltic natives); the paganism of the early settlers and their hosts; Eastern Orthodox Christianity as a link to the Byzantine literary and cultural traditions; the country's lack of natural borders; the flow of rivers toward both the Black Sea and the Baltic Sea; and the variety of religions in the region (Catholicism, Orthodoxy, Judaism, and Islam).

Culture

of

Belarus

Maksim Bahdanovich thumbnail

Maksim BahdanovichMaksim Adamavich Bahdanovich (Belarusian: Максім Адамавіч Багдановіч, IPA: [makˈsʲim aˈdamavʲid͡ʐ baɣdaˈnɔvʲit͡ɕ]; Russian: Максим Адамович Богданович, romanized: Maksim Adamovich Bogdanovich; 9 December 1891 – 25 May 1917) was a Belarusian poet, journalist, translator, literary critic and historian of literature. He is considered one of the founders of the modern Belarusian literature.

Maksim

Bahdanovich

Maksim Bahdanovich Literary Museum thumbnail

Maksim Bahdanovich Literary MuseumMaksim Bahdanovich Literary Museum (Belarusian: Літаратурны музей Максіма Багдановіча) is a museum in Minsk, Belarus. It is dedicated to the writer Maksim Bahdanovich (1891–1917). The work of the bibliographer Nina Vatatsy was central to the museum's foundation.

Maksim

Bahdanovich

Literary

Museum

Chernobyl Way thumbnail

Chernobyl WayChernobyl Way (Belarusian: Чарнобыльскі шлях, romanized: Čarnobylski šlach, Russian: Чернобыльский шлях, Чернобыльский путь, romanized: Chernobyl'sky shlyakh, Chernobyl'sky put') is an annual rally held on April 26 by the opposition in Belarus as a remembrance of the Chernobyl disaster.

Chernobyl

Way

List of museums in BelarusThis is a list of museums in Belarus. Belarusian Great Patriotic War Museum Belarusian National Arts Museum Belarusian National History and Culture Museum Belarusian Nature and Environment Museum Berestye Archeological Museum Brest Railway Museum Gomel Palace Maksim Bahdanovič Literary Museum Marc Chagall Museum Old Belarusian History Museum Tower of Kamyanyets Virtual Museum of Soviet Repression in Belarus Vitebsk Museum of Modern Art Vitebsk regional museum

List

of

museums

in

Belarus

Nina VatatsyNina Barysaŭna Vatatsy (Belarusian: Ніна Барысаўна Ватацы; May 14, 1908 – August 3, 1997) was a Belarusian bibliographer and literary critic, known for her work as chief bibliographer at the National Library of Belarus from 1945 to 1990.

Nina

Vatatsy

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