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Como en menos de un mes la Oficina Europea de Patentes va a entregar el premio “Jóvenes Inventores 2025”, los expertos bajitos Sviatoslav, Miriam y Vega han decidido visitar junto a Irene Ramírez la Academia de Inventores en Madrid. Allí han aprendido programación, robótica, mecánica y ciencia de la mano de Sol y Mari Carmen, que están a cargo de la academia. Cuentan su experiencia desde Vives La Radio, en el colegio público Luis Vives de Parla.
Sviatoslav Hnizdovskyi is CEO at OpenMinds. He is an expert at countering influence operations and disinformation. Sviatoslav is a serial tech entrepreneur and investor dedicated to helping Ukraine and democratic nations counter authoritarian influence in the global fight for free and open societies. At OpenMinds he leads a cognitive defence tech company that collaborates with over 30 governments and organizations worldwide, including Ukraine, the US, the UK, NATO members, strategic communications agencies, and leading research institutions. Their mission is to combat authoritarian influence, safeguard information integrity, develop cutting-edge AI tech for national security priorities of the democratic world.----------OpenMinds is a cognitive defence tech company countering authoritarian influence in the battle for free and open societies. They work with over 30 governments and organisations worldwide, including Ukraine, the UK, and NATO member governments, leading StratCom agencies, and research institutions. Their expertise lies in accessing restricted and high-risk environments, including conflict zones and closed platforms.We combine ML technologies with deep local expertise, particularly on Russia and Ukraine. OpenMinds team is based in Kyiv, London, Ottawa, and Washington, DC, includes behavioural scientists, ML/AI engineers, data journalists, communications experts, and regional specialists.----------LINKS:https://x.com/s_hnizdovskyihttps://www.linkedin.com/in/hnizdovskyi/https://www.openminds.ltd/https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/how-strong-is-russian-public-support-for-the-invasion-of-ukraine/https://www.facebook.com/sviatoslav.hnizdovskyi/----------SILICON CURTAIN FILM FUNDRAISER - A project to make a documentary film in Ukraine, to raise awareness of Ukraine's struggle and in supporting a team running aid convoys to Ukraine's frontline towns.https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extras----------Easter Pysanky: Silicon Curtain - https://car4ukraine.com/campaigns/easter-pysanky-silicon-curtainCar for Ukraine has joined forces with a group of influencers, creators, and news observers during this special Easter season. In peaceful times, we might gift a basket of pysanky (hand-painted eggs), but now, we aim to deliver a basket of trucks to our warriors.This time, our main focus is on the Seraphims of the 104th Brigade and Chimera of HUR (Main Directorate of Intelligence), highly effective units that: - disrupt enemy logistics - detect and strike command centers - carry out precision operations against high-value enemy targetshttps://car4ukraine.com/campaigns/easter-pysanky-silicon-curtain----------SILICON CURTAIN FILM FUNDRAISERA project to make a documentary film in Ukraine, to raise awareness of Ukraine's struggle and in supporting a team running aid convoys to Ukraine's front-line towns.https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extras----------SUPPORT THE CHANNEL:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtainhttps://www.patreon.com/siliconcurtain----------TRUSTED CHARITIES ON THE GROUND:Save Ukrainehttps://www.saveukraineua.org/Superhumans - Hospital for war traumashttps://superhumans.com/en/UNBROKEN - Treatment. Prosthesis. Rehabilitation for Ukrainians in Ukrainehttps://unbroken.org.ua/Come Back Alivehttps://savelife.in.ua/en/Chefs For Ukraine - World Central Kitchenhttps://wck.org/relief/activation-chefs-for-ukraineUNITED24 - An initiative of President Zelenskyyhttps://u24.gov.ua/Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundationhttps://prytulafoundation.orgNGO “Herojam Slava”https://heroiamslava.org/kharpp - Reconstruction project supporting communities in Kharkiv and Przemyślhttps://kharpp.com/NOR DOG Animal Rescuehttps://www.nor-dog.org/home/----------
durée : 01:28:46 - Sviatoslav Richter, légende du piano - par : Aurélie Moreau - Pour Sviatoslav Richter, immense pianiste né il y a 110 ans, "La musique, c'est une manière de vivre, de penser, de ressentir. Une présence de tous les instants, une joie profonde". (Diapason). Au programme: Beethoven, Rachmaninov, Brahms, Schubert…
The Cognitive Crucible is a forum that presents different perspectives and emerging thought leadership related to the information environment. The opinions expressed by guests are their own, and do not necessarily reflect the views of or endorsement by the Information Professionals Association. During this episode, Sviatoslav Hnizdovskyi Sviatoslav discusses propaganda and disinformation in society and the challenges of discerning truth in the age of social media. OpenMinds' specific expertise lies in working with hard-to-reach regions, including occupied territories, closed platforms, and authoritarian or restricted societies. Recording Date: 14 Jan 2025 Research Question: Sviat Hnizdovskyi suggests an interested student or researcher examine: What are the key motivational drivers behind the mobilization of Russian soldiers? How can we establish a link between changes in social media sentiment and real-world behavior? What are some effective approaches to measuring impact and outcomes of counter-influence campaigns? Resources: Cognitive Crucible Podcast Episodes Mentioned #62 Jonathan Rauch on the Constitution of Knowledge Openminds website Openminds: Russian Threat Index How to Win an Information War by Peter Pomerantsev Awakening from the Meaning Crisis by John Vervaeke and Christopher Mastropietro Zombies in Western Culture: A Twenty-First Century Crisis by John Vervaeke, Christopher Mastropietro, Filip Miscevic Link to full show notes and resources Guest Bio: Sviatoslav Hnizdovskyi is a CEO and Founder of OpenMinds - a cognitive defence tech company countering authoritarian influence in the battle for free and open societies. Renowned for its ability to access hard-to-reach areas through technology and leveraging deep local expertise, OpenMinds collaborates with Ukrainian and NATO-member governments, leading communication agencies, and think tanks. In the past two years, OpenMinds has executed 380+ counter-disinformation campaigns and conducted over 55 research projects on societal resilience and effects of propaganda, with a particular focus on the Russo-Ukrainian war. The company's work has been featured in leading global media outlets, such as The Economist, CNN, The Times, The Guardian, and The New York Times. About: The Information Professionals Association (IPA) is a non-profit organization dedicated to exploring the role of information activities, such as influence and cognitive security, within the national security sector and helping to bridge the divide between operations and research. Its goal is to increase interdisciplinary collaboration between scholars and practitioners and policymakers with an interest in this domain. For more information, please contact us at communications@information-professionals.org. Or, connect directly with The Cognitive Crucible podcast host, John Bicknell, on LinkedIn. Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, 1) IPA earns from qualifying purchases, 2) IPA gets commissions for purchases made through links in this post.
Day 1,016.Today, as Odesa faces renewed attacks down on the coast, we lead with the downfall of a multi billion pound Russian money laundering system, and we interview the front man of Ukraine's most famous and influential rock band, Okean Elzy. Contributors:Francis Dearnley (Assistant Comment Editor). @FrancisDearnley on X.Dominic Nicholls (Associate Editor of Defence). @DomNicholls on X.Roland Oliphant (Senior Foreign Correspondent). @RolandOliphant on X.With thanks to our special guest, Svyatoslav Vakarchuk of 'Okean Elzy'. @s_vakarchuk on X.Learn more about Slava's band, 'Okean Elzy':https://okeanelzy.com/en/https://www.softserveinc.com/en-us/news/softserve-and-okean-elzy-rock-band Content Referenced:Multi-billion pound Russian money laundering network exposed in international sting (The Telegraph):https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/04/russian-money-laundering-network-downfall/Subscribe to The Telegraph: telegraph.co.uk/ukrainethelatestEmail: ukrainepod@telegraph.co.uk Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
durée : 00:23:27 - Disques de légende du jeudi 05 décembre 2024 - En 1981 à Moscou, Sviatoslav Richter consacre un disque au quintette de César Franck pour Philips. Cet enregistrement sera complété par quelques pièces de Liszt en 1984. Richter est alors le grand nom du piano sur la scène mondiale.
durée : 00:23:27 - Disques de légende du jeudi 05 décembre 2024 - En 1981 à Moscou, Sviatoslav Richter consacre un disque au quintette de César Franck pour Philips. Cet enregistrement sera complété par quelques pièces de Liszt en 1984. Richter est alors le grand nom du piano sur la scène mondiale.
Sviatoslav Hnizdovskyi is CEO at OpenMinds and of the Kyiv-based Open Minds Institute. He is an expert at countering influence operations and disinformation. ---------- LINKS: https://x.com/s_hnizdovskyi https://www.linkedin.com/in/hnizdovskyi/ https://www.openminds.ltd/ https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/how-strong-is-russian-public-support-for-the-invasion-of-ukraine/ https://www.facebook.com/sviatoslav.hnizdovskyi/ ---------- SILICON CURTAIN FILM FUNDRAISER - A project to make a documentary film in Ukraine, to raise awareness of Ukraine's struggle and in supporting a team running aid convoys to Ukraine's frontline towns. https://buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain/extras ---------- SUPPORT THE CHANNEL: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/siliconcurtain https://www.patreon.com/siliconcurtain ---------- TRUSTED CHARITIES ON THE GROUND: Save Ukraine https://www.saveukraineua.org/ Superhumans - Hospital for war traumas https://superhumans.com/en/ UNBROKEN - Treatment. Prosthesis. Rehabilitation for Ukrainians in Ukraine https://unbroken.org.ua/ Come Back Alive https://savelife.in.ua/en/ Chefs For Ukraine - World Central Kitchen https://wck.org/relief/activation-chefs-for-ukraine UNITED24 - An initiative of President Zelenskyy https://u24.gov.ua/ Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation https://prytulafoundation.org NGO “Herojam Slava” https://heroiamslava.org/ kharpp - Reconstruction project supporting communities in Kharkiv and Przemyśl https://kharpp.com/ NOR DOG Animal Rescue https://www.nor-dog.org/home/ ---------- PLATFORMS: Twitter: https://twitter.com/CurtainSilicon Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/siliconcurtain/ Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/4thRZj6NO7y93zG11JMtqm Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/finkjonathan/ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/siliconcurtain ---------- Welcome to the Silicon Curtain podcast. Please like and subscribe if you like the content we produce. It will really help to increase the popularity of our content in YouTube's algorithm. Our material is now being made available on popular podcasting platforms as well, such as Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Utah Jazz guard Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk addressed the media at Utah Jazz Media Day on Monday morning.
durée : 01:58:20 - Sviatoslav Richter (1915-1997) avant 1960 (2/2) - par : Philippe Cassard - Au programme, les concerts avec la soprano Nina Dorliak sa future épouse. La rencontre avec Prokofiev. Le duo avec Rostropovich. - réalisé par : Philippe Petit
durée : 00:08:29 - Disques de légende du jeudi 12 septembre 2024 - Notre disque du jour est légendaire par plusieurs aspects : il réunit trois icônes de la musique du XXe siècle, avec Sergueï Prokofiev, Mstislav Rostropovitch et Sviatoslav Richter. Sa création et son enregistrement, en pleine Union Soviétique des années 1950, participent d'autant plus à sa légende.
durée : 00:08:29 - Disques de légende du jeudi 12 septembre 2024 - Notre disque du jour est légendaire par plusieurs aspects : il réunit trois icônes de la musique du XXe siècle, avec Sergueï Prokofiev, Mstislav Rostropovitch et Sviatoslav Richter. Sa création et son enregistrement, en pleine Union Soviétique des années 1950, participent d'autant plus à sa légende.
durée : 01:58:19 - Sviatoslav Richter (1915-1997) avant 1960 (1) - par : Philippe Cassard - Avant ses premiers concerts, fin 1960, du côté occidental des pays du bloc soviétique, Richter marquait déjà de son empreinte et de son jeu puissant tous les répertoires qu'il abordait. - réalisé par : Philippe Petit
Hey, Hi, Hello, this is the History Wizard and welcome back for Day 19 of Have a Day w/ The History Wizard. Thank you to everyone who tuned in for Day 18 last week, and especially thank you to everyone who rated and/or reviewed the podcast. I hope you all learned something last week and I hope the same for this week as well. Originally this week was going to cover the currently ongoing genocide in Ukraine, but I need to do some more research before I'm ready to record that episode so instead today's episode is going to be an interlude and we're going to be talking aboutone of my favorite women in history. Olga of Kiev, a woman who is the very definition of fuck around and find out. But first! The Alchemist's Table! Today's libation is called Kissed by Summer. It's 2 oz of bourbon, 1 oz each of amaretto and francelico. .75 oz of vanilla simple syrup, 3 dashes of angostura bitters. Shake well and pour over ice. Top with equal parts lemonade and ginger beer and enjoy! So, now onto Ola of Kiev, the Saint of Slaughter. Olga's exact year of birth is unknown, but we know she was born somewhere between 890 and 925 CE in Pleskov. She was of Varangian origin, which was an ethnic group descended from Swedish vikingr invaders that eventually settled in the area of the Kievan Rus. She was 15 years old when she was married to Prince Igor I of the Rurik Dynasty. Igor was the son of Rurik, making him only the second ruler of this particular dynasty. During Igor's reign and owing to a great deal of military aid from his guardian Oleg the Wise the Kievan Rus, and the many tribes of people living in it all came under Rurik control. Tragedy would strike the Rurik Dynasty in the form of a neighboring tribe known as the Drevelians, a tribe of Eastern Slavic peoples. The Drevelians were not part of the Kievan Rus, though they had joined them in military campaigns against the Byzantine Empire previously and paid a yearly tribute to Igor's predecessors in the Rurik Dynasty. After Oleg the Wise died in 912 CE the Drevelians stopped paying their tribute to Igor, instead paying it to a local warlord. In 945 CE Igor set out with his army to bring the Drevelians into line. No longer would he allow them to deny him what he saw as his rightful tribute. He marched his army to the traditional Drevelian capital, Iskorosten, today known as Korosten in the Zhytomyr Oblast in northern Ukraine. Now, Igor's army was much larger than any the Drevelians could field, so they backed down and agreed to resume their payments to Igor. However, Igor became greedy and after leaving to return home he turned around and went back to Iskorosten to demand even MORE tribute, at which point he Drevelians captured him alone and killed him. According to the Byzantine chronicler Leo the Deacon, Igor's death was caused by a gruesome act of torture in which he was "captured by them, tied to tree trunks, and torn in two." They allegedly tied one leg each to two bent over birch trees and then let them catapult up in opposing directions, tearing him in half. Though it is possible that this exact story is apocryphal, the fact that Igor was killed by the Drevelians cannot be denied. Upon learning of the death of her husband Olga ascended to the throne to rule as regent in the name of her son Sviatoslav. Olga was the first woman to rule over the Kievan Rus. Now, there isn't a great deal of information in the historical record regarding what Olga's reign was like. But there is A LOT of information detailing the bloody revenge she got on those who stole her love from her. The Drevelians, now firmly in the Fuck Around stage and emboldened by their successful murder of Igor sent a missive to Olga. They proposed that Olga should marry the Drevelian prince Mal. The man directly responsible for killing her husband. According to the Russian Primary Chronicle, a document formerly thought to have been written by Nestor the Chronicler, although now it is considered to be of unknown authorship, Olga responded to their bold pronouncement thusly: “Your proposal is pleasing to me, indeed, my husband cannot rise again from the dead. But I desire to honor you tomorrow in the presence of my people. Return now to your boat, and remain there with an aspect of arrogance. I shall send for you on the morrow, and you shall say, "We will not ride on horses nor go on foot, carry us in our boat." And you shall be carried in your boat.” When they returned the next day the Drevelians repeated the words Olga had bade them and the people of the Kievan Rus lifted their boat upon their shoulders and carried them into the courtyard of Olga's castle. The Drevelians were thrilled by this, feeling as though they were carried in great honor upon a palanquin. Once they were brought into the courtyard their porters dropped them, boat and all, into a trench that Olga had ordered dug the day before and were buried alive. It is written that Olga bent down to watch them as they were buried and "inquired whether they found the honor to their taste." The Drevelins were now squarely in the middle of the Find Out stage, although they didn't know it yet as all 20 of the men from the initial retinue they had sent were now buried in the courtyard of Olga's home. So Olga wrote to the Drevelians and asked them to send “their distinguished men to her in Kiev, so that she might go to their Prince with due honor.” The Drevelian, completely unaware of the fate of the previous retinue sent others to Olga, who ordered a bath be drawn so that they might wash off the dust of the road. Once the bath was drawn and the Drevelians were comfortably in the bathhouse, Olga set the damnthing on fire. No one escaped alive. But Olga's revenge was not complete. The Drevelians, still unaware that Olga was engaged in acts of genocidal revenge over the death of her husband, received another missive from her. She was on her way to Iskotorsten and asked that they prepare great quantities of mead so that she might mourn and feast her husband as is proper. And the Drevelians compiled and a funeral feast was held by Igor's tomb. When the Drevelians were good and drunk on mead, Olga ordered her followers to fall upon them and slaughter them all. According to the Primary Chronicle some 5000 Drevelians were killed in a single night. Olga would then return to Kiev, her capital city, and prepare her armies to march back to Iskotorsten. She swept across Drevelian land like an avenging angel until she reached, once again, their capital. Here is where things stalled and Olga entered into a year long siege. Eventually she sent another missive to the Drevelians asking them why their capital refused to surrender. “All of your other cities have surrendered and now pay tribute to me, why would you rather die of hunger than pay tribute.” The Drevelians, as you might expect, responded that they were worried that Olga ws still dead set on revenge, but Olga told them that the boat, bathhouse, and feast massacres had satisfied her. She instead asked them for 3 pigeons and three sparrows from each house and the Drevelians rejoiced that the price they were asked to pay was so low. Oh those poor fools. Olga then instructed her army to attach a piece of sulphur bound with small pieces of cloth to each bird. At nightfall, Olga told her soldiers to set the pieces aflame and release the birds. They returned to their nests within the city, which subsequently set the city ablaze. As the Primary Chronicle tells it: "There was not a house that was not consumed, and it was impossible to extinguish the flames, because all the houses caught fire at once." As the people fled the burning city, Olga ordered her soldiers to catch them, killing some of them and giving the others as slaves to her followers. Olga would go on to become a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church. Not because of the genocide she committed. Mostly because of her efforts to Christianize the Kievan Rus, a mission that she did not succeed in, but that was carried to fruition by her grandson Vladimir. Well… that's it for this week folks. No new reviews, so let's get right into the outro. Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard is brought to you by me, The History Wizard. If you want to see/hear more of me you can find me on Tiktok @thehistorywizard or on Instagram @the_history_wizard. Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe to Have a Day! On your pod catcher of choice. The more you do, the more people will be able to listen and learn along with you. Thank you for sticking around until the end and, as always, Have a Day.
What if a queen's ultimate revenge could change the course of a nation's history? Discover the chilling yet riveting story of Queen Olga of Kiev, a formidable ruler whose cunning and ruthless tactics left an indelible mark on medieval Eastern Europe. Start your journey with us as we bring the flavors of history to life, beginning with a mouth-watering discussion about Ukrainian braised pork with mashed potatoes. From there, we unravel the mysterious origins of Queen Olga, delving into her possible Varangian, Slavic, or Northern Russian Viking roots. The episode chronicles her marriage to Prince Igor of Kiev and the shocking events following his assassination by the Drevlians, which propelled Olga to the forefront of Kievan Rus politics as regent for her young son, Sviatoslav.Witness the sheer brilliance and brutality of Queen Olga's revenge strategies—from burying emissaries alive to setting an entire city ablaze using pigeons and sparrows. These audacious acts not only secured her power but also etched her name into the annals of history. Olga's journey didn't end there; her conversion to Christianity in Constantinople marked a pivotal moment in the Christianization of Kievan Rus, influencing her descendants and shaping the religious landscape for generations. Join us for an enthralling episode that captures the essence of a queen who mastered both the art of vengeance and the path to sainthood, leaving a legacy celebrated in Eastern Orthodox and Greek Catholic traditions. This is history brought to life with gripping stories and compelling insights you won't want to miss.Links: Support our show on paypal or from our host: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=SC5G5XFCX8MYW https://www.buzzsprout.com/547567/supportVisit us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SmarticusTellsHistoryStart your podcast on Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=486316Recipe:https://tatyanaseverydayfood.com/ukrainian-braised-pork/#recipe Sources:https://theconversation.com/saint-olga-of-kyiv-is-ukraines-patron-saint-of-both-defiance-and-vengeance-178019https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olga_of_Kiev#:~:text=Olga%20then%20instructed%20her%20army,subsequently%20set%20the%20city%20ablaze. Support the Show.
Sviatoslav was the son of a warrior king and a smart queen who loved a good fight (or war) but not so much the actual ruling bit of being a ruler. He won great battles in the east and lost great battles in the west. Was the first "Slav" king that great? And why is his image now so complicated? Find out in this episode of Wandering the Edge! Facebook & Instagram: Wanderedgeukraine For more episodes, sources and extras, please visit: wanderingtheedge.net
durée : 00:21:00 - Sviatoslav Richter joue Prokofiev : Sonates pour piano n°2 et 9, Concerto pour piano n°1 et 5 - Quatre enregistrements de la musique de Prokofiev par le pianiste virtuose Sviatoslav Richter sont disponibles sur un disque nouvellement remasterisé par Paul Arden-Taylor
durée : 01:27:54 - En pistes ! du mercredi 21 février 2024 - par : Charlotte Landru-Chandès - Ils sont au programme ce matin : le théorbiste Azul Lima, les violoncellistes Anastasia Kobekina et Sol Gabetta, les pianistes Maria Stratigou, Sviatoslav Richter et Bertrand Chamayou, la soprano Diana Damrau, mais également l'Orchestre de la Radio de Munich et l'Orchestre Philharmonique Slovaque
durée : 01:00:10 - René Martin, directeur artistique de festivals de musique classique - par : Priscille Lafitte - Les quatuors de Bartók représentent le "big bang" de l'univers musical de René Martin, qui découvre son métier aux côtés du pianiste Sviatoslav Richter. Le créateur du Festival de La Roque d'Anthéron et de la Folle Journée raconte ses amitiés avec Michel Corboz, Radu Lupu ou encore Matthias Goerne. - réalisé par : Claire Lagarde
Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk on Catholic-Hierarchy: https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bshevchuk.html Major Archbishop Sviatoslav Shevchuk on Gcatholic.org: http://www.gcatholic.org/p/24285 Archeparchy of Kyiv-Halyč (Ukrainian) on Catholic-Hierarchy.org: https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dkiev.html Archeparchy of Kyiv-Halyč (Ukrainian) on Gcatholic.org: http://www.gcatholic.org/dioceses/diocese/kyiv0.htm Britannica on the Holodomor: https://www.britannica.com/event/Holodomor Religious Information Service of Ukraine on Sviatoslav Shevchuk's election as Major Archbishop: https://risu.ua/en/argentinian-bishop-sviatoslav-shevchuk-becomes-new-head-of-ukrainian-greek-catholic-church_n46014 Fr. De Souza NCR commentary: https://www.ncregister.com/commentaries/pope-francis-names-new-cardinals-what-s-unsaid-speaks-volumes IMAGE CRED: Олег Чупа at uk.wikipedia Олег Чупа, GFDL, via Wikimedia Commons This episode's image is from Wikipedia since they're pretty chill about image-sharing as long as I credit them and I don't have time to go creating a new image-permission request every day, I've got stuff to talk about. Also, yes, I, a degreed librarian, consult Wikipedia during my research as they are generally a solid aggregator of resources. You have my permission to consult Wikipedia as well, just remember they are not a source in their own right or else citogenesis may occur (P.S. Randall Munroe is a treasure: https://xkcd.com/978/). THANKS AND SUCH: Thank you for listening, and thank my family and friends for putting up with the massive time investment and for helping me out as needed. As always, feel free to email the show at Popeularhistory@gmail.com If you would like to financially support Popeular history, go to www.patreon.com/Popeular. If you don't have any money to spare but still want to give back, pray and tell others– prayers and listeners are worth more than gold!
Olga (Old East Slavic: Вольга, romanized: Volĭga;[a] Old Norse: Helga; Lith: Alge; Christian name: Elena; c. 890–925 – 969) was a regent of Kievan Rus' for her son Sviatoslav from 945 until 960. Following her baptism, Olga took the name Elenа (Old East Slavic: Ѡлена, romanized: Olena).[2] She is known for her subjugation of the Drevlians, a tribe that had killed her husband Igor of Kiev. Even though it was her grandson Vladimir who converted the entire nation to Christianity, because of her efforts to spread Christianity through Rus', Olga is venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church with the epithet "Equal to the Apostles". Her feast day is 11 July. Our theme song was written and performed by Anna Bosnick. If you'd like to support the show on a per episode basis, you can find our Patreon page here. Be sure to check our website for more details.
durée : 01:25:00 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Albane Penaranda - En septembre 1998, le musicien et cinéaste Bruno Monsaingeon est l'invité de l'émission "Opus" sur France Culture. Au micro de Claude Kiejman, il raconte les coulisses de son film documentaire consacré au grand pianiste russe Sviatoslav Richter (1915-1997). Depuis le début des années 1970, Bruno Monsaingeon n'a cessé de filmer la musique et les plus grands interprètes de son temps : Yehudi Menuhin, Glenn Gould, Nadia Boulanger, Rostropovitch, Grigori Sokolov, Paul Tortelier et bien d'autres encore. Mais dans l'imposante filmographie de Bruno Monsaingeon (une centaine de documentaires), Richter l'Insoumis occupe une place particulière. "Richter est un homme sans désir, sans ambition, sans intention. Il joue." Achevé en 1997, récompensé d'un FIPA d'or, ce portrait de deux heures et demie a été le fruit d'un long travail de collaboration avec le légendaire pianiste russe Sviatoslav Richter, durant les dernières années de sa vie. Ce film restera un document d'autant plus exceptionnel que Richter n'aimait ni se montrer ni s'exprimer autrement qu'avec la musique. Un document musical, mais aussi historique sur l'existence d'un citoyen soviétique virtuose, né en 1915 en Ukraine et mort à Moscou en 1997. À écouter "La Nuit rêvée de Caroline Champetier" par Albane Penaranda. Par Claude Kiejman Réalisation : François Viet Opus - Bruno Monsaingeon ou comment filmer la musique : autour du pianiste Sviatoslav Richter (1ère diffusion : 05/09/1998) Indexation web : Documentation Sonore de Radio France Archive Ina-Radio France
Il prossimo 13 maggio, per iniziativa della Fondazione Lepanto, si svolgerà a Roma una conferenza su Fatima, la Russia, l'Ucraina nell'ora storica attuale. L'importanza di questa conferenza non è data solo dal tema, ma dalla partecipazione, in collegamento diretto da Kyiv, di Sua Beatitudine Sviatoslav Shevchuk, arcivescovo maggiore di Kyiv e Padre e capo della Chiesa greco-cattolica ucraina.
The Psychic and The Doc - Your Practical Paranormal Power Unleashed
In this special episode of his podcast, Nathan Eckersley reflects on some of his biggest and most insightful interviews of 2022. He shares highlight moments from interviews with Sviatoslav Yurash (the youngest Ukrainian MP), Baroness Morrissey DBE (British financier, campaigner and member of the House of Lords) and Konstatin Kisin (podcaster and political commentator). On The Nathan Eckersley Podcast, Nathan Eckersley discusses the biggest political news and current affairs and is joined by thought leaders from across the political spectrum for special interviews. The podcast is recorded live from Manchester, UK every Sunday afternoon - to get involved with the show live and have your opinions read out on the podcast, listen to the live broadcast on www.wizardradio.com/listen from 3pm-4pm (UK) every Sunday. DISCLAIMER: Any facts, statistics and news stories mentioned in this episode are true and relevant as of the time it was recorded. All opinions stated on this podcast are representative only of the people they are credited to and are not a representation of any sponsors, advertisers or partners involved in The Nathan Eckersley Podcast, including W!ZARD Studios and Nathan Eckersley. Please do not try to send in a message or opinion whilst listening to this podcast as your message won't be read but you might still be charged. For our Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions, please visit: www.wizardradio.com Spotted a mistake on this podcast? Let us know and we'll try to fix it. Message us using the Contact Form on: www.wizardradio.com/about Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Yaroslav the Wise had four daughters and six sons. His daughters were all married to European rulers while his sons decided to play game of the thrones of Kyivan Rus. Well, three of them did - anyway. Iziaslav was ruler three different times and was an European adventurer, while Sviatoslav was the wise one with a short reign and Vsevolod was the last, who ruled the longest. How did this complicated relationship of brothers and rulers come about and why did Iziaslav spend so much time in Europe? Find out in this latest episode! Facebook & Instagram: Wanderedgeukraine For more episodes, sources and extras, please visit: wanderingtheedge.net
durée : 00:58:29 - Sviatoslav Richter, titan de la musique - par : Aurélie Moreau - Par ses interprétations fascinantes, Sviatoslav Richter est devenu légendaire de son vivant. Son grand collègue Julius Katchen a dit de lui : « un pianiste sans égal dont la puissance titanesque interdisait toutes comparaisons ».
Sviatoslav Ivanov is a startup founder born in Moscow and currently traveling in Europe with his wife and 1-year-old daughter. He spent 5 years learning sound engineering and used to be a cinematographer. 5 years ago he decided to switch to tech and learned several programming languages, working with Sber, Prequel, and Endel. At the same time, Slava with his wife Barbara was developing a music application, pursuing a dream to give a great innovative way to interact with music for people without any musical background. FIND SVIATOSLAV ON SOCIAL MEDIA LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram ================================ SUPPORT & CONNECT: Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/denofrich Twitter: https://twitter.com/denofrich Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/denofrich YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/denofrich Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/den_of_rich/ Hashtag: #denofrich © Copyright 2022 Den of Rich. All rights reserved.
Sviatoslav is a Slavic Name, he wore Slavic Clothing… but he was a Viking. The Viking Origin story concludes with the Viking King of the Slavic Nation facing off against the Roman Empire in a final showdown that will result in one of them being turned into a drinking cup.The History of Modern Greece Podcast covers the events of the Greek People from the fall of Constantinople in 1453 to the Greek War of Independence in 1821-1832, through to the Greco-Turkish War from 1919 to 1922 to the present day.Website: www.moderngreecepodcast.comMusic by Mark Jungerman: www.marcjungermann.com
durée : 01:25:00 - Les Nuits de France Culture - Bruno Monsaingeon ou comment filmer la musique : autour du pianiste Sviatoslav Richter
durée : 00:11:30 - Disques de légende du mercredi 25 mai 2022 - Aujourd'hui dans Disques de légende, nous écoutons Le Premier Livre du Clavier bien tempéré de Bach par Sviatoslav Richter.
Florian Kührer-Wielach spricht mit Alexandra, Anna und Sviatoslav, drei Studierenden aus Czernowitz/Tscherniwzi (Bukowina/Ukraine), und ihrer Professorin Nataliya Nechayeva-Yuriychuk.
2022
Jen chats to Ukrainian MP, Sviatoslav Yurash about what it's like in Ukraine two months into the war!
The images of the horrific violence in the Ukrainian city of Bucha has provoked shock and immense upset around the world. As Russian forces have been pushed back bodies of innocent civilians have been left in the streets. It’s been called genocide by Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, the world has reacted in anger in calling them war crimes including New Zealand. We're joined by Ukraine’s youngest ever MP, Sviatoslav Yurash.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Psychic and The Doc - Your Practical Paranormal Power Unleashed
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Nathan Eckersley is joined by Ukrainian politician Sviatoslav Yurash to discuss the situation on the ground fighting for Kyiv, the West's response to the war and what we can do to help Ukraine. Sviatoslav Yurash is the youngest member of the Ukrainian Parliament and a representative of the 'Servant of the People' party. Since Russia's invasion of his country, Sviatoslav has - like many Ukrainians - taken to arms to defend the country and has been sharing his story on Twitter. Follow Sviatoslav Yurash here: https://twitter.com/SviatoslavUA DISCLAIMER: Any facts, statistics and news stories mentioned in this episode are true and relevant as of the time it was recorded. All opinions stated on this podcast are representative only of the people they are credited to and are not a representation of any sponsors, advertisers or partners involved in The Nathan Eckersley Podcast, including W!ZARD Studios and Nathan Eckersley. Please do not try to send in a message or opinion whilst listening to this podcast as your message won't be read but you might still be charged. For our Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions, please visit: www.wizardradio.co.uk Spotted a mistake on this podcast? Let us know and we'll try to fix it. Message us using the Contact Form on: www.wizardradio.co.uk/about Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, I spoke with two members of the government, one in Ukraine and one in Russia. I don't believe these guys necessarily have the view of an average Russian or Ukrainian. However, they do represent people in their countries. First I spoke with Sviatoslav Yurash, Ukraine's youngest-ever MP. Sviatoslav is currently defending Ukraine from the ongoing Russian invasion and gives his perspective on the war and what it really looks like on the ground in Kyiv. He has an impressive story. He is deeply involved in the government and has been involved in the war between Russia and Ukraine for years. He is the former Euromaidan press centre organizer (which was the group that protested and eventually ousted Ukraine's pro-Russian president in 2014. Sviatoslav was the senior spokesperson for the current president Zelensky's 2019 presidential election campaign. Sviatoslav is currently in Kyiv and has taken up arms against the Russian military. I then spoke with Nikolai Burlyayev, a member of State Duma (an elected government official), First Deputy Chairman of the Committee for the Development of Civil Society, Public and Religious Association Issues, and member of the Orthodox Patriarchal Council for Culture. He is also a Russian theatre and cinema actor, laureate of 50 international film festivals including Venice, Cannes, San Francisco, and Acapulco, an Oscar nominee for the lead part in Pyotr Todorovsky's "Wartime Romance", and President of the Golden Vityaz Internationals Film Forum. Member of the State Duma. He came on to give the Russian government's perspective on the war. As you guys might know, I have a lot of Russian friends and my 4-year-old daughter is half Russian. We were going to be there in the summer. Russian doctors saved my dad. I had some negative feedback about giving a platform to the government of an invading country, but I believe in untrammeled freedom of speech and letting people think for themselves. I'm not interested in contributing to censorship. Shutting down RT (Russia Today, the government news source) like some platforms have I think is a mistake. Russia blocking Facebook and Twitter is a mistake. This war is brutal and nobody knows what it's going to turn into, but not being aware of what Russian citizens are being told is not the way to go in my opinion. If you want to help:
Well, he did it. He actually did it. After month of posturing, years of undeclared war, and even longer lying to our faces, Putin authorised Russia's invasion of Ukraine. How did it come to this? Is Putin the only variable that matters? Does diplomacy still have a chance? Where do I see all of this going? You may not think you need yet another person talking about this war, but just in case you do, join me here, as I explain why this war happened, and why it's personal to me. It's my first time wading into modern affairs with such venom, so I hope you enjoy it!Sviatoslav Yurash is on Twitter Sviatoslav on Sky News - start video at 1:35. Thomas de Waal's thread on Russia's post-war plan. Learn more about Putin's Ukraine speech on Feb 22. More context on Putin's position. Putin decides on war. Putin calls Ukraine's government Nazis and drug dealers. Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
I interviewed Sviatoslav Yurash, the youngest member of parliament in Ukraine who is on the ground in Kyiv to give us an update of what's going on and background information about the war. As you guys might know I have a lot of Russian friends and my 4-year-old daughter is half Russian. We were going to be there in the summer. Russian doctors saved my dad. The original plan for this episode was to also speak to someone in the Russian government to see what the Russian governments' citizens are being told, and get that perspective. I had some negative feedback from that about giving a platform to the government of an invading country but I still plan on doing that if I can find someone who is comfortable with talking to me. It's hard to know what's going on without information from everyone. Today's guest is Sviatsolav Yurash. Yurash is a Ukrainian politician. He is deeply involved in the government and has been involved in the war between Russia and Ukraine for years. He was previously the Euromaidan press center organizer (which was the group that protested and eventually ousted Ukraine's pro-Russian president in 2014. Sviatoslav was the senior spokesperson for the current president Zelensky's 2019 presidential election campaign. Sviatoslav is currently in Kyiv, and has taken up arms against the Russian military. He went into details about what it looks like on the ground there and his perspective on why there has been fighting for the last 8 years or so and why there's been an invasion. I cannot express how sorry I am about this war. It's heartbreaking. I've linked what Sviatoslav spoke about in the shownotes - if you're interested in donating there are bank accounts listed:
Glenn starts off the show by recapping the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and then lays out facts that don't make sense. Pat Gray joins to discuss the updates in Russia and Ukraine as Russia goes to DEFCON level 2. Glenn, Stu, and Pat discuss the steps we need to take to fight Russia, but President Biden is more concerned with stopping oil production in the U.S. Freelance journalist Manny Marotta joins to share his story of escaping Ukraine on foot when Russia began invading. Member of Ukrainian Parliament Sviatoslav Yurash joins to share Ukraine's version of the Russia invasion. Glenn ponders whether Americans would respond as bravely as Ukrainians in the event of an invasion as he discusses the importance of freedom. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Pastor Stephen Love Please continue to pray for Alex, Anna, Sviatoslav, and Maria Tarasov. Pastor and Family Vertical Church, Kyiv, Ukraine.
Our last episode was on Project MAC, a Cold War-era project sponsored by ARPA. That led to many questions like what led to the Cold War and just what was the Cold War. We'll dig into that today. The Cold War was a period between 1946, in the days after World War II, and 1991, when the United States and western allies were engaged in a technical time of peace that was actually an aggressive time of arms buildup and proxy wars. Technology often moves quickly when nations or empires are at war. In many ways, the Cold War gave us the very thought of interactive computing and networking, so is responsible for the acceleration towards our modern digital lives. And while I've never seen it references as such, this was more of a continuation of wars between the former British empire and the Imperialistic Russian empires. These make up two or the three largest empires the world has ever seen and a rare pair of empires that were active at the same time. And the third, well, we'll get to the Mongols in this story as well. These were larger than the Greeks, the Romans, the Persians, or any of the Chinese dynasties. In fact, the British Empire that reached its peak in 1920 was 7 times larger than the land controlled by the Romans, clocking in at 13.7 million square miles. The Russian Empire was 8.8 million square miles. Combined the two held nearly half the world. And their legacies live on in trade empires, in some cases run by the same families that helped fun the previous expansions. But the Russians and British were on a collision course going back to a time when their roots were not as different as one might think. They were both known to the Romans. But yet they both became feudal powers with lineages of rulers going back to Vikings. We know the Romans battled the Celts, but they also knew of a place that Ptolemy called Sarmatia Europea in around 150AD, where a man named Rurik settle far later. He was a Varangian prince, which is the name Romans gave to Vikings from the area we now call Sweden. The 9th to 11th century saw a number o these warrior chiefs flow down rivers throughout the Baltics and modern Russia in search of riches from the dwindling Roman vestiges of empire. Some returned home to Sweden; others conquered and settled. They rowed down the rivers: the Volga, the Volkhov, the Dvina, and the networks of rivers that flow between one another, all the way down the Dnieper river, through the Slavic tripes Ptolemy described which by then had developed into city-states, such as Kiev, past the Romanians and Bulgers and to the second Rome, or Constantinople. The Viking ships rowed down these rivers. They pillaged, conquered, and sometimes settled. The term for rowers was Rus. Some Viking chiefs set up their own city-states in and around the lands. Some when their lands back home were taken while they were off on long campaigns. Charlemagne conquered modern day France and much of Germany, from The Atlantic all the way down into the Italian peninsula, north into Jutland, and east to the border with the Slavic tribes. He weakened many, upsetting the balance of power in the area. Or perhaps there was never a balance of power. Empires such as the Scythians and Sarmatians and various Turkic or Iranian powers had come and gone and each in their wake crossing the vast and harsh lands found only what Homer said of the area all the way back in the 8th century BCE, that the land was deprived of sunshine. The Romans never pushed up so far into the interior of the steppes as the were busy with more fertile farming grounds. But as the Roman Empire fell and the Byzantines flourished, the Vikings traded with them and even took their turn trying to loot Constantinople. And Frankish Paris. And again, settled in the Slavic lands, marrying into cultures and DNA. The Rus Rome retreated from lands as her generals were defeated. The Merovingian dynasty rose in the 5th century with the defeat of Syagrius, the last Roman general Gaul and lasted until a family of advisors slowly took control of running the country, transitioning to the Carolingian Empire, of which Charlemagne, the Holy Roman Emperor, as he was crowned, was the most famous. He conquered and grew the empire. Charlemagne knew the empire had outgrown what one person could rule with the technology of the era, so it was split into three, which his son passed to his grandsons. And so the Carolingian empire had made the Eastern Slavs into tributaries of the Franks. There were hostilities but by the Treaty of Mersen in 870 the split of the empire generally looked like the borders of northern Italy, France, and Germany - although Germany also included Austria but not yet Bohemia. It split and re-merged and smaller boundary changes happened but that left the Slavs aware of these larger empires. The Slavic peoples grew and mixed with people from the Steppes and Vikings. The Viking chiefs were always looking for new extensions to their trade networks. Trade was good. Looting was good. Looting and getting trade concessions to stop looting those already looted was better. The networks grew. One of those Vikings was Rurik. Possibly Danish Rorik, a well documented ally who tended to play all sides of the Carolingians and a well respected raider and military mind. Rurik was brought in as the first Viking, or rower, or Rus, ruler of the important trade city that would be known as New City, or Novgorod. Humans had settled in Kiev since the Stone Age and then by Polans before another prince Kyi took over and then Rurik's successor Oleg took Smolensk and Lyubech. Oleg extended the land of Rus down the trading routes, and conquered Kiev. Now, they had a larger capital and were the Kievan Rus. Rurik's son Igor took over after Oleg and centralized power in Kiev. He took tribute from Constantinople after he attacked, plunder Arab lands off the Caspian Sea, and was killed overtaxing vassal states in his territory. His son Sviatoslav the Brave then conquered the Alans and through other raiding helped cause the collapse of the Kazaria and Bulgarian empires. They expanded throughout the Volga River valley, then to the Balkans, and up the Pontic Steppe, and quickly became the largest empire in Europe of the day. His son Vladimir the Great expanded again, with he empire extending from the Baltics to Belarus to the Baltics and converted to Christianity, thus Christianizing the lands he ruled. He began marrying and integrating into the Christian monarchies, which his son continued. Yaroslov the Wise married the daughter of the King of Sweden who gave him the area around modern-day Leningrad. He then captured Estonia in 1030, and as with others in the Rurikid dynasty as they were now known, made treaties with others and then pillaged more Byzantine treasures. He married one daughter to the King of Norway, another to the King of Hungary, another to the King of the Franks, and another to Edward the Exile of England, and thus was the grandfather of Edgar the Aetheling, who later became a king of England. The Mongols The next couple of centuries saw the rise of Feudalism and the descendants of Rurik fight amongst each other. The various principalities were, as with much of Europe during the Middle Ages, semi-independent duchies, similar to city-states. Kiev became one of the many and around the mid 1100s Yaroslav the Wise's great-grandson, Yuri Dolgoruki built a number of new villages and principalities, including one along the Moskva river they called Moscow. They built a keep there, which the Rus called kremlins. The walls of those keeps didn't keep the Mongols out. They arrived in 1237. They moved the capital to Moscow and Yaroslav II, Yuri's grandson, was poisoned in the court of Ghengis Khan's grandson Batu. The Mongols ruled, sometimes through the descendants of Rurik, sometimes disposing of them and picking a new one, for 200 years. This is known as the time of the “Mongol yoke.” One of those princes the Mongols let rule was Ivan I of Moscow, who helped them put down a revolt in a rival area in the 1300s. The Mongols trusted Moscow after that, and so we see a migration of rulers of the land up into Moscow. The Golden Horde, like the Viking Danes and Swedes settled in some lands. Kublai Khan made himself ruler of China. Khanates splintered off to form the ruling factions of weaker lands, such as modern India and Iran - who were once the cradle of civilization. Those became the Mughals dynasties as they Muslimized and moved south. And so the Golden Horde became the Great Horde. Ivan the Great expanded the Muscovite sphere of influence, taking Novgorod, Rostov, Tver, Vyatka, and up into the land of the Finns. They were finally strong enough to stand up to the Tatars as they called their Mongol overlords and made a Great Stand on the Ugra River. And summoning a great army simply frightened the Mongol Tatars off. Turns out they were going through their own power struggles between princes of their realm and Akhmed was assassinated the next year, with his successor becoming Sheikh instead of Khan. Ivan's grandson, Ivan the Terrible expanded the country even further. He made deals with various Khans and then conquered others, pushing east to conquer the Khanate of Sibiu and so conquered Siberia in the 1580s. The empire then stretched all the way to the Pacific Ocean. He had a son who didn't have any heirs and so was the last in the Rurikid dynasty. But Ivan the Terrible had married Anastasia Romanov, who when he crowned himself Caesar, or Tsar as they called it, made her Tsaritsa. And so the Romanov's came to power in 1596 and following the rule of Peter the Great from 1672 to 1725, brought the Enlightenment to Russia. He started the process of industrialization, built a new capital he called St Petersburg, built a navy, made peace with the Polish king, then Ottoman king, and so took control of the Baltics, where the Swedes had taken control of on and off since the time of Rurik. Russian Empire Thus began the expansion as the Russian Empire. They used an alliance with Denmark-Norway and chased the Swedes through the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, unseating the Polish king along the way. He probably should not have allied with them. They moved back into Finland, took the Baltics so modern Latvia and Estonia, and pushed all the way across the Eurasian content across the frozen tundra and into Alaska. Catherine the Great took power in 1762 and ignited a golden age. She took Belarus, parts of Mongolia, parts of modern day Georgia, overtook the Crimean Khanate, and modern day Azerbaijan. and during her reign founded Odessa, Sevastopol and other cities. She modernized the country like Peter and oversaw nearly constant rebellions in the empire. And her three or four children went on to fill the courts of Britain, Denmark, Sweden, Spain, and the Netherlands. She set up a national network of schools, with teachings from Russian and western philosophers like John Locke. She collected vast amounts of art, including many from China. She set up a banking system and issued paper money. She also started the process to bring about the end of serfdom. Even though between her and the country she owned 3.3 million herself. She planned on invading the Khanate of Persia, but passed away before her army got there. Her son Paul halted expansion. And probably just in time. Her grandson Alexander I supported other imperial powers against Napoleon and so had to deal with the biggest invasion Russia had seen. Napoleon moved in with his grand army of half a million troops. The Russians used a tactic that Peter the Great used and mostly refused to engage Napoleon's troops instead burning the supply lines. Napoleon lost 300,000 troops during that campaign. Soon after the Napoleanic wars ended, the railways began to appear. The country was industrializing and with guns and cannons, growing stronger than ever. The Opium Wars, between China and the UK then the UK and France were not good to China. Even though Russia didn't really help they needed up with a piece of the Chinese empire and so in the last half of the 1800s the Russian Empire grew by another 300,000 square miles on the backs of a series of unequal treaties as they came to be known in China following World War I. And so by 1895, the Romanovs had expanded past their native Moscow, driven back the Mongols, followed some of the former Mongol Khanates to their lands and taken them, took Siberia, parts of the Chinese empire, the Baltics, Alaska, and were sitting on the third largest empire the world had ever seen, which covered nearly 17 percent of the world. Some 8.8 million square miles. And yet, still just a little smaller than the British empire. They had small skirmishes with the British but by and large looked to smaller foes or proxy wars, with the exception of the Crimean War. Revolution The population was expanding and industrializing. Workers flocked to factories on those train lines. And more people in more concentrated urban areas meant more ideas. Rurik came in 862 and his descendants ruled until the Romanovs took power in 1613. They ruled until 1917. That's over 1,000 years of kings, queens, Tsars, and Emperors. The ideas of Marx slowly spread. While the ruling family was busy with treaties and wars and empire, they forgot to pay attention to the wars at home. People like Vladimir Lenin discovered books by people like Karl Marx. Revolution was in the air around the world. France had shown monarchies could be toppled. Some of the revolutionaries were killed, others put to work in labor camps, others exiled, and still others continued on. Still, the empire was caught up in global empire intrigues. The German empire had been growing and the Russians had the Ottomans and Bulgarians on their southern boarders. They allied with France to take Germany, just as they'd allied with Germany to take down Poland. And so after over 1.8 million dead Russians and another 3.2 million wounded or captured and food shortages back home and in the trenches, the people finally had enough of their Tsar. They went on strike but Tsar Nicholas ordered the troops to fire. The troops refused. The Duma stepped in and forced Nicholas to abdicate. Russia had revolted in 1917, sued Germany for peace, and gave up more territory than they wanted in the process. Finland, the Baltics, their share of Poland, parts of the Ukraine. It was too much. But the Germans took a lot of time and focus to occupy and so it helped to weaken them in the overall war effort. Back home, Lenin took a train home and his Bolshevik party took control of the country. After the war Poland was again independent. Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, and the Serbs became independent nations. In the wake of the war the Ottoman Empire was toppled and modern Turkey was born. The German Kaiser abdicated. And socialism and communism were on the rise. In some cases, that was really just a new way to refer to a dictator that pretended to care about the people. Revolution had come to China in 1911 and Mao took power in the 1940s. Meanwhile, Lenin passed in 1924 and Rykov, then Molotov, who helped spur a new wave of industrialization. Then Stalin, who led purges of the Russian people in a number of Show Trials before getting the Soviet Union, as Russian Empire was now called, into World War II. Stalin encouraged Hitler to attack Poland in 1939. Let's sit on that for a second. He tried to build a pact with the Western powers and after that broke down, he launched excursions annexing parts of Poland, Finland, Romania, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia. Many of the lands were parts of the former Russian Empire. The USSR had chunks of Belarus and the Ukraine before but as of the 1950s annexed Poland, Easter Germany, Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Bulgaria as part of the Warsaw Pact, a block of nations we later called the Soviet Bloc. They even built a wall between East and West Germany. During and after the war, the Americans whisked German scientists off to the United States. The Soviets were in no real danger from an invasion by the US and the weakened French, Austrians, and military-less Germans were in no place to attack the Soviets. The UK had to rebuild and British empire quickly fell apart. Even the traditional homes of the vikings who'd rowed down the rivers would cease to become global powers. And thus there were two superpowers remaining in the world, the Soviets and the United States. The Cold War The Soviets took back much of the former Russian Empire, claiming they needed buffer zones or through subterfuge. At its peak, the Soviet Union cover 8.6 million square miles; just a couple hundred thousand shy of the Russian Empire. On the way there, they grew to a nation of over 290 million people with dozens of nationalities. And they expanded the sphere of influence even further, waging proxy wars in places like Vietnam and Korea. They never actually went to war with the United States, in much the same way they mostly avoided the direct big war with the Mongols and the British - and how Rorik of Dorestad played both sides of Frankish conflicts. We now call this period the Cold War. The Cold War was an arms race. This manifested itself first in nuclear weapons. The US is still the only country to detonate a nuclear weapon in war time, from the bombings that caused the surrender of Japan at the end of the war. The Soviets weren't that far behind and detonated a bomb in 1949. That was the same year NATO was founded as a treaty organization between Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, and the United States. The US upped the ante with the hydrogen bomb in 1952. The Soviets got the hydrogen bomb in 1955. And then came the Space Race. Sputnik launched in 1957. The Russians were winning the space race. They further proved that when they put Yuri Gagarin up in 1961. By 1969 the US put Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the moon. Each side developed military coalitions, provided economic aid to allies, built large arsenals of weapons, practiced espionage against one another, deployed massive amounts of propaganda, and spreading their ideology. Or at least that's what the modern interpretation of history tells us. There were certainly ideological differences, but the Cold War saw the spread of communism as a replacement for conquest. That started with Lenin trying to lead a revolt throughout Europe but shifted over the decades into again, pure conquest. Truman saw the rapid expansion of the Soviets and without context that they were mostly reclaiming lands conquered by the Russian imperial forces, won support for the Truman Doctrine. There, he contained Soviet expansion in Eastern Europe. First, they supported Greece and Turkey. But the support extended throughout areas adjacent to Soviet interests. Eisenhower saw how swiftly Russians were putting science in action with satellites and space missions and nuclear weapons - and responded with an emphasis in American science. The post-war advancements in computing were vast in the US. The industry moved from tubes and punch cards to interactive computing after the Whirlwind computer was developed at MIT first to help train pilots and then to intercept soviet nuclear weapons. Packet switching, and so the foundations of the Internet were laid to build a computer network that could withstand nuclear attack. Graphical interfaces got their start when Ivan Sutherland was working at MIT on the grandchild of Whirlwind, the TX-2 - which would evolve into the Digital Equipment PDP once privatized. Drum memory, which became the foundation of storage was developed to help break Russian codes and intercept messages. There isn't a part of the computing industry that isn't touched by the research farmed out by various branches of the military and by ARPA. Before the Cold War, Russia and then the Soviet Union were about half for and half against various countries when it came to proxy wars. They tended to play both sides. After the Cold War it was pretty much always the US or UK vs the Soviet Union. Algeria, Kenya, Taiwan, the Sudan, Lebanon, Central America, the Congo, Eritrea, Yemen, Dhofar, Algeria, Malaysia, the Dominican Republic, Chad, Iran, Iraq, Thailand, Bolivia, South Africa, Nigeria, India, Bangladesh, Angolia, Ethiopia, the Sahara, Indonesia, Somalia, Mozambique, Libya, and Sri Lanka. And the big ones were Korea, Vietnam, and Afghanistan. Many of these are still raging on today. The Soviet empire grew to over 5 million soldiers. The US started with 2 nuclear weapons in 1945 and had nearly 300 by 1950 when the Soviets had just 5. The US stockpile grew to over 18,000 in 1960 and peaked at over 31,000 in 1965. The Soviets had 6,129 by then but kept building until they got close to 40,000 by 1980. By then the Chinese, France, and the UK each had over 200 and India and Israel had developed nuclear weapons. Since then only Pakistan and North Korea have added warheads, although there are US warheads located in Germany, Belgium, Italy, Turkey, and the Netherlands. Modern Russia The buildup was expensive. Research, development, feeding troops, supporting asymmetrical warfare in proxy states, and trade sanctions put a strain on the government and nearly bankrupted Russia. They fell behind in science, after Stalin had been anti-computers. Meanwhile, the US was able to parlay all that research spending into true productivity gains. The venture capital system also fueled increasingly wealthy companies who paid taxes. Banking, supply chains, refrigeration, miniaturization, radio, television, and everywhere else we could think of. By the 1980s, the US had Apple and Microsoft and Commodore. The Russians were trading blat, or an informal black market currency, to gain access to knock-offs of ZX Spectrums when the graphical interfaces systems were born. The system of government in the Soviet Union had become outdated. There were some who had thought to modernize it into more of a technocracy in an era when the US was just starting to build ARPANET - but those ideas never came to fruition. Instead it became almost feudalistic with high-ranking party members replacing the boyars, or aristocrats of the old Kievan Rus days. The standard of living suffered. So many cultures and tribes under one roof, but only the Slavs had much say. As the empire over-extended there were food shortages. If there are independent companies then the finger can be pointed in their direction but when food is rationed by the Politburo then the decline in agricultural production became dependent on bringing food in from the outside. That meant paying for it. Pair that with uneven distribution and overspending on the military. The Marxist-Leninist doctrine had been a one party state. The Communist Party. Michael Gorbachev allowed countries in the Bloc to move into a democratic direction with multiple parties. The Soviet Union simply became unmanageable. And while Gorbachev took the blame for much of the downfall of the empire, there was already a deep decay - they were an oligarchy pretending to be a communist state. The countries outside of Russia quickly voted in non-communist governments and by 1989 the Berlin Wall came down and the Eastern European countries began to seek independence, most moving towards democratic governments. The collapse of the Soviet Union resulted in 15 separate countries and left the United States standing alone as the global superpower. The Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland joined NATO in 1999. 2004 saw Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia join. 2009 brought in Albania and Croatia. 2017 led to Montenegro and then North Macedonia. Then came the subject of adding Ukraine. The country that the Kievan Rus had migrated throughout the lands from. The stem from which the name and possibly soul of the country had sprouted from. How could Vladimir Putin allow that to happen? Why would it come up? As the Soviets pulled out of the Bloc countries , they left remnants of their empire behind. Belarus, Kazakstan, and the Ukraine were left plenty of weapons that couldn't be moved quickly. Ukraine alone had 1,700 nuclear weapons, which included 16 intercontinental ballistic missiles. Add to that nearly 2,000 biological and chemical weapons. Those went to Russia or were disassembled once the Ukrainians were assured of their sovereignty. The Crimea, which had been fought over in multiple bloody wars was added to Ukraine. At least until 2014, when Putin wanted the port of Sevastopol, founded by Catherine the Great. Now there was a gateway from Russia to the Mediterranean yet again. So Kievan Rus under Rurik is really the modern Ukraine and the Russian Empire then Romanov Dynasty flowed from that following the Mongol invasions. The Russian Empire freed other nations from the yolk of Mongolian rule but became something entirely different once they over-extended. Those countries in the empire often traded the Mongol yolk for the Soviet yolk. And entirely different from the Soviet Union that fought the Cold War and the modern Russia we know today. Meanwhile, the states of Europe had been profoundly changed since the days of Thomas Paine's The Rights of Man and Marx. Many moved left of center and became socialized parts of their economy. No one ever need go hungry in a Scandanavian country. Health care, education, even child care became free in many countries. Many of those same ideals that helped lift the standard of living for all in developed countries then spread, including in Canada and some in the US. And so we see socialism to capitalism as more of a spectrum than a boolean choice now. And totalitarianism, oligarchy, and democracy as a spectrum as well. Many could argue reforms in democratic countries are paid for by lobbyists who are paid for by companies and thus an effective oligarchy. Others might argue the elections in many countries are rigged and so they aren't even oligarchs, they're monarchies. Putin took office in 1999 and while Dmitry Medvedev was the president for a time, but he effectively ruled in a tandemocracy with Putin until Putin decided to get back in power. That's 23 years and counting and just a few months behind when King Abdullah took over in Jordan and King Mohammed VI took over in Morocco. And so while democratic in name, they're not all quite so democratic. Yet they do benefit from technology that began in Western countries and spread throughout the world. Countries like semi-conductor manufacturer Sitronics even went public on the London stock exchange. Hard line communists might (and do) counter that the US has an empire and that western countries conspire for the downfall of Russia or want to turn Russians into slaves to the capitalist machine. As mentioned earlier, there has always been plenty of propaganda in this relationship. Or gaslighting. Or fake news. Or disinformation. One of those American advancements that ties the Russians to the capitalist yoke is interactive computing. That could have been developed in Glushkov's or Kitov's labs in Russia, as they had the ideas and talent. But because the oligarchy that formed around communism, the ideas were sidelined and it came out of MIT - and that led to Project MAC, which did as much to democratize computing as Gorbachev did to democratize the Russian Federation.
durée : 01:25:00 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit, Albane Penaranda, Mathilde Wagman - En septembre 1998, alors que la chaîne Arte s'apprêtait à diffuser "Richter l'insoumis", Bruno Monsaingeon était l'invité de l'émission "Opus". Au micro de Claude Kiejman, il disait comment il avait réalisé ce film et décrivait la personnalité du grand pianiste. - réalisation : Virginie Mourthé - invités : Bruno Monsaingeon musicien, réalisateur, essayiste, ami de Yehudi Menuhin.
Sviatoslav hits the the military campaign trail again but this time with mixed results. There's also more Byzantine double dealing an attack on Kiev and someones skull gets turned into drinking vessel. If you want to subscribe/follow or get in touch - Website = https://www.historyofrussia.net Twitter = @HistoryRussia1 Mail = nordicworld@outlook.com
We look at the life of Sviatoslav, the next man in charge of the Rus starting with his early years, his accession to power, his stance on religion and his first military campaigns and we'll ponder the question - Immature thug or brilliant, long term miltary strategist? And if you want to get in touch then you can in a number of different ways, - via the website -https://www.historyofrussia.net Or you can now comment or follow me on twitter @HistoryRussia1 or follow me or subscribe/follow on whichever platform you listen in on And then there's good old email nordicworld@outlook.com
From Shumsk Ukraine to FLEX in Ohio to the American University in Bulgaria where he is pursuing a Bachelor's Degree in Business Administration, Political Science, and International Relations, Sviatoslav Hryhorenko is the Vice President & PR Manager of "TEDxAUBG" and captain of the AUBG Soccer Team "Vamos Shkembe", as well as an Intern at “Djooky” - a UA-DE-US music startup. His Instagram: @sviatoslav_hryhorenko
durée : 00:58:40 - Disques de légende du mardi 29 septembre 2020 - En septembre 1962, le pianiste soviétique Sviatoslav Richter enregistre le Premier Concerto pour piano de Tchaïkovsky au Musikverein de Vienne, avec l'Orchestre symphonique de Vienne et Herbert von Karajan, pour le label Deutsche Grammophon. C'est l'une des grandes versions de ce concerto.
durée : 00:25:10 - Elisabeth Leonskaja, pianiste (3/5) - par : Emmanuelle Franc - La pianiste russe Elisabeth Leonskaja décrit sa rencontre avec son mari Oleg Kagan, violoniste et étudiant comme elle au conservatoire de Moscou. C'est grâce à lui qu'elle fait la connaissance de l'immense pianiste Sviatoslav Richter, avec qui elle commence rapidement à jouer en duo. - réalisé par : Christine Amado
durée : 01:57:54 - Relax ! du vendredi 19 juin 2020 - par : Lionel Esparza - Nous rendons hommage au metteur en scène et directeur d'opéra Nicolas Joel, décédé hier à l'âge de 67 ans. On évoque aussi la nomination du jeune chef Klaus Mäkelä à l'Orchestre de Paris, et notre légende du jour est la version des concertos de Liszt par Sviatoslav Richter et Kirill Kondrachine. - réalisé par : Antoine Courtin
durée : 00:58:09 - Le Beethoven puissant et narratif de Sviatoslav Richter - par : Aurélie Moreau - Oeuvres de Beethoven, Brahms, Chostakovitch, Rachmaninov et Prokofiev par le pianiste Sviatoslav Richter, qui disait de Beethoven qu'il était "le compositeur des contrastes les plus vifs". - réalisé par : Sophie Pichon
durée : 00:25:10 - Les Grands entretiens - par : Judith Chaine - La pianiste russe Elisabeth Leonskaja décrit sa rencontre avec son mari Oleg Kagan, violoniste et étudiant comme elle au conservatoire de Moscou. C'est grâce à lui qu'elle fait la connaissance de l'immense pianiste Sviatoslav Richter, avec qui elle commence rapidement à jouer en duo.
In this episode, we reminisce about the Detroit Shock and shout out some of the toughest females in the wrestling business!Twitter: PistonsProWrestlingFansEmail: PistonsProWrestlingFans@gmail.com
The UGCC bishops of Canada issued this Pastoral Letter on the occasion of the Third Sunday of Great Lent, Sunday of the Veneration of the Cross. They remind us of the central place of the Cross in our Christian Life, and its unequivocal connection to God's Love for us and to the Resurrection.
This pastoral letter was signed by Patriarch Sviatoslav last month. It addresses the importance of a catechesis rooted in Holy Scripture and provided to all the faithful. In a spirit of transmission of the faith, the letter emphasizes the place of the family, of priests on behalf of their bishop, of catechists and of the parish community. Along with Holy Scripture, it encourages the faithful to turn to the Catechism of our Church, Christ - Our Pascha.
In this week's epsiode, we look at events in Kiev following Sviatoslav's early death.
This week, we take a look at the life and reign of Sviatoslav
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Jacob Rude and Honi Ahmadian are joined by 247 Sports Kansas beat writer Scott Chasen to break down what rookies Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk and Malik Newman can provide for the Lakers.
durée : 01:58:48 - La Biennale de Quatuors à cordes ; Concert d'archives Sviatoslav Richter en musique de chambre - par : Jean-Baptiste Urbain - ## Prélude à l'après-midi **La [Biennale de Quatuors à cordes](https://philharmoniedeparis.fr/fr/biennale-de-quatuors-cordes-15-24-janvier) à la Philharmonie** **Joseph Haydn** _Quatuor à cordes en si bémol majeur op. 76 n° 4 "Lever de soleil"_ : _I. Allegro con spirito_ [Quatuor Modigliani](https://www.modiglianiquartet.com/) Mirare **Samuel Barber** _Quatuor à cordes op. 11_ _: II. Molto adagio_ [Quatuor Diotima](http://quatuordiotima.fr/fr/) Naïve **Maurice Ravel** _Quatuor à cordes en fa majeur_ _: II. Assez vif - Très rythmé_ [Quatuor Hermès](http://www.quatuor-hermes.com/) La Dolce Volta **Emmanuel Chabrier** _J'engraisse : Air de Poussah_ (version pour voix, quatuor à cordes et piano) Philippe Jaroussky, contre-ténor / [Quatuor Ebène](https://www.quatuorebene.com/) / Jérôme Ducros, piano Warner Classics **Anton Dvorak** _Ohlas pisni (Echos de chants, arrangement pour quatuor à cordes de douze des dix-huit Mélodies du cycle Cyprès)_ _:_ _I. Ja vim ze v sladke nadeji (Je sais que sur la foi de mon amour pour toi)_ [Quatuor Thymos](http://www.quatuorthymos.com/Fr_cadre1.htm) Avie **Eduard Grieg** _Quatuor à cordes n° 1 en sol mineur op. 127_ _: IV. Finale : Lento - Presto al saltarello_ [Quatuor David Oïstrakh](http://www.oistrakhquartet.com/) Muso ## Concert d'archives **Benjamin Britten** _Lachrymae pour alto et piano op. 48_ Yuri Bashmet, alto / Sviatoslav Richter Enregistrement Radio France Enregistré le 28 juin 1985 à La Grange de Meslay, aux Fêtes Musicales en Touraine **Robert Schumann** _Quintette pour piano et cordes en mi bémol majeur op. 44_ _I. Allegro brillante II. Un poco largamente in modo d'una marcia III. Scherzo IV. Finale_ Sviatoslav Richter, piano / Quatuor Borodine Enregistrement Radio France Enregistré le 18 juin 1994 à La Grange de Meslay, aux Fêtes Musicales en Touraine ## En complément {% image 296dec54-97f6-4424-a4d9-9fdaaf80ff4d %} **Robert Schumann** _Bilder aus Osten (Images d'Orient), Impromptus pour piano à quatre mains op. 66_ _I. Lebhaft II. Nicht schnell und sehr gesangvoll zu spielen III. Im Volkston IV. Nicht schnell V. Lebhaft VI. Reuig andachtig_ Sviatoslav Richter et Benjamin Britten, piano à quatre mains Music and Arts Enregistré le 21 juin 1966 au Festival d'Aldeburgh - réalisé par : Laurent Lefrançois
Bienvenue pour ce huitième épisode de Coliopod. La nouvelle de ce mois, est l’unique texte disponible en français de l’auteur russe Sviatoslav Loguinov : « Sur quoi pleurent les limaces ». Parue initialement dans le premier numéro de la défunt revu Mythologica, la nouvelle propose une version du mythe slave de la Kikimora. « Sur quoi pleurent les limaces » a été traduite par Viktoriya & Patrice Lajoye et est lue par l’autrice Estelle Faye qui est aussi, en autre, comédienne. « Sur quoi pleurent les limaces » © Sviatoslav Loguinov, Coliopod pour cet enregistrement. Merci aux mécènes sur Tipeee qui ont aidé à la sortie de cet épisode : Lune, Xapur, Cauchy, Clément, Alias
John Tzimiskes pacifies his domestic and foreign enemies as he consolidates his rule. However the Rus leader Sviatoslav makes the decision to move his capital to the Danube forcing the Romans to respond. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Celebrating the 100th anniversary of the birth of Russian pianist, Sviatoslav Richter. Music includes: Liszt: Transendental Etude #5, Chopin: Military Polanaise and Beethoven: Piano Sonata #23.
Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk speaks with reporters about his first semester at Kansas University, and adjusting to not only college basketball, but life in the U.S.
Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk speaks with reporters about his first semester at Kansas University, and adjusting to not only college basketball, but life in the U.S.
Perry Ellis, Devonte' Graham & Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk meet with the media after season-opening win
Perry Ellis, Devonte' Graham & Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk meet with the media after season-opening win
Kansas University freshman Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk, from Ukraine, says he decided to play for the Jayhawks instead of beginning a professional career in Europe because he thought it would give him a better chance of making it to the NBA.
Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk pronounces his name by KU HawkZone
Kansas University freshman Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk, from Ukraine, says he decided to play for the Jayhawks instead of beginning a professional career in Europe because he thought it would give him a better chance of making it to the NBA.