I visited the Marta and Mary convent in 2019 a incredibly lovely and serene place, god bless the holy Martyr Elizabeth Feodorovna , a truly remarkable woman
Thank you for sharing, Darren. We are sure it was a beautiful visit. Please join us for another upcoming "Second Saturday" online lecture! www.russianhistorymuseum.org/events/
Thank you very much. This is such a worthy addition to some issue I was occupied with two years ago. Wladimir Lindenberg was a Russian neurologist, psychiatrist and author 1902 - 1997. He wrote several books about his childhood in old Russia, about the time of revolution, and his chaotic emigration to Germany. He mentioned Elisaveta as his patreon mother (Patenmutter). The German title of the first book is "Marionetten in Gottes Hand." (Puppets in the Hands of God) I didn't find out if a translation exists. Lindenberg's mother was Jadwiga, née Studenska, his father Alexander Tschelistschew was from a Russian noble family. His mother's second husband, the German industrialist Karl Lindenberg, was his stepfather. He initially studied painting under Miginadian and David Burlyuk.[1] After the Russian Revolution, Vladimir Lindenberg had to leave his homeland because of his noble origins. When he began his medical studies at the University of Bonn in 1921, he joined the Nerother Wandervogel, a youth organization. He studied medicine and psychology in Bonn until 1926. After gaining his doctorate in 1928, Lindenberg traveled to Africa and South America as a ship's doctor from 1930. As a neurologist and psychiatrist, he became an assistant to Walther Poppelreuter. The Gestapo took Lindenberg to Neusustrum concentration camp in 1937. After his release in 1941, he moved to Berlin, where he took over the management of the research laboratory of a pharmaceutical company in Berlin-Waidmannslust. The air raids on Berlin caused him to flee from Berlin-Wilmersdorf to Berlin-Schulzendorf in 1944 - together with his wife, the sculptor Dolina Gräfin von Roedern (1887-1966). In 1946/47, he practiced medicine for a short time in a makeshift hospital in Berlin-Heiligensee. From 1947 to 1959, he was chief physician in the special department for brain injuries at the Evangelisches Waldkrankenhaus Berlin-Spandau. Between 1954 and 1977, Lindenberg was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Fürst Donnersmarck Foundation in Berlin. Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
At 18:10 you quote that it was the day that the Tsar and family were taken from Moscow to exile...Of course they were not in Moscow but rather imprisoned at Tsarskoe Selo since the abdication in March of that year.
Thank you Hannah and the RHM Team for facilitating this lecture, and thank you Louise for condensing your countless hours of research into a thoroughly informative and entertaining lecture. Apart from the very moving and tragic story of Elizaveta Feodorovna (rightly sainted as a New Martyr), I now have a new book to read - “Inside the Russian Revolution” by Rheta Louise Childe Dorr, and I was thrilled to learn so much about the artwork of Mikhail Nesterov in particular. Off down those rabbit holes now, with appreciation.
Hello Hannah and Team I have just recently completed listening to your entire playlist and there are just not enough superlatives to describe my appreciation for the scholarship of your staff and guests. Speaking of rabbit holes, I was browsing the body of work of Nesterov [I had not heard of him] and was struck to identify the portrait of Ivan Ilyin. I have read that he is high on the list of recommended reading by President Putin I recently read his 1925 work “On Resistance to Evil By Force”. From Chapter 2 Ilyin: “In fact, what would “non-resistance” [to evil] mean, in the sense of the absence of any resistance? This would mean accepting evil: letting it in and giving it freedom, scope and power. If under these conditions the uprising of evil occurred, and non-resistance continued, it would mean subordination to it, a surrender of the self to it, participation in it, and finally, turning oneself into its instrument, into its body, into its cesspool, its playing, an absorbed element thereof.”
Um, Nicholas and family left not from Moscow, but from the Alexander Palace in Pushkin, 15 miles south of St. Petersburg......they were held in the round ballroom all night with luggage and finally around dawn they were taken to a train and shipped out. In diaries they remark about leaving from that particular room. It must have been so sad for them to say good-bye to their home.
Why did they kill nun? So find out the true essence of modern globalism, which begins its bloody history with the world's first color Revolution, which took place in Russia in 1917 with the same overseas sponsors of all color revolutions in the world today on Wall Street today... starting from the World War I in 1914 and until the end of the World War II in 1945, in just 31 years they turned the whole world upside down, subjugating it to the dollar, which was the original goal of pushing the world into two world wars in this devilish plan, in which the death of one mohini, even of royal blood, was only a drop in the sea of human blood 50 million Europeans, whose lives were sacrificed in the ascent of the dollar under the crown to the top of the main currency of the world! The devil of dollar doesn't need monks... Let me remind you that Trotsky (the ideologist of the bloody revolutionary terror, whose victim was this nun) was a representative of US banks in the first communist government of the USSR
The nurses in the photo with Elizaveta flanked by two recuperating Russian soldiers might be GDs Olga and Tatiana, but I don't have any proof. The closer one looks like Tatiana.....they may have welcomed their aunt to the hospital where they volunteered, showed her around, and posed with her.
interesting but your inability to pronounce the names of flowers ordinary flowers and religious terminology including iconostasis suggests your lack of reading and education
Hi, Andreea! Thank you for watching our recordings and interacting with our channel. To generate subtitles, click "settings" and adjust to your preferences. This article may be helpful: www.washingtonunified.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/How-to-turn-on-subtitles-on-RUclips-1.pdf.
I visited the Marta and Mary convent in 2019 a incredibly lovely and serene place, god bless the holy Martyr Elizabeth Feodorovna , a truly remarkable woman
Thank you for sharing, Darren. We are sure it was a beautiful visit. Please join us for another upcoming "Second Saturday" online lecture! www.russianhistorymuseum.org/events/
A beautiful video. Thank you for putting it together and posting it here.. A very special woman.
I puneți subtitrare in română
Glad you enjoyed it
Thank you very much. This is such a worthy addition to some issue I was occupied with two years ago. Wladimir Lindenberg was a Russian neurologist, psychiatrist and author 1902 - 1997. He wrote several books about his childhood in old Russia, about the time of revolution, and his chaotic emigration to Germany. He mentioned Elisaveta as his patreon mother (Patenmutter). The German title of the first book is "Marionetten in Gottes Hand." (Puppets in the Hands of God) I didn't find out if a translation exists.
Lindenberg's mother was Jadwiga, née Studenska, his father Alexander Tschelistschew was from a Russian noble family. His mother's second husband, the German industrialist Karl Lindenberg, was his stepfather. He initially studied painting under Miginadian and David Burlyuk.[1] After the Russian Revolution, Vladimir Lindenberg had to leave his homeland because of his noble origins.
When he began his medical studies at the University of Bonn in 1921, he joined the Nerother Wandervogel, a youth organization. He studied medicine and psychology in Bonn until 1926. After gaining his doctorate in 1928, Lindenberg traveled to Africa and South America as a ship's doctor from 1930. As a neurologist and psychiatrist, he became an assistant to Walther Poppelreuter.
The Gestapo took Lindenberg to Neusustrum concentration camp in 1937. After his release in 1941, he moved to Berlin, where he took over the management of the research laboratory of a pharmaceutical company in Berlin-Waidmannslust. The air raids on Berlin caused him to flee from Berlin-Wilmersdorf to Berlin-Schulzendorf in 1944 - together with his wife, the sculptor Dolina Gräfin von Roedern (1887-1966). In 1946/47, he practiced medicine for a short time in a makeshift hospital in Berlin-Heiligensee. From 1947 to 1959, he was chief physician in the special department for brain injuries at the Evangelisches Waldkrankenhaus Berlin-Spandau. Between 1954 and 1977, Lindenberg was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Fürst Donnersmarck Foundation in Berlin.
Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
At 18:10 you quote that it was the day that the Tsar and family were taken from Moscow to exile...Of course they were not in Moscow but rather imprisoned at Tsarskoe Selo since the abdication in March of that year.
Thank you Hannah and the RHM Team for facilitating this lecture, and thank you Louise for condensing your countless hours of research into a thoroughly informative and entertaining lecture.
Apart from the very moving and tragic story of Elizaveta Feodorovna (rightly sainted as a New Martyr), I now have a new book to read - “Inside the Russian Revolution” by Rheta Louise Childe Dorr, and I was thrilled to learn so much about the artwork of Mikhail Nesterov in particular. Off down those rabbit holes now, with appreciation.
Thanks again, Julius!
@@RussianHistoryMuseum subtrite in Romanian
Hello Hannah and Team
I have just recently completed listening to your entire playlist and there are just not enough superlatives to describe my appreciation for the scholarship of your staff and guests.
Speaking of rabbit holes, I was browsing the body of work of Nesterov [I had not heard of him] and was struck to identify the portrait of Ivan Ilyin. I have read that he is high on the list of recommended reading by President Putin I recently read his 1925 work “On Resistance to Evil By Force”.
From Chapter 2
Ilyin:
“In fact, what would “non-resistance” [to evil] mean, in the sense of the absence of any resistance? This would mean accepting evil: letting it in and giving it freedom, scope and power. If under these conditions the uprising of evil occurred, and non-resistance continued, it would mean subordination to it, a surrender of the self to it, participation in it, and finally, turning oneself into its instrument, into its body, into its cesspool, its playing, an absorbed element thereof.”
Um, Nicholas and family left not from Moscow, but from the Alexander Palace in Pushkin, 15 miles south of St. Petersburg......they were held in the round ballroom all night with luggage and finally around dawn they were taken to a train and shipped out. In diaries they remark about leaving from that particular room. It must have been so sad for them to say good-bye to their home.
Why in the world would they murder a nun? She had no worldly ideas of politics. Cruel for no reason.
Thank you for watching, Helene. Join us for future programs if you are interested: www.russianhistorymuseum.org/events/.
@@RussianHistoryMuseum hello daca mai publicați ceva cu ea i puneți subtitrare in limba Româna please
Why did they kill nun? So find out the true essence of modern globalism, which begins its bloody history with the world's first color Revolution, which took place in Russia in 1917 with the same overseas sponsors of all color revolutions in the world today on Wall Street today... starting from the World War I in 1914 and until the end of the World War II in 1945, in just 31 years they turned the whole world upside down, subjugating it to the dollar, which was the original goal of pushing the world into two world wars in this devilish plan, in which the death of one mohini, even of royal blood, was only a drop in the sea of human blood 50 million Europeans, whose lives were sacrificed in the ascent of the dollar under the crown to the top of the main currency of the world! The devil of dollar doesn't need monks... Let me remind you that Trotsky (the ideologist of the bloody revolutionary terror, whose victim was this nun) was a representative of US banks in the first communist government of the USSR
Why would they murder innocent children?
Beauty Ella
The nurses in the photo with Elizaveta flanked by two recuperating Russian soldiers might be GDs Olga and Tatiana, but I don't have any proof. The closer one looks like Tatiana.....they may have welcomed their aunt to the hospital where they volunteered, showed her around, and posed with her.
Thank you, Virginia!
Saint Elizabeth New Martyr of Russia, pray for us!
Thanks for watching!
@@RussianHistoryMuseum please translate in Romanian
Buna as rugao pe D-na daca poate sa subtitreze in limba romana videoclipul că nu înțeleg engleza
Superlative and consummate treatment of the Glorified.
interesting but your inability to pronounce the names of flowers ordinary flowers and religious terminology including iconostasis suggests your lack of reading and education
Hello please subtrite in Romaniaj
Hi, Andreea! Thank you for watching our recordings and interacting with our channel. To generate subtitles, click "settings" and adjust to your preferences. This article may be helpful: www.washingtonunified.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/How-to-turn-on-subtitles-on-RUclips-1.pdf.
@@RussianHistoryMuseum nu are subtitrare in limba Româna
@@RussianHistoryMuseum nu are subtitrare in limba Româna