Before the Revolution | The Extravagant Lives of Russia’s Nobility

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  • Опубликовано: 22 июн 2022
  • Before the revolution, the Russian elite lived decadent lives. This video details the lifestyle of Russia’s aristocracy, who are now known as Russia’s former people.

Комментарии • 51

  • @lavishhistory9751
    @lavishhistory9751  2 года назад +11

    Thank you for watching! Don’t forget to like, comment and subscribe for more videos!

  • @annak.9054
    @annak.9054 Год назад +60

    I recently finished Tolstoy’s novel, Anna Karenina. All the parties, dinners, and extravagance was so beautifully illustrated throughout the story. I’d be surprised if you hadn’t read Anna K. because you nailed the aristocratic culture on the head.

    • @michaelodhiambo8375
      @michaelodhiambo8375 6 месяцев назад +2

      I read Anna Karenina some times back. Tolstoy explicitly illustrate the lifestyle of Russian nobility, but he acknowledged that the system was unfair. He was wondering how the peasants could in the farms of the nobility with their children, sometimes for the whole night but all they could make in a year was equivalent to what the nobility could make in a day.

    • @zainabsyedahmed5194
      @zainabsyedahmed5194 Месяц назад

      Omg! I am here on the same account....Anna karenina...

  • @RANDOMraspberry1
    @RANDOMraspberry1 2 года назад +30

    These paintings and stories resemble so much of what my great grandma used to talk about when she’d be speaking about her childhood. They left St. Petersburg when the revolution happened, changed names and never came back - I hope I can discover their noble name.

    • @PavelAVasilevich
      @PavelAVasilevich Год назад +5

      Распутина???

    • @zhulyi
      @zhulyi 9 месяцев назад

      People's kids were poisoned and that's after the revolution and far from Russia.

  • @lenietrollip486
    @lenietrollip486 4 дня назад

    Beautifully done, thank you. What a cultured society, vivid and many distinguished composers also.

  • @premodernprejudices3027
    @premodernprejudices3027 11 месяцев назад +10

    In other words, the country was tragically ripe for the horror of communist revolution. We would do well to pay attention to the plight of the working or out of work middle class here in America, rather than scapwgoating them as "deplorables," or "racists," or "bigots," and so on.

    • @Warcrimeenthusiast
      @Warcrimeenthusiast 10 месяцев назад +1

      Spot on

    • @zonilo1
      @zonilo1 5 месяцев назад +1

      "rather than scapegoating them as "deplorables," or "racists," or "bigots," and so on."
      Because they are much like yourself more than likely.

  • @kristenthomas3985
    @kristenthomas3985 2 года назад +4

    Thanks 😊

  • @ClanImprobable
    @ClanImprobable Год назад +2

    Thank you, what a lovely video.

  • @joelgustafson8283
    @joelgustafson8283 Год назад +2

    This deserves way more views, very well done!

  • @ksmith610
    @ksmith610 2 года назад +15

    Your voice is lovely. I could listen to it for a long time. Please note, though, that the word is pronounced “air-is-TOCK-ruh-see. Please do make more videos!

    • @lavishhistory9751
      @lavishhistory9751  2 года назад +10

      You’re very sweet! And thank you for the correction, I honestly had no idea I was pronouncing it wrong.

    • @mediocremaiden8883
      @mediocremaiden8883 2 года назад +7

      Actually it depends on the region. New Wnglander Americans pronounce it that way, but I wouldn't say that's the "correct" way. It's just how we pronounce it because of Regional Dialect.

  • @moritzwilhelme.1333
    @moritzwilhelme.1333 Год назад +10

    Your videos are incredibly professional, thank you so much! The information you provide, combined with the choice of paintings, gives a really vivid and extensive insight into the lives of Russia's nobility. I am looking forward to your future videos!
    Are you planning to limit your content to depicting particular lifestyles and persons? Or are you also interested in portraying broader historical developments regarding the aristocracy?

  • @stevenwillard8436
    @stevenwillard8436 7 месяцев назад

    This video was precisely what I hoped it would be. I didn’t expect it to be so hypnotic, though.

  • @ioan_jivan
    @ioan_jivan Год назад

    Great video :D

  • @whitneycloud9419
    @whitneycloud9419 2 месяца назад

    Lovely and informative video--really gives a taste of Russian aristocratic life! New subscriber here.

  • @chrisoleary9876
    @chrisoleary9876 Год назад +4

    Aristocracy..air-iss-toc-rah-see.

  • @singhsahab9874
    @singhsahab9874 Год назад

    A saturday night john and stella....

  • @NigelFowlerSutton
    @NigelFowlerSutton Год назад +2

    There was no difference between the lives of the Russian nobility and those in Britain before the Revolution. The great aristocratic mansions and palaces of Britain of which there are still many were also lavish with many household servants. The "season" the traditional annual period runs from April to August when members of the upper classes hold balls, dinner parties and charity events. And remains to this day.

    • @hazel2546
      @hazel2546 Год назад +4

      British nobility are significant less lavish than the Russians were, just compare Sandringham house of the British royals with Catherine the Winter Palace of the Russian Royals... both were the winter residences!

    • @NigelFowlerSutton
      @NigelFowlerSutton Год назад

      @@hazel2546 You cannot compare Sandringham to the Winter Palace. Sandrigham is the equivalent of a Russia dacba or hunting lodge. And to be perfectly correct, the Winter Palace was not a winter residence. The palace was the official residence of the Tsars.
      One final and most important point I aluded to was a comparison to their lives, not their palaces.

    • @prabowodjojominarso6151
      @prabowodjojominarso6151 Год назад

      The british nobility lived less lavish life than their russian counterpart

    • @zonilo1
      @zonilo1 5 месяцев назад

      @@prabowodjojominarso6151That's because that's their Protestantism showing compared to the Russians and it's also the same reason why the United States is even less lavish than anywhere in Europe where the worst of the Protestants went to....

  • @kelvinsande
    @kelvinsande Месяц назад +1

    The is no difference of the Russia nobility and french nobility

  • @saccharinesilk
    @saccharinesilk Год назад +1

    1:09 that's not a russian manor, that's mavisbank house, in scotland

    • @saccharinesilk
      @saccharinesilk Год назад +1

      8:38 less eggregious, this is not a palace as the narration implies, it's stieglitz mansion

    • @hyltonfalgate1789
      @hyltonfalgate1789 2 месяца назад

      Yes, quite, so many of the representations are famous French paintings, not Russian at all.

    • @piplebref4607
      @piplebref4607 22 дня назад

      @@hyltonfalgate1789 Or elsewhere. At 2 mins the painting is of the Heldenplatz, Vienna.

    • @meeeka
      @meeeka 3 дня назад

      Not Annikov Palace, An-inich-kov (1st syllable emphasis) Palace.
      The irony of course is that the Russian court looked to France and the French courts, both Bourbon and Napoleonic, for style guidance, even tho the Russian nobility was closely intermarried with the German and Danish smaller courts, as well with some families of Austria Hungarian origin. Still, the Russian seemed to intermarry best with the German and Danish speaking courts.

  • @justinleemiller
    @justinleemiller 8 месяцев назад

    Many nannies from French speaking countries or Britain

  • @TERRANOVAofficial
    @TERRANOVAofficial Год назад

    ok basically like every other monarchy only a little behind and leaning towards kitsch - that hasnt changed. this reminds me of the music in supermarkets

  • @nicolasuribestanko
    @nicolasuribestanko Год назад +3

    The video is OK, but the narration is.... kinda like a mosquito in my ear.

  • @user-le8md3xv5m
    @user-le8md3xv5m Месяц назад

    Only utilisation

  • @lightdarklightdarklightdark
    @lightdarklightdarklightdark 5 месяцев назад

    :)

  • @tracyanne8616
    @tracyanne8616 10 месяцев назад +1

    It was very nice but you do really need to seek out to say aristocracy correctly.

  • @MorningGlory62
    @MorningGlory62 2 года назад +6

    Wow, this version, depicts them as if they had no invention or culture or fashion, etc.. of their own. As if they longed to be French! Insulting.
    Can't wait to see if the Saudi Arabian royals, African, Chinese, Japanese, etc.. are depicted as French whatabe's also.

    • @MariiaDotsenko
      @MariiaDotsenko Год назад +3

      But it was so. In 17 century the rulers of Russian empire took everything from Europe.

  • @trineperstuen7011
    @trineperstuen7011 Год назад +1

    It would have been nice with real pictures😢..this was kinda boring😢.

  • @gabrielmarceloecheverriadi2286
    @gabrielmarceloecheverriadi2286 Год назад +1

    My dear, the communist Nomenklatura and leadership act, behave and live in the same way that the nobility they hated meanwhile belch citations of Marx and the benefits of the revolution ( for them and not for the ones like you and me). Russian nobility was not different from the English, German nobility and French haute bourgeois...

    • @grigol101
      @grigol101 Год назад +1

      It is not true. I am not a supporter of revolutions, but the nobles themselves brought to this situation. To be fair, communists didn't live like that. After Stalin's death, only a couple of military jackets remained from his personal property. The children of members of the Central Committee of the CPSU fought in the Great Patriotic War, like ordinary soldiers. Power was not inherited. The communists introduced the standards of free education, free medical care, an eight-hour working day, equal rights for women, and so on for the whole world. But the main thing is that the communists developed industrial production and science. Stalin managed to win all the wars and build a nuclear and space superpower out of a backward peasant country.

  • @zoyai
    @zoyai Год назад

    Nice presentation but too focused on a 'feministic' pov.

  • @faziletharezmsah7977
    @faziletharezmsah7977 2 года назад +9

    Young talented historian