Tumgik
#crimea
Text
Tumblr media
Fountain in the Livadiya Palace's Park, Crimea, Ukraine
Russian vintage postcard, mailed to Paris
40 notes · View notes
kyitsya · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
🩵💛🤝🇺🇦 — may our occupied territories be free soon
1K notes · View notes
sovietpostcards · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Paintings of Crimea by Appolinary Vasnetsov (1890-1920s)
1K notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Sevastopol, Crimea by Ekaterina Dmitrenko
2K notes · View notes
vyvilha · 2 months
Text
russian police in occupied crimea has illegally detained indigenous rights activist lutfiye zudieva. she was among very few people documenting russian persecution against crimean tatars
339 notes · View notes
yellowcry · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Today, it's ten years since the beginning of occupation of Crimea
This war goes on for ten years.
361 notes · View notes
jensweller · 3 months
Text
Serbian actor Miloš Biković, who supports russia, will star in the HBO series The White Lotus.
In 2018, he received the Pushkin Prize from vladimir putin. In 2021, Biković was granted russian citizenship.
He has publicly supported russia's occupation of Crimea.
Tumblr media
would be great if you could follow the link and tag the HBO account to help draw attention to it
339 notes · View notes
pettania · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
On February 20, 2014, Russian soldiers with weapons but without identification marks invaded Ukrainian Crimea. Soon, Russia occupied the peninsula, began armed aggression in the east of Ukraine, and in 2022 — a full-scale war.
Ukraine has been fighting for freedom, justice, and peace for ten years. We fight to liberate Crimea and every Ukrainian village, town, and city. But most importantly, we fight for people who are subjected to terror and intimidation in the temporarily occupied territories yet resist Russia's suppression and wait for Ukraine.
We are at our home, we are with our people, with our dream of a peaceful future and duty to protect what's ours. No one will take our freedom. Because we know what we are fighting for.
243 notes · View notes
humanoidhistory · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Druzhba Sanatorium (health spa), Yalta, Ukraine, 1985. Designed by Igor Vasilevsky.
(Design Milk)
605 notes · View notes
she-is-ovarit · 3 months
Text
Ukrainian saboteurs who are alleged to have poisoned and killed 46 Russian soldiers are on the run in annexed Crimea after a shoot-out with police, a local report says. Two young saboteurs who had poisoned members of the Russian military in Simferopol and Bakhchisarai fled when authorities attempted to detain them in Crimea, Telegram channel Kremlin Snuffbox said on Tuesday. The police went to apprehend the female suspects at a private house in Yalta but were surprised to find them "well armed" and "well prepared," the post said.
The saboteurs opened fire and fled the scene in a car, and authorities do not know their current whereabouts. Three officers were killed and two were wounded in the shoot-out, a source in Russia's Federal Security Service told the Telegram channel. It was reported in December that members of a Ukrainian partisan group called Crimean Combat Seagulls poisoned and killed 24 Russian soldiers after lacing their vodka with arsenic and strychnine. At the time, Snuffbox quoted unnamed sources as saying that "two nice girls" tricked the unit in Simferopol, Crimea, into drinking the vodka, per the Kyiv Post translation. In another incident, saboteurs killed 18 and hospitalized 14 Russian personnel in Bakhchisarai, Crimea, by putting arsenic and rat poison in pies and beer, Kremlin Snuffbox previously reported. Russian military personnel stationed in Crimea have been asked not to take any food or any drinks from strangers and to detain any suspicious young women who approach them to prevent further incidents of poisoning. Business Insider could not independently verify the report. There were also been reports of two mass poisonings of Russian troops in Mariupol in 2023. Acts of sabotage by Ukrainian resistance and partisan groups are used to harass Russian soldiers in Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula occupied by Russia since 2014, and other occupied territories, and supply intelligence for Ukrainian strikes on military installations.
260 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
View of Alupka, Crimea, modern-day Ukraine
Russian vintage postcard
24 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
From the boulevard Yalta, the Crimea , Ukraine
2. The gulf, Yalta, the Crimea, Ukraine
3. Gurzuf from the Yalta Road, the Crimea, Ukraine
4. Gurzuf, the Crimea, Ukraine
5. The Crimea, Alupka. The Imperial palace, Ukraine
6. The church, Baidar, the Crimea, Ukraine
7. Gurzuf, from the Park, the Crimea, Ukraine
8. The gulf, Sebastopol, Ukraine
9. The Khan's palace, Bakhchysaraĭ, Ukraine
10. The harem, Bakhchysaraĭ, Ukraine
Photos were published between 1890 and 1900 and are part of The Photochrom Print Collection, which has almost 6,000 views of Europe and the Middle East and 500 views of North America. Published primarily from the 1890s to 1910s, these prints were created by the Photoglob Company in Zürich, Switzerland, and the Detroit Publishing Company in Michigan. The richly colored images look like photographs but are actually ink-based photolithographs, usually 6.5 x 9 inches.
Source https://www.loc.gov
231 notes · View notes
bobemajses · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Old photographs of Jewish women II
1. Kurdistan; 2. Volhynia region, Ukraine; 3. Yemen; 4. Bukhara, Uzbekistan; 5. Algeria; 6. Crimea; 7. Cracow, Poland; 8. Thessaloniki, Greece; 9. Bulgaria
3K notes · View notes
sovietpostcards · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
“Spring in Gurzuf” by Shaya Bronshtein (1960)
882 notes · View notes
blueiskewl · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Disputed Ukrainian Treasures Returned to Kyiv After Dutch Court Ruling
A haul of Ukrainian treasures sent to Europe for an exhibition nearly 10 years ago have been returned to Kyiv from the Netherlands after a lengthy legal battle.
The collection of ancient artifacts was dispatched to the Netherlands from four museums in Crimea before Russia’s annexation of the region in 2014. But the annexation meant their return has not been straightforward.
“After almost 10 years of litigation, artifacts from four Crimean museums that were presented at the exhibition ‘Crimea: Gold and Secrets of the Black Sea’ in Amsterdam have returned to Ukraine,” the National Museum of History of Ukraine said in a statement.
The collection comprised 565 items, including antique sculptures, Scythian and Sarmatian jewelry, and Chinese lacquer boxes that are 2,000 years old, the museum said.
Rostyslav Karandieiev, Ukraine’s acting minister of culture and information policy, described the treasures’ homecoming as “our great historical victory.”
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
“It is very important for us to save and protect our history, traditions, and heritage. This is what we are fighting for at the battlefield. We are fighting for our identity and freedom,” he said.
“The exhibition in the Netherlands was showing the history of Ukrainian Crimea, therefore it is exclusively the people of Ukraine who should possess these treasures,” he added.
In a statement published on its website, the Allard Pierson museum in Amsterdam confirmed that the collection had been kept in storage while the legal dispute raged on over whether items should be returned to Ukraine or the four museums in Russian-controlled Crimea, with both sides claiming ownership rights over the historic pieces.
Ultimately, the Supreme Court of the Netherlands ruled on June 9 of this year that the collection should be returned to Kyiv.
In its statement, the Allard Pierson museum went on to say that the items were “independently checked and carefully packed in accordance with museum rules” last month and arrived back in Kyiv on Sunday.
Els van der Plas, director of the museum, said in the statement: “This was a special case, in which cultural heritage became a victim of geopolitical developments. After it became clear in 2014 that the judge would consider the case, we focused on safely storing the artefacts until the time came to return them to their rightful owner. We are pleased that clarity has emerged and that they have now been returned.”
Welcoming the development, Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture and Information Policy said in a statement: “Until the de-occupation of Crimea, the ‘Scythian Gold’ will be temporarily stored on the territory of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra.”
By Maria Kostenko, Victoria Butenko and Lianne Kolirin.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
282 notes · View notes
queerism1969 · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
303 notes · View notes