MOSCOW || INSIDE A CAR MUSEUM || RUSSIA
One day out in Moscow. After internship classes in MIPT. [Students From JIS College of Engineering]
???? Museum of Soviet ARCADE MACHINES (Budget Travel Russia) {St. Petersburg, RUSSIA}
Budget Travel Russia #13
Vintage Soviet arcade machines are no longer relegated to the relics of forgotten electronics. Tucked away from the main sights along Nevsky Street in St. Petersburg, a converted warehouse contains refurbished arcade games honoring USSR technology.
Dozens of vintage Soviet arcade machines are on display at which to be admired, gawked and yes, played in this interactive museum. While it is said the technology of the USSR was always behind the West, and these games would be a prime example, these video games, pinballs and tabletop sports still display a level of technological sophistication that made them fun to play decades ago and even more enjoyable today with their nostalgia.
Matt captures some of the Museum's exuberance and even tries his hand at pulling the Giant Turnip. You have to be there to get it.
Budget Travel St. Petersburg #5
Museum of Soviet Arcade Machines:
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Our Russian Holiday 2019 | Izmaylovo Kremlin and Vodka Museum (Episode 2)
In today's episode we explore one of the most colourful structures in the world, the Izmaylovo Kremlin! We even have a look at vodka museum!
Russia: ‘Pobeda’ vintage train finishes Victory Day celebration tour in Rostov
A vintage steam train called 'Pobeda' [Victory] finished its south-Russian tour at Rostov-on-Don’s main railway station on Friday, commemorating the 75th anniversary of the region's liberation from Nazi-German forces.
The journey took two weeks to complete, during which the train travelled through the North Caucasus, as well as Krasnodar, Tuapse and Novorossiysk.
The carriages were also identical to those used during the Great Patriotic War, including heated freight cars, flatbeds and living quarters. All the equipment was provided by the Museum of North Caucasus Railway.
The journey comes ahead of the 2018 Victory Day festivities, set to take place across Russia on May 9, marking the anniversary of the official capitulation of Nazi Germany to Soviet forces.
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Video ID: 20180427 047
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Exhibition in All-Russian Museum of Decorative Art. Moscow, 2013
I created this video with the YouTube Slideshow Creator (
Vladivostok HAUTE COUTURE - Старинная мода в наши дни
Что носили дети в 19 веке? Где сегодня бывают полезными атрибуты старинной моды? И как во Владивостоке прошел День красоты? Смотрите в десятом выпуске проекта Vladivostok HAUTE COUTURE
#8канал #ВладивостокОтКутюр #VladivostokHauteCouture #vdk
Russia: Thirty legendary T-34 tanks returned to Russia by Laos
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The Lao People's Democratic Republic has returned 30 legendary T-34-85 tanks to the Russian Federation, as shown in footage shot in Vladivostok and released on Wednesday.
“These T-34-85 [tanks] were returned to the Russian Federation in the full working order. They are ready to be used which means that they did not lose their combat capacity and their combat power,” General-major Alexander Khanov, head of the Armoured Automobile Service, said.
The tanks have been in active service in Laos since 1987. Following a visit by Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu in January last year, the two countries agreed that the vehicles would be returned to Russia.
The tanks will be transported to Naro-Fominsk in the Moscow Region, after which they are expected to be used as museum exhibits, film props and participate in parades.
Video ID: 20190109-020
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YESTERDAY'S NEWSREEL WILEY POST SOLO FLIGHT U.S. TROOPS IN SIBERIA RUSSIAN CIVIL WAR 54944
Episode 64 of “Yesterday’s Newsreel” provided viewers “television highlights of the news of yesteryear” by providing vintage clips of famous people and events from the first half of the 20th century. This episode opens with pilot Wiley Post’s solo flight around the world in 1933 (mark 00:43) with numerous scenes from the historic event and the celebrations that followed, including a meeting with New York City Mayor John O’Brien (mark 03:30). US Soldiers Sail for Siberia” (mark 04:20) tells how US troops headed to Russia during the Bolshevik Revolution, with many returning later with Russian war brides. “Personalities of 1930” (mark 05:30) include a birthday celebration for German field marshal and president Paul von Hindenburg, plus silent film stars Hope Hampton and Ben Turpin. Scenes of New York subway accidents and disasters are recalled starting at mark 07:10, followed by a trip to 1930 and a comical look of “London’s Best Basket Balancer” (mark 08:15). At mark 08:53, the film introduces us to Jesuit Father Johannes Hagen, director of the Vatican Observatory and the only American on the staff of Pope Pius XI, and we see scenes of him at work. Fashion from 1920 are shown beginning at mark 09:43, as are a few of the sports stars from circa 1930 (mark 10:44), including Canadian figure skater Constance Wilson-Samuel and 1929 Indianapolis 500 winner Ray Keech.
The American Expeditionary Force Siberia (AEF Siberia) was a United States Army force that was involved in the Russian Civil War in Vladivostok, Russian Empire, during the end of World War I after the October Revolution, from 1918 to 1920. As a result of this expedition, which failed but became known to the Bolsheviks, early relations between the United States and the Soviet Union would be low.
U.S. President Woodrow Wilson's claimed objectives for sending troops to Siberia were as much diplomatic as they were military. One major reason was to rescue the 40,000 men of the Czechoslovak Legion, who were being held up by Bolshevik forces as they attempted to make their way along the Trans-Siberian Railroad to Vladivostok, and it was hoped, eventually to the Western Front. Another major reason was to protect the large quantities of military supplies and railroad rolling stock that the United States had sent to the Russian Far East in support of the prior Russian government's war efforts on the Eastern Front. Equally stressed by Wilson was the need to steady any efforts at self-government or self defense in which the Russians themselves may be willing to accept assistance. At the time, Bolshevik forces controlled only small pockets in Siberia and President Wilson wanted to make sure that neither Cossack marauders nor the Japanese military would take advantage of the unstable political environment along the strategic railroad line and in the resource-rich Siberian regions that straddled it.
Concurrently and for similar reasons, about 5,000 American soldiers were sent to Arkhangelsk (Archangel), Russia by Wilson as part of the separate Polar Bear Expedition.
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This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit
Izmailovo Kremlin, Moscow
Izmailovo Kremlin
Moscow's other, lesser known kremlin is a fairytale-like cultural complex modeled after Old Russia.
As the symbol of the Russian state, the Kremlin in Moscow’s Red Square is famed and celebrated. But there is a second, less known Kremlin in the northeast part of the city. Located near the Serebryano-Vinogradny Pond, the Kremlin in the city’s Izmailovo District is an unexpected, fairytale-like cultural wonderland.
Kremlin is the Russian word for citadel or fortress, and they are found in many Russian cities. But the Izmailovo Kremlin, a wooden complex completed in 2007, was not built for protection as its name suggests. It was established as a cultural center and marketplace loosely modeled after traditional Russian architecture and fairytale depictions of Old Russia. Wander about and you will spot the Romanov emblem of a crowned griffin decorating everything from buildings to fences, as well as a pink statue of Lenin which has caused some mild outrage.
The colorful and bustling complex is home to several single-subject museums. One is dedicated to Russian folk art, another to bread, and yet another to vodka. It includes a wooden replica of the summer palace of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, where visitors can experience a traditional Russian meal. It is also home to the Church of St. Nicholas, named after the patron saint of crafts and trade, which at 151 feet in height is the tallest wooden church in the country.
Next to the Kremlin is the Izmailovo District’s landmark open-air market, which dates back to the 17th century, when it was an avant-garde market selling original paintings, crafts, and wares. The market is now connected to the Izmailovo Kremlin by a wooden bridge. Taking the appearance of a town, with roofed stalls lining a maze of walkways, it is divided into two tiers: the Vernissage for souvenirs and traditional handicrafts, and the flea market for all else. The bazaar is attended by merchants from regions all over Russia and is a favored shopping destination for locals and tourists alike, brimming with items ranging from books, baskets, retro toys and furniture to Soviet memorabilia, fur hats, nesting dolls, and traditional artwork.
Entering the Izmailovo Kremlin is like stepping back in time. Most popular during the summer and on weekends, the complex and its labyrinthine market space are equally charming during quiet, uncrowded hours.
The Caucasian VI Steam Train Tour 2018
This Cruising on Rail episode, filmed exclusively for Golden Eagle Luxury Trains by AwayTV documents the Caucasian VI steam train tour we operated from Moscow in September 2018.
The Golden Eagle train was hauled throughout by 21 different Soviet-era steam locomotives, covering 3,500 miles from Moscow down to the North Caucasus and along the waters of the Black Sea coast, before looping back to the Russian capital.
Tour itinerary; Moscow – Saratov – Astrakhan – Grozny – Vladikavkaz - Kislovodsk - Pyatigorsk – Zheleznovodsk – Apsheronsk (for Guamka) – Sochi – Gagra – Krasnodar – Rostov – Volgograd – Moscow
RUSSIA: REBIRTH OF RELIGION BOOSTS ICON BUSINESS
Russian/Nat
Better known for tales of economic woe, Russia's provinces have produced a business success story with a difference. It's key: the factory has God on its side.
The massive rebirth of religion in Russia has filled the order books and created thousands of new jobs at an icon workshop outside Moscow.
Resurrecting centuries old traditions, the factory has also become a one-stop shopping mall for priests from the Polish border to the Pacific Ocean.
These are the sounds of a spiritual revolution.
Low tones of the Orthodox liturgy issue from ever more of Russia's churches.
In the years following communism's demise, ten thousand parishes have been reconstituted.
Billions of roubles have been channelled into resurrecting Russia's religious heritage.
For the faithful, it is the answer to a prayer.
For the clergy, it's become something of a headache: thousands of restored churches demand icons, vestments and gilded ornaments.
But under communism, much of the trappings of the Orthodox faith were either melted down or squirreled away into museum vaults. Equipping the parish churches is no easy task.
The factory in Sofrino could be any other ex-Soviet plant. But here the rooftop slogans exhort the nation to keep the new faith.
Inside the grounds, a portrait of Patriarch Alexy II replaces the old images of Lenin.
This is the industrial powerhouse of the Orthodox revival.
Painters meticulously work on icons, restoring a centuries old tradition.
Icon-painting all but disappeared after the revolution.
The techniques and styles now have to be learnt from books and museum exhibits.
The massive demand means the factory staff has grown from 500 to three thousand since the workshops opened.
And the results - like this gold and enamel altar bible - are breathtaking.
As the chief jeweller explains, demand has been fueled by the reluctance of museums to return their treasures.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
Our work is to restore. In seventy years (of communism) an awful lot of destruction was wrought upon our churches and cathedrals. Many things are now in museums and they are unwilling to give them up - even though they have no need for them and a lot are hidden away in basements and vaults.
SUPER CAPTION: Andrei Klushnikov, Chief Jeweller
Not all of the factory's work is as painstaking. This machine can stitch vestments for eight bishops at once.
At the print shop, hundreds of church calendars come off the presses daily.
And they cater to every priest's pocket - these paper icons sell for a few cents a piece while 17-thousand (US) dollars is the asking price for a complete set of icons in the factory showroom.
Together with its store in Moscow, the factory is a one-stop shopping centre for priests from the Polish border to Vladivostok.
Eleven time zones makes for a sizeable market - and the Sofrino factory has it virtually to itself.
The workshops also take occasional civilians orders - President Yeltsin ordered souvenirs for his G-7 guests at their recent Moscow meeting.
Yet despite the big business, one thing stops the factory really moving into mass production.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
Some (of our painters) learned faster than others, some slower, but on average it takes around eight years before you can fully feel what it is you are working on.
SUPER CAPTION: Alexander Moskalionov, Head of Icon Workshop
But with the order books full for the foreseeable future, the second coming for Russia's orthodox artisans looks set to run and run.
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Post WWI street scenes in snow-covered Petrograd, Russia. HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
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Post WWI street scenes in snow-covered Petrograd, Russia.
Russian people going about their routine activities in Petrograd, Russia, immediately following World War One. People walk on the snow covered sidewalks. The city looks metropolitan, with offices and shops. A horse-drawn sled moves on the street. Women perform heavy labor shoveling snow. Location: Petrograd Russia. Date: 1919.
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AEF IN SIBERIA
AEF IN SIBERIA - Department of Defense - PIN 30165 - VIGNETTE OF THE EXPEDITIONARY FORCE WHICH VISITED RUSSIA FOLLOWING WORLD WAR I - THEIR MISSION AND ACTIVITIES WHILE IN THE USSR.
A man displays Dayfield Body Shield showing front and back portions of the body a...HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
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A man displays Dayfield Body Shield showing front and back portions of the body armour in the United Kingdom, World War 1
A man displays a Dayfield Body Shield vest standing in a field in the United Kingdom during World War I. He displays the back and front portions of the body armour vest which weighed 15-20 pounds and had metal plates sewn in the fabric. Fence and trees can be seen in the background. Location: United Kingdom. Date: 1917.
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57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.
Russian Soldiers board train as Russia begins withdrawal of 41,000 troops from Ea...HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
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Russian Soldiers board train as Russia begins withdrawal of 41,000 troops from East Berlin, Germany.
Russian troops march as Russia begins withdrawal of 41,000 troops from East Berlin, Germany, with an initial departure by 500 troops. Posters of two leaders on wall. German on a board. Russian soldiers board railroad train. Soldiers with flowers in hand. Train and obsolete T-34 tanks depart East Germany by rail. Location: East Berlin Germany. Date: 1958.
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Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.
[상트와숑] 브이로그#10 러시아에서 꼭 사야하는 명품 그릇 | 최초!!! 명품그릇 언박싱 | 임페리얼포슬린 | 로마노소프도자기
러시아 여행을 계획하고 계시다면 꼭 사야할 명품 그릇 소개해드려요~
임페리얼포슬린 박물관 정보
State Hermitage. Museum of the Imperial Porcelain Factory
Obukhovskoy Оborony Ave, д. 151, St Petersburg, 192171
8 (812) 326-46-20
ipm.ru
네이버 카페 '러시아를 사랑하는 사람들의 모임'
팟캐스트 '보드카 먹은 불곰'
GHOST TRAMS OF RUSSIA
in many cities of russia the tram is dying. trams no longer exist in Astrakhan, Ivanovo, Voronezh and recently Ryazan!... they want to kill off the trams in many other Russian cities. Trams are ecologically friendly.. replacing the trams are dirty buses. Other countries of the world have either brought back their tram system, upgraded or built their trams. If used correctly, trams help solve traffic congestion. Russia don't kill your trams. it is not a good thing...
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russia's tram system is disappearing in many parts of the country. They have been killed in some cities while others they are fading away while in other cities the tram is under threat... Progress has deteriorated in Russia for the tram.
While Russia kills its trams other countries (which did the same thing as Russia: 50 yrs ago however) are finally bringing back or buildling new whole entire tram system
Russian soldier guards a train in Russia during World War I. HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
Link to order this clip:
Historic Stock Footage Archival and Vintage Video Clips in HD.
Russian soldier guards a train in Russia during World War I.
Allied Expeditionary Forces in Siberia, Russia during World War I. Russian soldiers on a train car and guard a train. Artillery kept on a train car. A soldier guards a train. Location: Russia. Date: 1918.
Visit us at CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.
Lend-Lease Vehicles in the Red Army
Duration : 7:51
Cast [in order of appearance] :
0:00
US6 Studebaker in Iran
0:02
Dodge WF-32 in Iran
0:04
[Un]loading Jeep [non-Lend-Lease]
0:10
US M3 APC halftrack on rail flatcar [non-Lend-Lease]
In the back : Ward la France (?)
US GMC CCKW353 [non-Lend-Lease]
0:19
FDR signing documents
0:29
Dodge WF-32 on the march
0:33
Unloading one of 43,728 Jeeps in Murmansk
0:39
Ford G8T in a row
375,883 trucks delivered in total
0:45
Harley-Davidson WLA-42 Motorcycle
35,170 delivered in total
0:51
Halftracks in Iran
4,614 APCs delivered in total
3,786,000 tires
2,670,000 tons of fuel
1:12
US6 Studebaker at the Murmansk docks
1:20
A.Mikoyan - Lend-Lease Soviet supervisor
-- Persian Corridor (Iran) --
1:25
Dodge WF-32 lined up in Iran
1:40
M3A1 White Scout Car on the march in Iran
1:45
Arctic Convoy
2:23
Halftracks lined up in Iran
2:27
M5A1/M9A1 (!) un der Soviet service
2:33
T-48 (SU-57) Halftrack
2:45
Reo 28XS tank transporter lined up
2:51
US6 Studebaker transport column on the march
-- Transsib --
3:28
Train with Dodge WF-32 coming from Vladivostok
3:38
Ford G8T on the march
3:43
US6 Studebaker entering Bucarest, August 31,1944
3:52
Renault AH? trophy leading ZiS-5 truck column [non-Lend-Lease]
3:58
Willys MB / Ford GPW Jeep
4:27
Jeep towing 45mm AT Gun
4:40
Ford GPA
5:04
Dodge WC51 with 12.7mm DShK hMG mounted (!!)
5:25
Dodge WC53 (!)
5:35
BM-13-16 rocket launcher under canvas on US6 chassis
5:46
US6 Studebaker with N2P Pontoon parts (!)
6:04
Ford G8T
6:13
BM-13-16 rocket launcher under canvas on US6 chassis entering Sofia
6:16
BM-13-16 rocket launcher on US6 chassis in action
6:21
BM-13-16 rocket launcher on British WOT8 chassis
6:24
BM-13-16 rocket launcher on Chevrolet G-7107 chassis
6:27
BM-13-16 rocket launcher on Ford-Marmon chassis
6:30
BM-13-16 rocket launcher on US6 chassis in action
6:36
BM-13-16 rocket launcher on ZIS-6 chassis in action [non-Lend-Lease]
6:44
US6 soft cab entering Bucarest
6:55
Studebaker US6 U-2 BZ-35S tanker on the march
7:15
Red Square victory parade with US6 M-8.48 rocket launcher
7:38
Loading ex-German Einheitsdiesel [non-Lend-Lease]
7:46
Dodge WF-32 in Northern Caucasus
7:48
GMC CCW-353 (!!) M-13-16 rocket launcher on parade
Moscow and Leo Tolstoy (my favorite Russian writer), Russia
Impressive architecture (July 2019)