Rating of audiobooks on Russian history. Audiobook Audio library “Knowledge is power” - History of world civilizations
Photo: personal Facebook page
It makes no sense to introduce this person in literary circles. For everyone else, an explanation: perhaps the most famous contemporary researcher in Russia of American literature of the 20th century, aestheticism, European modernism and the author of several fiction books. On his website or official YouTube channel there is a whole selection of free lectures on Salinger, Kafka, Eliot and Oscar Wilde. It is simply contraindicated for anyone interested in foreign literature to pass by.
"Gutenberg Smoking Room"
A relatively recent non-profit educational project specializing in live events held in Moscow and other large cities. Recordings of speeches by local lecturers are posted in the official VKontakte group in completely open access. The range of topics is incredibly wide - as the organizers themselves write, “in one evening a biologist, philologist and cosmologist can speak to you.” The format is rather popular science and more than fascinating.
Despite the sufficient popularity of this resource, it is impossible not to say something about it. This site, popular all over the world, creates sequential courses of lectures and weekly exercises, which can be viewed and completed completely free of charge by any registered user. Most courses require an online exam at the end. More than 109 different universities, mostly foreign, are involved in the development of materials. Dominates here, of course, English language, but if you want, it’s easy to gnaw on the granite of science with the help of the great and mighty. There are, for example, courses from the Higher School of Economics or joint laboratories of ABBYY and Digital October.
Academic Earth
Another academic English-language resource. As in the case of Coursera, many different universities are participating in the development of the project, including Harvard, Princeton, Stanford and other big names. Also presented are mainly courses, all materials of which are available for free download. A separate big advantage is the local interface: Academic Earth is always happy to tell its visitor what to go and see, there is a convenient division by university, specialty and level of difficulty. Many video lectures are posted separately from the main courses in a special section, and you don’t even need to log in to view them. True, here you will not find texts and videos in Russian, so you will have to educate yourself in the language of Shakespeare.
Arzamas
The list cannot ignore the project of the former editor-in-chief of the magazine “Big City” Philip Dzyadko, who shot loudly this year. Arzamas offers its users entire courses consisting of video lectures, articles and documentary photo galleries. Entirely and completely focused on the humanities. Here you can learn how to listen to classical music, what St. Petersburg was like on the eve of the 1917 revolution, read about the beliefs of South American Indians or about the theater of the English Renaissance. Fortunately, the project is completely Russian-language.
"Skepticism"
An online magazine that also regularly publishes printed almanacs. Offers its readers materials of a truly academic level. Therefore, it is not worth starting with it to try to understand, for example, capitalism at the beginning of the 20th century. But for people interested in history, culture, sociology, religion or philosophy, the resource is absolutely invaluable. A characteristic feature of Skepticism is that the magazine’s authors do not hesitate to speak out on current issues in their articles and lectures. modern themes, be it education or political manipulation. The editor-in-chief is Sergei Solovyov, Candidate of Philosophical Sciences.
Khan Academy
The project of Bangladeshi native and Harvard graduate Salman Khan is not being exchanged for additional materials. All that is there is a whole galaxy of micro-lectures on all possible scientific specialties. Moreover, despite the serious academic approach, many disciplines are taught here starting from the most basic fundamentals. Of course, it will not be possible to study these disciplines deeply, but it is easy to get a general idea. The site exists thanks to donations, with a significant portion of financial support provided by Google. They are also involved in translating the Academy’s videos into world languages (the list so far, however, only includes English, Spanish, French, Norwegian, Portuguese and Turkish).
Education
Let's return to the most popular site in RuNet - the social network vk.com. Education is an extremely curious community that exists exclusively on VKontakte. The public administration posts video and audio recordings of lectures with enviable regularity, mainly in the humanities and natural sciences. It’s distinctive that here you can also listen to non-modern materials, such as, for example, conversations about culture with Joseph Brodsky - this is also part of the community’s content. There are also movies, documentaries and more, and audiobooks.
"Orpheus"
Radio station "Orpheus" not only gives you the opportunity to listen to classical music, but also learn more about it and culture in general. Recordings of programs are presented in large quantities on the official website. Franco Zeffirelli, Stanley Kubrick, Johann Sebastian Bach and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Lloyd-Webber and rock operas - all in the format of twenty- and thirty-minute recordings of radio broadcasts. It is unlikely that anywhere else you can find such a large number of truly interesting and professionally made podcasts in Russian.
Lectures by Alexander Pyatigorsky
Photo: from the archive of Alexander Pyatigorsky
The Andrei Bely Prize winner, Soviet-British philosopher and orientalist, translator from dead languages, Alexander Pyatigorsky, is an almost legendary personality. On the Radio Liberty website you can listen to the full cycle of his lectures on various philosophical ideas from Buddha and Zarathustra to Sartre and Chomsky. The lectures are quite short - eight minutes each - but extremely informative. Each text is accompanied by a small professional commentary, making it easier to understand the material.
Lectures by Natalia Basovskaya
Photo: Natalia Krasilnikova / PhotoXPress
The Ekho Moskvy radio project, the program “Everything is So,” is a series of conversations on the topic of foreign history. Author - Natalya Basovskaya, medievalist, doctor historical sciences, the largest Russian expert on the Hundred Years' War. All materials exist in both text and podcast form. You will not find here a recitation of historical facts and sequential events. The emphasis is on analyzing the logic of the historical process, the meaning of various cultural myths, periods and events.
TED
Since 1984, the annual TED conference has been held in the United States, dedicated to “technology, design and entertainment.” It featured the first presentation of the CD, the Macintosh computer, and the first experiments in creating artificial intelligence. Participants include scientists from around the world, public figures and Nobel laureates. The official TED website is a treasure trove for those who want to learn about new developments in any field of science. Speeches from the main conference and local TED events are posted here and just individual lectures. Knowledge of English is necessary, but this is perhaps the only negative. The resource is extremely conveniently organized, synchronized with all major social networks, and there is an excellent system for searching for materials and news.
18th century in history
element-529452-snd1-ne_tak-26-07-1 element-529452-snd2-ne_tak-26-07-2 Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” S. BUNTMAN: Good afternoon. Sergei Buntman at the microphone. This is our program, jointly with the magazine “Knowledge is Power”, I hope that you are now convinced after hearing Elena Syanova in “The Price of Victory” that she is indeed on vacation and in August we are starting a new cycle. And now(…)
18th century in Russia: Middle Ages or Modern times?
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on January 15, 2001. The program “Not So” is live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow”. Our guest is historian Alexander Kamensky. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S.BUNTMAN: Good evening. They asked questions on the Internet, I hope that they will also be sent via pager. Here such a fundamental question came to us from Pskov (...)
18th century: expansion of Russia's borders
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on April 26, 2003. Live on “Echo of Moscow” Alexander Kamensky, historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S.BUNTMAN: So, the 18th century, the expansion of the borders of Russia. Today we are completing the epic of the 18th century, we are approaching a key era, the Catherine era, which is the most important and stable, which laid the foundation for many things that, if not (...)
1812 In search of a pitched battle
4-2012-08-25-netak-1408 Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” SERGEY BUNTMAN: Well, then? Dear friends, we are continuing our series, and now before that, I will announce to take another look at the Dilettant magazine, in addition to the huge musketeer block that is in the Dilettant, there is indeed a very solid historical block with everything connected with the era only herself, (...)
400 years of the Council Code of Russia
2009-06-06-netak-1413(1) Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” S. BUNTMAN: So, well, here we have sincere indignation: “Today is D-Day, Operation Overload "Why doesn't Echo respond?" He will react, there are big events there - “D-Day”. They reacted in the same way; we had materials about the 20th anniversary of the events in Tiananmen Square. But today, of course, we have (...)
90th anniversary of the First World War
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on September 4, 2004. The program “Not So” was broadcast on the radio station “Echo of Moscow”. Guest in the studio: Oleg Budnitsky. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN: We are now: You know, we interrupted the series first due to some normal events such as - I was on vacation, we wanted to continue it, the series (...)
Alexander I in the Patriotic War of 1812
2012-07-28-netak-1409 Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” SERGEY BUNTMAN: Good afternoon again! 14 hours 10 minutes. Sergei Buntman at the microphone. It’s already absolutely legal here, here in its place... It so happened that “Culture Shock” was also close to our themes, and I really hope that everything will go well, humanly and (...)
Alexander I. Part 1
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on March 16, 2002. Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” the program “Not so!” Our guest is historian Andrei Levandovsky. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN: Little Matvey Muravyov-Apostol asked his mother why people are celebrating Christ in the street, is it Easter today? No, not Easter, his mother answered. It was(…)
Alexander I. Part 2
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on March 23, 2002. Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” the program “Not so!” Guests are historian Andrei Levandovsky and Ilya Ber, a participant in the project “One Family in the Times of Vladimir Putin.” The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN Program “Not so!”, we continue the series “Romanov Dynasty”, Alexander the First. Andrey Levandovsky(...)
Alexander I. Part 3. Arakcheevshchina
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on March 30, 2002 Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” the program “Not so!” Our guest is Andrey Levandovsky, historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergei Buntman Topic: “The Romanov Dynasty. Alexander 1. Arakcheevshchina”, third program S. BUNTMAN: Today in the “No So” program the third, final part is dedicated to the reign of Alexander 1, and let me remind you that (...)
Alexander II. Part 1. Great reforms
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” S. BUNTMAN - What’s wrong? We continue to follow the forks in Russian history. “In Search of Our History” is a book that we always refer to and move on, sideways, up, down, deeper. Andrey Levandovsky. Good day, Andrey. A. LEVANDOVSKY - Hello. S.BUNTMAN - We were a few programs ago, we (…)
Alexander II. Part 2
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on June 15, 2002. Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Leonid Lyashenko is a historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN We continue the reign of Alexander II, but here, naturally, we return from reforms to the very beginning of the reign. Today we will talk about the external concerns of the empire, and external concerns (...)
Alexander II. Part 3
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on June 22, 2002. Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Leonid Lyashenko is a historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN We continue to talk about the era of Alexander II. We have come to a society that changed very much in the Alexander era, both in connection with reforms and in itself.(…)
Alexander II. Part 4
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on June 29, 2002. Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Leonid Lyashenko is a historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN We are finishing and summing up the reign of Alexander II. We will ask more questions, and you will answer these questions using a pager. We will ask four questions, two in (…)
Alexander II. Part 5
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on June 1, 2002 Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Leonid Lyashenko is a historian, Alexander Vereshchagin is a historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN You and I are in the era of Alexander II. This is our series “Romanov Dynasty”. Alexander II, liberator. Alexander II is not only a liberator, but also (...)
Alexander III. Part 1. Conservative peacemaking
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” On the air of the radio station “Echo of Moscow” - Valentin Kornilov, historian. The broadcast is hosted by Anton Oreh and Nikolai Alexandrov. A. NUT Our joint program, the program “Not So”, “Echo of Moscow” and the magazine “Knowledge is Power”. We are starting a series of programs about Alexander III. “Peacemaking of a conservative” - this will all be under the conventional title (...)
Alexander III. Part 2
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on September 14, 2002. Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Valentin Kornilov is a historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN Today we continue the conversation about Emperor Alexander III. It started last time. I wasn't there, but I'm aware. My colleagues, Anton Oreh and Nikolai Alexandrov,(…)
Alexander III. Part 3
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on September 21, 2002 Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Valentin Kornilov is a historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN We continue the series “Romanov Dynasty”. The Romanov dynasty itself and its history are coming to an end. And the penultimate, not formally, but truly, emperor from the Romanov dynasty, Alexander III, is with us today, (...)
Alexander III. Part 5
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on September 28, 2002 Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Valentin Kornilov. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN Program “Not So”, jointly with the magazine “Knowledge is Power”. Series “Romanov Dynasty”, the penultimate ruler of this dynasty is actually Alexander III. And the fourth and final program, Valentin (...) talks about his era.
Alexander III. Part four
September 7, 2002 Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” Valentin Kornilov, historian. The broadcast is hosted by Anton Oreh and Nikolai Alexandrov. A. NUT Our joint program, the program “Not So”, “Echo of Moscow” and the magazine “Knowledge is Power”. We are starting a series of programs about Alexander III. “Peacemaking of a conservative” under this conventional title, all this will be on our air in the coming(...)
Alexander Nevsky - between the Order and the Horde
bcst-50810-snd1 Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” S. BUNTMAN - Igor Danilevsky in our joint program with the magazine “Knowledge is Power”. Igor, good afternoon! I. DANILEVSKY - Good afternoon! S.BUNTMAN - We are also returning to Alexander Nevsky for an anniversary. I. DANILEVSKY - Yes. S.BUNTMAN - And the Battle of the Ice. And I would like to immediately ask a question (...)
Alexey Mikhailovich Romanov
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on September 15, 2001. Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” program “Not So” The guest is historian Igor Andreev. The broadcast is hosted by Lev Gulko. L. GULKO – Alexey Mikhailovich, old and new. In general, all the Romanovs, one of them. The first question before we listen to a certain essay(…)
Anna Ioannovna – Anna the Terrible
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” on December 1, 2001 Live on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” the program “Not so!” The guest is Igor Kurukin, historian. The broadcast is hosted by Sergey Buntman. S. BUNTMAN We are about to begin the reign of Anna Ioannovna. Igor Kurukin is here, Igor, good afternoon. I. KURUKIN - Good afternoon. S. BUNTMAN Let's (...)
Arakcheev in Russian history
2010-03-27-netak-1408 Transcript of the “Not So” program on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” S. BUNTMAN: Well, we are starting, or rather, continuing our cycle within the framework of the “Not So!” program, as was said, “Our Everything - 2”, these are statesmen of the seven reigns of the Romanov dynasty, from Catherine II to Nicholas II, we decided to include it in the “Not So” cycle, because here (...)
Ariadna Tyrkova, the iron lady of Russian liberalism
Transcript of the program “Not So” on the radio station “Echo of Moscow” S. BUNTMAN - We are starting our program, jointly with the magazine “Knowledge is Power”. Our pager is 961-33-33 for Echo of Moscow subscribers. Oleg Budnitsky. We have two troubles, we have all the time, all of August, all of July and August, we have the 17th century, 20th century, 17th century, 20th century.(…)
And since we started about books, I’m here in Lately I got hooked on the audio lectures.
If it’s interesting to our dear audience, we’ll put it out for 100 books.
So, let's begin.
The first were Strelkov’s lectures on History Ancient Greece. A very good course, it gives a general picture of the history of Greece, the internal logic of development, etc. In fact, both Strelkov and Ryabov are parts of a large course of lectures that was recorded for the distance course of the Institute of Cultural History, and recently I found it in its entirety on torrents. They come first
History of Ancient Greece (7:35:21), Andrey Valentinovich Strelkov, Candidate of Historical Sciences. Associate Professor of the Department of History ancient world" M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University
Story Ancient Rome(4:36:48), Pyotr Vladimirovich Ryabov, candidate of philosophical sciences, associate professor
History of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance (7:14:15), Roman Alekseevich Schastlivtsev, Candidate of Philosophical Sciences. Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Moscow State Pedagogical University
History of Russia from other times to the 16th century (2:49:37), Pyotr Vladimirovich Ryabov, Candidate of Philosophy, Associate Professor
Ancient literature (7:00:25), Lyubzhin Alexey Igorevich
Medieval literature and the Renaissance (3:56:01), Feigina Ekaterina Vitalievna
Literature of the 17th-18th centuries (2:36:30), Paskharyan Natalya Tigranovna
Old Russian literature (3:54:38), Pautkin Alexey Arkadyevich
Mythology (12:04:14), Barkova Alexandra Leonidovna, Candidate of Philological Sciences. Senior Researcher at the Public Museum named after. N.K. Roerich
Orthodoxy and Russian Culture (4.37:52), Volkova Maria Alekseevna
Judaism Christianity Islam (9:12.24), Shilkina Margarita Vasilievna, Candidate of Philosophical Sciences. Assistant professor.
Christianity (3.23:38), Shilkina Margarita Vasilievna, Candidate of Philosophical Sciences. Assistant professor.
Ancient philosophy (2.08:47), Girenok Fedor Ivanovich
Medieval philosophy (2:36:33), Fedor Ivanovich Girenok
Philosophy of Modern Times (3:55:07), Faibyshenko Victoria Yulievna
for those who can't handle it, there is a shortened version
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3 438973
2. Anatoly Alekseevia Alekseev, History of the Bible
http://russianlectures.ru/ru/author/alek seev/
one of the outstanding Russian biblical scholars, a very good overview course - 10 lectures of 20-30 minutes each - on the history of the Bible, I listened to it with great pleasure
3. Lectures on philosophy and history of science for graduate students of the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=4 445403
the lectures - I have no doubt - are excellent, especially for philosophers, but, unfortunately, the recording from the recorder is poor; I realized that I won’t be able to listen, but maybe it’s ok for someone
3_1. History of the philosophy of science for graduate students of the Faculty of Physics
http://www.medialecture.ru/node/1475
also Moscow State University, read by Vladimir Yakovlev. I haven’t listened to it yet, I just tested the very beginning - audibility is OK
http://vfc.org.ru/rus/personalsites/shap oshnikov/audioPGS2011-2012.php - another lecture for graduate students, read by Shaposhnikov
it seems that Yakovlev’s lectures are for graduate students of the Faculty of Mathematics, Shaposhnikov’s are for the entire stream of natural scientists, also graduate students
everything below is what I found and put in the queue, but have not personally listened to yet, except for the first lecture on the philosophy of mathematics
Lectures for schoolchildren
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1 874304
I am very skeptical about sections like “the peoples of Russia” and “the largest companies of Russia” (Lukoil and TNK, and Gazprom is a national treasure, yes), but I have hopes for the Animal and Floral World, as well as Nature and Geography
Obvious-incredible
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3 421403
audio recordings of Kapitsa's program
Lotman, Conversations about Russian culture
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1 462364
Lotman, just Lotman.
Zubov, History of religious ideas
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2 857506
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2 110930
We remember this Zubov at the congress of political scientists either in 2002 or 2003... but I generally remember a lot of things...
Lectures on cultural studies and lectures on ethics
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1 343158
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1 346106
let them be on the list, but for now they cause my healthy skepticism
Academy program series
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3 518896
I personally have some doubts about the humanitarian part of the series - we will listen about DNA and the emergence of life on earth, I believe in our natural science school
Lectures on literature by Mikhail Budaragin
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=4 260898
Philosophy of the Frankfurt School
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3 929053
one lecture by Peter Ryabov. let's put it on the list
V.Ya. Perminov, Philosophy of Mathematics
http://vfc.org.ru/rus/media/audio/index.p hp?SECTION_ID=115
WHERE TO LOOK FOR THE BEAUTIFUL
It’s clear that our tastes may differ, and much of what I didn’t consider necessary to put on my author’s list may well be a must read for you - for example, philology
Audio section on root tracker
http://rutracker.org/forum/viewforum.php?f=1 48
49 pages of all sorts of different things, diamonds are searched for with pens by stupidly flipping through the endless secrets of pick-up artists (AAAAAAAAA how to build a wife and have a mistress AAAAAAAAA), Orthodox yoga, interpretations of the Koran, the ubiquitous Kurginyan, broadcasts of the echo of Moscow, fragments of speeches by Lunacharsky and Stalin, as well as Yeltsin’s New Year’s address and Sobchak 1993
http://russianlectures.ru/ru/
A golden fund of lectures from the Russian World, almost all of them are professors from St. Petersburg State University. So far I have only downloaded Alekseev (there are mostly philologists there, and I don’t feel like I’m in the mood for philology right now), but I think many will find something else interesting for themselves. I also advise you to pay attention to Krivosheev’s lectures on Russian history.
http://www.medialecture.ru/
Open archive of audio lectures. a lot of things - for example, there are courses on the history and philosophy of science for graduate students of Moscow State University, and there is Alexander Gelevich with postmodern philosophy, an introduction to jargon and puzzles as a tool for developing creativity. There is even the Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas Kuhn, but unfortunately only the first chapter (((
http://vfc.org.ru/rus/
virtual philosophical center of the Faculty of Philosophy of Moscow State University. Philosophy of mathematics for postgraduate students of the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics is our everything, but a snowflake flies over the fire...
That's all for now. Download, listen, add)))
In “The Age of Peter the Great” there are still pauses, but in “The Overthrow of Sophia” it has already accelerated somewhere. Those who know what they are talking about find it easy, but if the information is new, then their brains curl up into a tube. Slow down a little and pause longer, so that you have time to comprehend what was said.
And the site is great! Thank you very much!
It feels like the one who reads does not like history and is passionate about it, but went to the board and reads for money so that he can quickly run away about his business...
You know, when your mother or grandmother tells you a bedtime story, you feel good. I would like just such reading, caring, and not to quickly escape.
- Dobrynin
Well, there are no comrades in taste and color, as they say. Lectures draw attention already from the musical intro, and those who are in the mood to listen to a story about history think little about the thoughts of the speaker.
The diction is good, but the expression is lacking.
Funny name “New Russia”. The feeling is that we are talking about some kind of overseas colony like New England or New Zealand.
- Dobrynin
The colonial perspective was prepared for Russia by the curators of the bacchanalia of the 90s. The interpretation of events in the lectures smooths out the reformatting of the once mighty colossus, arguing with some objective processes. The new Russia in the world system was supposed to become a “gas station.”
Very high-quality lectures - the backbone of Russian history is briefly, concisely and clearly presented according to a traditional textbook. Just for those who want to refresh their memory of a course they took a long time ago and are used to walking with headphones in their ears.
I wanted to listen to a course of lectures - it’s very convenient to do it from your phone. But it didn’t work out for me - it seems like Java is connected and the flash player is updated, but links to audio files are still not displayed on the page... What should I do?
One of the most fascinating periods of Russian history is presented in an interesting and accessible way. The transition from a neutral interpretation of the legend about Rurik’s calling clearly leads to the time of the reign of Vladimir Svyatoslavovich, who created a system of power based on a single religion and culture.
- Anna Bezanne
Everything is fine, but some names are pronounced with the wrong accent, you have to double-check.
The dramatic fratricide stopped larger bloody feuds between the descendants of Prince Vladimir the Saint. But it was unable to stop the inexorable advance of feudal fragmentation. New feudal centers of Rus' flourished, and stories about the Vladimir-Suzdal land aroused particular interest.
The prototype of the epic story of the three heroes was the Battle of Lipitsa, which revealed the true face of the princes tearing apart the country for personal gain on the eve of the Mongol-Tatar invasion. The decline of Kievan Rus is covered in lectures in all the fullness of the tragedy of the era.
One of the most problematic materials on the history of the Fatherland is presented in exciting stories that covered a significant array of stunning events over a long period of time.
The Muscovite kingdom went through times of difficult formation, terrifying crisis and seething with indignation. Endless wars with the Poles and Swedes exhausted the country, the Schism led to a spiritual crisis, and strife in the royal family threatened the dynasty. In this way, the country approached the radical reforms of Peter I.
Arranged in six parts, the history of the period is presented in fragmentary lectures that give a general idea of great era in the history of our country, which turned the world upside down.
Wonderful material, especially good for self-study and working with inclusive children.
how can I download lectures? Or can you only listen to them on the website?
Please explain why audio recordings of parts 4-8 are not loading?