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The Forbidden Garden: The Botanists of Besieged Leningrad and Their Impossible Choice. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-6680-0766-2. Honigsbaum, Mark (18 November 2024). "The Forbidden Garden of Leningrad by Simon Parkin review – the lost heroes of Soviet horticulture". The Observer. Vasina-Popova, E. T. (1987).
The sculpture was made in Mikhail Anikushin's workshop in Vyazemsky Garden in Leningrad. A group of workers made a frame and covered it with wooden panels according to the artist's sketch. The workers were A. Grigoriev, A. Ezhkov, V. Pospelov, B. Chadaev, and V. Shilin.
The Forbidden Garden may refer to: The Forbidden Garden, a science fiction novel by John Taine; Forbidden Corner, a garden in Yorkshire, England;
Ivangorod Fortress (Russian: Ивангородская крепость; Estonian: Jaanilinna linnus; Votic: Jaanilidna) is a castle in Ivangorod, Leningrad Oblast, Russia. It was built in the 15th century.
Lidiya Yakovlevna Ginzburg (Russian: Ли́дия Я́ковлевна Ги́нзбург; March 18, 1902, Odessa, Russian Empire [1] – July 17, 1990, Leningrad, USSR [2]) was a major Soviet literary critic and historian and a survivor of the siege of Leningrad. [3]
Lennauchfilm (acronym of Leningrad studio popular science and educational films) is a Soviet and Russian film studio founded in Leningrad. The current Lennauchfilm studio is one of the largest in the Russian Federation. Lennauchfilm is a full-cycle studio, working on films for theatrical, video and television rental.
The searing story of Leningrad helps explain his thinking. Given the devastation World War II caused — an estimated 26 million Soviets lost their lives — such stories are widely available to ...
Lena Mukhina, also Lena Muchina (Russian: Елена Владимировна Мухина, Yelena Vladimirovna Mukhina; 21 November 1924 in Ufa – 5 August 1991 in Moscow), was a Russian woman who wrote a diary about her experiences as a teenage schoolgirl during the Siege of Leningrad.