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    Sofia Yablonska

    View from the ship

    Sofia Yablonska Foundation
    Sofia Yablonska Foundation
    Author:Sofia YablonskaGenre:Documentary Photography, Wildlife Photography, Landscape PhotographyOriginal copyright: All rights reservedRestoration copyright: All rights reserved
    Views of Odessa. [Album]. View of the Pokrovsk Church and Aleksandrovsky Avenue. Mid-1850s.
    Views of Odessa. [Album]. View of the Pokrovsk Church and Aleksandrovsky Avenue. Mid-1850s.
    Odesa. Quarantine. Mid-1850s.
    Odesa. Quarantine. Mid-1850s.
    Ivan Zavadsky
    Ivan ZavadskyBorn in 1780 near Hadyach in Poltava Oblast. He was a circumnavigator and polar explorer, cartographer, hydrographer, and collector of natural history collections. During 1819–1821, he served as deputy captain on the warship Vostok (Russian: Шкхид), which made a circumnavigation of the Southern Ocean in search of a route to the South Pole. This expedition was one of the first to discover Antarctica and the islands near it: the South Sandwich Islands, Alexander I, and Peter I. Since the days of Soviet historiography, Ivan Zavadovsky has been called a Russian, as has Lysyansky. Ivan Zavadovsky. Photo from open sources. One volcanic island was named in honor of Zavadovsky. In 2016, the government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands printed four postage stamps "Zavadovsky Island". Another island in the Western Ice Shelf near Antarctica was also named after him. In Oleksandr Dovzhenko's film story "Antarctica", Ivan Zavadovsky is one of the main characters.
    Bison
    Bison
    Boys from the Plast hut ‹The Winged Bunker› 1947. Bavaria
    Boys from the Plast hut ‹The Winged Bunker› 1947. Bavaria
    Verkhovyna 12
    Verkhovyna 12
    Verkhovyna 11
    Verkhovyna 11
    Verkhovyna 9
    Verkhovyna 9
    Verkhovyna 8
    Verkhovyna 8
    Villa Bashkirtseff in Nice
    Villa Bashkirtseff in NiceFrom 1871 to 1877, the Bashkirtseff family villa in Nice served as a setting for Marie’s early ambitions. Here, surrounded by the social life she adored, Marie immersed herself in private studies, driven by her vision of fame. Today, Nice commemorates her with a dedicated street and a permanent display of her work in the Musée des Beaux-Arts.