Preview

Lermontov History

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1494 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Lermontov History
Early life[edit source | editbeta]

Lermontov was born in Moscow into a respectable noble family of the Tula guberniya, and grew up on the Tarkhany estate in the village of Tarkhany (now Lermontovo in Penza Oblast). According to legend, his paternal family is descended from the Scottish Earls of Learmont, one of whom settled in Russia in the early 17th century, during the reign of Mikhail Fedorovich Romanov. The legendary Scottish poet Thomas the Rhymer (Thomas Learmonth) is thus claimed as a relative of Lermontov. The only ascertainable genealogical information states that the poet was descended from Yuri (George) Learmont, a Scottish officer in the Polish service who settled in Russia in the middle of 17th century[1]
Lermontov's father, Yuri Lermontov, like his father before him, was a military man. Having moved up the ranks to captain, he married the sixteen-year-old Maria Arsenyeva, to the great dismay of her mother, Yelizaveta Alekseyevna. A year after the marriage, on the night of October 3 (Old Style), 1814, Maria gave birth to Mikhail Lermontov. According to tradition, soon after his birth some discord between Lermontov's father and grandmother erupted, and unable to bear it, Maria fell ill and died in 1817. After her daughter's death, Yelizaveta Alekseyevna devoted all her love to her grandson, constantly afraid that his father might move away with him. Either because of this pampering or continuing family tension or both,the young Lermontov developed a fearful and arrogant temper, which he took out on the servants, and in vandalising his grandmother's garden.
As a small boy Lermontov listened to stories about the outlaws of the Volga region, about their great bravery and wild country life. When he was ten, Mikhail fell sick, and Yelizaveta Alekseyevna took him to the Caucasus because of its better climate. That was the beginning of his love for this region.
School years[edit source | editbeta]

Lermontov as a child
The intellectual atmosphere

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    BUS 620 Week 5 DQ 2

    • 416 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Going Global . Identify the strategies for entering into the global market. Assess the strengths and limitations of each. Give an example of a company that has made a success of doing business in the global economy. What lessons from McDonald’s success in the global marketplace are transferable across industries?…

    • 416 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    He left Moscow threatening to relinquish his throne as tzar of Russia. Due to his very apparent paranoia he made it law that all law breakers and traitors with execution and seizure of property. 24 years following Ivan put in place what those call a “Reign of Terror”, that reign involved destroying the major boyar families in the Russian region furthermore earning himself the “Gronzy” translating to mean “sparking terror/fear” which is exactly what Ivan the Terrible was known for putting fear in people’s hearts. During that same time Ivan beat his daughter-in-law who was pregnant at the time, causing her to have a miscarriage; Ironically creating the Oprichniki thereafter, the first official secret Russian police…

    • 440 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Anton Chekov’s “The Lady with the Dog”, Chekov uses direct language along with slight descriptions to dictate the setting. However, the main purpose for the settings of Yalta and Moscow are to influence Gurov’s motives and feelings. The atmosphere that Gurov is open to is infectious. The locations of Yalta and Moscow represent two different ideologies in Gurov’s life. Yalta expands on the mischievousness and romantic aspects of Gurov while in Moscow the boring and mundane life of Gurov is exhibited. The location called S. is brief, but also entails a rebellious attitude. The plot overall is pushed forward by the chronological change in venue.…

    • 306 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    ch 18 21 22 ap world vocab

    • 2110 Words
    • 13 Pages

    Why significance: continued policy Russian expansion. He established contacts with western European commerce and culture.…

    • 2110 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ivan Vasilyevich IV was born August 25, of 1530, in Kolomenskoye, Russia. Ivans father was Vasily Ivanovic, who died when Ivan was only an infant. At the age of three Ivan was named the Grand Duke of Muscovy due to his fathers' death. Ivans mother Elana Glinskaya ruled as regent until…

    • 1282 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    adaklfjda

    • 818 Words
    • 3 Pages

    ● Elena Glinskaya was his mother she acted as a regent, but she died of what many believe…

    • 818 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Still I say that a man who stakes his whole life on a woman’s love and, when that one card gets beaten, turns sour and sinks to the point where he’s incapable of doing anything at all, then that person is no longer a man, not even a male of the species.” (Turgenev 27). Bazarov makes his view of love very clear in this scene and also seems to foreshadow his demise. He says that someone who gives up everything after failing in the game of love, is weak. This would be an obvious notion from Bazarov since a nihilist has no respect for anyone or anything. Ironically, Bazarov clearly explains exactly what ends up happening to him in the story. He is the card that is beaten by Anna Sergeevna when she does not tell him whether or not she shares the same feelings as him, when he expresses his love for her. He tries to hide his sadness and frustration by engaging in a romantic manner with Fenichka Nikolayevna, the servant who becomes Nikolai Petrovich Kirsanov’s wife at the end. When this fails as well, Bazarov knows he can no longer hide his feelings and need to love and appears to be a changed…

    • 1284 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    An important part of Kandinsky’s life was spent in Odessa a cosmopolitan city populated by mainly Western Europeans and other ethnic groups. At an early age, he expressed an uncommon sensitivity towards sound, word and colors – in other words, the arts. His father encouraged what he perceived as a gift and pushed him into drawing and music lessons.…

    • 1876 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    How did this small, dynamic Russian, who at age 36 reached the top of power in his home country, find his way to a small classroom half a world away and half a century later?…

    • 935 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ivan began displacing noble families of their titles and start abusing his own family. His “madness” left him with the blood of his unborn grandchild and his son on his hands. He also blinded an architect. During this time he created the Oprichniki, the first secret police in Russia. The…

    • 719 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    While the family was still under arrest the person who guarded them changed and Yakov Yurovsky became the leader. The family’s life under Yurovsky’s rule was even more aggressive and enduring than the rest of their arrest, this was a consequence of all of the rumors that were going around saying that the “White Army” an anti Bolshevik group was approaching Yekaterinburg, who indeed took over Yekaterinburg only 5 days after the assassination of the Romanov family.…

    • 455 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Alexei, who puzzled the people - they didn’t know about his condition - and was seen as spoiled and unloveable by politicians, was reasonably killed. He followed his father’s way of life, one that the people of Russia greatly disliked. It also made sense that Alexandra, the tsarina, was killed, as the people mistrusted her and Rasputin. Wherever Alexandra went, Rasputin went too. On the other hand, Nicholas’s brother, Grand Duke Michael, was asked to take the throne. (He later on refused) Eventually though, as history tells, most of the Romanov family was led to their deaths. OTMA, on the other hand, were possibly murdered due to the fact that their parentage led people to believe the children would turn out like Nicholas II and Alexandra. Nicholas was actually an uneducated man. “He had few intellectual pretensions” and instead preferred to leave the politics and papers to others. His parents did not bother educating him well either; Nicholas was tutored by average and undesirable people. The upbringing of the tsar helped Nicholas rule the way he did, and look at other people the way he did. The tsar was not very smart, so he sent away all ministers that he thought were more intelligent than him due to superiority belief. The people might have thought that OTMA and Alexei would turn out the same way - as Alexei showed he…

    • 1127 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eventually, however, he became rejected by the group, because they thought he was too conservatory trained and that his music wasn’t nationalistic enough. While his music was Russian, it was imbued with his love of Mozart and other Western European influences.…

    • 645 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Tchaikovsky Research Paper

    • 2579 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, also spelled Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, was born in Votkinsk, in the city of Vyatka, Russia, May 7, 1840. Second in a family of five sons and one daughter, to whom he was extremely devoted. Once in his early teens when he was in school at St. Petersburg and his mother started to drive to another city, he had to be held back while she got into the carriage, and the moment he was free ran and tried to hold the wheels.…

    • 2579 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Anton Chekhov Biography

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov was born in Taganrog in South Russia on the Azov Sea on January 17, 1860. He was the third of six children of Pavel Egorovich Chekhov, a grocery store owner. Chekhov 's grandfather was a serf (a peasant who lives and works on land owned by another) who bought his family 's freedom in 1841. The young Chekhov and his brothers and sisters worked in the family store and studied in the local school. Their extremely religious father often beat them. In 1876 his father 's business failed, and the family moved to Moscow, Russia, for a fresh start. Chekhov, then sixteen, was left behind to finish his schooling.…

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays