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  1. Russian. How Czar Peter the Great Married Off His Moor ( Russian: Сказ про то, как царь Пётр арапа женил, Skaz pro to, kak tsar Pyotr arapa zhenil) is a 1976 musical film directed by the Russian filmmaker Alexander Mitta. The film features Vladimir Vysotsky as the protagonist Abram Petrovich Gannibal, the African ...

  2. 9 de dez. de 2007 · Public domain image. Sold into Turkish slavery, Abram Petrovich Hannibal was brought as a black servant to Czar Peter I, known as Peter the Great. He became one of the royal favorites, a general-in-chief, and one of the best educated men in Russia in his era. His great-grandson was Alexander Pushkin, the famous Russian writer who later ...

  3. Three versions of the libretto of Lourié's The Blackamoor of Peter the Great survive: the earliest is a Russian libretto (Lib1); a modified English version (Lib2) (Irina Graham Collection, Amherst Center for Russian Culture); and the published version of the English libretto (Lib3) in Irina Graham, ‘Materialen zur Opera Arap Petra Velikogo/The Blackamoor of Peter the Great’, in Studien ...

  4. Similarities. Absolute Monarchs: Both Louis XIV and Peter the Great embraced the concept of absolute monarchy. They centralized power, diminishing the influence of noble estates and establishing themselves as the supreme authority. Military Ambitions: Louis XIV and Peter the Great were ambitious military leaders, seeking to expand their empires.

  5. Other articles where The Negro of Peter the Great is discussed: Aleksandr Pushkin: The early years: …novel, Arap Petra Velikogo (1827; The Negro of Peter the Great). Like many aristocratic families in early 19th-century Russia, Pushkin’s parents adopted French culture, and he and his brother and sister learned to talk and to read in French. They were left much to the care of their maternal ...

  6. 1 de fev. de 2018 · According to Anne Lounsbery, a scholar of Russian Literature, “Boyar credentials, African heritage, and a personal link to Peter the Great were all crucial to Pushkin’s identity.”. Playing up his connection with Gannibal, the author adopted the nickname “ afrikanets, ‘the African.”. His connection with his relative showed up in ...

  7. Alexander Pushkin, "The Bronze Horseman" and "The Moor of Peter the Great." Pushkin was Russia's greatest poet; he lived in the early decades of the 19 th century. The poem, "Bronze Horseman," puts Peter at the center of a tale of love and hate in St. Petersburg and is a major contribution to the "myth" of Peter.