For today's Sunday Stamps, dedicated to Foreign Languages, I have chosen the stamps that appear on the back of a postcard recently sent by Eduard (Russia).
Ivan Fyodorov or Fiodorov (1510 or c. 1525 – 1583), was one of the fathers of Eastern Slavonic printing. He was forced out of Moscow because of his attempts to employ the “blasphemous” new printing techniques, and found refuge in Poland–Lithuania, where he was instrumental in the publication of the Ostrog Bible, the first complete printed edition of the Bible in Church Slavonic.
Dmitry Likhachev (1906 – 1999) was a Russian medievalist, linguist, and a former inmate of Gulag. During his lifetime, he was considered the world's foremost scholar of the Old Russian language and its literature.
Sergey Mikhalkov (1913 – 2009) was a Soviet and Russian author of children's books and satirical fables. He wrote the lyrics for the Soviet and Russian national anthems.
The title of the work of the writer Leskov is often translated as "Wig maker". In fact, the main character of the book is a hairdresser.
ReplyDeleteThanks, I changed it :)
DeleteNow I want to read The Wig Maker...
ReplyDeleteThe font on the Soviet stamp is pleasing. Eduard chose some interesting people for his selection.
I am going to show Russian stamps too.
ReplyDeleteGreat stamps. And they are all on one postcard!
ReplyDelete