The directory «Plots»
Gilyarovsky (Гиляровский) Vladimir Alekseyevich
(1853/1855–1935)
Vladimir Gilyarovsky was a Russian writer and newspaper journalist, best known for his reminiscences of life in pre-Revolutionary Moscow ("Moscow and Muscovites"), which he first published in a book form in 1926.
He was born on a manor near Vologda where his father, a Novgorodian, worked as an assistant to the manor's bailiff, a Zaporozhian Cossack whose daughter he later married. Gilyarovsky treasured his partly Cossack descent: as a young man, he posed for one of the Cossacks depicted on Repin's huge canvas Reply of the Zaporozhian Cossacks; he was also a model for Taras Bulba, whose figure is part of the Gogol Monument in Moscow.
Raised by his well-educated mother (who died when he was 8) and his aristocratic step-mother, he left home early and, after a series of odd jobs (which included stints at a toxic lead paint factory in Yaroslavl, as a tutor and as a barge hauler), he enlisted as a volunteer during the 1877-78 Russo-Turkish war. After a short career as a provincial actor, he established himself as a journalist, winning praise and notoriety as one of the best crime reporters in Moscow. His first book, "The Stories of the Slums" (1887) recorded his experiences with the Moscow underworld, the Moscow of poverty and crime.
After the revolution he dedicated himself to writing memoirs. Among those were "My Travels" (1928), "Newspaper Moscow" (published posthumously), recording his reminiscences of the newspaper business of pre-revolutionary Moscow and of some famous people he'd worked with (such as Anton Chekhov), and "Theatre People" (also published posthumously). He died in Moscow on October 1, 1935.
USSR, 1944, Zaporozhian Cossacks
USSR, 1944, Zaporozhian Cossacks
USSR, 1944, Zaporozhian Cossacks
USSR, 1956, Zaporozhian Cossacks
USSR, 1969, Zaporozhian Cossacks
USSR, 1991, Zaporozhian Cossack
Russia, 2003, 150th Birth Anniv of Vladimir Gilyarovsky
USSR, 1929, Zaporozhian Cossacks
USSR, 1930, Zaporozhian Cossacks