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Monument to Poet Lermontov
Gelendzhik,  Russia 
Monument to Poet Lermontov in Gelendzhik, Russia, photo by Pavel Viaznikov
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Tags for this city photo: Gelendzhik (13), Russia (1808), sculpture (357), park (249), statue (247), monument (193), Lermontov. All tags.
Author or submitter: Pavel Viaznikov  (stats)
Comment: Mikhail Yuryevich Lermontov (October 15 [O.S. October 3] 1814 - July 27 [O.S. July 15] 1841), a Russian Romantic writer and poet, sometimes called "the poet of the Caucasus", was the most important presence in Russian poetry after Alexander Pushkin's death until his own four years later, at the age of 26. Like Pushkin, he fell in a duel. In one of his best-known poems, written on January 1, 1840 he described his poetry as "iron verse steeped in bitterness and hatred."
More: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lermontov

Gelendzhik is a resort town in Krasnodar Krai, Russia, situated on the Gelendzhik Bay of the Black Sea, between Novorossiysk (31 km to the northwest) and Tuapse (93 km to the southeast). The municipality of Greater Gelendzhik spawls for 102 kilometers along the coastline and covers an area of 122,754 ha (of which only 1,925 ha fall within the boundaries of Gelendzhik proper). Population: 50,012 (2002 Census); 47,711 (1989 Census).

In antiquity, the Gelendzhik Bay was the site of a minor Greek outpost, mentioned as Torikos in the Periplus of Pseudo-Scylax. It is unknown to Hellenistic sources, but reappears in Roman ones under the name of Pagrae in 64 BC. The colony was wiped out by the invading Huns, which were succeeded by the Zygii soon after. During the Middle Ages, the bay was of some mercantile importance to the Genoese traders who referred to the seaside village as Maurolaca.

Before Russia secured the coast by the Treaty of Adrianople (1829), a brisk slave trade had been carried on between the mountaineers and the Ottoman Empire. Since the Circassian beauties were usually traded for gold and other commodities before being taken to Turkish seraglios, the market place became known as "Gelendzhik" (literally, "white brides"). In 1831, one of the first forts of the Black Sea Coastal Line was set up at Gelendzhik. At the outbreak of the Crimean War the fort had to be blown up and abandoned, but it was resettled by the Cossacks in 1864, at the conclusion of the Russian-Circassian hostilities, and became known as Stanitsa Gelendzhiksaya. The town of Gelendzhik was incorporated in 1915.

During the Soviet period, Gelendzhik was developed as a spa. It possesses sand beaches, three waterparks, two aerial tramway lines, and two Orthodox churches (from 1909 and 1913, respectively). The environs of Gelendzhik are noted for a chain of waterfalls, an outcrop of dolmens, two extremely ancient pine and juniper groves, and the Sail Rock, located 17 km from the downtown core. The coastal village of Arkhipo-Osipovka, administrated from Gelendzhik, contains the terminus of the Blue Stream gas pipeline.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelendzhik
http://www.wikimapia.org/#lat=44.570048&lon=38.07003&z=13&l=1&m=a&v=2
exct place of the monument: http://www.wikimapia.org/#lat=44.564491&lon=38.076982&z=17&l=1&m=a&v=2
Upload date: 6 January 2007
Views: 111
 1536x2048 358 kb
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