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Mikhail Znamensky

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Mikhail Znamensky

Full Name
  
Михаил Степанович Знаменский

Born
  
May 26, 1833 (
1833-05-26
)
Kurgan, Russian Empire

Occupation
  
Writer, memoirist, ethnographer, artist, caricaturist

Died
  
15 March 1892, Tobolsk, Russia

Mikhail Stepanovich Znamensky (Russian: Михаил Степанович Знаменский, 26 May 1833, Kurgan, Imperial Russia—15 March 1892, Tobolsk, Imperial Russia) was a Russian writer, memoirist, painter, caricaturist, archeologist and ethnographer.

Znamensky, who knew many of the Decembrist personally through his father, protoiereus Stepan Znamensky (who was canonized by Russian Orthodox Church in 1984, as Stefan Omsky), is credited with having authored the first ever Russian novel on the Decemberists, The Men Who Disappeared (Исчезнувшие люди, 1872). It was followed by the much more fragmented part two of it, Tobolsk of the Forties (Тобольск сороковых годов, 1884). Part three, The Fifties in Tobolsk (Пятидесятые годы в Тобольске) remained unfinished.

Znamensky left numerous drawings and paintings which include the portraits of the Decembrists he had known, as well as the illustrations to the works by Pyotr Yershov, Ivan Goncharov and Kondraty Ryleyev, among many others. Iskra published more than 300 of his caricatures, most of them concerning the life of the Siberian provinces.

Znamensky left important memoirs on Pyotr Yershov, Matvey Muravyov-Apostol, Ivan Pushchin, Vasily Tisengausen and Ivan Yakushkin, and authored several ethnographical works, mostly on Tobolsk and its surroundings. Two streets, one in Tobolsk, another in Khanty-Mansiysk, bear his name.

References

Mikhail Znamensky Wikipedia