- cross-posted to:
- marxism
- cross-posted to:
- marxism
"1. Notepad, grey leather cover; 2. Notebook, red leather cover;
Personal notes made on separate sheets and tear-off sheets. Sixty-seven sheets numbered;
Notebook with general notes, red cover;
5 smoking pipes with 4 boxes and special devices for them, tobacco. In the study of Comrade Stalin: books, desk accessories and souvenirs in the comrade Stalin's cabinet are not included.
Bedroom and closet:
2 white coloured tunics (Both have medals "Sickle and Hammer" of the Hero of Socialist Labour attached);
2 grey tunics;
2 dark-green coloured kitels;
10 pants;
...
A savings book was found in the bedroom with 900 rubles written in it."
Most dachas were basically small plots of land you used as a garden. The majority didn't have houses and if they did those houses were tiny and without electricity or indoor toilet.
Supposedly this is recently declassified Stalin's dacha near Moscow. Not too lavish as residencies of heads of states go but also not something a Soviet worker could ever have.
This page has pictures of what it looks like on the inside.
This is pretty rustic for a head of state, who will definitely need to meet local leaders, new media and diplomats wherever he stays.
I always thought there would typically be some type of shelter/dwelling, but maybe those are just the ones people like to talk about. Thanks for the links. Very interesting.
Most had like a tiny shed for gardening tools. Nevertheless building a house on their dacha called just "building dacha" was the project for many Soviet and post-Soviet people.
So something like "строить дачу", building as a verb? My Russian is crude, but I try.
A friend of mine showed me the dacha her parents built. It's basically a picnic pavilion with a couple rooms. No heat or electricity, but it's where they hang out in good weather and eat shaschlik.
Yeah, exactly that.
I'm adopting this into my lexicon, both Russian and English.
It sounds like a fun time, and a healthy thing to talk to your neighbors about.