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  1. The work recounts the poet's travels to the Caucasus, Armenia, and Arzrum (modern Erzurum) in eastern Turkey at the time of the Russo-Turkish War (1828–29). The Tsarist authorities never allowed Pushkin to travel abroad and he had only been permitted to travel as far as Tiflis , capital of Georgia and Russian Transcaucasia.

  2. Dec 16, 2019 · Topics. Pushkin, Aleksandr Sergeevich, 1799-1837, Russo-Turkish War, 1828-1829, Erzurum (Turkey) -- Description and travel, Caucasus -- Description and travel. Publisher.

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  4. Pushkin's A Journey to Arzrum (Erzurum) celebrates his friends’ part in delivering for Russia and salutes the Russia they stood for. The literary challenge was steep. Its text had to pass muster with an infuriated Tsar Nicholas, his “personal censor”.

  5. Jan 27, 2017 · When in 1829 Pushkin and Petr A. Viazemskii were refused permission to travel to Paris, Pushkin embarked instead on the illicit trip south that would become the basis for his literary “Puteshestvie v Arzrum” six years later.

  6. A Journey to Arzrum. Alexander Pushkin, Brigitta Ingemanson (Translator) 3.62. 434 ratings62 reviews. Swedish / Svenska. Genres Russian Literature Nonfiction History Russia Classics Memoir Travel. ...more. 111 pages, Hardcover. First published January 1, 1836. Book details & editions. About the author. Alexander Pushkin. 1,531 books3,056 followers.

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  7. Pushkin's "Journey to Arzrum": The Poet at the Border. MONIKA FRENKEL GREENLEAF. Pushkin's "Journey to Arzrum": The Poet at the Border. "Mne nenadobno puteshestvovat'. Ia puteshestvuiu v svoem voobrazhenii," said Aleksandr. Pushkin, not quite ingenuously, toward the end of his life.' Pushkin's chronic desire for travel.

  8. A Journey to Arzrum. Александр Сергеевич Пушкин. Ardis, 1974 - History - 111 pages. Other editions - View all. ‹ ›. About the author (1974) Aleksandr Sergeyevich Pushkin, one of Russian's...

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