East Slavic & Ashkenazi Folk Art 🐓
•East Slavic folk art - Russian Gorodets painting.
•Ashkenazi Jewish folk art from Eastern Europe, late 19th century.
–Pagankæ'leh 🌿

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East Slavic & Ashkenazi Folk Art 🐓
•East Slavic folk art - Russian Gorodets painting.
•Ashkenazi Jewish folk art from Eastern Europe, late 19th century.
–Pagankæ'leh 🌿

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My work for Captive Prince reverse bang! I participate as an artist, because I can't write fics in English. I am not a good artist, but I draw better than Google translates from Russian to English. I like Russian decorative art, especially Gorodets painting. And I drew a box with pictures of New Artes routine. Ancel and Berenger ride horses. Charls and Paschal drink tea and have conversations, and their students are with them: Nicaise and Basil (the Regent’’s last pet). Erasmus and Kallias play kithara. Nikandros is busy, while Isander and Aden are trying to attract his attention. Damianos and Laurent rule together. Everything is good in the new kingdom!
The story by @tajmutthall is here https://archiveofourown.org/works/35056468
Gorodets folk art style horse done in gouache on Clairefontaine Noir Mix Media paper using Silver Ultra Mini brushes.
Vintage Russian wooden spoons

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Feodorov Gorodetskii Monastery (Gorodets, Russia, 1910).
@shuckingfits submitted:
Good evening, I’ve been doing some research in Bohurt, and I came across a couple of fighters who have helmets styled in this fashion. I’m interested in making a Rus/Varangian Guard kit, but I’ve had trouble finding any historical evidence of this kind of helmet style (save for the Turban Helmet in the MET). I was wondering if perhaps I’ve missed something, or if this is a creative anachronism that people tend to overlook.
Ah! this is a great topic.
So, some Bohurt do wear this helmet, although usually paired with a lot of stuff that has no business being with this style helmet.
This style helm is known as the “Gorodets” Helmet, named after where the first fully intact example of this helm was found. A town near Novgorod.
It is also, less commonly known as the “Nikolskoye” or “Nikolskoie” Also named in honor of where another was found, near Oryol Russia, a few hundred miles south west of Moscow.
Since then many surviving examples of these helms have been found, they were popular with slavic soldiers operating under the Byzantine and ottoman empires, from the 12th century, all the way to the 15th century. Almost always paired with a chain drape, and accompanied by chainmail, yushman, or lamellar armor.
The picture you submitted is based off this reproduction piece, currently hanging in a moscow history museum
Thanks for the submission!
-Mod Close-Helm
"...if the cowards only remain, then grass will grow in the streets. Nay, rot, mildew, and toadstool" (c) J.R.R. Tolkien, Morgoth's Ring, The Annals of Aman.
My illustration. Wood, tempera. Imitation of Russian Gorodets painting.