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Cossack encampment on the Champs-Elysées, 1814

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Cossack encampment on the Champs-Elysées, 1814

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Summary

This scene depicts Russian soldiers in Paris after the allied invasion of Paris following Napoleon's defeat in March 1814. The woman in the background is wearing a fashionable cashmere shawl while the woman in the foreground is wearing a fur-trimmed coat with a fur muff. Both women are wearing high hats, embellished with feathers and silk ribbons. Source for abstract: Ruppert, Jacques. Le Costume Français. Paris : Flammarion, 1996.

The Cossacks were a group of predominantly East Slavic-speaking people who lived in the lands of the Dnieper, Don, Terek, and Ural rivers in Eastern Europe. The Cossacks were known for their military skills and their semi-nomadic lifestyle. They were organized into autonomous communities and were known for their martial traditions and their resistance to foreign domination. The Cossacks played an important role in the history of Eastern Europe, and they were involved in many conflicts and wars throughout their history. Today, the Cossacks are still recognized as a distinct cultural group in some parts of Eastern Europe. Cossacks had a tradition of independence and finally received privileges from the Russian government in return for military service. Originally (in the 15th century) the term referred to semi-independent Tatar groups, which formed in the Dnieper region. The term was also applied (by the end of the 15th century) to peasants who had fled from serfdom in Poland, Lithuania, and Muscovy to the Dnieper and Don regions, where they established free self-governing military communities. In the 16th century, there were six major Cossack hosts: the Don, the Greben (in Caucasia), the Yaik (on the middle Ural River), the Volga, the Dnieper, and the Zaporozhian (mainly west of the Dnieper).

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Date

1898
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Source

Brown University Library
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Copyright info

public domain

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