Russian Federation
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Flag of Russia
Three equal horizontal bands of white (top), blue, and red.
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Founded in the 12th century, the Principality of Muscovy,
was able to emerge from over 200 years of Mongol domination (13th-15th centuries)
and to gradually conquer and absorb surrounding principalities.
In the early 17th century, a new Romanov Dynasty continued this policy
of expansion across Siberia to the Pacific. Under PETER I (ruled 1682-1725),
hegemony was extended to the Baltic Sea and the country was renamed the
Russian Empire. During the 19th century, more territorial acquisitions were
made in Europe and Asia. Repeated devastating defeats of the Russian army
in World War I led to widespread rioting in the major cities of the Russian
Empire and to the overthrow in 1917 of the imperial household. The Communists
under Vladimir LENIN seized power soon
after and formed the USSR. The brutal rule of Iosif STALIN (1928-53) strengthened
communist rule and Russian dominance of the Soviet Union at a cost of
tens of millions of lives. The Soviet economy and society stagnated in the
following decades until General Secretary Mikhail GORBACHEV (1985-91)
introduced glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring) in an attempt
to modernize Communism, but his initiatives inadvertently released forces
that by December 1991 splintered the USSR into Russia and 14 other independent
republics. Since then, Russia has struggled in its efforts to build a
democratic political system and market economy to replace the strict social,
political, and economic controls of the Communist period.
While some progress has been made on the economic front, recent years have
seen a recentralization of power under Vladimir PUTIN and the erosion
of nascent democratic institutions. A determined guerrilla conflict still
plagues Russia in Chechnya and threatens to destabilize the North Caucasus region.
- CIA World Factbook.
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National Emblem of Russia
In 1992 the last innovation in the Emblem came into force:
the abbreviation above hammer and sickle
was replaced by the inscription "Russian Federation".
www.rf.boom.ru/eng14.html
Russia - Fotw
Presentation of Russia,
Description of the flag,
Flag day,
Origin of the flag,
Supposed color meanings,
Flag mourning,
Flag related national anthem lyrics proposal.
www.fotw.us/flags/ru.html
Russia - wikipedia.org
After the breakup of the Soviet Union, the newly-independent Russian Federation
emerged as a great power and is also considered to be an energy superpower.
Russia is internationally recognised as continuing the
legal personality of the Soviet Union
and is a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia
Russia - U.S. Department of State
Most of the roughly 141 million Russians derive from the Eastern Slavic family of peoples, whose original homeland was probably present-day Poland. Russian is the official language of Russia and is one of the six official languages of the United Nations. Russian is also the language of such giants of world literature as Pushkin, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn.
Russia's educational system has produced nearly 100% literacy. About 3 million students attend Russia's 519 institutions of higher education and 48 universities, but continued reform is critical to producing students with skills to adapt to a market economy. Because great emphasis is placed on science and technology in education, Russian medical, mathematical, scientific, and space and aviation research is still generally of a high order. The number of doctors in relation to the population is high by American standards, although medical care in Russia, even in major cities, is generally far below Western standards. The unraveling of the Soviet state in its last decades and the physical and psychological traumas of transition during the 1990s resulted in a steady decline in the health of the Russian people. Currently Russia faces a demographic crisis as births lag far behind deaths. While its population is aging, skyrocketing deaths of working-age males due to cardiovascular disease is a major cause of Russia's demographic woes. A rapid increase in HIV/AIDS infections and tuberculosis compounds the problem. In 2007, life expectancy at birth was 59 for men and 73 for women. The large annual excess of deaths over births is expected to cut Russia's population by 30% over the next 50 years.
The Russian labor force is undergoing tremendous changes. Although well educated and skilled, it is largely mismatched to the rapidly changing needs of the Russian economy. Official unemployment has dropped in recent years to 6.9%, and labor shortages have started to appear in some high-skilled job markets. Nonetheless, pockets of high unemployment remain and many Russian workers are underemployed. Unemployment is highest among women and young people. Following the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union and the economic dislocation it engendered, the standard of living fell dramatically. However, real disposable incomes have doubled since 1999, and experts estimate that the middle class ranges from one-fifth to one-third of the population. In 2006, 15.8% of the population lived below the subsistence level, in contrast to 38.1% in 1998.
Moscow is Russia's capital and largest city (population 8.3 million). Moscow is also increasingly important as an economic and business center; it has become Russia's principal magnet for foreign investment and business presence. Its cultural tradition is rich, and there are many museums devoted to art, literature, music, dance, history, and science, as well as hundreds of churches and dozens of notable cathedrals.
The second-largest city in Russia is St. Petersburg, which was established by Peter the Great in 1703 to be the capital of the Russian Empire as part of his Western-looking reforms. The city was called Petrograd during World War I and Leningrad after 1924. In 1991, as the result of a city referendum, it was renamed St. Petersburg. Under the tsars, the city was Russia's cultural, intellectual, commercial, financial, and industrial center. After Lenin moved the capital back to Moscow in 1918, the city's political significance declined, but it remained a cultural, scientific, and military-industrial center. The Hermitage, formerly the Winter Palace of the tsars, is one of the world's great fine arts museums.
Russia has an area of about 17 million square kilometers (6.5 million sq. mi.); in geographic terms, this makes Russia the largest country in the world by more than 2.5 million square miles. But with a population density of about 22 persons per square mile (9 per sq. km.), it is sparsely populated, and most of its residents live in urban areas.
www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/3183.htm
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