Thursday, September 29, 2011

Train and Train stations, Kiev - Lviv

The fun isn't just in Kiev.  We went to Lviv via a night sleeper train.  Lviv will be covered in a separate chapter.  This the train ride itself.  Regretfully there were many pictures of the train at all.  But the train stations are pretty.

The train schedule was convenient, from 11 pm to 6 am.  Get on the train, lie down, get up, start a new day in Lviv.  That was the idea at least.  Sergei and I were in this 4 sleep suit.  Ended up only two of us there on that ride.  It was a $20 ride.  Yep, I didn't miss a zero.



Kiev Train Station, the main entrance.

Main entrance, shot from the main lobby.

The escalator to the second floor

On left side of the escalator.  See the schedule board?

Wall and ceiling to the right, once entering the main lobby.

Chandelier and part of the beautiful vaulted ceiling.

Second floor.  The people just got off the escalator, rushing to their platforms.

Same with the previous one, only from the opposite side of the hall (of the same end).  Confusing, right? What it is is that, escalator brings you up to the second floor, then you turn slight left or right to enter the hallway.

Down the hall, there will be access to the platforms on left and right.

Same as the prev, only on other side of the hallway. The middle are a bunch of stores.

Platform.  This is our train.  It was 11 pm at night.

A brighter shot of our train and the platform.  It was still 11 pm at night.  :-)

You can order tea on the train.  The attendant will bring to you.  It was 2.25 rph a cup.  What was interesting was on the way back from Lviv to Kiev, the tea was 4 rph.  Depending on the direction of the train going, it seems, :-)  The sugar it came with was slightly fancier, which was probably really why the difference.

Nice cup holders.  Good tea.  And it worked too.  I didn't sleep all that night.  Lying down on my sleeper nice and comfy, wide awake wondering why I drank all that caffeine.

Our train and the platform.  Only geographically shifted to Lviv, and temporally shifted to 6 am in the morning.  And I was about start my whole day of journey in a truly stylish town.

I couldn't record the music it played on the platform while I was taking this picture.  It was signature Soviet style revolutionary music, to me that is.  Sergei said it was just some regular music they play on the platform when trains arrive.  I usually do not argue with Sergei when it comes to how it is in Ukraine.
It was only short minute long clip.  But I loved it.

Main lobby exit / entrance.  It seems all train station lobbies are the same in Ukraine.

A bright shot here.

Lviv train station.

Lviv train station.

Last shot of the station.  We were head to downtown.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Ukrainian history and heritage

This is a big topic, which sounds like a topic for a master study or PhD dissertation.  Sergei and Natalia bought me a book of Russian history before my trip.  Very thoughtful.  The book is only about a couple of thousand pages, and I am a slow reader.  But I did manage to get through the pre historic intro and the Kievan time, and the occupation by Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.  All these were very helpful to my understanding on where the country and the people came from, and what they went through.  So when visited some of the museums, I already had some background.

I visited a few museums, 2 of which were particularly interesting, Ivan Honchar's Ukrainian Center of Folk Culture, and National History Museum of Ukraine.  I have some pictures taken at these museum.  I will only post a few that I think are of the most interesting ones. 

Ukrainian Center of Folk Culture


  Meseum Entrance

Meseum Entrance

A new couple. Unsure when this was taken. Sergei says definitely after photos and cameras were invented. Let's hope he is right. But notice the broom is in suit. The bride is in traditional costume. Not many cultures today retain the colorful costumes. Pity.

Traditional musical instruments and swords. What a combination, you might ask. The cossaks, living horse backs, classically carry both of these with them. Cossak, a social class or profession, one who is independent and a professional soldier, per my understanding quite like a samurai of the feudal Japan, and a knight of medieval (western) Europe,

Zoom on the swords. There are also smoke pipes on one end. Another typical companion of cossaks in the past.

Cossaks.

a cossak community.

Another new couple. Now both are in traditional dressing. Nice!

Ivan Honchar himself. An artist, a sculptor, and a painter. The museum is build upon his private collection, since his death in 1993.

Cossaks.

Ukrainian women in costume. Beautiful.

A bride?

Me signing the Museum guest book. The sculptor in uniform in the picture on the wall, is Ivan. If I ever wish to contribute to my own culture, I would wish to be like him. And being in Soviet Russia, trying to preserve the minority Ukrainian culture isn't particularly something KGB encourages. Something extraordinary an ordinary man can do. Salute, Ivan.












National History Museum of Ukraine


Scythian people and culture

Daggers, spear heads and armor of the Scythian.

Scythian territory.  Scythians are nomads, an Iranian people.  The Scythians established kingdoms here a few hundred BC.

A Greek soldier

Greek.

Sarmatian, another Iranian people.  From 5th BC to 4th AD, they spanned mostly in the west Scythia.

I am sure this is not about the ancient Ukrainian hair styles.  I wish I remembered this one.  Must be something interesting.  Never been a good note taker.

Khazars.  A Turkic people, among many others, have once occupied area around Caucasus, between Black Sea and Caspian Sea.  Their time is from 7th - 10th century.  At the peak time, they drove a branch of the old Bulgars to today's Bulgaria; blocked the Islamic invasion from the south, in a way historically draw the border of the religions.

Khazars.  Eventually the Khazars were over powered and subjugated to the Kievan Rus.

Armor of the Khazars.

This looks much closer to today's Ukrainian style, so must be the Slavic part of the history.



Some battle against the Tartars.

This is one of the princes at the Kievan time. Just forgot who. The fact that there is a cross, I suspect it is Prince Vladimir, who introduced Christianity to the then pagan Kievan Rus, and baptized the princedom. This happened at the end of 10th century.





A wooden wagon.

Military uniform. Completely Russian style. Suspect the Tsar's army.



This looks very Russian to me, except for the long scarf hanging on the wall at the back.

It looks to me this mixed in a little nomad's style, from the 2 piece setting to the cut of the shirt.  The area has to constant deal with invasions from the nomads from the east, sometimes defeated and devastated by the horse back people, from as early as the prehistoric time.  It shouldn't be impossible for the traditional costumes to show some of the foreign traits.





The pattern is very Ukrainian. It couldn't be anything else.

The setting of a typical Ukrainian peasant's house and yard/

A shot from the back of the yard.