Do-it-yourself construction and repairs

Presentation "Creating a calendar of historical events" in history - project, report. Presentation "Creating a calendar of historical events" in history - project, report Project 4 classes creating a calendar of historical events

Municipal budgetary educational institution
Secondary school No. 165Project “Creating a calendar of historical events”

Calendar (lat. calendarium, calemdae – Calendar (lat. calendarium, calemdae –
first day of the month) - time number system

Project objectives:
-maintain interest in the most important events of the past,
- develop independence.

01.01. Monetary reform began in the USSR: 10 old rubles are exchanged for 1 new ruble01.01. Monetary reform began in the USSR: 10 old rubles are exchanged for 1 new ruble
02.12. Soviet heavy aircraft launched into orbit artificial satellite Earth
02.15 A total solar eclipse occurred, passing through the territory of the USSR narrow strip from Odessa to the Taimyr Peninsula

02.18 Soviet researchers of Antarctica opened a new scientific station in the area of ​​Dronning Maud Land. The station is named Novolazarevskaya
02.19 Completed at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory of the USSR Academy of Sciences
telescope installation
03.09 In the USSR, a spaceship with an experimental animal was launched into orbit
03.18 Geologists discovered an underground river in the waterless Mirzor-Abad basin of Tajikistan. A well 80 meters deep produces 500 liters of water every second
03.25. The Soviet Union launched its fifth satellite into orbit
04.12 In the USSR, a spaceship with a person on board was successfully launched into space. Yuri Gagarin orbits the planet in 108 minutes and returns safely to Earth

05.11 Radar location of the planet Venus was carried out in the Soviet Union. 05.11 Radar location of the planet Venus was carried out in the Soviet Union.
06.03 During the meeting between Khrushchev and Kennedy in Vienna (June 3-4), the Soviet leader proposes to the US President to hold a conference in order to conclude a peace treaty with Germany and declare Berlin a free city, also discuss the issue of disarmament and, in parallel, hold negotiations on a nuclear test ban
07.20 Working at the Kiev Historical Museum, the famous Soviet archaeologist Academician B.A. Rybakov finished deciphering the mysterious signs on a Slavic jug from the 4th century.
08.06 On board the Vostok-2 spacecraft, pilot-cosmonaut Major German Stepanovich Titov went into space

08.10 The 5th International Biochemical Congress took place in Moscow. The idea of ​​ways to decipher the code of heredity was first expressed at the congress. 08.10 The 5th International Biochemical Congress took place in Moscow. The idea of ​​ways to decipher the code of heredity was first proposed at the congress
10.17 The 12th Congress of the CPSU began its work in Moscow. N. Khrushchev makes new revelations about Stalin and announces that communism will be built by 1980. At the congress, a possible break in Soviet-Chinese relations was announced
10.31 Stalin’s body was taken out of the mausoleum and reburied in the necropolis on Red Square near the Kremlin wall

12.08 All-Union Meeting of Astronomers on the Study of the Moon
12.09 The USSR breaks off relations with Albania

PROJECT

“Creating a calendar of historical events”

Completed by: 4th grade students

under the guidance of teacher Ikonnikova L.E.

2016-2017 academic year year

    Fundamental Question

    What is a calendar?

Calendar (lat.calendarium, calemdae – first day of the month) - time number system

Objective of the project:

Research the dates of historical events as much as possible

Project objectives:
-maintain interest in the most important events of the past,

Develop independence

Introduce schoolchildren to significant dates


Historical information about calendars.

Over a long history, people have come up with many different calendars. For a long time, there were three calendars in Rus':civil, church and folk (natural) months, and these three different calculations of time did not always coincide. For example, New Year's Evecivil calendar in ancient times it fell on March 1, which did not correspond well to the rhythm of economic life.Church calendar opened the year on September 1st.In 1348 . At the Orthodox Council in Moscow, it was decided that both the civil and church years should begin on September 1. This order lasted until the era of Peter I, by his decree New Year began to be calculated from January 1. Peter I introduced the Julian calendar in Russia, while most European countries used the more accurate Gregorian calendar.

Important historical events in Russia

    Baptism of Rus' 988

According to the Tale of Bygone Years, in 6496 from the creation of the world (that is, approximately 988 AD) Kiev Prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich decided to be baptized by the Church of Constantinople. After which, during the reign of Emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII Porphyrogenitus, the clergy sent by Patriarch Nicholas II of Constantinople, the Chrysoverg, baptized the Kyiv people in the waters of the Dnieper and (or) Pochayna.


    1367 - Construction of the stone Kremlin in Moscow

In 1366-1368, under Grand Duke Dmitry Donskoy, wooden walls The Kremlin is being replaced by walls and towers made of local white stone (according to archeology, the towers and the most important parts of the wall were stone, from where there was the greatest danger of an assault). From this period, the name “White Stone Moscow” is often found in chronicles. Soon after the construction of the white stone walls, they twice - in 1368 and 1370 - withstood the siege of the troops of Prince Olgerd

    1613 -The rise to power of the Romanov dynasty in Russia .

    After the end of the Time of Troubles and the election of Mikhail Romanov as Tsar, a new political situation developed in the country. A significant role in government was played by Zemsky Sobors, which resolved issues foreign policy, finance, taxes. Under Tsar Michael, Zemsky Sobors met regularly. Still weak royal power needed the support of various social groups - the boyars, nobility, clergy, townspeople and service people, peasants.

    1550 - Code of Law of Ivan the Terrible.

    Code of Law of Ivan IV , Code of laws of 1550 - a collection of laws from the period of the class monarchy in Russia, a monument of Russian law of the 16th century, the first legal act in Russian history proclaimed as the only source of law. Adopted at the first Zemsky Council in the Russian kingdom in 1549 with the participation of the Boyar Duma. In 1551, the Code of Law was approved by the Stoglavy Council, convened on the initiative of Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible. Contains one hundred articles.

The code of law of Ivan IV has a general pro-state orientation, eliminates the judicial privileges of appanage princes and strengthens the role of central state judicial bodies. With this, the Code of Law of 1550 develops the trends laid down in the Code of Law of 1497. government controlled And

legal proceedings

    1696 - decree on the creation of a fleet in Russia

    During the second Azov campaign in 1696 against Turkey, for the first time the Russians advanced 2 battleships, 4 fire ships, 23 galleys and 1300 plows built on the Voronezh River. After the conquest of the Azov fortress, the boyar duma discussed Peter's report on this campaign and decided to begin construction of the navy on October 20, 1696. This date is considered the official birthday of the regular Navy Russia, whose ships were built at the shipyards of the Voronezh Admiralty.

    1721 - proclamation of Russia as an empire

    The Empire was proclaimed on October 22 (November 2, 1721) following the results of the Northern War, when, at the request of senators, Russian Tsar Peter I the Great accepted the titles of Emperor of All Russia and Father of the Fatherland.

    The capital of the Russian Empire from 1721 to 1728 and from 1730 to 1917 was St. Petersburg (1914-1917 Petrograd), and in 1728-1730 it was Moscow.

    The Russian Empire was the third largest state ever to exist (after the British and Mongol Empires) - it extended to the Northern Arctic Ocean in the north and the Black Sea in the south, to the Baltic Sea in the west and the Pacific Ocean in the east. The head of the empire, the All-Russian Emperor, had unlimited, absolute power until 1905.

    1803 -Decree on free cultivators . Peasants received the right to redeem themselves with the land.

    February 20th 1803 - legislative act Russian Emperor Alexander I, according to which landowners received the right to free serfs individually and in villages with the issuance of a plot of land. Published as part of the reform of the Russian Empire, which took place in the 1800s.

    For their will, the peasants paid a ransom or performed duties. If the agreed obligations were not fulfilled, the peasants returned to the landowner. Nevertheless, nothing prevented the landowner from releasing the peasant free of charge - everything was determined by the agreement between the peasant and the landowner. The peasants who received their freedom in this way were called free or free tillers (hence the popular name of the decree).

    1837 - builtfirst Railway in Russia.

    The decree of Emperor Nicholas I of March 21, 1836 on the construction of the Tsarskoye Selo railway was promulgated on April 15, 1836. Construction began on May 1, 1836. The road was opened on October 30, 1837. The track width is 1829 mm.

    Initially, the Tsarskoye Selo railway was laid from St. Petersburg to Tsarskoe Selo, and was later extended to the holiday town of Pavlovsk, while the total length of the route increased to 27 kilometers . The first test ride of a horse-drawn train between Tsarskoe Selo and Pavlovsk took place on September 27, 1836.

    1861 -Abolition of serfdom in Russia .

    Peasant reform in Russia (colloquiallyabolition of serfdom ) - a reform begun in 1861 that abolished serfdom in the Russian Empire. It was the first and most significant of the “great reforms” of Emperor Alexander II; proclaimed by the Manifesto on the abolition of serfdom dated February 19 (March 3), 1861.

    A long overdue, belated reform opened the way to the development of capitalism in Russia and to industrialization. Russia and the United States were the last of the “great powers” ​​of their time to end slavery on their territory. It is no coincidence that Karl Marx compared the process of emancipation of serfs in Russia with the movement for the emancipation of slaves

    1917 -Revolution in Russia

    Russian Revolution (Great Russian Revolution) - the conventional name for the revolutionary events that occurred in Russia in 1917, starting with the overthrow of the monarchy February revolution, when power passed to the Provisional Government, which, in turn, was overthrown as a result of the October Revolution of the Bolsheviks, who proclaimed Soviet power.

    Civil war in Russia - a series of armed conflicts between various political, ethnic, social groups and state entities on the territory of the former Russian Empire, which followed the Bolsheviks coming to power as a result of the October Revolution of 1917.

    The Civil War was the result of the revolutionary crisis that struck Russia at the beginning of the 20th century, which began with the revolution of 1905-1907, aggravated during the World War and led to the fall of the monarchy, economic ruin, and a deep social, national, political and ideological split in Russian society. The apogee of this split was a fierce war throughout the country between armed forces Soviet power and anti-Bolshevik authorities.

    War of the Soviet Union Socialist Republics against Nazi Germany and its allies (Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Romania, Slovakia, Finland, Croatia). Having won a military victory over Germany, Soviet Union made a decisive contribution to the defeat of Nazism in Europe.

    1961 -The first manned flight into space

    On April 12, 1961, Yuri Gagarin became the first person in world history to fly into space. The Vostok launch vehicle with the Vostok-1 spacecraft, with Gagarin on board, was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. After 108 minutes of flight, Gagarin successfully landed in the Saratov region, not far from the city of Engels. Starting from April 12, 1962, the day of Gagarin's flight into space was declared a holiday - Cosmonautics Day.

    1991 -The collapse of the USSR and the fall of socialism .

    As a result, on March 17, 1991, an all-Russian referendum was held, as a result of which the post of President of the RSFSR was introduced.

    On June 12, 1991, as a result of the first popular elections, B. N. Yeltsin became President of the RSFSR, receiving 45,552,041 votes, which amounted to 57.30 percent of those who took part in the vote, and significantly ahead of Nikolai Ryzhkov, who, despite the support of the allied authorities, received only 16.85 percent of the vote. Together with B. N. Yeltsin, Vice President Alexander Rutskoi was elected. On June 1, 1991, representatives of the democratic movement - G. Kh. Popov and A. A. Sobchak - were elected mayors of Moscow and Leningrad. After his election, the main slogans of B. N. Yeltsin were the fight against the privileges of the nomenclature and the maintenance of Russian sovereignty within the USSR. On July 10, 1991, B. N. Yeltsin took the oath of allegiance to the people of Russia and the Russian Constitution, and took office as President of the RSFSR.

HISTORICAL CALENDAR –

THIS IS A HISTORICAL MEMORY!

Kopaigora Daria

Project on literary reading on the topic: "Creating a historical calendar"

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Preview:

  • Fundamental QuestionWhat is a calendar?

Calendar (lat. calendarium, calemdae –

first day of the month) - time number system

Objective of the project:

Research the dates of historical events as much as possible

Project objectives:
-maintain interest in the most important events of the past,

Develop independence

Introduce schoolchildren to significant dates


  • Historical information about calendars.
    Over a long history, people have come up with many different calendars. For a long time, there were three calendars in Rus':civil, church and folk(natural) months, and these three different calculations of time did not always coincide. For example, New Year's Evecivil calendarin ancient times it fell on March 1, which did not correspond well to the rhythm of economic life.Church calendaropened the year on September 1st. In 1348 . At the Orthodox Council in Moscow, it was decided that both the civil and church years should begin on September 1. This order lasted until the era of Peter I; by his decree, the new year began to be counted from January 1. Peter I introduced the Julian calendar in Russia, while most European countries used the more accurate Gregorian calendar.
  • Important historical events in Russia
  • Baptism of Rus' 988

According to the Tale of Bygone Years, in 6496 from the creation of the world (that is, approximately 988 AD)Kiev Prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich decided to be baptized by the Church of Constantinople. After which, during the reign of Emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII Porphyrogenitus, the clergy sent by Patriarch Nicholas II of Constantinople, the Chrysoverg, baptized the Kyiv people in the waters of the Dnieper and (or) Pochayna.

  • 1237-1240 - Conquest of Rus' by the Mongol-Tatars

    1480 - The final deliverance of Rus' from the Mongol-Tatar yoke
  • Overthrow of the Mongol-Tatar yoketook place in 1480. The Sovereign of Muscovite Rus' refused to pay tribute to the Khan of the Great Horde, Akhmat. The Great Horde was the successor to the Golden Horde, from which during the 15th century the Nogai Horde, Kazan, Astrakhan, and Crimean khanates gradually broke away. By this time, the Russian principalities had finally united under the leadership of Moscow.
    In 1472, Khan Akhmat organized an invasion of Rus' in order to subjugate it again. However, in the battle of 1480, Khan Akhmat made a second attempt to subjugate Rus'. Russian and Horde troops approached the Ugra River, where a general battle was to take place between them. However, the Lithuanians, allies of the Mongol-Tatars, were unable to approach the Ugra due to the attack on them by the Crimean Tatars. In addition, problems began in the White Horde. These circumstances forced Akhmat to retreat without a fight. Thus it happened
    overthrow of the Mongol-Tatar yoke. On the Oka River, the Mongol-Tatars received serious repulse from Russian soldiers and retreated.
  • 1367 - Construction of the stone Kremlin in Moscow
  • In 1366-1368, under Grand Duke Dmitry Donskoy, the wooden walls of the Kremlin were replaced by walls and towers made of local white stone (according to archeology, the towers and the most important parts of the wall were stone, from where there was the greatest danger of an assault). From this period, the name “White Stone Moscow” is often found in chronicles. Soon after the construction of the white stone walls, they twice - in 1368 and 1370 - withstood the siege of the troops of Prince Olgerd
  • 1613 - The rise to power of the Romanov dynasty in Russia.
  • After the end of the Time of Troubles and the election of Mikhail Romanov as Tsar, a new political situation developed in the country. A significant role in government was played by Zemsky Sobors, which resolved issues of foreign policy, finance, and taxes. Under Tsar Michael, Zemsky Sobors met regularly. The still weak tsarist power needed the support of various social groups - the boyars, nobility, clergy, townspeople and service people, peasants.
  • 1550 - Code of Law of Ivan the Terrible.
  • Code of Law of Ivan IV, Code of laws of 1550- a collection of laws from the period of the class monarchy in Russia, a monument of Russian law of the 16th century, the first legal act in Russian history proclaimed as the only source of law. Adopted at the first Zemsky Council in the Russian kingdom in 1549 with the participation of the Boyar Duma. In 1551, the Code of Law was approved by the Stoglavy Council, convened on the initiative of Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible. Contains one hundred articles.
  • The code of law of Ivan IV has a general pro-state orientation, eliminates the judicial privileges of appanage princes and strengthens the role of central state judicial bodies. By this, the Code of Law of 1550 develops the tendencies of public administration and legal proceedings laid down in the Code of Law of 1497.
  • 1696 - decree on the creation of a fleet in Russia
  • During the second Azov campaign in 1696 against Turkey, for the first time the Russians advanced 2 battleships, 4 fire ships, 23 galleys and 1300 plows built on the Voronezh River. After the conquest of the Azov fortress, the boyar duma discussed Peter's report on this campaign and decided to begin construction of the navy on October 20, 1696. This date is considered the official birthday of the regular Russian Navy, whose ships were built at the shipyards of the Voronezh Admiralty.
  • 1721 - proclamation of Russia as an empire
  • The Empire was proclaimed on October 22 (November 2, 1721) following the results of the Northern War, when, at the request of senators, Russian Tsar Peter I the Great accepted the titles of Emperor of All Russia and Father of the Fatherland.
  • The capital of the Russian Empire from 1721 to 1728 and from 1730 to 1917 was St. Petersburg (1914-1917 Petrograd), and in 1728-1730 it was Moscow.
  • The Russian Empire was the third largest state ever to exist (after the British and Mongol Empires) - stretching to the Arctic Ocean in the north and the Black Sea in the south, to the Baltic Sea in the west and the Pacific Ocean in the east. The head of the empire, the All-Russian Emperor, had unlimited, absolute power until 1905.
  • 1803 - Decree on free cultivators. Peasants received the right to redeem themselves with the land.
  • February 20th 1803 - a legislative act of the Russian Emperor Alexander I, according to which landowners received the right to free serfs individually and in villages with the issuance of a plot of land. Published as part of the reform of the Russian Empire, which took place in the 1800s.
  • For their will, the peasants paid a ransom or performed duties. If the agreed obligations were not fulfilled, the peasants returned to the landowner. Nevertheless, nothing prevented the landowner from releasing the peasant free of charge - everything was determined by the agreement between the peasant and the landowner. The peasants who received their freedom in this way were called free or free tillers (hence the popular name of the decree).
  • 1837 - built first railway in Russia.
  • The decree of Emperor Nicholas I of March 21, 1836 on the construction of the Tsarskoye Selo railway was promulgated on April 15, 1836. Construction began on May 1, 1836. The road was opened on October 30, 1837. The track width is 1829 mm.
  • Initially, the Tsarskoye Selo railway was laid from St. Petersburg to Tsarskoe Selo, and was later extended to the holiday town of Pavlovsk, while the total length of the route increased to 27 kilometers. The first test run of a horse-drawn train between Tsarskoe Selo and Pavlovsk took place on September 27, 1836.
  • 1861 - Abolition of serfdom in Russia.
  • Peasant reform in Russia(colloquially abolition of serfdom) - a reform begun in 1861 that abolished serfdom in the Russian Empire. It was the first and most significant of the “great reforms” of Emperor Alexander II; proclaimed by the Manifesto on the abolition of serfdom dated February 19 (March 3), 1861.
  • A long overdue, belated reform opened the way to the development of capitalism in Russia and to industrialization. Russia and the United States were the last of the “great powers” ​​of their time to end slavery on their territory. It is no coincidence that Karl Marx compared the process of emancipation of serfs in Russia with the movement for the emancipation of slaves
  • 1917 - Revolution in Russia
  • Russian Revolution(Great Russian Revolution) is the conventional name for the revolutionary events that occurred in Russia in 1917, starting with the overthrow of the monarchy by the February Revolution, when power passed to the Provisional Government, which, in turn, was overthrown as a result of the October Revolution of the Bolsheviks, who proclaimed Soviet power.
  • 1918 - 1922 - Russian Civil War
  • Civil war in Russia- a series of armed conflicts between various political, ethnic, social groups and state entities on the territory of the former Russian Empire, which followed the Bolsheviks coming to power as a result of the October Revolution of 1917.
  • The Civil War was the result of the revolutionary crisis that struck Russia at the beginning of the 20th century, which began with the revolution of 1905-1907, aggravated during the World War and led to the fall of the monarchy, economic ruin, and a deep social, national, political and ideological split in Russian society. The apogee of this split was a fierce war throughout the country between the armed forces of the Soviet government and the anti-Bolshevik authorities.
  • Great Patriotic War 1941-1945
  • the war of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics against Nazi Germany and its allies (Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Romania, Slovakia, Finland, Croatia). Having won a military victory over Germany, the Soviet Union made a decisive contribution to the defeat of Nazism in Europe.
  • 1961 - The first manned flight into space
  • On April 12, 1961, Yuri Gagarin became the first person in world history to fly into outer space. The Vostok launch vehicle with the Vostok-1 spacecraft, with Gagarin on board, was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. After 108 minutes of flight, Gagarin successfully landed in the Saratov region, not far from the city of Engels. Starting from April 12, 1962, the day of Gagarin's flight into space was declared a holiday - Cosmonautics Day.
  • 1991 - The collapse of the USSR and the fall of socialism.
  • As a result, on March 17, 1991, an all-Russian referendum was held, as a result of which the post of President of the RSFSR was introduced.
  • On June 12, 1991, as a result of the first popular elections, B. N. Yeltsin became President of the RSFSR, receiving 45,552,041 votes, which amounted to 57.30 percent of those who took part in the vote, and significantly ahead of Nikolai Ryzhkov, who, despite the support of the allied authorities, received only 16.85 percent of the vote. Together with B. N. Yeltsin, Vice President Alexander Rutskoi was elected. On June 1, 1991, representatives of the democratic movement - G. Kh. Popov and A. A. Sobchak - were elected mayors of Moscow and Leningrad. After his election, the main slogans of B. N. Yeltsin were the fight against the privileges of the nomenclature and the maintenance of Russian sovereignty within the USSR. On July 10, 1991, B. N. Yeltsin took the oath of allegiance to the people of Russia and the Russian Constitution, and took office as President of the RSFSR.
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Municipal budgetary educational institution Secondary School No. 44 Author of the project: K opaigora Daria Kl. Supervisor: M uratova E.G. Project “Creating a calendar of historical events”

Calendar (lat. calendarium, calemdae - first day of the month) - time numbering system Project goal: - to study the dates of historical events as much as possible Project objectives: - to maintain interest in the most important events of the past, - to foster independence, - to introduce schoolchildren to significant dates Fundamental question What is a calendar?

Historical information about calendars. Over a long history, people have come up with many different calendars. For a long time in Rus' there were three calendars: civil, church and folk (natural) calendars, and these three different time calculations did not always coincide. For example, the New Year according to the civil calendar in ancient times fell on March 1, which did not correspond well to the rhythm of economic life. The church calendar opened the year on September 1. In 1348, at the Orthodox Council in Moscow, it was decided that both the civil and church years should begin on September 1. This order lasted until the era of Peter I; by his decree, the new year began to be counted from January 1. Peter I introduced the Julian calendar in Russia, while most European countries used the more accurate Gregorian calendar.

Important historical events in Russia 988 - Baptism of Rus'. Kievan Rus accepts Orthodox Christianity. According to the Tale of Bygone Years, in 6496 from the creation of the world (that is, approximately 988 AD), the Kiev prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich decided to be baptized by the Church of Constantinople. After which, during the reign of Emperors Vasily II and Constantine VIII Porphyrogenitus, the clergy sent by Patriarch Nicholas II of Constantinople, Chrysoverg, baptized the Kyiv people in the waters of the Dnieper and (or) Pochayna.

The overthrow of the Mongol-Tatar yoke took place in 1480. The Sovereign of Muscovite Rus' refused to pay tribute to the Khan of the Great Horde, Akhmat. The Great Horde was the successor to the Golden Horde, from which during the 15th century the Nogai Horde, Kazan, Astrakhan, and Crimean khanates gradually broke away. By this time, the Russian principalities had finally united under the leadership of Moscow. In 1472, Khan Akhmat organized an invasion of Rus' in order to subjugate it again. However, in the battle of 1480, Khan Akhmat made a second attempt to subjugate Rus'. Russian and Horde troops approached the Ugra River, where a general battle was to take place between them. However, the Lithuanians, allies of the Mongol-Tatars, were unable to approach the Ugra due to the attack on them by the Crimean Tatars. In addition, problems began in the White Horde. These circumstances forced Akhmat to retreat without a fight. Thus, the Mongol-Tatar yoke was overthrown. On the Oka River, the Mongol-Tatars received serious repulse from Russian soldiers and retreated. 1237-1240 - Conquest of Rus' by the Mongol-Tatars 1480 - Final deliverance of Rus' from the Mongol-Tatar yoke

In 1366-1368, under Grand Duke Dmitry Donskoy, the wooden walls of the Kremlin were replaced by walls and towers made of local white stone (according to archeology, the towers and the most important parts of the wall were stone, from where there was the greatest danger of an assault). From this period, the name “White Stone Moscow” is often found in chronicles. Soon after the construction of the white stone walls, they twice - in 1368 and 1370 - withstood the siege of the troops of Prince Olgerd in 1367 - Construction of the stone Kremlin in Moscow

After the end of the Time of Troubles and the election of Mikhail Romanov as Tsar, a new political situation developed in the country. A significant role in government was played by Zemsky Sobors, which resolved issues of foreign policy, finance, and taxes. Under Tsar Michael, Zemsky Sobors met regularly. The still weak tsarist power needed the support of various social groups - the boyars, nobility, clergy, townspeople and service people, peasants. 1613 - The Romanov dynasty comes to power in Russia.

Code of Laws of Ivan IV, Code of Laws of 1550 - a collection of laws from the period of the class monarchy in Russia, a monument of Russian law of the 16th century, the first legal act in Russian history proclaimed as the only source of law. Adopted at the first Zemsky Council in the Russian kingdom in 1549 with the participation of the Boyar Duma. In 1551, the Code of Law was approved by the Stoglavy Council, convened on the initiative of Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible. Contains one hundred articles. The code of law of Ivan IV has a general pro-state orientation, eliminates the judicial privileges of appanage princes and strengthens the role of central state judicial bodies. By this, the Code of Law of 1550 develops the tendencies of public administration and legal proceedings laid down in the Code of Law of 1497. 1550 - Code of Law of Ivan the Terrible.

During the second Azov campaign in 1696 against Turkey, for the first time the Russians advanced 2 battleships, 4 fire ships, 23 galleys and 1300 plows built on the Voronezh River. After the conquest of the Azov fortress, the boyar duma discussed Peter's report on this campaign and decided to begin construction of the navy on October 20, 1696. This date is considered the official birthday of the regular Russian Navy, whose ships were built at the shipyards of the Voronezh Admiralty. 1696 - decree on the creation of a fleet in Russia

The Empire was proclaimed on October 22 (November 2, 1721) following the results of the Northern War, when, at the request of senators, Russian Tsar Peter I the Great accepted the titles of Emperor of All Russia and Father of the Fatherland. The capital of the Russian Empire from 1721 to 1728 and from 1730 to 1917 was St. Petersburg (1914-1917 Petrograd), and in 1728-1730 it was Moscow. The Russian Empire was the third largest state ever to exist (after the British and Mongol Empires) - stretching to the Arctic Ocean in the north and the Black Sea in the south, to the Baltic Sea in the west and the Pacific Ocean in the east. The head of the empire, the All-Russian Emperor, had unlimited, absolute power until 1905. 1721 - proclamation of Russia as an empire

February 20, 1803 - a legislative act of the Russian Emperor Alexander I, according to which landowners received the right to free serfs individually and in villages with the issuance of a plot of land. Published as part of the reform of the Russian Empire, which took place in the 1800s. For their will, the peasants paid a ransom or performed duties. If the agreed obligations were not fulfilled, the peasants returned to the landowner. Nevertheless, nothing prevented the landowner from releasing the peasant free of charge - everything was determined by the agreement between the peasant and the landowner. The peasants who received their freedom in this way were called free or free tillers (hence the popular name of the decree). 1803 - Decree on free cultivators. Peasants received the right to redeem themselves with the land.

The decree of Emperor Nicholas I of March 21, 1836 on the construction of the Tsarskoye Selo railway was promulgated on April 15, 1836. Construction began on May 1, 1836. The road was opened on October 30, 1837. The track width is 1829 mm. Initially, the Tsarskoye Selo railway was laid from St. Petersburg to Tsarskoye Selo, and was later extended to the dacha town of Pavlovsk, while the total length of the route increased to 27 kilometers. The first test run of a horse-drawn train between Tsarskoe Selo and Pavlovsk took place on September 27, 1836. 1837 - the first railway in Russia was built.

Peasant reform in Russia (colloquially abolition of serfdom) is a reform begun in 1861 that abolished serfdom in the Russian Empire. It was the first and most significant of the “great reforms” of Emperor Alexander II; proclaimed by the Manifesto on the abolition of serfdom dated February 19 (March 3), 1861. A long overdue, belated reform opened the way to the development of capitalism in Russia and to industrialization. Russia and the United States were the last of the “great powers” ​​of their time to end slavery on their territory. It is no coincidence that Karl Marx compared the process of emancipation of serfs in Russia with the movement for the emancipation of slaves in 1861 - Abolition of serfdom in Russia.

Russian Revolution (Great Russian Revolution) is the conventional name for the revolutionary events that occurred in Russia in 1917, starting with the overthrow of the monarchy by the February Revolution, when power passed to the Provisional Government, which, in turn, was overthrown as a result of the October Revolution of the Bolsheviks, who proclaimed Soviet power. 1917 - Revolution in Russia

The Russian Civil War is a series of armed conflicts between various political, ethnic, social groups and government entities on the territory of the former Russian Empire, following the Bolsheviks' rise to power as a result of the October Revolution of 1917. The Civil War was the result of the revolutionary crisis that struck Russia at the beginning of the 20th century, which began with the revolution of 1905-1907, aggravated during the World War and led to the fall of the monarchy, economic ruin, and a deep social, national, political and ideological split in Russian society. The apogee of this split was a fierce war throughout the country between the armed forces of the Soviet government and the anti-Bolshevik authorities. 1918 - 1922 - Civil War in Russia

the war of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics against Nazi Germany and its allies (Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy, Romania, Slovakia, Finland, Croatia). Having won a military victory over Germany, the Soviet Union made a decisive contribution to the defeat of Nazism in Europe. Great Patriotic War 1941-1945

On April 12, 1961, Yuri Gagarin became the first person in world history to fly into outer space. The Vostok launch vehicle with the Vostok-1 spacecraft, with Gagarin on board, was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. After 108 minutes of flight, Gagarin successfully landed in the Saratov region, not far from the city of Engels. Starting from April 12, 1962, the day of Gagarin's flight into space was declared a holiday - Cosmonautics Day. 1961 - The first manned flight into space

As a result, on March 17, 1991, an all-Russian referendum was held, as a result of which the post of President of the RSFSR was introduced. On June 12, 1991, as a result of the first popular elections, B. N. Yeltsin became President of the RSFSR, receiving 45,552,041 votes, which amounted to 57.30 percent of those who took part in the vote, and significantly ahead of Nikolai Ryzhkov, who, despite the support of the allied authorities, received only 16.85 percent of the vote. Together with B. N. Yeltsin, Vice President Alexander Rutskoi was elected. On June 1, 1991, representatives of the democratic movement - G. Kh. Popov and A. A. Sobchak - were elected mayors of Moscow and Leningrad. After his election, the main slogans of B. N. Yeltsin were the fight against the privileges of the nomenclature and the maintenance of Russian sovereignty within the USSR. On July 10, 1991, B. N. Yeltsin took the oath of allegiance to the people of Russia and the Russian Constitution, and took office as President of the RSFSR. 1991 - Collapse of the USSR and the fall of socialism.

Conclusion The historical calendar is a historical memory

« Creating a calendar

historical events"

Prepared students of 4th grade “B”

Class teacher T.A. Smokolova

Organizing time
  • The bell rang and fell silent - the lesson begins. You sat down quietly at your desks, everyone looked at me. Wish you success with your eyes and forward to new knowledge!
Fundamental Question What is a calendar? Calendar (lat. calendarium, calemdae- first day of the month) - time notation system Project objectives: - maintain interest in the most important events of the past, - cultivate independence. Over a long history, people have come up with many different calendars. For a long time, there were three calendars in Rus': civil, church and folk(natural) months, and these three different calculations of time did not always coincide. For example, New Year's Eve civil calendar in ancient times it fell on March 1, which did not correspond well to the rhythm of economic life. Church calendar opened the year on September 1st. In 1348, at the Orthodox Council in Moscow, it was decided that both the civil and church years should begin on September 1. This order lasted until the era of Peter I; by his decree, the new year began to be counted from January 1. Peter I introduced the Julian calendar in Russia, while most European countries used the more accurate Gregorian calendar.

Historical information about calendars.

1715 Peter I issued a decree prohibiting residents of the capital from tamping boots and shoes with staples and nails (to preserve wooden pavements)
  • Having founded Petersburg, Peter I immediately began to take care of its streets. The laying of each new street was approved by him personally. At first these were just clearings. Even the main street - Nevskaya Prospekt - was only a clearing from the Admiralty to the Novgorod road. There was no pavement on it: two ordinary ditches were dug along the edges to drain water.
Student performance

« Creating a calendar

historical events"

Project of Novoprutskaya Anastasia

On September 13, 1745, the first geographical "Russian Atlas" was published. It was released Russian Academy Sciences and is recognized as the first official atlas of the state.

"Atlas of Russia" - a unique representative of early Russian cartography - is a collection of nineteen special maps, "representing the All-Russian Empire with its border lands, compiled according to the rules of geographical and modern observations, with the attached General Map of this great empire, the efforts and works of the Imperial Academy Sciences".

Many cartographers worked on the creation of the atlas, carrying out instrumental surveys of Russian lands by decree of Peter I, for twenty years.

Project - Ivanova Raula.

Project – Logunova Ivana

On this day in different countries world, in the name of caring for the environment and people's health, many people switch to public transport, bicycles or become pedestrians.

Project - Nikishkina Ivan

Project – Andrey Bogdanov

September 25, 1763 By order of Catherine II, the Pavlovsk Hospital, the first public hospital in Russia, was opened in Moscow.

The medical and medical part of the hospital has always been set at the height of the requirements of science; outstanding medical figures have been appointed to its management. Worked here: Leventhal, Lorey, Uronosov, Rein, Vinogradov, Nesterov and others.

From the very beginning of its formation until today, the Pavlovsk Hospital has been the largest medical and scientific center, and a magnificent monument of architecture and art of the 18-19 centuries.

Project – Pavel Bogdanova

The huge Tatar army of the Golden Horde, led by Mamai, moved to Rus'.

In a fierce battle between the Don, Nepryadva and Krasivaya Mecha rivers, Russian army led by Prince Dmitry, won a victory on the Kulikovo field over the Tatar army.

After the Battle of Kulikovo, Prince Dmitry received the nickname Donskoy and stopped paying tribute to the Tatars.

Project – Sophia Kharichkina

The history of the program and its ageless heroes

"GOOG night kids!" - TV show for children preschool and primary school age. Published since September 1, 1964.

"GOOG night kids!" became the first domestic program for kids, and the kids loved it

PROJECT – Daria Zubkova.

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The presentation on the topic “Creating a calendar of historical events” can be downloaded absolutely free on our website. Subject of the project: History. Colorful slides and illustrations will help you engage your classmates or audience. To view the content, use the player, or if you want to download the report, click on the corresponding text under the player. The presentation contains 8 slide(s).

Presentation slides

Municipal budgetary educational institution Secondary School No. 165

Project “Creating a calendar of historical events”

Slide 2

Fundamental Question What is a calendar?

Calendar (lat. calendarium, calemdae - first day of the month) - a time reckoning system Project objectives: - to maintain interest in the most important events of the past, - to foster independence.

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Historical information about calendars. Over a long history, people have come up with many different calendars. For a long time in Rus' there were three calendars: civil, church and folk (natural) calendars, and these three different time calculations did not always coincide. For example, the New Year according to the civil calendar in ancient times fell on March 1, which did not correspond well to the rhythm of economic life. The church calendar opened the year on September 1. In 1348, at the Orthodox Council in Moscow, it was decided that both the civil and church years should begin on September 1. This order lasted until the era of Peter I; by his decree, the new year began to be counted from January 1. Peter I introduced the Julian calendar in Russia, while most European countries used the more accurate Gregorian calendar.

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historical events of 1961

01.01. Monetary reform began in the USSR: 10 old rubles are exchanged for 1 new ruble 02.12. A Soviet heavy artificial Earth satellite was launched into orbit 02.15 A total solar eclipse occurred, passing through the territory of the USSR in a narrow strip from Odessa to the Taimyr Peninsula

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02.18 Soviet researchers of Antarctica opened a new scientific station in the area of ​​Dronning Maud Land. The station was named Novolazarevskaya 02.19 The installation of a telescope was completed at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory of the USSR Academy of Sciences 09.03 In the USSR, a spacecraft with an experimental animal was launched into orbit 03.18 An underground river was discovered by geologists in the waterless Mirzor-Abad basin of Tajikistan. A well 80 meters deep produces 500 liters of water every second 03.25. In the Soviet Union, the fifth satellite was launched into orbit. 04.12 In the USSR, a spacecraft with a person on board was successfully launched into space. Yuri Gagarin orbits the planet in 108 minutes and returns safely to Earth

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05.11 Radar detection of the planet Venus was carried out in the Soviet Union. 06.03 During the meeting between Khrushchev and Kennedy in Vienna (June 3-4), the Soviet leader proposes to the US President to hold a conference in order to conclude a peace treaty with Germany and declare Berlin a free city, also discuss the issue of disarmament and simultaneously hold negotiations on a nuclear test ban 07.20 Working in the Kiev Historical Museum, the famous Soviet archaeologist Academician B.A. Rybakov finished deciphering the mysterious signs on a Slavic jug from the 4th century. 08.06 On board the Vostok-2 spacecraft, pilot-cosmonaut Major German Stepanovich Titov went into space

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08.10 The 5th International Biochemical Congress took place in Moscow. The idea of ​​ways to decipher the code of heredity was first expressed at the congress. 10.17 The 12th Congress of the CPSU began its work in Moscow. N. Khrushchev makes new revelations about Stalin and announces that communism will be built by 1980. At the congress, a possible break in Soviet-Chinese relations is announced 10.31 Stalin’s body is taken out of the mausoleum and reburied in the necropolis on Red Square near the Kremlin wall 12.08 All-Union Meeting of Astronomers on lunar exploration 09/12 USSR breaks off relations with Albania