Yasnaya Polyana

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House of Leo Tolstoy in Yasnaya Polyana.
House of Leo Tolstoy in Yasnaya Polyana.

Yasnaya Polyana (Russian: Ясная Поляна, literally: "Clear Glade") was the home of Leo Tolstoy, located 12 kilometers southwest of Tula, Russia. The writer was born, lived and was buried there.

Immediately after Tolstoy's death, the estate was designated his memorial museum. It was at first run by Alexandra Tolstaya, the writer's daughter. The current director of the museum is also one of Tolstoy's descendants. The museum contains Tolstoy's personal effects and movables, as well as his library of 22,000 volumes. It was there that Tolstoy wrote his celebrated novels War and Peace and Anna Karenina.

The museum contains the writer's mansion, the school he founded for peasant children, and a park with Tolstoy's grave. During World War II the estate was occupied by the Germans and desecrated,[1] but the most precious items had been evacuated by the Soviet government prior to that. Following the war the estate and mansion were restored to exactly how they were when Tolstoy lived there, and Yasnaya Polyana remains a hugely popular tourist attraction within Russia.

Dining room in Yasnaya Polyana.
Dining room in Yasnaya Polyana.
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[edit] References

  1. ^ "They destroyed the estate and museum of Leo Tolstoy, "Yasnaya Polyana" and desecrated the grave of the great Writer", said Robert H. Jackson during the Nuremberg trials (see "The Case Against the Nazi War Criminals: Opening Statement for the United States of America", A.A. Knopf, 1946, page 164).

Coordinates: 54°04′34″N, 37°31′34″E