Queen's crest. From the book "Red Spies": The figure of the poet and military intelligence officer Nikolai Gumilyov attracted the attention of not only the Cheka, but also the emerging Soviet intelligence. Unknown pages of the life of Nikolai Gumilyov

Traces of ancestors in our North have been known for a long time, a huge contribution to their study was made by my friend and colleague, the first head of the Russian People's Front, Doctor of Philosophy, Valery Nikitich Demin (1942-2006), who died untimely in a series of books about Hyperborea, and the Kuzovskaya archipelago in the White Sea no less significant for our history than the Solovki. Nowadays, everyone can visit these fabulous places in the summer, covered with many legends and ancient testimonies. I was interested in Timur Nazikulov's note from the Moskovskaya Pravda newspaper five years ago under the heading "Finds" (November 2, 2005, No. 241 / 25252 /, p. 2) - "The Pigeon Book" by Nikolai Gumilyov: Russian researchers discovered unknown pages of the biography of the great poet "):

“Last week, a press conference was held in Moscow by Konstantin Sevenard, a well-known researcher of antiquity and a public figure from St. Petersburg. The theme of the event was the sensational finds of the Sevenard expedition, undertaken this summer on the Kuzovskaya archipelago in the White Sea. The researchers managed to find traces of the "Stone Book" - the "divine" artifact of Ancient Rus'. According to the organizers of the expedition, references to the "Stone Book" are contained in the works of Lomonosov, Roerich, who tried to comprehend the secret of this legendary monument, and especially in the work of Nikolai Gumilyov, treated kindly by the emperor after a trip to the Russian north in 1904, where the poet discovered flat rocks with mysterious hieroglyphs - pages of the "Stone Book".

“I have been seriously interested in this time for a long time,” says Konstantin Sevenard. - I managed to get access to the materials currently stored in the special depository, in particular, to the diary entries of Matilda Feliksovna Kshesinskaya, my grandmother. From them, I learned the story of a gold comb of a uniquely high standard, found by Gumilyov in one of his northern expeditions, then presented to Matilda by Nicholas II and disappeared along with a significant part of her treasures. I continued to search for information on this topic and came across Gumilyov's diaries, as well as his report on the expedition, financed, as it turned out, from the royal treasury. In the report, he describes his finds - the Stone Book and the ancient tomb. One of the finds during the research of the tomb was the comb.

According to researchers, all these facts are confirmed, first of all, by the work of symbolist and acmeist poets, whose recognized ideologist is Nikolai Gumilyov. The theme of the "Stone Book" repeatedly slips in the poems of Nikla Zabolotsky, Velimir Khlebnikov, Konstantin Balmont, Andrei Bely, Osip Mandelstam.

However, as of today, Sevenard's research has been suspended. To conduct archaeological surveys on the islands of the Russian Body and the German Body and a full-scale underwater study of the bottom landscape in the place where the mouth of the Indel River was once located, and, consequently, the Stone Book is located, permission from the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation is required.

This is not easy to achieve - for five years, Konstantin Sevenard, being a deputy of the State Duma, tried to obtain permission for research work in the mansion of his grandmother M.F. Kshesinskaya, but neither a well-developed project, nor a willingness to fully finance the work of archaeologists could break through administrative obstacles ".

  1. Civil war of androids and wikis
    Why Yuri Andropov visited the entrance to the legendary Shambhala

    This version of the development of human civilization, perhaps, will be even more abrupt than, alas, the already famous historical aberrations of Fomenkov's comrades ... Here is the plot for a monumental epic ...

    A long time ago, at least 70 thousand years ago, that is, just at the time of the rampant Neanderthals in Europe, the ancestral home of all Indo-Europeans (Aryans) existed in the Russian North. Moreover, it was not only the ancestral home of the Aryans, but in general of all the peoples of the Earth. And in the role of direct, so to speak, our creators were almost immortal creatures of more than two meters in height - wikis. In turn, the Wiki Empire is an earthly colony of some stellar civilization.

    Civilization, though stellar, but life in the Russian North and 70 thousand years ago, you see, was also not sugar. So the wikis had to create (today they would say - clone) assistants for themselves, those same Aryans. That is, our ancestors with you - biological robots, androids. It was then that what later became known as civilization fermented. Take androids and start multiplying on your own! They liked this business so much that very soon the wikis simply lost control over the livestock of the Aryans. (In general, this is another picture to a well-known fact: technology tends to get out of hand - nuclear and biological weapons, the Internet, the secret of making Phoenician purple, sheep cloning, etc.)

    The Aryans, having multiplied in such a shameless way, began to demand for themselves equal rights with their actual parents, wikis, rights - the right to eternal life, first of all. Immortality was provided to wikis by a certain substance (drug), the recipe of which they kept more than they now store the recipe for some Coca-Cola. In short, no one wanted to die! Word for word - it came to civil war. The leader of the Aryan rebels was a young man named Fab. And although he had to fight against a technologically much more advanced opponent - the queen of the Wick Empire, for example, flew on dragons, and the basis of the technological power of the Wicks was an intangible impact on the material world - Fab won.

    The last thing known about Comandante Phoebe is that he buried his son and daughter on about. The Russian Body in the White Sea, at the same time built an underground palace there and moved to the South - to look for the entrance to Shambhala. He found this hole in the underworld (parallel civilization) on the territory of present-day Tajikistan. During the storming of this passage, he finally laid down his violent head ...

    This is where this whole fantasy-style heroic saga ends and tearful Russian melodrama begins.

    It turns out that the civil war of wikis with androids - and at the same time all the clues to cosmological mysteries, including the birth of the Universe, stars and the Sun - are captured in the so-called Stone (its other name is Pigeon) book. At least the true Aryan from St. Petersburg, Konstantin Sevenard, is sure of this. By the way, the well-known story with a guy named Prometheus, who gave fire to people, also turns out to be written off from the Pigeon Book. “Feb gave this technology to the Aryans,” emphasizes Konstantin Sevenard.

    Where does this confidence come from, you ask? I will quote an excerpt from a press release from Sevenard's recent press conference in Moscow.

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  2. Ai-Petri - the cradle of civilization

    Perhaps he is a descendant of the Romanovs. Perhaps he found traces of an ancient civilization. Perhaps he knows the exact location of the cache, where a unique artifact is kept among the many treasures...

    Perhaps the powers that be are trying to stop him, fearing that he will find something too sensational. The history of his family is like a detective novel, which has not been completed yet.

    He is Konstantin Sevenard, a former special forces soldier, builder, hydraulic engineer, successful businessman, president of the Russian Gefest Industrial Company, publicist, researcher of lost civilizations. In his incomplete 39, Konstantin Yuryevich not only reached serious heights in business, but also took part in hostilities (Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Angola, Transnistria), was a deputy of the Legislative Assembly of St. Petersburg and a deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Federation.

    With a very busy work schedule (his secretaries and assistants joke: “Konstantin keeps us in a black body!”), One wonders how he has enough time for everything. The formula for Konstantin Sevenard's success is simple: the main thing is to set priorities. For him, family comes first - his wife and four children. In addition, he manages to write good poetry and prose.

    Recently, a notorious researcher in Russia (the entire Russian press was making noise about his hypotheses, but more on that later) acquired a mansion in the village of Nikita. At the end of May, he held a presentation of his book "White City" for Crimean scientists and journalists. The bold conclusions about the location of the cities of the most ancient civilizations (some of them in the Crimea), which Konstantin is ready to confirm before any academic council, amazed not only journalists who were rather weak in the sciences, but also the masters of the history department of the Tauride National University. It seems that Professor Igor Nikolaevich Khrapunov is seriously interested in the issue and will certainly take part in Sevenard's further research.

    “My interest in the history of Egypt and the entire Ancient World,” writes K. Sevenard, “is probably due to the fact that I was born in Egypt, where my parents, also hydraulic engineers, participated in the construction of the Aswan Dam. A childish question was also born there, to which I have been looking for an answer all my life: “Where is the Great Sphinx looking?”

    As Constantine later found out, the direction of the gaze of the Sphinx became a kind of invisible axis along which the army of Alexander the Great followed.

    After Egypt, the family of Konstantin Yurievich moved to Tajikistan, where the world's highest dam, the Nurek hydroelectric power station, was then being built. Tajik legends link many places in the area with the name of Alexander the Great. This is the Sogdian rock, and the lake Iskander-Kul, three hundred kilometers from Nurek.

    On one of the rocks, Constantine saw a giant image of the Sphinx. At its front paws blackened the entrance to a large cave. He convinced his father, who was the head of the construction of the hydroelectric power station, that the climbers employed at the construction site surveyed the cave and the furrow that outlined the image. The conclusion was unequivocal: both the cave and the contour of the Sphinx were of artificial origin. However, despite the significance of the find, a signal was received "from above" - ​​to continue construction. As a result, the Sphinx and the entrance to the tunnel were flooded.

    Later, Constantine repeatedly returned in his memories to the Sphinx on the rock, to the tunnel into which, according to legend, Alexander the Great descended. Leaving the army in the gorge of the Great Sphinx, he returned in a completely different way: according to legend, he rose inside a large transparent ball from the bottom of the lake. Later they began to call him the name of the great commander - Iskander-Kul (in Tajik). Sevenard claims that this lake is almost regular in shape, surrounded by steep banks, and a narrow track of the road is carved into them - also not of natural origin. And Konstantin made many similar discoveries.

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    1. Last year, Konstantin Sevenard made an expedition to the White Sea. Together with his like-minded people, he explored the Kuzovskaya archipelago, and the finds of the White Sea may well change the view of the history of the world. According to the researcher, at the bottom of the reservoir of the Belomorskaya HPP there is a legendary and mysterious Stone Book. Nicholas Roerich and many Symbolist poets have references to her (another name is Pigeon). There are suggestions that Lomonosov saw her, which may well explain his extraordinary career.

      Perhaps Nikolai Gumilyov, traveling through the Russian North, also saw the Stone Book. Gumilyov received a report on it from Nicholas II, who took the discovery very seriously. Then, under the patronage of Emperor Nikolai Gumilyov, he was placed in the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum, and his further studies were funded by the Russian treasury. Following the texts of the Stone Book, Gumilyov organized an expedition to the Kuzovskaya archipelago, where on the island of Russian Kuzov he opened the tomb of Queen Mob. There he found a unique comb made of 1000-carat gold, called "Hyperborean".

      This is how Gumilyov himself described this find: “... We managed to open this burial, made in the form of a crypt. The Vikings did not bury their dead and did not build stone tombs, I concluded that this burial belongs to an older civilization. in the grave was the skeleton of a woman, no objects, except for the only one. Near the woman's skull was a golden comb of amazing work, on top of which a girl in a tight-fitting tunic sat on the backs of two dolphins carrying her.

      According to the Sevenard family legend, Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich presented this comb at the request of Nicholas II to Matilda Kshesinskaya, who was the great-grandmother of Konstantin Sevenard. He believes that the comb still lies in the cache of the Kshesinskaya mansion in St. Petersburg. The existence of the crest can become indisputable proof of the authenticity of the events described in the Stone Book. However, it has yet to be extracted.

      A lot has been written about the love story of the heir to the Russian throne, Nikolai Aleksandrovich Romanov, and the young talented ballerina Matilda Feliksovna Kshesinskaya in recent years. It is generally accepted that their romance ended shortly before the official marriage of the Tsesarevich. However, there is evidence that even after his marriage and coronation, the emperor repeatedly met with the ballerina.

      In September 1910, the emperor lived in the Konstantinovsky Palace without a family. Matilda Kshesinskaya spent the entire autumn of 1910 and the winter of 1911 at the dacha, which was separated from the imperial palace only by a small canal. Then the ballerina rarely appeared in the capital, and in spring and summer she generally disappeared from the field of view of secular society. She lived in the estate of her friend's relatives, which belonged to the nobles Sevenards. Her brother lived here with his young wife. They spent the entire summer and autumn of 1911 at the Sevenardov estate and returned to St. Petersburg only in November with the girl Tselina, who, according to the metrics, was born in October, although the newlyweds were observed with a small child almost all summer. In the future, they will say about Tselina’s ballet successes: “How she looks like the great Matilda on stage ...”

      Many years later, when Matilda Feliksovna was already living in France, she tried to meet Yuri Sevenard, the son of Tselina. She was already over 90, but the famous Matilda was ready to come to Odessa to meet her relatives. The state could not allow this meeting.

      “There is a family legend,” said Konstantin Sevenard, “which, with numerous facts, photographs, films and letters, confirms that my grandmother is the daughter of Matilda Kshesinskaya and Emperor Nicholas II. In any case, her birth is shrouded in a certain mystery. The Third Directorate of the Tsarist Okhrana participated in the preservation of the secret. Even when she was a little girl, royal honors were given to her, this can be seen from the 1914 film, which has been preserved in the family archive. So maybe we're connected in some way.

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    2. By the way, at the insistence of Nicholas II, Gumilyov sold the artifact he found, the Hyperborean comb, to Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich, who at that time was already practically the husband of Matilda Feliksovna. It is known where the cache of valuables is, my relatives were present at its creation.

      In this cache, according to Sevenard, there is a collection of diamonds, Faberge jewelry. Matilda Feliksovna was one of the richest women in Russia, and before the revolution, she bought jewelry in huge quantities, transferred her capital into jewelry values. These values ​​can rightfully be considered the property of the country. Konstantin Sevenard is sure that most of the unique Faberge products are located in the caches of Kshesinskaya.

      “If the hiding place is opened,” Konstantin Yuryevich assured, “everything will undoubtedly belong to the state. According to our laws, all cultural and historical values ​​before 1917 belong to the state, we do not object and do not claim them. To extract it, a project has already been developed, agreed with all authorities, only the signature of the Minister of Culture of the Russian Federation is missing. I have met with him several times, and formally he does not mind that we will carry out this work. But he made it clear to me that some forces were interfering, either from above, or from the side, which is not very clear. The question, under various pretexts, dragged on for almost five years, a temporary refusal was given for unknown reasons. Although the project is protected, its "high" level is noted by professional authorities.

      Konstantin Sevenard not only paid for the development of the project, he is ready to assemble a team of professionals who will take care of extracting the cache, he is ready to finance all the work. All this - for the love of history and expanding the boundaries of human knowledge. But in spite of everything, the authorities do not give the green light to this project. Maybe they really are hiding something?

      The house in the village of Nikita Konstantin Sevenard bought for a reason. On the peninsula, he is also going to do research that can lead scientists to sensational discoveries. According to his hypothesis, not far from Kerch, next to the Adzhimushkay quarries, there was one of the leading centers of the ancient state of Hyperborea, which was called the New Tsar-grad. According to legend, it was located not far from the Iry mountains, and these, Sevenard is sure, are the modern Crimean mountains. The terrain near Kerch seemed to him very interesting. In plan - the correct geometric shape - an arch and a circle in the center. It could be huge city walls and, apparently, the top of a giant amphitheater. All this is washed away with sand from above, as the hydraulic engineer Sevenard claims that this ancient civilization owned the technology of hydraulic reclamation.

      In addition, in the Crimea, Sevenard expects to find confirmation of his hypothesis that the sacred Iriysk mountain Alatyr, otherwise the White Mountain, on the slopes of which there was a sacred garden, today is Mount Ai-Petri. Nikitsky Garden and Vorontsovsky Park are much older than the oldest buildings on their territories!

      - I assume that this sacred White Mountain is really Mount Ai-Petri. These are not only my assumptions, there are many facts confirming this. In the Vedas of the Slavs it is directly stated that "... We left the Iry mountains and walked for a century, and conquered Europe." According to Gothic tradition, the kings of the three united tribes that captured Europe were buried in the sacred Iry Garden as a sign of special respect - Constantine seems to be completely sure of his assumptions, but science requires confirmation of them. - The driver who works with me in Yalta, showed accidentally opened in 1991 burials from three graves in the Nikitsky Botanical Garden. The bones are still lying there - to the shame of the local authorities. Can you imagine if these are the remains of the great Gothic kings who conquered Europe? And this is not excluded.

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    3. “A place not far from Kerch, next to the Adzhimushkay quarries, requires professional research by Crimean archaeologists, and I will help in any way I can, I will participate with pleasure,” K. Sevenard promised. - I am convinced that our people are not 1300 years old, but at least three thousand. Looking at all of you, beautiful, I am convinced of this. We are not at all younger than Europeans, but in my opinion - older, smarter, our culture is deeper and richer. At least not inferior to European.

      If the hypotheses of Konstantin Sevenard are confirmed, the Crimea can rightfully be considered almost the cradle of civilization and the center of the world. Just imagine what kind of flow of tourists will be drawn to our peninsula. The main thing is that the authorities of the autonomy should pay attention to the project and at least not interfere, as happened with the cache of Kshesinskaya in St. Petersburg.

      http://yalta.org.ua/kurier/news.php?id=1150704598

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  3. In 2005, the expedition of Konstantin Sevenard to the White Sea also took place.
    This is such a public figure in St. Petersburg, who says that since childhood there has been a memory of a past life in him, moreover, the life of a completely specific subject, his name is Fab or Fab. I respect people who remember past lives only if in this past life a person does not remember himself as Nefertiti. This already resembles a mental disorder, you see. And the boy Kostya shocked his parents by talking about some things that the child cannot know. So, in Tajikistan, he talked about the storming of a certain city, which was located near the entrance to the underworld, where the souls of the dead go. Say, this entrance really exists, as does the image of the sphinx opposite the entrance to this tunnel. According to Sevenard's insights, before his death in that life, he managed to dictate and depict to his subordinate Aryans a dictionary of petroglyphs, which Fab used when creating the Stone Book on the shores of the White Sea. All the events of Phoebe's life after leaving the North are described in the rock text, which is located in the area of ​​the town of Santuda in Tajikistan. It is proof of the existence of Phoebe, since the petroglyphs of the text allegedly coincide with the text of the Stone Book, which is located at the bottom of the reservoir of the Belomorskaya hydroelectric power station. The Santuda hydroelectric power station is under construction, the reservoir of which will flood these inscriptions, but for the time being they are still available. And the entrance to the underworld and the sphinx in Tajikistan were flooded by the reservoir of the Nurek hydroelectric power station, the dam of which is the highest in the world. Such a height of the dam leads to useless thoughts right now ... For example, about why the Arkaim city in the Southern Urals almost got into the zone of flooding of reservoirs.

    And there are legends about the Stone Book. There is a legend, in my opinion completely crazy, that Lomonosov saw the book, which explains his career. And also that Nikolai Gumilyov saw her, at the age of 18, in 1904, traveling in the Russian North. Here already, perhaps, at least there is a half-truth, they say, he did not read it, but made inquiries about it. Because Gumilyov was allegedly hosted by Emperor Nicholas II with a report on the Stone Book. Further research is funded by the Russian treasury. An expedition is organized to the Kuzovskaya archipelago, which opens the tomb there and finds a unique comb of gold. Sevenard claims that during a trip in the summer of 2005, he discovered an open tomb (which for some reason he calls the "tomb of Queen Mob") on the top of one of the hills of the Russian Kuzov.

    The crest, called "Hyperborean", was found on Kuzov by an expedition of the Russian Academy of Sciences led by the researcher of the Russian North Vise in 1898. Here is how Wiese himself describes this find: “For excavations, we chose a stone pyramid on the island, which is called the Russian Body, unfortunately, the pyramid turned out to be empty, and we were about to finish the work on the island when I asked the workers not to do anything special. hoping to turn over a large stone slab near the pyramid. Under the stove, to my incredible joy, there were stones tightly fitted to each other. The very next day we were able to open this burial. The Vikings did not bury their dead and did not build stone tombs, I concluded that this burial belongs to an older civilization. In the grave was the skeleton of a woman, no objects, except for a single one. Near the woman's skull was a golden comb of amazing work, on top of which a girl in a tight-fitting tunic sat on the backs of two dolphins carrying her.

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    Regarding the history of the planet and its 2nd full wave of life ..
    Once upon a time, approx. 1.15 million years ago, and in another galaxy - connected with you geometrically, but with other parametric characteristics, the resettlement of full-like life began, and those people were able to move through the portal in one of the arms to your coordinates - the right-ascending principle of organization of the Milky Way galaxy
    (another galaxy that you will not find anywhere in your 0HBO coordinates is called the Stellar Wind, and it is in a different line of their total charge, and its life does not intersect with yours in any way, since their coefficient of creation is different than yours, and only upon reaching corresponding levels and abilities, you will gain the ability to move to their coordinates, after 10,000 years approx.), and after long expeditions they discovered the Earth, in the historical era of the late Paleolithic, when you were all Pithecanthropes, and they left several observation bases on the planet, and returned here for the full settlement of the planet only 258 thousand years ago, and about 120 thousand of them settled around the planet, everywhere giving very serious progress to your communities that lived in the era of gathering and wandering around their habitats ... And in the next 123 thousand years many cities and states were built by them and you, you stepped very far in their leadership and direction, the population of the planet on all continents reached 23 million people, on On all continents, the primary structures of self-government and matriarchy were organized, since the society of aliens was organized in this way.
    But through the same portals, about 125 thousand years ago, other aliens moved into your galaxy - the Egdorians - worshipers of the doctrine of chaos and the growth of entropy, and they entered into a tough fight with the first aliens, and about 84 thousand years ago, the second were able to destroy the bases of the Eshdorians and captured the control portals to the alien galaxy, which cut them off from their homeland and its support...
    In general, the Ashdorians are the beings of a certain brotherhood (ideoms and doctrines of the ascension of all forms of life and the progress of the universal ..), whose adherents and ministers were aware of the creation of full-like and humanoid life in the entire four galaxies from their common platform and its prime charge - from which people are the creators , then people are gods, aliens, and finally - you of the straight-ascending principle of organization - the final one in this four, the 2nd full-like wave of the life of the planet ... And they lived for 150-170 thousand years, were psychics in modern and knew both atomic organization and first-field, possessed technologies for changing the coupling of nucleons and coegortons, partially owned short-range and long-range forces, gravitational transformations, and could even see through time up to 1-2 million years, which gave them simply fantastic opportunities for today's humanity, and they were gods for you from the stars, their figures and images are still preserved in some corners of the Earth, they erected a commonwealth of states on the planet rstv (Esvantia and Amazonia, see below ...) on all 5 continents, they flew on their ships almost throughout the galaxy, and at that time gave the beginning of science and general organization, opened portals to adjacent planetary planes and even other planets, and then all states lived in a harmonious union and their control was universal ... and about 2.2 meters tall on average. And it was their engineers and adepts who erected grandiose structures - observatories and temples, cities and sanctuaries to control the forces of the planet, including stone rivers and roads on all continents, aqueducts and underground shelters that you will still find (well hidden and deep enough. .).

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  4. (up to 57 species and their varieties, all who remained after the previous ice age (2nd) - from 125 to 119 thousand years ago ... when the Eshdorians still completely ruled the planet and contributed to the development and progress of the spiritual and technological local wave of life, which and we are...)
    and the remaining compositions of people, directed by the protectorate of the Esgodorians, could not preserve their knowledge and technologies in the future, and about 46 thousand years ago, wars and clashes of entire peoples of all continents began in the struggle for territory and domination, as a result of which almost all cities built under the leadership of the Eshdorians died , until 890, the city of Eternity and the city of the Stars, the cities of the Mother and Father, all their abberatories and temples, scientific and public buildings, all of this now remains in abundance and in ruined form on the territory of the Urals and Siberia, Altai and all of Eurasia and other continents , all the megalithic buildings studied by modern researchers and progressors, their followers and adherents, and all this heritage of bygone times was left by your ancestors and the leadership of the Eshdorians ... (and temples in Syria - Palmyra, and Baalbek, and other grandiose temples and sanctuaries on all continents ...) ... and it was they who built stone rivers in Siberia and Altai - since they were clairvoyants and saw movements the development of power flows of all 4 types of life on the planet - stone, water, air and fire of the bowels, built many places for controlling elemental forces - to control the weather and even climate, because in times before the last glacier the climate was very favorable, moderate, and even at the poles the temperature did not fall below 7-8 degrees in winter, which ensured very harmonious living conditions on all continents ...
    And of course, these events did not do without the participation of other compositions of our galaxy, which everyone knows - Orions and Sirians, Vegans and others who are in other coordinates than 0HBO, and pursued a policy similar to the policy of the Egdorians - chaos and degradation, checks and trials , false principles and the replacement of permanent compositions with their own, who lived on the principle of ignorance and orientation to the past,
    (the old is better than the new - this is their motto and creed, and the direction of temporary specializations towards the past, the ancient principles of survival and the first life - the harsh cycles of youth of any branch of the life of our primordial creation ...)
    since they were and remain ego-modified, i.e. they are such in nature and only in millions of years will they move into positive installations and scales, and you will in the coming years, which makes it impossible for them to remain in your star system and guide you in the future. And these galaxies that came from the stars were and remain in the leadership of the Egdorians and another branch from another galaxy - but not associated with ours and other principles of life - the mirror one, which live with waste and negative energies that are unacceptable for you, and they gave the order to introduce into your structures and fields of modification codes and distorted your genetics for you to produce energy suitable for them, which deprived you of most of your opportunities by the end of the last ice age, when your star system, in most coordinates and time categories, entered into a full-fledged egorisdemine (your atomic-nuclear environment, and 0HBO - to which you are tuned with your consciousness of the waking principle in general, as it is practically understood, and with which you read this text from the computer screen, and with you up to 2000 creatures of your own composition, of a similar scale to you ...) and up to 75% all structures and their superassemblies, gradations and places of universal life in which your charges and substrates are located, bases and foundations, bodies and organisms, progressions and developments of them and your entire protogenesis – individual and universal.

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The poet and traveler of the Silver Age Nikolai Gumilyov, traveling in 1904 in the Russian North, saw hieroglyphs carved on a stone slope near the city of Belomorsk in one of the deep hollows at the mouth of the Indel River. He was sure that this was the legendary Stone Book, which contained the original knowledge about the world and became the primary source for myths and legends of almost all peoples of the world. Another name of the book - Pigeon, comes from the "pigeon" hieroglyphs with which the book is written. To facilitate reading, the author of the book, Phoebus, left to posterity a stone dictionary of symbols, in which the hieroglyphs, denoting, for example, stars, the sun, a person, a seagull, or a dragon, corresponded to an “explanatory” image. It was this dictionary that helped the young Gumilyov decipher the writings of the Pigeon Book, which is mentioned in Russian fairy tales, folk poetry, even in monastic records and the lives of saints.

In the Pigeon rock book, Gumilyov read some revelations about
the structure of the world, the physical and spiritual interaction of all life on the planet,
which more than 100 thousand years ago was inhabited by representatives of a completely different
civilization that perished due to a debilitating civil war. Conflict
flared up between the wikis, who knew the secret of the philosopher's stone and possessed
the right to eternal life, and the Aryans deprived of this privilege. After graduation
war and the death of the queen Mob, the leader of the rebels, Phoebus, led away the survivors
Aryans to the south.

With a report on the northern expedition and the discovery of the Stone Book of the 18-year-old
Nikolai Gumilyov was hosted by Emperor Nicholas II, who reacted to
find with extreme seriousness, therefore, further research by Gumilyov,
as well as his education at the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum was financed from the royal treasury.

From the texts of the Stone Book translated by Gumilyov, it follows that “Feb buried
on the island, which, according to the description, coincides with the island of the German body, under two
huge mounds of their son and daughter, but on the contrary, on an island similar to
Russian bodywork, his wife - the queen of the Vikov empire - Mob.

Following the texts of the Stone Book, Gumilyov organizes an expedition to Kuzovskaya
archipelago, where he opens an ancient tomb, in which he finds a unique comb
from gold of the 1000th test (such purity of gold has not been achieved so far).
This is how Gumilyov himself described this find: “For excavations, we chose a stone pyramid on the island, which is called the Russian Body, unfortunately, the pyramid turned out to be empty, and we were about to finish the work on the island when I asked the workers not to do anything special. hoping to dismantle a small pyramid, which was about ten meters from the first. There, to my incredible joy, there were stones tightly fitted to each other. The very next day we were able to open this burial. The Vikings did not bury their dead and did not build stone tombs, I concluded that this burial belongs to an older civilization. The grave contained the skeleton of a woman, no items except one. Near the skull of a woman was a golden comb of amazing work, on top of which a girl in a tight-fitting tunic sat on the backs of two dolphins carrying her.

According to legend, this comb, which was called "Hyperborean", was presented by Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich at the request of Emperor Nicholas II to the ballerina Matilda Kshesinskaya. “There is every reason to believe, following family traditions, that the comb still lies in the cache of the Kshesinskaya mansion in St. Petersburg,” says St. Petersburg public figure and researcher Konstantin Sevenard, who considers himself a descendant of Kshesinskaya. Indirect evidence is the fact that after the October Revolution of 1917, the Bolsheviks, in search of a unique comb, were one of the first to seize this particular mansion, and the American Masons offered Kshesinskaya herself to sell the comb for 4.5 million gold rubles. Sevenard, having studied all the diaries and letters of the ballerina, claims that Kshesinskaya considered the Hyperborean Comb to be a kind of catalyst for the revolution.

The further fate of N. Gumilyov is also symbolic. After the first revolution, he led the largest expedition in the history of Russia to Africa in search of the legendary land of Mu, which he learned about from the texts of the Stone Book. The collection brought by him and his nephew N. L. Sverchkov from Africa, according to experts, is in second place after the Miklouho-Maclay collection. The execution of Gumilyov in 1921, Konstantin Sevenard also connects with the secret knowledge that the Stone Book endowed the poet with and to which, according to him, Freemasons are very partial.

"GORDON" publishes selected chapters from the book "Red Spies" by Ukrainian journalist Sergei Kulida, which was published at the end of 2015. The author researched the history of intelligence and counterintelligence and found dark spots in the biographies of famous artists, writers, actors who became spies of their own free will or by chance. Among them were the poet Nikolai Gumilyov and the ballerina Anna Pavlova, who worked for the intelligence of the Russian Empire. The agent of the Cheka was the silent film star, actress Vera Kholodnaya, who was killed in Odessa. The book also presents the life stories of people who became the prototypes of famous literary and cinematic heroes, such as Anka the machine gunner and His Excellency's Adjutant. Today's story is about the acmeist poet Nikolai Gumilyov.

Photo from the book "Red Spies"

Unknown pages of the life of Nikolai Gumilyov

He was, perhaps, the greatest poet of the Silver Age of Russian literature. The founder of a new poetic direction - acmeism. His poems, forcibly withdrawn from literary circulation in the second half of the 1920s, nevertheless served as a guiding star, a kind of beacon, for many famous Soviet poets - Eduard Bagritsky, Nikolai Tikhonov, Vadim Shefner, Evgeny Vinokurov ...

Gradually, starting from the "perestroika" years, the name of Gumilyov and his poetic works began to return to literary use. Many literary and biographical works appeared, as well as memoirs of the life of Nikolai Stepanovich. But there is still no complete biography. And to this day, the life path of the poet in the works of his biographers is fairly replete with white spots. Studying what has been written about Gumilyov, getting acquainted with the testimonies of contemporaries about his being, one gets the impression that some unknown forces intentionally, like an eraser, wiped out whole, and considerable, layers from his life full of adventures. The wife, a "sorceress" from the "serpent's lair, from the city of Kyiv," also contributed. Anna Akhmatova, hating the memoirists of her brilliant husband, burned his letters, destroyed an incalculable number of priceless Gumilev documents. As for the poet himself, he was taciturn and not talkative. And he trusted his secrets to a few. And even then - not all ...

We will try, from those fragments of the poet’s fate that did not fit into the “glamorous” biographies, to sketch out a “summary” for the future fundamental and comprehensive study of the life of the poet and traveler, officer and gentleman and, of course, the outstanding military intelligence officer - Nikolai Gumilyov ...

Hyperborean comb for a ballerina

In 1906 in St. Petersburg, at the corner of Kronverksky Prospekt and Bolshaya Dvoryanskaya, according to the project of the architect Alexander von Gauguin, they began to build a majestic mansion, more like a palace. It was intended for the residence of the then famous ballerina Matilda Kshesinskaya. But it is unlikely that the servant of Melpomene, albeit quite famous, could afford such an impressive and luxurious dwelling. Shining on the stage of the Imperial Theater, Kshesinskaya, back in 1890, at a graduation ball at a theater school, thanks to the good-hearted mood of Emperor Alexander III, met his son Nicholas. Then the great-powerful father, winking at the young people, jokingly warned his child: "Just look, don't flirt too much." Something clearly felt father's heart ...


Despite the fact that the romance between the aspiring prima and the heir to the throne took place with the blessing and under the control of the imperial family, there could be no question of a joint future. Such a misalliance was not included in the plans of the august family.

“Although I knew for a long time that it was inevitable that sooner or later the heir would have to marry some foreign princess, nevertheless, my grief knew no bounds,” Matilda Kshesinskaya recalled. “What I experienced on the day of the Sovereign’s wedding, can only be understood by those who are able to really love with all their soul and with all their heart and who sincerely believe that true, pure love exists. I experienced incredible mental anguish. "

However, the ballerina did not remain without the attention of the royal family of the Romanovs. Soon the emperor's cousin noticed her. “Grand Duke Andrei Vladimirovich immediately made a huge impression on me that first evening that I met him: he was surprisingly handsome and very shy, which did not spoil him at all, on the contrary. During dinner, he accidentally touched his sleeve with a glass of red wine that tipped over in my direction and poured over my dress. I was not upset that the wonderful dress was lost, I immediately saw in this an omen that this would bring me much happiness in life. "

And although relations with the Grand Duke developed in the most serious way, confirmed by the birth of a son, Nikolai, who by that time had become the "owner" of the second "serial number" in the royal "service record", did not forget his youthful love. In 1907, he presented the famous dancer with an invaluable gift - an artifact - a golden comb.



And the prehistory of a truly royal gift is as follows. In 1903, returning from Tiflis, the family of the ship's doctor Stepan Yakovlevich Gumilyov settled in Tsarskoye Selo. By that time, his son Nikolasha, a calm and lonely boy, fond of zoology, geography and history, had already published his first poem "I fled the cities into the forest ...". Youthful searches for the meaning of life led the young Gumilyov to the Russian North. At least, this is what a hydraulic engineer by education and the president of the Russian Industrial Company Gefest, a former special forces soldier and deputy of the Russian State Duma, as well as the great-grandson of the ballerina Kshesinskaya, Konstantin Sevenard, says. At that time, the eighteen-year-old young man Nikolai Gumilyov, under the influence of the "Secret Doctrine" of Helena Blavatsky, as well as the results of the research of the expedition of the famous Russian traveler Nikolai Przhevalsky, became interested in studying occult, mystical teachings.

For that period of Russian history, the beginning of the 20th century, the presence in the capital of the empire of adherents of various religious and philosophical views, theosophical movements and all kinds of "seekers of forgotten wisdom" was very characteristic. “The whole of St. Petersburg is engulfed in an unusually strong mystical movement, and at present a whole whirlpool of small religions, cults, sects has already formed there,” wrote the correspondent of the occult magazine Rebus. “The movement embraces both the upper strata of society and the lower ones. In the upper strata we find a theosophical-Buddhist current... On the other hand, there is a rise of a strong interest in Freemasonry and the forms of religious movements of the last century that had once died out are emerging again. Apparently, it was not by chance that the Mongolian doctor Pyotr Badmaev, the envoy of the 13th Dalai Lama, the Buryats Agvan Dorzhiev, and, later, the Siberian "old man" Grigory Rasputin appeared in St. Petersburg surrounded by the royal family ...


And therefore, it can be considered quite reasonable to assume that at the peak of general interest in the religious and mystical teachings that swept Russia, Nikolai Gumilyov turned his attention to the close, even in purely geographical location, North, to the Kola Peninsula, to which there is nothing from Northern Palmyra ... It was the land of Karelia, according to pre-Aryan and ancient Aryan beliefs, that was the ancestral home of the Aryans - the legendary state of the Hittites - Hyperborea.

In these places, a mountain (or rock) rose, which was considered the central point of the world. According to ancient testimonies, she had "the foot of the seven heavens" on which the celestials lived, and where the "golden age" reigned. In the ancient Russian apocryphal narrative, dating back to the 14th century, "About the whole creature" it was told that in "Okiyan there is a pillar, called adamantine ( diamond. - Sergei Kulida). He is the head of heaven. "" The pillar in Okiyana to heaven "is also known according to legend as the Bel-burning stone or Alatyr-stone and the fact that it was located on the fabulous island of Buyan (now known as the German Body, located near the city of Kem ) in the White Sea. By the way, it was to this "Rock on the Ocean" that the mythical Prometheus, sung by Aeschylus, was chained for forty years. And the now replicated Nostradamus wrote that "the North is a special place for meeting other worlds."



As a result of the age-old transformation, the power of the Hittites-Gettians and, ultimately, the Goths extended their dominion from the White to the Black Sea. And, as some researchers assure, it was under the influence of the Goths-Hyperboreans that the empire of King Philip and his son, Alexander the Great, subsequently arose.

The legend of the so-called "Stone" or "Pigeon", perhaps more precisely - "Deep ( old,- Sergey Kulida) book". This "folio" was actually runic signs carved in the rocks on the shore of the White Sea, up to 80 meters wide. But in 1962, the "canonical" text, as Konstantin Sevenard, mentioned by us, assures, was intentionally flooded during the construction of the Belomorskaya hydroelectric power station.

What is the secret of this "book"? According to historians, it not only contained the original teachings about the universe, but also revealed the mystery of the elixir of eternal life, some applied technologies that could bring civilization to a new level of development. And the "Stone Book" has become the primary source for myths and legends of almost all the peoples of the world, all the most ancient knowledge and religions.

It was this lost artifact that Nikolai Gumilyov allegedly found in 1904 during his trip to the rocky islands of the White Sea. And after returning, he immediately achieved an audience with his high-ranking neighbor in Tsarskoye Selo, Nicholas II. Strange as it may seem, meeting the king was as easy as shelling pears. St. Petersburg artists and researchers Natalya and Vladimir Evseviev say that, "by the way, the royal residence ( Alexander Palace.- Sergey Kulida) was then open to everyone. "And therefore it was possible to get acquainted with the emperor during a walk. "Now it sounds incredible," the Evsevyovs say, "but at that time the leaders of the country were much closer to the people." And the house Poluboyarinov, where the Gumilyovs lived, was located in the very center of the "Russian Versailles" - at the corner of Orangery and Middle streets - near the Alexander Palace itself.


Gerhard Mercator's map published by his son Rudolf in 1535. In the center of the map is the legendary Arctida (Hyperborea)


Surprisingly, after listening to the report of an eighteen-year-old youth, the Russian autocrat ordered to immediately allocate certain funds from the treasury to continue research. The expedition led by Gumilyov again goes to the North - to the islands of the Kuzovsky archipelago. Following the information gleaned from the "Stone Book" deciphered by him, the young researcher begins to search for legendary evidence of an ancient era, the tomb of "Queen Mob". "For excavations, we chose a stone pyramid on the island, which is called the Russian Body, unfortunately, the pyramid turned out to be empty and we were about to finish the work on the island, when I asked the workers, not particularly counting on anything, to dismantle a small pyramid, which was located meters ten from the first, - reported to the sovereign Gumilyov. - There, to my incredible joy, there were stones tightly fitted to each other. The very next day we managed to open this burial, made in the form of a crypt. The Vikings did not bury their dead and did not build stone tombs , on the basis of which I concluded that this burial belongs to an older civilization.In the grave was the skeleton of a woman, no objects, except for a single one.Near the woman's skull was a golden comb of amazing work, on top of which a girl in a tight tunic sat on the backs of two dolphins carrying it." By the way, it should be noted that the found piece of jewelry was made of 1000-carat gold, which, according to Gumilyov's translation of the "Pigeon Book", was made in the empire of the "Vic progenitors" with the help of a philosopher's stone.

There is an opinion that, following the "persistent request" of the sovereign, Nikolai Gumilyov sold the artifact he found, which he called the "Hyperborean ridge", to Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich, who at that time was already the actual spouse of Matilda Kshesinskaya. And he, in turn, on behalf of Nicholas II, presented it to the ballerina ...

Anticipating further events, we note that four years later, in 1911, at public expense, Gumilev's translation of the Stone Book was published. Huge, it should be noted, at that time, twenty thousand circulation. And next year, the poet publishes the first issue of his journal, called "Hyperborea" ...

Nine years from now Nikolai Gumilyov's "Hyperborean adventures" will have their continuation...

"Nicholas of Abyssinsk"

In 1906, twenty-year-old Nikolai Gumilyov, having graduated from the Nikolaev Imperial Gymnasium, wishing to continue the dynasty of a military family (recall that his uncle Lev Lvov was also a sailor, rear admiral), enters the Naval Corps. By that time, tall, somewhat awkward, with a slanting scar near his right eye on a slightly elongated head, the young man, according to Gumilyov's biographer Nikolai Polushin, "acquired a mustache, dressed emphatically smartly ... He wore fashionable pointed-toed boots." This habit of looking a little "not like everyone else", "keeping the style" remained with the poet for life. Having become a fairly famous poet, he added to his dapper attire, "dress code", in the current way, a black tailcoat and a top hat ...

The career of a naval officer attracted Nikolai for the simple reason that it gave him the opportunity to see the world, to make exotic trips, to experience adventures akin to the heroes of Bret Garth, Mine Reed, Boussenard or Robert Stevenson. Nikolai read their books from early childhood, remaining true to his aspirations for "feats and glory" even at a more "respectful" age. In addition, a year earlier, in 1905, Gumilev's first collection of poems was published, symbolically called "The Way of the Conquistadors." And as an epigraph to the book, he chose lines from the poem "Earthly Delights" by the then little-known French poet Andre Gide - "I became a nomad in order to voluptuously touch everything that roams!" And, as it seems, these poetic lines served for Nikolai Gumilyov as the cornerstone of his whole life. However, as well as the analogy with the name of the French poet, reminiscent of the biblical wanderer - the Eternal Gide...

Cover of the first book by Nikolai Gumilyov "The Way of the Conquistadors"


So, dreams of "precipits, abysses and storms" were given an impetus in the form of admission to the naval school. But... In mid-May, Nikolai suddenly informs his teacher and friend Valery Bryusov: "In the summer I am going to go abroad and stay there for five years."

Why did young Gumilyov's plans change so suddenly? On the surface lies a seemingly trivial answer. If at the end of the last century the "world Babylon" was New York, then at the beginning of the century it was Paris. The capital of France attracted not only the bohemian public, poets, artists, but also all kinds of adventurers, rogues and, as they wrote then, "international spies."

Vasily Stavitsky, a former employee of the Second Main Directorate of the KGB, is sure that “in itself, this private episode of his personal life could not pass by the attention of military intelligence. Intelligence simply could not ignore the fact that a young cadet with an excellent knowledge of a foreign language went to study in France. has always been of particular interest to Russia as an ally and as a rival on the world stage at the same time, depending on the situation. Russian military intelligence simply could not miss such an opportunity."

I think that the Soviet counterintelligence officer is somewhat mistaken. At that time, military intelligence was handled by the 7th Division (for military statistics of foreign countries) of the 1st Division (Military Statistical) Office of the Second Quartermaster General of the General Staff. The people in the Intelligence Department of the General Staff of the Russian Army served as educated and the craving of a young man, moreover, already tested in a "secret mission" in the Russian North in the "search for truth", was taken "on a pencil". Professional intelligence officers simply had no right to miss such a candidate for "secret agents". And therefore, we are sure, it was the Russian special services that sent Nikolai Gumilyov on a special mission to Paris. Such confidence is given by the fact that before leaving for France, the young man, according to biographers, "decided to study the occult sciences" ...

"In the French side, on an alien planet" Gumilyov, like his nameless medieval colleague, "was to study at the university." Having decided on the philological faculty of the Sorbonne, he began to look for suitable housing for himself. It would seem that for a poor student, to whom his parents have determined a monthly subsidy of one hundred convertible rubles, a cheap room in the area of ​​Strasbourg Boulevard, the suburb of St. Martin, Turbigot or in the Latin Quarter would be quite suitable for living. However, Nikolai decides not to save money and settles on the aristocratic Boulevard Saint-Germain, at number 68. Several French ministries and most foreign embassies are located nearby. Including, on the adjacent Rue de Grenell, the Russian embassy and consulate.


Let's clarify the situation. At the end of 1904, the leadership of the security department of the Police Department decided to establish a special unit in the structure of the Special Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. The task of this top secret branch of diplomatic agents included, among other things, the "search for international espionage." In Paris, the main headquarters of foreign intelligence of the Russian Police Department was located on the Rue de Grenell in number 79. And Nikolai Gumilev, as they say, was within easy reach ...

With regards to the comprehension of science, the novice poet did not show much reverence for the subjects studied. He publishes the magazine "Sirius", publishes the second collection of poetry - "Romantic Flowers", suffers mental anguish from unrequited love for Anechka Gorenko, and even tries to open his veins with a penknife in Butte de Chamon park ...

Meanwhile, Nikolai had reached the age when he should have paid his military debt to the Motherland. Arriving from Paris in Tsarskoye Selo, Gumilyov went to the medical commission. “The son of the state councilor, Nikolai Stepanovich Gumilyov, appeared to perform military service during the call of 1907,” the certificate of the Tsarskoye Selo district for military service of the Presence said, “and, according to the lot drawn by him No. 65, he was subject to entry into the army, but, according to the examination recognized as completely incapable of military service, and therefore released forever from service.

Isn't it strange?.. A year ago, Nikolai entered the Naval Corps without any problems, and a year later he became "fit for non-combatant" ... Apparently, the young man was "dismissed" from the army by quite influential forces. Those who nominated the son of a naval officer for battles on the "invisible front" - in intelligence ...

And now Africa was to become the "battlefield" for Nikolai Gumilyov. This continent for centuries remained a kind of "Terra Incognita" for the Russian Empire. Under Peter I, in the "Geography", published in Moscow in 1719, the first information about Africa appeared, abounding, at times, with phantasmagorical information. And even a little later, in the folio "Geography" published by the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1753, one could read that "" the whole of Africa is filled with elephants, lions, leopards, camels, monkeys, snakes, dragons, ostriches, kazurias and many others ferocious and rare beasts that bored not only the passers-by, but also the inhabitants themselves. ”And another curious maxim that is in circulation today:“ If we talk about the whole of Africa at all, then it has no advantages like Europe or Asia. Although they do not surpass it in gold, silver, precious stones or other expensive things, it has such incapacities that the inhabitants for the most part of their treasures cannot use it in such a way, as it is repaired in other lands.


As for Peter I, he was the first of the Russian rulers to decide to include unexplored African lands in the sphere of state interests. In 1723, at his command, two frigates set sail around Africa with his message - "A Letter to the King of Madagascar." However, the expansionist plans of the Russian emperor had no further development. And only “at the end of the 19th century,” writes Doctor of Historical Sciences, Professor Apollon Davidson, “Russia first had an ally in Black Africa. It was Ethiopia, or, as it was then called in Russia, Abyssinia.

The state interest of Russia was determined, first of all, by the important strategic position of Ethiopia - on the shortest route from Europe to the Far East."

Then the Russian government took care of creating its own naval base or, as they say today, an "unsinkable aircraft carrier" in order not to depend on European countries that have their colonies in Africa when loading Russian ships with coal. There has already been such a precedent. During the Russo-Japanese War, the British refused to refuel Admiral Rozhdestvensky's squadron with "black gold" in one of their controlled territories. And therefore, in St. Petersburg, they tried to find common ground with the Abyssinian rulers in order to be able to equip at least a "gas station" at the exit from the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean.

It was also important that the religion common in Abyssinia was similar to Orthodoxy. This similarity played an important role in the state policy of the Russian Empire. Sergei Witte later wrote in "Memoirs": "Since Abyssinia, after all, is a semi-idol-worshipping country, but in this religion of theirs there are some glimpses of Orthodoxy, the Orthodox Church, on this basis we very much desired to declare Abyssinia under our patronage, and at a convenient case, and eat it."

A brief chronology of the "conquest" of the country at the Horn of Africa looks like this.

In 1888, the Terek Cossack Nikolai Ashinov, accompanied by Archimandrite Paisius and a detachment of one and a half hundred people, having secured the patronage of Alexander III himself and called Pobedonostsev "Russian Christopher Columbus", landed on the shores of the Red Sea. Here he, to the north of the present city of Djibouti, arranged a settlement, calling it "Moscow village". Following the advice of the Nizhny Novgorod governor-general Baranov, Ashinov also intended to form a "Russian-African company". But nothing came of this idea: the French ousted the Russian "missionaries" by force of arms.


In March 1895, the expedition of the famous traveler A. Eliseev arrived in Addis Ababa. And as a result of his negotiations, three months later an Abyssinian diplomatic delegation appeared in St. Petersburg. Three years later, in February 1898, a Russian imperial mission arrived in Addis Ababa on a return visit of "good will" to establish diplomatic relations. The real State Councilor P. Vlasov headed the Russian representation. And together with him, as a guard, a convoy of 20 Cossacks arrived in Abyssinia under the command of Peter Krasnov, the lieutenant of the Life Guards of the Ataman Regiment. The one who became the hero of the Civil War. True, from the "white" side. By the way, Krasnov was not only a talented military man, but also a writer. And his first literary experience manifested itself precisely in Africa - in 1899, Peter Krasnov wrote the book "Cossacks in Abyssinia".

Between the lines, let's also say that the "mistress of the seas" Britain, together with France, as well as the Kaiser's Germany, also looked at the northwest of Africa with "greedy eyes" ...


Later, Colonel of the General Staff Leonid Artamonov visited "Black Africa", in the western part of Abyssinia and Eastern Sudan. Four times, at the parting words of Nicholas II himself, Alexander Bulatovich, Lieutenant of the Life Guards of the Hussar Regiment, visited Abyssinia. And now the turn of Nikolai Gumilyov has come. But he also had his own reasons for traveling to uncharted lands.

The Russian poet Abyssinia, of course, caused involuntary reverence by the fact that the ancestors of "our everything" - Alexander Pushkin - came from there. But there were other, secret, purposes of her visit.

Literary critic Nikolai Bogomolov in his work "Occult Motifs in Gumilyov's Work" noted that "the problem of the connection between Gumilyov's work and various mystical teachings of his contemporary era is a completely obvious problem, fixed by numerous documents and observations." According to the scientist, there were several reasons "forcing Gumilyov to strive for Africa, which go back to occult doctrines." Among them is "Masonic mythology, which suggested as marked for visiting, especially dedicated to the highest degrees, three cities that Gumilyov visited." As M. Longinov wrote, "all Rosicrucianism was divided into nine districts. Places for conventions were assigned to the four highest degrees: Cairo and Paris; ... Smyrna" ...


In July 1907, Nikolai Gumilyov sets out on his first short trip to the Levant. Unfortunately, we do not know the details of this trip, but we know the lines from a letter to Valery Bryusov, from which it becomes known that the "studioso" was "a week in Constantinople, in Smyrna, had a fleeting affair with some Greek woman, fought with the Apaches in Marseilles and only yesterday, I don’t know how, I don’t know why, I found myself in Paris.

Nicholas was also under the "magic of the word" of Dr. Papus (real name - Gerard Encausse), whom he met in Paris. This fact of their acquaintance was also confirmed by Anna Akhmatova, who recalled (according to the notes of Pyotr Luknitsky) that "Gumilyov brought Papus in the 7th year to Schmidt's dacha. He left it for me." So the mystic Papus believed: the history of mankind is a tetrad of races that carry the true light of wisdom - Lemurians, Atlanteans, black and white. At the same time, Africa, which was the continent where the heirs of previous civilizations lived, was considered as a repository of the most important data on the magical roots of modern "secret knowledge".

These arguments of a learned friend shed light on the mystery of explorations in the Russian North in 1904. It was by no means a coincidence, according to Gumilev, that the name of the Karelian city of Kem comes from the ancient term "kem" or "khem", and means "big water", and that the ancient Egyptians themselves called themselves "the people of Kem". Yes, and ancient Greek sources, from which it was known about the existence of a mysterious country known to them in the north of the world known to them - Hyperborea, - claimed that the inhabitants there are the most ancient people, along with the Egyptians.


It seems quite possible that the task of Nikolai Gumilyov was precisely the disclosure of occult, Masonic knowledge. And the main thing is the search for the legendary country of Mu in Africa.

But France, where "freemasons" were especially strong in their traditions, could serve as a kind of "legal residency". Here Gumilyov had to find the necessary connections and contacts ...

In July 1908, he informed Valery Bryusov that "in the autumn I am thinking of leaving for six months in Abyssinia."

In the meantime, he decides to continue his studies at home. In a petition addressed to the rector of St. Petersburg University, Gumilyov writes: "I have the honor to ask Your Excellency to enroll me as a full student of the Faculty of Law of St. Petersburg University." And again, education remains in the background. On August 22, after a positive response from the rector and enrollment in the course, the then-famous poet Gumilyov notifies Bryusov in writing about his departure to the "black continent": him to you."

And on September 7, Nikolai Gumilyov informs the son of Innokenty Annensky, Valentin, about his route: "I'm thinking of going to Greece, first to Athens, then to different islands. From there to Sicily, Italy and through Switzerland to Tsarskoe Selo. I'll be back around December."

Three days later, the poet on the steamer "Sinop" leaves Odessa for Constantinople, from there - to Greece, and then finds himself ... in the north of the African continent - in Egypt - in Alexandria and Cairo. The question is: why such a "conspiracy"? What did Nikolai Gumilyov want to hide from friends and acquaintances? Perhaps the search for a lost artifact, which he read about in a book about Abyssinia, published in 1894 and bought on the occasion in a second-hand bookstore. It said that "modern Abyssinians firmly believe that the authentic kivot of the Testament, brought from Jerusalem by Menelik, the son of Solomon, is stored in the recesses of the Aksum Cathedral" ... Maybe this trip was a kind of reconnaissance for more fundamental searches? .. Or did Russian intelligence put before Gumilyov a task in the plane of geopolitical goals?.. Or maybe both?..


The next trip to Africa was not long in coming. On November 30, 1909, Gumilyov went to Odessa, from there - to the north, which attracted him so much, the continent. The route of his trip is also little known.

Through Constantinople, Cairo, Port Said, Jeddah, the adventurer arrived in Djibouti on December 22 or 23. From there, he writes to the same Bryusov: "Tomorrow I'm going inland, towards Addis Ababa, the capital of Menelik." And again, it is not clear what real goal, besides hunting and poetic nourishment, Gumilev pursued when he went to Abyssinia. In his essay "African hunting. From the travel diary of N. Gumelev" there is such an entry: "And at night I dreamed that for participating in some kind of Abyssinian palace coup they cut off my head ..." It is very possible that this is the key to unraveling the poet's mission -scout to the country of "co-religionists". The Russian Empire, by all means, tried by all possible methods and means to acquire allies in northeast Africa. Moreover, here, near the Arab East, the British Colonel Thomas Edward Lawrence, better known as Lawrence of Arabia, and the German diplomat Vasmus - Vasmus Persian were already operating. Russia needed its own super agent in the African and Arab world. They became Nikolai Gumilyov, who would have been quite suitable for the name - Nikolai Abyssinsky ...

In 1910, as Vasily Stavitsky writes, "Nikolai Gumilyov and Anna Akhmatova enter into a marriage union (in Kiev, in the church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, which was located on the site of the current market near the Levoberezhnaya metro station; a few minutes walk from the editorial office of" MK in Ukraine ". - Sergey Kulida) ... Immediately after the April wedding, the young people went on a trip to Paris, which they knew well (where Akhmatova had an affair with Modigliani. - Sergey Kulida) and returned to Russia only in the fall, almost six months later. And no matter how strange it may seem, almost immediately after returning to the capital, Gumilyov quite unexpectedly, leaving his young wife at home, leaves again for distant Abyssinia. This country mysteriously attracts Gumilyov, giving rise to various rumors and interpretations.

The details of this next trip "for the exotic" are also very scarce. “I am well aware,” Alexander Kuprin wrote, “that he received a gracious and completely unnecessary permission from the Negus (emperor. - Sergey Kulida) of Abyssinian to hunt elephants and mine gold within the Abyssinian possessions.” In the language of scouts, contact with the Negus, at that time the heir to the imperial throne, Lij-Iass, is called the recruiting approach. An attempt to get his "agent of influence" in semi-wild Abyssinia.



Nikolai Gumilyov himself indirectly confirmed this. In a note he wrote: "I also lived for four months in the capital of Abyssinia, Addis Ababa, where I met many ministers and leaders and was introduced to the court of the former Emperor by the Russian chargé d'affaires in Abyssinia (Boris Chemerzin. - Sergei Kulida)" .

By the way, the Russian traveler did not feel a lack of money. Not without reason, after all, Anna Chemerzin's wife wrote that "apparently, he is a rich man, very well-mannered and pleasant in communication." Who, if not the Russian General Staff, could lend Gumilyov money ... And, one must think, a lot ...

The government also financed the next trip of Nikolai Gumilyov to Africa in 1913. This time the journey was given the form of a solid scientific ethnographic expedition patronized by the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography at the Imperial Academy of Sciences. Personally, the director of the museum, academician and active privy councilor, Vasily Radlov convinced his colleagues of the expediency of appointing a twenty-seven-year-old young man as the head of the expedition. He also enthusiastically assisted in obtaining weapons and ammunition from the Main Artillery Directorate for Gumilyov, provided free passage on the steamer of the Russian Volunteer Fleet, obtained letters of recommendation to the Russian vice-consul in Djibouti and to the Russian Orthodox mission in Abyssinia.

Such activity of an authoritative scientist may seem strange, but professor-historian Apollon Davidson is sure that "he (Gumilev. - Sergey Kulida) approached the director of the museum, academician V.V. Radlov and the scientific curator of the museum L.Ya. Sternberg" for the simple reason "that there were no professional African ethnographers in our country then." The statement, we dare to think, is highly controversial.

Anatoly Dolivo-Dobrovolsky, perhaps the most authoritative researcher of the life and work of Nikolai Gumilyov in modern Russia, has a slightly different opinion. He believes that the poet's candidacy was approved by venerable scientists for one, but good reason: such trips were "controlled by the War Department." And he does not even particularly doubt that the poet "was also given some special secret assignments." Moreover, "the expedition took place in the pre-storm time - just a year before the start of the First World War."

In his African Diary, Gumilyov wrote about the "legal" assignment received from the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography: "I had to go to the port of Djibouti in the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, from there by rail to Harar, south to the area lying between the Somali Peninsula and the lakes of Rudolf, Margarita, Zvay, capture the largest possible area of ​​study, take pictures, collect ethnographic collections, record songs and legends. In addition, I was given the right to collect zoological collections.

But the "additional tasks", in the words of Dolivo-Dobrovolsky, assumed: "to collect information about the political situation in Abyssinia, about the possible participation of various Abyssinian tribes in hostilities on the side of Russia, if any unfold on the black continent, about the expediency of their use in different branches of the military...

On April 10, 1913, at seven o'clock in the evening, Nikolai Gumilyov, accompanied by his nephew Nikolai Sverchkov, at home - Kolya-small, both in white suits and hats, sailed to Constantinople on the ship "Tambov". From here their path lay, in Abyssinia, already well known to the poet.

We will not describe in detail the four-month journey of Nikolai Gumilyov along the route planned in St. Petersburg. For those who are curious, we recommend that you familiarize yourself with the "African Diary" already mentioned by us. But here we will briefly talk about several, as it seems, significant meetings from the words of the "head of the expedition" himself. “In Constantinople, we were joined by another passenger (Mozar Bey. - Sergey Kulida), the Turkish consul, who had just been appointed to Harar,” Gumilev wrote. army from the local Muslims. It could serve to pacify the eternally rebellious Arabs of Yemen, especially since the Turks cannot stand the Arabian heat. Two, three other plans of the same kind, and we are in Port Said. "


And here's what's interesting. At the same time, near Port Said, in Cairo, there was an employee of Captain Mansfield Smith-Cumming, head of the external department (intelligence) of the newly created Bureau of Her Majesty's Secret Service. The name of this British agent was Thomas Edward Lawrence, who later became known in the spy establishment as Lawrence of Arabia. The subjects of the queen closely monitored all the movements of Russians around the world, fearing competition in colonial affairs. Therefore, with a considerable degree of certainty, let's say: two scouts met. And, we dare to say, Lawrence convinced Gumilyov of something ...

I follow a further path, as Nikolai Stepanovich notes, "even a compatriot, a Russian subject of the Armenian Artem Iokhanzhan, who lived in Paris, America, Egypt and lived in Abyssinia for about twenty years, turned out to be in Harare." This unexpected acquaintance is clearly not an accidental person in the espionage trade, although, according to Gumilyov, "on business cards he was listed as a doctor of medicine, a doctor of science, a merchant, a commission agent and a former member of the Court ..." It can be assumed that in fact Artem Iokhanzhan was an employee Russian intelligence service, introduced into this African country for a long "settlement".

During the "African safari" Nikolai Gumilyov also had another meeting, which had considerable geopolitical significance. "We stopped at the house of the governor-general - dejazmatch (correctly - dejazmatch; one of the highest titles of Abyssinia. - Sergey Kulida) Tafari, the son of Ras-Makonen, who with his retinue was waiting for us in the courtyard of his house. This is a young man of 18-19 years old, who, at the request of the Harar army, was, in spite of his youth, appointed governor-general, or rather ruler of Harar. A young boy, thin, who had just suffered pneumonia, he looked more like a silent doll. He bears the title of highness after his father. He understands, however, in French and has an Abyssinian interpreter, a Catholic who knows French. Tafari has a beautiful smile that makes him both attractive and lively. Subsequently, the boy became, first regent, and then Emperor Haile Selassie I, and ruled his country until 1974. But he did not have relations with the Soviet Union ...



As for Nikolai Gumilyov, in September, together with his nephew, he appears in Tsarskoye Selo. "On September 26, - writes literary critic Vladimir Polushin, - Gumilyov submitted three collections as a report to the Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography." The well-known African scholar, academician D. Olderogge, at that time the secretary of the academy, noted: “Interesting ... a collection of 128 items. Collected in East Africa ... by Mr. N. S. Gumilyov sent there. The Somali tribe was still represented in the museum only a few items; the 48 Somali items delivered by Mr. Gumilyov complete the picture of the life of this tribe. The Harari have not yet been represented at all, for the life of which there are 46 items in the collection of Gumilyov. The rest of the collection replenishes the previous collections of the museum on the life and culture of Abyssinia ".

There was another collection that had a "dual purpose". These are photographic images, which, first of all, were of interest to military people, and which carried invaluable visual information about the country of interest to the Russian General Staff.

An official certificate of that period, found in the archive, said that "a source who directly communicated with the local population claims that many Abyssinians still profess the Orthodox faith, treat Russia and Russians warmly and friendly. On the other hand, the military aggression of France met with rebuff from the local population. Some tribal leaders make requests to provide them with military support in the fight against the French. However, it should be borne in mind that the local natives are not able to offer any serious resistance. Therefore, Russia's participation in this event is fraught with serious consequences. "


It is not known for certain whether this report belonged to the pen of Nikolai Gumilyov. But in 1947, in the London archive of the poet and artist, a close friend of Akhmatova Boris Anrep, and, concurrently, a military intelligence officer in the British Isles, a “Note on Abyssinia” was discovered, which had the subtitle: “A note regarding the possible recruitment of volunteers for the French army in Abyssinia". The document was signed: "Ensign of the 5th Alexandria Hussar Regiment of the Russian Army Gumilyov." Special services historian Vasily Stavitsky, a former employee of the Soviet counterintelligence, claims that this "official" Note on Abyssinia ", written several years later, in the summer of 1917 in Paris. The essence of this document was to analyze the possibilities of Abyssinia to mobilize volunteers from among the black population to replenish allied troops on the German front ... By the way, the "Note on Abyssinia" was written in French, as it was intended for consideration by the united command of the Entente "...

Three years earlier, in 1914, in the fifth issue of Niva, an article by Nikolai Gumilyov "Did Menelik Die?" was published, in which the poet-traveler-spy comprehensively analyzes the situation in Abyssinia in connection with the reign of the commander and Negus Menelik II , which united the Abyssinian peoples into a single state. It was the talents of Menelik II that managed to organize a confrontation between the barefoot ashkers, armed with antediluvian guns, against the European armies - at first the "pasta", and soon the combined Anglo-French forces. According to Gumilyov, the Italian colonialists expected to get the northern and southern parts of the country, the French sought the eastern regions, and the British - everything else.

Anatoly Dolivo-Dobrovolsky is a hundred times right when he writes: “It is unlikely that a poet, far from politics, as Gumilyov is represented, who collects ethnographic objects and beetles, would be able to penetrate so deeply into the circumstances of the inner life of Abyssinia and the plans of her enemies hidden from the whole world, if would not have performed a special task to collect such information from the Russian Ministry of War. Already on the basis of this article, we can assume that Gumilyov had undoubted intelligence talents "...

military scout

On July 15, 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. This happened after a member of the underground organization Young Bosnia, Gavrila Princip, shot the heir to the Habsburg throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand. After this, events began to develop rapidly and irrevocably. Two days later, Russia, which has always supported the Slavic brothers, announced a general mobilization. A couple of days later, the German ambassador told the head of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Sazonov, that the Kaiser's empire considers itself at war with Russia.

Nikolai Gumilyov decided without hesitation to sign up as a "hunter", that is, a volunteer, in the army. “He accepted the war with perfect simplicity, with straightforward fervor,” wrote a contemporary of the poet Y. Levinson. “He was, perhaps, one of those few people in Russia whose soul the war found in the greatest combat readiness. His patriotism was just as unconditional, how unclouded was his religious confession."

On July 28, signed by the actual State Councilor, Doctor of Medicine, Voskresensky, the poet receives a medical certificate stating that "the son of the State Councilor Nikolai Stepanovich Gumilyov, 28 years old, according to the study of his health, turned out to have no physical defects that prevented him from entering a real military service, with the exception of myopia in the right eye and some strabismus, and, according to Mr. Gumilyov, he is an excellent shooter.


In early August, Nikolai Gumilyov was enrolled as a volunteer in the Life Guards Lancers of Her Majesty Empress Alexandra Feodorovna Regiment.

“He ends up in a cavalry reconnaissance platoon, where there is constant risk and danger, raids behind enemy lines,” writes Vasily Stavitsky. “Gumilyov’s documentary essays remained about this, who finds time between battles to write Cavalryman’s Notes, which were published in 1915- 1916 in the newspaper "Birzhevye Vedomosti". In a letter to Mikhail Lozinsky, the poet-warrior reported: "... I am writing to you as a veteran who has been in intelligence many times." By the way, Gumilyov's student in the "Poets' Workshop" said that the master went to war to earn a full bow of the Knight of St. George - four crosses, from the first to the fourth degree.

And the editor-in-chief of the Apollo magazine, Sergei Makovsky, recalled that in the summer of 1914, when mobilization was announced, all Apollonians were drafted into the army, but, putting on military uniforms, they tried to settle in the rear. "One Gumilyov, who had all the rights, like a white ticket, decided, by all means, to go to war ... I met him more than once in the summer of 1915 and 1916, when he came from the front on vacation, proud of two soldiers " Georgiy"... for participation in the battles... During the second vacation, after he was promoted to non-commissioned officer for distinction in battles, Nikolai Stepanovich received permission to take exams for an officer's rank. In the spring of that year ... he received, at his own request, a business trip from the Provisional Government to the Russian expeditionary corps ... "It happened in 1917.

At the end of March, by order of the 5th Army, Ensign Gumilyov was awarded the Order of St. Stanislav, 3rd degree with swords and bows. But the next award does not please the combat officer, who is able to light a cigarette, climbing onto the parapet, under continuous rifle and machine-gun fire of the enemy. In Russia, as Ivan Bunin aptly put it, "cursed days" were advancing: the legitimate Sovereign Emperor was forced to abdicate; the Germans. High feelings of patriotism, service to the Fatherland, heroism - suddenly depreciated and even, in the eyes of many, lost their meaning ...


And then, on April 27, a telegram came to the headquarters of the 5-1 cavalry division with the following content: “I ask you to telegraph mobilization Petrograd whether there are any obstacles and whether you honor the ensign of the Alexandria regiment Gumilyov to command the composition of our troops of the Thessaloniki Front point Head of the mobilization department of the Main Directorate of General Staff of the General Staff - Sergey Kulida) Colonel Sutterup point".

On May 15, having signed a contract and becoming a foreign correspondent for Russkaya Volya, Nikolai Gumilyov leaves Petrograd. Only on June 20, through Stockholm, Oslo and Bergen, did he reach London, an intermediate stop on the way to Paris. In his letters to Anna Akhmatova, Gumilyov, for obvious reasons, cannot report on the nature of his work. But he makes it clear: it is akin to the one "which is carried out by Anrep in England."

A few words should be said about Boris Anrep. A poet and artist, he was actually a regular officer, who was in the reserve before the war. The outbreak of hostilities in the Eastern theater of operations found him in London, where by that time an exhibition of his artwork had been opened. Anrep abandoned everything and, returning to Russia, was sent to the Galician front, where he proved himself to be a brave officer. For which he was awarded military awards. In the same place, in Galicia, Anrep makes friends with the commander of the British armored detachment Locker-Lamson and other British officers. “For some reason,” Anatoly Dolivo-Dobrovolsky asks, “in 1915, not being wounded or sick, he often receives some mysterious business trips from the front to Petrograd; combat officers, as a rule, for no reason at all. the front was not recalled. At the beginning of 1916, he was generally seconded to England. "

Gumilyov's biographer believes that "Gumilyov's recall from the front coincided with Anrep's arrival in Petrograd." And he suggests that "Boris Anrep played a role in changing Gumilyov's military fate, who, already in secret work, recommended Nikolai Stepanovich, well known to him, as a possible military intelligence officer for France." Where, we recall, Gumilyov spent several years and acquired many acquaintances ...

In London, Nikolai Gumilyov visits fashion salons, communicates with local bohemians - writers, journalists, artists. A particularly noteworthy meeting took place at Lady Juliet Duff's house in Mayfair Street, London. Here Nikolai Gumilyov met the living classic of English literature Herbert Keith Chesterton. A Russian poet wrote about him to Akhmatova: "He is either very loved here or very hated. But everyone counts."

“Among the guests was Major Maurice Bering, who brought a Russian in military uniform,” Chesterton later recalled ... “He spoke French, completely incessantly, and we fell silent; and what he said was quite characteristic of his people. Many tried to define it, but the easiest way is to say that the Russians have all the talents except common sense.He was an aristocrat, a landowner, an officer of the royal guard, completely devoted to the old regime.But something made him related to any Bolshevik, moreover, to every to me Russian. I will say one thing: when he went out the door, it seemed that in the same way he could go out the window. He was not a communist, he was a utopian, and his utopia was much crazier than communism. He proposed that poets rule the world. How he importantly explained to us, he himself was a poet. And, besides, he was so courteous and generous that he offered me, also a poet, to become the full ruler of England. He assigned D'Annunzio Italy, France - Anatole France. I noticed, in as much French as I could counter the flow of his words, that the ruler needs some kind of general idea, while the ideas of Frans and D'Annunzio, rather, unfortunately for the patriots, are directly opposite.



The Russian guest dismissed such arguments, because he firmly believed that if politicians were poets, or at least writers, they would not be mistaken and would always understand each other. Kings, businessmen, plebeians may enter into blind conflict, but writers do not quarrel. Around this stage, as the remarks say, I noticed a noise behind the scenes, and then a terrible roar of war in heaven ... What could be better than dying in a mansion on Mayfair when a Russian madman offers you the crown of England?

And yet, it is likely that the conversation between fellow writers concerned not only geopolitical projects, but also real politics. After all, only just, in the spring and summer of 1917, Chesterton himself returned from Russia. The literary father of Father Brown wrote about this somewhat veiledly in his Autobiography: "I have been to interesting places and seen interesting people; I participated in political strife; I talked with statesmen during the hours when the destinies of nations were being decided ...". Another well-known English spy writer, Somerset Maugham, who was more outspoken, also visited strife-torn Russia. “I entered the intelligence agencies, where, as it seemed to me, I could be more useful,” Maugham recalled .... “I was sent on a secret mission to Petrograd. I hesitated - this assignment required qualities that I, as it seemed to me, did not possess, but at that moment no one more suitable was found, and my profession was a good disguise for what I was to do ... I set off cheerfully, having unlimited means at my disposal ... The responsible nature of my mission pleasantly excited me. a private agent whom England could disavow in case of emergency, with instructions to contact elements hostile to the government and develop a plan to prevent Russia from withdrawing from the war and prevent the Bolsheviks, supported by the Central Powers, from seizing power.It is hardly necessary to inform the reader that my mission is over a complete failure, and I do not ask me to believe that if I had been sent to Russia six months earlier, I might have had a chance of succeeding. after my arrival in Petrograd thunder struck, and all my plans went to waste. I returned to England."

As you can see, the positions of the British, as well as Gumilyov himself, coincided: to prevent the power of the Bolsheviks. And the allies in the Entente were worried about the eternal question, which kept the British Lion awake. And here it is appropriate to recall the words of Bismarck: “In Asia, the British are much less successful in civilizing activities than the Russians; they show too much contempt for the natives and keep too far from them. The Russians, on the contrary, attract the population of the lands annexed to the empire approach and mingle with him."

The philologist Nikolai Borovko wrote: "The bicentennial history of the Russian Empire, especially in the course of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century, is mainly the history of its opposition to the British Empire in Asia (the delimitation of spheres of influence in China, Iran and Central Asia, the confrontation in Tibet and in area of ​​the "straits"). The "Greek project" of Catherine II was crowned with the "Ochakov Crisis". In 1801, Napoleon did not have much difficulty persuading Paul I to strike at British India. The Crimean War left a bitter memory. In 1878, when Russian troops stood at 12 kilometers from Constantinople, Disraeli threatened to bombard Kronstadt and Petersburg itself.

Quite fresh was the account to the British in 1904-1905, when England was an active ally of Japan. And during the World War, Russia was only lured by the promise of straits, no one was seriously going to give her any straits, and there were no real opportunities for that.


Gumilyov and Akhmatova with their son. 1915


But what if Chesterton also "lured" Nikolai Gumilyov, having information about the Russian's acquaintance with Lawrence of Arabia, who at that time was inciting the Arabs to go to war against Germany's ally - Turkey? It is quite possible, because after some time Ensign Gumilyov will write a report on his transfer to the Mesopotamian front ...

In the meantime, Nikolai Gumilyov, in early July, arrived in Paris. And, having settled in a hotel at 59, Pierre Sharon Street, first of all, he found his old acquaintances - famous Russian artists - Mikhail Larionov and his wife Natalya Goncharova, by the way, the great-niece of Alexander Pushkin.

It is believed that it was their efforts that Gumilev was left in Paris. He was seconded to the representative of the Provisional Government under the Russian troops in France, Major General Mikhail Zankevich. “At the height of the First World War, an agreement was concluded between Russia and France to send four infantry brigades to the French and Thessaloniki fronts in exchange for the supply of military equipment,” says Irina Lagutina. “The Russian army was poorly armed. The French did not have enough soldiers. , blue-eyed warriors (they were specially selected, as in the guards) the allies met with flowers and an orchestra. They were sent to the most difficult sectors of the front, they fought bravely and died like heroes. After the February Revolution, a split began among officers and soldiers: some refused to continue to fight for foreign land, others made up the Legion of Honor.

In the summer of 1917, the Russian brigade, which was in the rear camp of La Courtine, refused to go to classes and demanded to be sent to Russia. A very energetic Bolshevik - defeatist propaganda played a significant role in this, which was practically not hindered by either the French or the Russian military agent - Alexei Ignatiev. By order of the Provisional Government, the rebellion was suppressed on September 2-6 by artillery fire. Ensign Gumilyov, who arrived in France in early July, became an officer for assignments under the Commissioner of the Provisional Government Yevgeny Rappe and took an active part in negotiations with the rebels. "And, apparently, Nikolai Gumilyov, the St. "The heartfelt consent - of the Entente, supporting those who, without changing their oath, enrolled in the" Legion of Honor "...

Historian Stavitsky reports that in Paris, "in the military attache, Gumilyov carries out a number of special assignments not only for the Russian command, but also prepares documents for the mobilization department of the joint headquarters of the allied forces in Paris." One of these official documents was the Note on Abyssinia, which we have already written about. But other documents were also found: “In the then-secret case No. 00134, there are other analytical documents that, in terms of style of presentation and analytical content, could also have been prepared by an officer of the Russian army Gumilyov, but, unfortunately, they do not have a specific signature of the executor, as in the "Note on Abyssinia", but are documented under the heading of the mysterious "4 departments"".

After the power in Russia was seized by Lenin's comrades-in-arms, financed, Gumilyov could not help but know this, the Kaiser, he decides to go to Persia, to the Mesopotamian front. At least, most of the poet's chronographs think so. Here are just a letter from his beloved - Larisa Reisner - says that such a plan existed at the beginning of the "revolutionary" 1917. “I began to think strongly about Persia,” Nikolai Stepanovich wrote. “Why don’t I really start pacifying the Bakhtiars. I’ll order a raspberry Circassian coat for myself, I’ll become a resident (italics mine. - Sergey Kulida) at the court of some restless khan ... "No , definitely, the glory of Lawrence of Arabia haunted Nikolai Gumilyov.


Be that as it may, in January 1918, the intelligence poet leaves Paris for London with the hope of getting to the East. But, according to researcher Svetlana Popova, “Gumilyov’s fate turned out, as evidenced by the correspondence of military attachés in England and France, depending on the funds that were not enough to send him to Mesopotamia to the English army. General Zankevich greatly contributed to this He gave him brilliant references, appealed to the prime minister so that Gumilyov left the territory of France as soon as possible, because from day to day a small group of officers had to go on a campaign.

However, on January 22, from the Russian military agent in England, Lieutenant General Yermolov, a telegram follows to Major General Zankevich with the following content: “In view of ensign Gumilyov’s failure to receive money from you, according to my telegram, I cannot take over his trip to Mesopotamia, and therefore I send him back to you." And before Zankevich had time to react, a new dispatch came from London from Yermolov: “Unfortunately, the British today recognize Ensign Gumilyov’s dissatisfaction with travel and lifting money as the absence of your recommendation, why they rejected his assignment to Mesopotamia. Due to the impossibility of sending him back to France, I send it by the very first ship to Russia. The most humble request, when compiling further lists, to take the above into account "...

It should be noted that a little earlier, the staff officer under General Zankevich, Colonel Bobrikov, addressed the Russian military agent in France, Count Alexei Ignatiev, the one who has been "50 years in the ranks": "Ensign Gumilyov ... was appointed by the British War Ministry to the Persian Front. According to order of General Zankevich, I ask you not to refuse to make appropriate orders to facilitate the passage of Ensign Gumilyov to England. But the "Red Count", as Ignatiev was called later, did not strike a finger with his finger ... The fact is that Gumilyov got to the bottom of the fact that Ignatiev's subordinate lieutenant Shtakelberg was an agent of the tsarist secret police. In addition, the meticulous ensign, as a confidant of Rapp, got acquainted with secret documents that shed light on the actions of agents of the security department of the royal police in France. Ignatiev, who was suspected of having links with the "Reds" since 1917, simply could not release such a "secret carrier" from France. He wanted Gumilyov to be back in Russia... In the hands of the new owners of the former tsarist agent...

In London, Boris Anrep arranges for his friend to work in the encryption department of the Russian Government Committee in Great Britain. Gumilyov worked there for two months, but bureaucratic work did not suit the officer who was looking for a more active use. Then Anrep tried to attach Gumilyov to a similar department of the British Ministry of India, but even then something went wrong ... And then the poet decides to return to Russia ...


Why, a reasonable question arises, did the British not use the services of such a competent person in matters of "Eastern policy" as Gumilyov was, and why did he suddenly decide to return to the "lair of the red beast"? Some, like Boris Anrep, believed that this was due to an exaggerated "sense of the Motherland." Others write that he yearned for his native land and could not imagine himself an English subject. Still others believe that Gumilyov "was tired of the war, tired of the struggle, and he just wanted to live normally, like a human being" ...

Here I want to exclaim, straight from Stanislavsky: "I don't believe it!" A man of some thirty-two, until recently full of energy, strength and striving to search for the secrets of the East, could not suddenly become an infantile old man, dreaming of an ordinary philistine life with indispensable porcelain elephants on a shelf instead of real, alive ones - in the jungles of Africa or India .. .

Perhaps the Russian counterintelligence officer Nevakhovich, who, during the First World War, was in contact with the British Secret Service on official business, came closest to unraveling the mystery of Gumilyov. “A whole phalanx of experienced (Russian. - Sergey Kulida) intelligence officers was thrown ... to the Western Front, and to the Turkish, and to the Balkans,” Colonel Nevakhovich told the famous emigrant writer and journalist Nikolai Breshko-Breshkovsky in 1936. “Among them was sent to France and Thessaloniki with a number of secret and important assignments, and the young cavalry ensign Gumilyov. Only now it became known how brilliantly Gumilyov fulfilled the first part of the tasks assigned to him. The Bolsheviks came to power found Gumilyov in Paris. Gumilyov's trip to the Balkans disappeared by itself.The British command, having managed to appreciate and truly fall in love with Gumilyov, offered him a choice of three combinations.The first - to finally transfer to the Intelligence Service and leave for the Mesopotamian front, where Lawrence of Arabia strongly called him ... The second - to go to one of the White armies at the British intelligence and counterintelligence headquarters.The third - the most terrible - to return to Owl Russian Russia to blow up the Bolsheviks from within."

Probably the tsarist officer was right. Leaving for the unknown, Gumilyov does what any intelligence officer would do, setting off on a particularly important and dangerous mission. He leaves Boris Anrep his military awards, an archive that includes copies of documents about his activities in Paris, letters, and most importantly, poems and translations written in France and England, and then transcribed with his own hands into a thick notebook bound in green morocco with gold embossing "Autographs" .

On April 4, Nikolai Gumilyov leaves London and returns to Petrograd via Scandinavia and Murmansk...

Who are you, Nikolai Gumilyov?

The call of the Motherland forces Nikolai Gumilyov "in May 1918 to return to Petrograd," says Vasily Stavitsky, a former employee of the Soviet special services. "He came to a completely different city, a different Russia. But his creative heritage is surprisingand we will not find a single written evidence, not a single poem that would reflect his attitude to the revolution, the new power of the Bolsheviks. Not the slightest hint, not condemnation, not approval, as if he had seen nothing, heard nothing, participated in nothing. He seemed to continue to live in his invented poetic world of acmeism. But this does not at all resemble the active position of Gumilyov the officer. Maybe it's deepwhat a conspiracy of his political views, and he did not want to leave even indirect evidence of his protest against the Bolshevik regime? There is no answer to this question, since there is no direct evidence of his position on the ongoing processes ... Gumilyov leads an active literary life: he writes poetry, publishes books, lectures at the Institute of Art History, in Proletkult, translates ballads by Robert South and other foreign authors. he also joined the editorial board of the publishing house "World Literature", led by Maxim Gorky, teaches at the Institute of Art History, at the Institute of the Living Word and in various literary studios. Gumilyov's books are also published - the third edition of "Romantic Flowers", the poem "Mik" and "Bonfire".


In personal life - changes. After a divorce from Akhmatova, Gumilyov in 1919 marries Anna Engelhardt, the daughter of the historian and literary critic N. A. Engelhardt and the granddaughter of the publicist A. N. Engelhardt. A noteworthy fact: Anna was friends with the notorious Lilya Brik, the fatal muse of Vladimir Mayakovsky and, of course, a KGB agent in the literary environment.

There is no doubt that the Cheka carefully looked after Gumilyov. Especially at a time when the British were in the center of attention of the young Soviet intelligence service, which closely followed the activities in Russia of British agents - Lockhart, Reilly, Cromie and others. So it was no coincidence that Nikolai Gumilyov's acquaintance with the drinking buddy of many writers, the "Bolshevik Lawrence", as historians later call Yakov Blumkin, a specialist in the East ...

In our story about Gumilyov the scout, we will deliberately omit his so-called "underground activities" that Nevakhovich pointed out - his dubious participation in the Kronstadt rebellion and in "underground" officer organizations. Let us also leave out of our attention the "legal resistance" of the poet Nikolai Gumilyov - a defiant, from the point of view of orthodox Bolsheviks, declaration of his own monarchism, "unacceptable behavior" at numerous meetings with poetry lovers, and most importantly a conflict with Alexander Blok, when in February 1921 the pro-Bolshevik poetic lobby failed to put the author of The Twelve into the chair of the Petrograd branch of the All-Russian Union of Poets.

Indeed, the figure of Gumilyov could attract the attention not of the "territorial" bodies of the Cheka, but of the emerging Soviet intelligence. Moreover, with such an "experience" of foreign work, which the poet had. And the Chekists were well acquainted with the results of Gumilyov's "exotic" travels. They also knew about his desire to visit the Asian continent. And at this point, their desires coincided ...

Among many, the ex-lover, Larisa Reisner, could draw closer attention of the Chekists to the dissident Nikolai Stepanovich. The person is untalented, but quite vindictive. What is the case when, on her slander, Gumilyov was deprived of the food ration of the Baltic Fleet ...

Drinking buddy of many writers and "Bolshevik Lawrence"


So, with regard to the Bolshevik aspirations to the East. Just a week after the October Revolution, Lenin signed an appeal to the "working Muslims of the East" and, in particular, to the Muslims of India, calling for them to rise up and free themselves from the hated yoke of foreign capitalists. According to the plan of the new masters of the country, it was the revolutionary East that was to become a hotbed capable of kindling the flame of a world revolution. Do you remember: "we will fan the world fire on the mountain to all bourgeois"? ..

In August 1919, the People's Commissar of the Navy, Lev Trotsky, sent a memorandum marked "Secret" to the Central Committee of the RCP (b). In it, the apologist for the "permanent revolution" with his characteristic fervor and foreign intemperance justified the need to change the orientation of the party in international priorities: "The path to Paris and London lies through the cities of Afghanistan, Punjab and Bengal" In his opinion, for this purpose it is necessary to "disturb the unstable balance Asian relations of colonial dependence, give a direct impetus to the uprising of the oppressed masses and ensure the victory of such an uprising in Asia." And for this, quite specific tasks were envisaged: "We must now begin a more serious organization ... to concentrate the necessary forces, linguists, translators of books, to attract native revolutionaries - by all means and methods available to us."

No sooner said than done ... Here is how the writer Alexander Amfiteatrov described the expansion of Soviet Russia and the Comintern on the Asian continent: "The occupation of Georgia, a protectorate over Persia, intrigues in Central Asia, Raskolnikov's embassy in Afghanistan, Surits in Kabul (Yakov Surits - Plenipotentiary Representative of the RSFSR in Afghanistan in 1919-1921 - Sergei Kulida), seriously discussed in 1919-1920, the project of a campaign against India ... ".

In May-August 1920, in Caspian Iran, a detachment of Fyodor Raskolnikov, with the support of naval artillery, cleared Anzali and Rasht from the British, led by General Townsend. Raskolnikov's wife Larisa Reisner wrote that on May 19 "it became known about the capture of the entire white fleet interned in the Persian harbor of Anzali, about the surrender of the British troops occupying this port, in a word, about the final liberation of the Caspian Sea, from now on a free Soviet lake, surrounded by a ring of friendly republics ... In Anzali, British colonial policy collided with the real forces of the workers' state and was defeated. On May 18, 1920, the regular troops of Great Britain, for the first time in the East, were defeated in open battle and retreated, barely redeemed from shameful captivity. "

Kurds entered Rasht and Anzali, led by Kuchuk Khan, whom the enthusiastic Reisner calls a "communist", and the more down-to-earth Raskolnikov - "half-revolutionary-half-robber." Let us pay special attention to the fact that Yakov Blyumkina, a "friend" of Nikolai Gumilyov, already known to us, was engaged in training the leaders of the "Gilyan Republic".



Further in the series of "Eastern events" is the "Bukhara Revolution" of September 1920. And when the formally independent Emirate of Bukhara fell, the "red strategists" came up with the final plan to conquer India. Afghanistan was supposed to serve as a springboard for this purpose, where in 1921 Raskolnikov went with his eccentric wife as an ambassador.

From the Afghan emir, by hook or by crook, they tried to wrest consent to the conduct of communist agitation in India from Afghanistan, the supply of weapons there and, ultimately, a corridor for the passage of revolutionary troops. The fee for accommodating assumed 12 airplanes, a certain number of guns, 15 thousand guns, the construction of a telegraph line between Kushka and Kabul, and, well, the “nth” amount of money.

As a significant help in a future war, Reisner proposed using the nomadic tribes in the region of the Afghan-Indian border. The "Valkyrie of the Revolution" assumed that these tribes had a lot of claims against the British: "Songs are sung about the Bolsheviks on the borders of India." Did not work out…

But the phrase that Nikolai Gumilev, if it were, Reisner said, reached the ears of "those who need it": "If the Bolsheviks decide to conquer India, my sword is at their service" ... And then the Foreign Department of the Cheka (intelligence) decides engage the poet in the "east direction". If we allow this possibility, then some details in his future fate become explainable ...

On August 3, Chekists arrested Nikolai Gumilyov on suspicion of participation in the underground counter-revolutionary Petrograd militant organization, which was allegedly led by Professor Vladimir Tagantsev, the son of Nikolai Tagantsev, a well-known lawyer and former liberal senator.

“In the multi-volume “Tagantsev Case”, which I completely leafed through, only a small part of the materials (volume No. 177 “Accomplices”) concerns the fate of Nikolai Gumilyov,” writes Stavitsky. “Moreover, most of this small file (169 sheets) consists of various requests, certificates etc. And only a few pages are the protocols of interrogations, on which the whole accusation is actually built.Arrested on August 3, 1921 on charges of conspiracy in the Tagantsev Case, Nikolai Gumilyov was already sentenced on August 24 by the decision of Petrogubchek to capital punishment - execution Over the years, there have been many controversial publications in the press about Gumilyov's role in the "counter-revolutionary conspiracy of Tagantsev's military organization": from the active role of a combat officer of the Russian army to the victim of a treacherous denunciation.

In our opinion, there can be no talk of any conspiracy involving Nikolai Gumilyov at all. Of course, many, especially among the emigrants, wanted to see a conquistador in Gumilyov, showing the way to the truth for lost souls. Gumilyov's students, Irina Odoevtseva and Georgy Ivanov, especially raged in this confidence. But few paid attention to the testimony of Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko. The writer recalled that, in fact, Gumilev said (even if we assume that he got to "red" Russia thanks to the British special services with the task of "blow up the situation") about the internal situation in the "country of the Bolsheviks": "For a coup in Russia itself - no hope. All the efforts of those who love it and are rooting for it will be shattered against a solid wall of espionage unprecedented in the world. After all, it has seeped through us like water through a sponge. You can’t trust anyone. Salvation will not come from abroad either. The Bolsheviks, when they if something threatens from there, they throw a bone. After all, one does not feel sorry for the loot. No, an uprising is impossible here. Even the thought of it is forewarned. And it is stupid to prepare for it."

The "Tagantsev case" is a peculiar way of putting pressure on Gumilyov in order to persuade him to cooperate with the young Soviet intelligence. After all, specialists in the East of the level of Gumilyov could then, as they say, be counted on the fingers. And an operation similar to the "Tagantsev Case" was designed to remove the poet from "circulation", turning him into a kind of "legend", and to involve him in special operations under a new guise. Wasn’t Gumilyov himself striving for such adventures? ..

Even those few documents of the case of the Petrograd military organization that have been preserved in the archive are able to tell the main thing: an attempt to recruit (or re-recruit?) Nikolai Stepanovich to work against the British in Asia. In the protocol of interrogation we read: "Interrogated by investigator Yakobson, I testify as follows: ... in the winter before Christmas, a middle-aged lady came to me, who handed me an unsigned note containing a number of questions obviously connected with foreign espionage (for example, information about the upcoming campaign against India). I answered her that I did not want to give any such information, and she left ... (Signed - N. Gumilyov) 18 / VIII - 21. " Did you notice that Gumilyov answered - "I don't want to". So he knew something...

And, perhaps, he shared his knowledge about India with the Chekists. And as a result, a cover document appeared, entitled: "Extract from the minutes of the meeting of Petrgubchek dated August 24, 1921." It said: "Gumilyov Nikolai Stepanovich, 35 y.o., former nobleman, member of the collegium "From World Literature", non-partisan, former officer.

Member Peter. fights. counter-revol. organizations. He actively contributed to the drafting of proclamations of counter-revolutionary content, promised to connect with the organization at the time of the uprising a group of intellectuals, career officers who would actively take part in the uprising, received money from the organization for technical needs.

Sentence to capital punishment - execution.

Correct: (signature illegible)."

There are many incomprehensible moments in the Tagantsev case, which, in particular, are pointed out by Anatoly Dolivo-Dobrovolsky: “There is no evidence of Gumilyov’s counter-revolutionary activities in the documents, and a sentence can only be passed on actual cases, and not on suspicion. The decision to execute was not made by the court, but investigator Yakobson… There are no other signatures in Gumilyov’s case, except for the signature of the same investigator Yakobson, although according to official rules there should have been a signature of the detective of the Cheka… Surprising is the severity of the sentence to a person guilty only of non-information: after all, some of those arrested in this case were released , some received only two years in prison. Why was there special treatment for Gumilyov? And the absence of documents incriminating Gumilyov (as a conspirator - Sergey Kulida) in the case only means that the sophisticated investigators of the Cheka failed to get the confessions they needed from Gumilyov ".

Or maybe just succeeded? And not confessions, but consent to cooperation? .. And therefore no one else has ever seen Gumilyov either dead or alive ... By the way, immediately after the alleged execution of the poet, rumors spread that the death of Nikolai Stepanovich was inspired by Western intelligence services, who decided in this way to get rid of not from a philologist and poet, but from the scout Gumilyov. The question is: who could possibly dissolve such "gossip"? Who knew for sure about the "double" life of the famous poet? Answer: secret services of the Soviets...

And in what way was another “friend of the writers” involved in the case, Yakov Agranov, who at the indicated time served as head of the Special Bureau for the Administrative Expulsion of Anti-Soviet Elements and Intelligentsia of the VChK-GPU, and who, as they claimed, personally interrogated Gumilyov? However, there is no documentary evidence of this fact.

And can it be considered a coincidence that at first in 1921, and then again, in August of the following year, Alexander Barchenko, a writer, parapsychologist, went to the Russian North, to those places where Nikolai Gumilyov had once visited, occultist, head of a secret laboratory. His work was supervised by a member of the board of the Cheka, the head of the Special Department, a freemason and occultist, Gleb Boky. Who led the "Red Terror" in Petrograd and, in turn, worked closely with Agranov and Blumkin.



It is also noteworthy that in 1922 a certain reporter named Semyonov joined the Barchenko expedition. When the researcher returned to Petrograd in the autumn of that year, the newspapers were full of reports like this one from the Krasnaya Nov newspaper: "Prof. Barchenko discovered the remains of ancient cultures dating back to a period older than the era of the birth of Egyptian civilization." The Chekist scientist himself claimed that the local residents - the Lapps - are "the oldest ancestors of the peoples who subsequently left the northern latitudes." And that, "recently, the theory has been consolidated, according to which, the Lapps, in parallel with the dwarf tribes of all parts of the world, appear to be the most ancient progenitors of the now much taller white race." Already in our time, the researcher V. Demin, repeating the route of Barchenko's Lapland expedition, claims: the Kola Peninsula is the legendary Hyperborea - "the cradle and ancestral home of human civilization." It is possible that it was the "reporter Semyonov" who told A. Barchenko about this...

Indirect confirmation that Nikolai Gumilyov was not executed in 1921 is the fact that, as literary critic Andrei Miroshkin writes, “until 1927, the name of Gumilyov in the USSR was allowed to be mentioned in a neutral and even positive context (without indicating the causes of death). these years his poems, translations and prose have been published"...

It is likely that, together with Yakov Blumkin, Gumilyov could have participated in the "Sovietization" of Mongolia. It is also possible that, on the instructions of the Chekists, the poet visited Tibet and even looked for the mysterious Shambhala in the Pamirs, where he died in 1927 ...

In the history of espionage, we assure you, there is nothing like that...

If the guardians of "pure art" and the "bright image" of Nikolai Gumilev find this "conspiratorial" version of the poet's life too far-fetched and even outrageous, refute it. But it should be remembered that "a poet in Russia is more than a poet." And, in some cases, a significant intelligence officer.

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Karelian trace in the biography of Nikolai Gumilyov A

Nikolai Stepanovich Gumilyov - Russian poet of the Silver Age, prose writer,

critic, translator. In the USSR, his works were banned, and rare

books published before the revolution were copied by hand and distributed in

Samizdat.

Nowadays, his name has again become well known, and oblivion no longer threatens the poet,

at the same time, his unusual fate is hushed up - after all, it was she who made him

the way he became. In addition, the biography of Nikolai Gumilyov is full

contradictions, adventures, ups and downs and tragedies and is worthy of interest in itself

yourself.

Let's start with the fact that the future poet was born on the night of April 15, 1886 in

Kronstadt, shaken by a storm. An old nanny looking at a play

storm, innocently declared that the one who was born "will have a stormy life." Her words

turned out to be quite prophetic.

On the official biography of the poet I dwell now

I will not, except to remind you of the main milestones in a nutshell. Yes,

studied at the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum, was sickly and frail,

remained for the second year - but wrote wonderful poems,

published. Then, after school, he entered the Sorbonne,

traveled a lot: France, Greece, Italy. Turkey,

Egypt, Abyssinia ... Yes, he was married to Anna at one time

Akhmatova. Yes, in 1914 he went to the front of the First World War

(two St. George's crosses, by the way!).

It was his military career that took him abroad, where he

worked as a cryptographer of the Russian government committee. But

the decomposition of the army was also felt there, in the corps where he served in France

a rebellion arose, of course, it was quickly suppressed, but Gumilyov could not do all this

accept, resigned and went back to Russia to lecture on poetry in

Institute of the Living Word - in 1918 (when everyone fled the country, he, on the contrary,

returned to it). In 1921 he was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy.

against the new government and was shot.

All of the above you will find in any curriculum vitae. But in

official biographies of Nikolai Gumilyovamong other things and a bunch of

white spots, all of which are associated with his work on

research of the Russian North and the discovery of the Stone Book in Karelia.

It involuntarily gives the impression thatsomeone carefully and consistently

cleaned out information about entire periods of his life.

It is about them, about the mysterious "white spots" that I will now lead "my long

speech."

Say, studying at the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum -

the most elite institution of the time. Gumilev not

just got there, his sponsor and patron

Nicholas 2 himself was, precisely according to his personal

I was so struck by an 18-year-old guy from a poor and

humble family of the Russian tsar? It's all about him

report on the results of a trip to Karelia in 1904.

Traveling through the Russian North, Gumilyov once saw at the mouth of the Indel River

flat rocks on which hieroglyphs were carved - hundreds of meters of text,

pages of a stone book.



pictures of the indel river

He became interested in this because he was sure

what is in front of him is the legendary "Stone Book", about which

mentioned in Russian folk tales and even monastery chronicles under

named "Pigeon Book". Pigeon - it means "deep", besides

hieroglyphs somewhat resembled traces of bird paws (we are talking about Russian runes,

something really reminiscent of "pigeon" prints)

Russian runes

According to tradition, the Stone Book

the primary source for the myths of almost all the peoples of Eurasia.

The one who carved the text of the book on the rock (according to the signature, his name was Phoebus),

left a hint for posterity: a dictionary of characters, where opposite the hieroglyph

there was a picture of what it means (for example, an image

deciphered the pages of the Stone Book. The age of the carved hieroglyphs,

Unfortunately, at the moment there is no way to find it in the public domain

diary entries and translations of stone book texts, not even

Gumilev's poems dedicated to her. Alas, during the years of Soviet power was

the rock itself with the inscriptions was also destroyed. However, there is evidence in

records of folklore expeditions, in the works of other poets of Serebryany

century and beyond.

And I hear a familiar saying
How Truth called Krivda to fight,
How Krivda overcame, and the peasants
Since then, they live, offended by fate.
Only far on the ocean-sea,
On a white stone, in the middle of the waters,
Shining book in golden dress,
Beams resting on the sky.

That book fell out of some formidable cloud,
All the letters in it sprouted with flowers,
And it is written by the hand of mighty fates
All the Truth of the Hidden Earth!

Nikolay Zabolotsky

Only in general terms and from the few surviving archival documents

it is known that in the rock Pigeon book were found, including

revelations about the structure of the world, the physical and spiritual interaction of everything

living on a planet that more than 100 thousand years ago was inhabited by representatives

a completely different civilization, perished due to a debilitating civil

war. The conflict flared up between the wikis, who knew the secret of the philosophical

stone and possessing the right to eternal life, and the Aryans, deprived of this

privilege. After the end of the war and the death of the queen Mob leader

rebels Phoebus led the surviving Aryans to the south.




Map of Mercator depicting Hyperborea, 16th century and so the artist saw Hyperborea

Nicholas 2 became interested in the report and appointed Gumilyov a personal

audience. After a long conversation with the young man, he gave the order for further

training a young man at the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum and financing it

scientific research from the royal treasury.It connects to the process

deciphering the hieroglyphs of other specialists, in particular, translators with

Arabic and Sanskrit. With their help, Gumilyov succeeds completely

restore the meaning of what was written in the Pigeon Book. Of course, the accuracy

translation is not perfect, but, thanks to him, in subsequent expeditions Gumilev

finds the Kuzovsky archipelago (the legendary island of Buyan) and on Russky Island

The body opens the tomb of the queen of the Wiki Empire. Then neither Gumilyov nor himself

the emperor had not yet assumed what for the country, and for them personally,

there will be an attempt to make the most ancient knowledge publicly available.


Kuzovsky archipelago

But back to the contents of the Pigeon Book. ANDfrom translated texts

followed about that (quote from Gumilyov's report,preserved in a special) "Fab

buried on the island, which, according to the description, coincides with the German island

body, under two huge mounds of his son and daughter, but on the contrary, on

an island that looks like a Russian body, his wife - the queen of the Vic empire -

Mob." Following the instructions, Gumilyov organized a second one with royal money - already

scientific, archaeological expedition to Karelia, to the Kuzov archipelago, where

they found an ancient tomb. One of the most valuable finds was

a unique comb made of 1000-carat gold (such purity of gold cannot be

achieved so far).


View of the island Russian Body

This is how Gumilyov himself describes the find: “For excavations, we chose a stone

pyramid on the island, which is called the Russian Body, unfortunately,

the pyramid turned out to be empty, and we were about to finish the work on the island,

when I asked the workers, not counting on anything in particular, to sort out

a small pyramid, which was about ten meters from the first. There, to

my incredible joy, were stones tightly fitted to each other.

The very next day we were able to open this burial. Vikings don't

buried their dead and did not build stone tombs, I did

the conclusion is that this burial belongs to an older civilization. In grave

was the skeleton of a woman, no items but one. Near the skull

woman was a golden comb of amazing work, on top of which

a girl in a tight-fitting tunic sat on the backs of two dolphins carrying her.


The same tomb on Russkiy Kuzov Island

This unique golden comb, called "Hyperborean"

Grand Duke Sergei Mikhailovich presented at the request of Emperor Nicholas

Second ballerina Matilda Kshesinskaya. “There is every reason to believe, following

family legend that the comb still lies in the hiding place of the mansion

Kshesinskaya in St. Petersburg, ”says the St. Petersburg public figure and

researcher Konstantin Sevenard, who considers himself a descendant

Kshesinskaya. Indirect evidence is the fact that after

The October Revolution of 1917, the Bolsheviks in search of a unique crest

one of the first to seize this particular mansion, and the American Masons

offered Kshesinskaya herself to sell the comb for 4.5 million gold

rubles. Sevenard, having studied all the diaries and letters of the ballerina, claims that

Kshesinskaya considered the "Hyperborean comb" a kind of catalyst

revolution.


Kshesinskaya's mansion in St. Petersburg Matilda Kshesinskaya in her mansion




Speech by V. Lenin from the balcony of the Kshesinskaya mansion Now in the mansion is a museum, this is the office of the Central Committee

The further fate of N. Gumilyov is also symbolic. As you know, he was in

Africa, there are documents claiming that after the revolution he led

the largest expedition in the history of Russia in search of the legendary country

MU, which I also read about in the Pigeon Book. The collection he and his

nephew N. L. Sverchkov was brought from Africa, according to experts,

ranks second after the Miklouho-Maclay collection.

The execution of Gumilyov in 1921, Konstantin Sevenard also connects with secret

knowledge that the Stone Book endowed the poet with and to which, according to him

In other words, the Freemasons were very indifferent. But Nikolai Gumilyov refused

cooperate with them, for which he paid the price.

Mysterious labyrinths ("Babylons") of the Kuzovsky archipelago.