Inessa Ivanovna Lomakina ( 1930 - 2007 ) - Soviet Russian journalist, Mongolist , writer, member of the Union of Journalists of the USSR .
| Inessa Ivanovna Lomakina | |
|---|---|
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| Date of Birth | September 14, 1930 |
| Place of Birth | Leningrad , USSR |
| Date of death | 2007 |
| Place of death | Saint Petersburg , Russia |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | publicist , journalist |
| Language of Works | Russian |
| Awards | |
Biography
Inessa Lomakina in 1953 graduated from the philological faculty of Leningrad University . She worked as a teacher of Russian language and literature at school.
In 1966, Lomakina first came to the Mongolian People’s Republic with her geologist husband, who was sent here on a long business trip. Feeling sympathy for the country and its inhabitants, here she takes an active part in public, journalistic activities. Lomakina works in Mongolia as a correspondent for the newspapers Sovetskaya Kultura and Literaturnaya . He also collaborates with the journal Modern Mongolia , where he writes under the pseudonym Enhe [1] .
I. Lomakina writes about Mongolia, its history and culture. A significant part of the author's works is devoted to Mongolian fine art. She has written over a hundred short articles on Mongol personalities for the German art encyclopedia Allgemeine Kunstlerleksikon (Saur, Leipzig).
Lomakina owns such books about Mongolia as “The Visual Art of Socialist Mongolia”, “Marzan Sharav”, “The Head of the Ja-Lama”, “The Great Fugitive”, “Ulan Bator”.
The book “The Head of the Ja-Lama” tells about Dambidzhaltsan (Ja-Lama) , a military leader, a khoshun prince, a member of the national liberation movement in Western Mongolia in the 1910s.
Based on numerous sources, Lomakin’s book “The Great Fugitive” tells of another episode from the history of the “Buddhist” Central Asia of the early 20th century - the dramatic wanderings of the 13th Dalai Lama Thupten Gyatso . Avoiding English and Chinese captivity, he flees to the Mongol Urga , and believes in Russia's support. The fate of this leader, a fighter for the independence of Tibet , neither before nor after this work, has ever become the subject of special studies in Russian.
The merit of I. Lomakina to Mongolia was marked by the awarding of her Order of the Polar Star .
In addition to the above, Lomakina owns many publications that are no longer associated with Mongolia. In particular, she wrote about Pyotr Tchaikovsky, Nicholas Roerich, Anna Vyrubova, Lilia Brik, Benois family, Baron Ungern.
Rewards
- Order of the Polar Star ( MPR )
Bibliography
- Lomakina I.I. Fine Art of Socialist Mongolia. Ulaanbaatar: State Publishing House of Mongolia, 1970.
- Lomakina I.I. Marzan Sharav. M.: Fine Arts, 1974.
- Lomakina I.I. White yurts in the steppe. M .: Young Guard, 1975.
- Lomakina I.I. Ulan-Bator. L .: Art, 1977.
- Lomakina I.I. Nevsky named after Lenin. The history of the production association “Nevsky Plant named after V. I. Lenin. " L .: Lenizdat, 1981.
- Lomakina I.I. Monument on Bukhtarm. M .: Political literature, 1989.
- Lomakina I.I. Our biography. Essays on the history of the production association “Plant them. M. I. Kalinina "1869-1989. L .: Lenizdat, 1991.
- Lomakina I.I. Pershin D.P. Baron Ungern, Urga and Altan-Bulak. (Compilation, afterword, comments, illustrations). Samara: Agni Publishing House, 1999.
- Lomakina I.I. Head of the Ja-Lama. Ulan-Ude - St. Petersburg: Ecoart Agency, 1993.
- Lomakina I.I. The Great Runaway. M .: Design. Information. Cartography, 2001.
- Lomakina I.I. Terrible mahakals of the East. M .: Eksmo; Yauza, 2004.
- Lomakina I.I. Mongolian capital, old and new. M.: Partnership of scientific publications of KMK, 2006.
Notes
- ↑ Mongol Sudlaach Inessa Lomakin өөd Bol (Unavailable link) . Date of treatment September 27, 2015. Archived September 28, 2015.
