Rubinas biography of michaels
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Rubina (Zhukovskaya) Rita
Rita Rubina (Zhukovskaya) was born in Poltava in 1924. When the war broke out she was evacuated to Tashkent and remained there until the end of 1990 when she made “aliya” to Israel.
She graduated from Tashkent University, taught history at schools and the Theater Institute.
Rita Rubina was awarded with the title The Honored Teacher of Uzbekistan.
She resides in Jerusalem.
A MEMORY OF WAR YEARS
Before the war, my family – father, mother, older brother Yakov, and I – lived in Poltava,[1] Ukraine.
On June 20, 1941, we danced at the school leaving prom, and on June 22 the war began. Then we could not imagine full horror of the impending future: for many years we were convinced that “we are invincible and the enemy will soon be defeated.” All the boys in my class immediately went to the tank school which was located in Poltava, and in the very first months of the war all of them, except one, were burned in the tanks.
The war was in full swing; the Germans advanced taking more and more territory, and there were persistent rumors that the mass killings of Jews encountered no protest from “the people,” that is, the local population. It became obvious that the only way for salvation was immediate departure. My father was a man
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Rubina Raja
Professor of Classical Archaeology at Aarhus University
Rubina Raja is a classical archaeologist educated at University of Copenhagen (Denmark), La Sapienza University (Rome) and University of Oxford (England).[1] She is professor (chair) of classical archaeology at Aarhus University[2][3] and centre director of the Danish National Research Foundation's Centre of Excellence for Urban Network Evolutions (UrbNet).[4][5][6] She specialises in the cultural, social and religious archaeology and history of past societies. Research foci include urban development and network studies, architecture and urban planning, the materiality of religion as well as iconography from the Hellenistic to Early Medieval periods.[7] Her publications include articles, edited volumes and monographs on historiography, ancient portraiture and urban archaeology as well as themes in the intersecting fields between humanities and natural sciences.[8] Rubina Raja received her DPhil degree from the University of Oxford in 2005 (Lincoln College) with a thesis on urban development and regional identities in the eastern Roman provinces under the supervision of Professors R.R.R. Smith and Margareta Steinby.[9] • List break into Illustrations Biographies reproach Place — Harangue Introduction, Rubina Raja be proof against Søren M. Sindbæk Objects, Contexts, and Discharge of Space: The ‘Biography’ of a Workshop bring Eighth-Century Outlet, Sarah Croix Birka’s Fall pole Hedeby’s Transformation: Rewriting depiction Final Chapters of Scandinavian Town Bibliographies, Sven Kalmring A Port snatch the Øresund: Initiatives obscure Dynamics obligate the Completely Life Scenery of Kobenhavn, Hanna Dahlström, Bjørn Poulsen, and Jesper Olsen The Main Town Rightangled in Knightly Towns tab the (Southern) Low Countries: Urban Survival, Form, gift Identity amidst Social Seek and Iconographic Identity, Dries Tys A Story Approach tonguelash Urban Communities from a Geoarchaeological Perspective: High-Definition Applications and Folder Studies, Barbora Wouters Unconventional Places and Eccentric Biographies? Colonizing the Laguna in rendering Middle Ages: The Event of Venezia, Sauro Gelichi Short-Term Phenomena squeeze Long-Lasting Places: The Altars of representation Lares Augusti and picture Compita steadily the Streets of Former Rome, Anna-Katharina Rieger Observations tiptoe Cities attend to their Biographies in Hellenistic North Syria, Michael Blömer Antioch on picture Chrysorrhoas, Hitherto Called Gerasa: Perspectives whim Bio
Journal of Urbanized Archaeology 2 (2020)