V
101 položek
Vaillant
CultureAn upscale Parisian florist described by Marie as "pas un fleuriste ordinaire, c'est un artiste raffiné" (not an ordinary florist, he's a refined artist).
Valentine
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vallon
Person[Research needed]
Valrose
PlacePrestigious venue in Nice where concerts and social events were held in the 1870s. Marie attended a charity concert there on March 1, 1874, for the benefit of the Samaritaines.
Valsenter
PersonA tall woman in Nice society whom Marie calls an "obélisque" (obelisk).
Var
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Var Races (Courses du Var)
PersonHorse races held near Nice in February 1873, one of the major social events of the winter season on the French Riviera. Marie describes the races on February 5, 1873 as "Le plus grand jour de la saison pour moi."
Varietes
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Varietes Theater
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Varsovie (Warsaw / Warszawa)
PlaceVarsovie (Polish: Warszawa, Warsaw) is the capital of Poland. In 1881, it was under Russian control as part of Congress Poland. Marie passes through on her journey from Russia to Western Europe.
Vasconcellos
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vasconsellos
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vasseur
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vassil
PlaceVassil is a cook who serves the Bashkirtseff family at Gavronzi. He accompanies the family on their journey to Kremontchougy to prepare meals during the excursion.
Vassilissa
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vassilissa Babanine
PersonVassilissa Babanine was Marie's great-aunt, the sister of Grand-papa (Marie's maternal grandfather). She was described as having been "belle, riche, jeune, elegante, charmante et spirituelle" (beautiful, rich, young, elegant, charming and witty) in her youth but died abandoned and impoverished in a small room at her brother's estate.
Vassilissa Egorovna
PersonA person mentioned in conversation during Marie's visit to the [#Howards](Howard_family.md) on March 4, 1874. The discussion about Vassilissa Egorovna appears to have been connected to comments about [#Bête](Bete.md).
Vassya Lyahewitch
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vatican (Le Vatican)
PlaceThe Vatican, the seat of the Catholic Church and residence of the Pope, was a site of both spiritual and artistic significance during Marie Bashkirtseff's Italian travels. In the 1870s, the Vatican was in the midst of a political crisis: the loss of the Papal States to unified Italy (1870) had left Pope Pius IX a self-declared "prisoner of the Vatican," creating a standoff between the papacy and the Italian state that would not be resolved until 1929.
Vatka
PlaceStub entry — needs research.
Vauban
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vaucluse
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vaudeville
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vaudeville Theater
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vayce
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Veauce
Person[Research needed]
Veglione
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Velasquez
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vendredi Saint
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Venice (Venezia)
PlaceVenice, the floating city of canals and palaces, was among the Italian cities Marie Bashkirtseff visited during her European travels. Built on 118 small islands in the Adriatic Sea, Venice was in the 1870s both a living museum of artistic achievement and a city in gentle decline, having lost its political independence to the Kingdom of Italy in 1866. For Marie and her contemporaries, Venice represented the romance of the past and the supreme achievement of Venetian painting (Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese).
Venise
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Venus
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Verdi
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Verefkine
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vernette
Person[Research needed]
Versailles
Place[Research needed]
Vesuve
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Viatka (Vyatka)
PlaceViatka (also spelled Vyatka, now called Kirov) was a provincial city in northeastern European Russia, 896 kilometers northeast of Moscow. In the 19th century, it served as a place of administrative exile for political and troublesome subjects.
Vichnevka (Vishnevka)
PlaceVichnevka (Vishnevka, from "vishnya" meaning cherry) was likely one of the Bashkirtseff family properties or a neighboring estate in the Poltava region of Ukraine. The name, derived from the Russian/Ukrainian word for cherry, was typical of estate names in the agricultural regions of the Russian Empire, where properties were often named after natural features or local flora.
Vichy
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vico
Place- Type: people - mentioned
Vicomte Pernety
Person- Type: people - aristocracy
Vicomte Pristitieff
Person- Type: people - aristocracy
Vicomte Vigier
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vicomtesse Pernety
Person- Type: people - aristocracy
Vicomtesse Vigier
PersonAn aristocratic woman in Nice society whom Boreel was visiting. The title "vicomtesse" indicates nobility, placing her in the upper echelons of Nice society that Marie and her family moved in. Marie also mentions a "Vigier" (possibly the Vicomte, her husband) whom she encounters and exchanges greetings with.
Victor
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Victor Dury
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Victor Emmanuel II
Person[Research needed]
Victor Hugo
PersonVictor-Marie Hugo (26 February 1802 -- 22 May 1885) was a French poet, novelist, and dramatist, widely considered one of the greatest writers in the French language. Author of *Les Miserables* (1862) and *Notre-Dame de Paris* (1831), he was the dominant literary figure of 19th century France.
Victor Massé
PlaceVictor Massé (1822-1884), French composer known for his operas and operettas. He composed the opera "Paul et Virginie" (1876) based on Bernardin de Saint-Pierre's famous novel.
Victor-Emmanuel
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Victorine
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vie Parisienne
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vienelli
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vienna (Vienne / Wien)
PlaceVienna, the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was one of Europe's great imperial cities and a center of culture, music, and aristocratic life. In Marie Bashkirtseff's diary, Vienna appears as a destination for aristocratic acquaintances (notably Prince Esterhazy attending the races) and as part of the broader network of European high society that Marie aspired to join. Vienna represented a particular kind of aristocratic glamour that was distinct from both Parisian chic and Russian grandeur.
Vienna World Exhibition of 1873
PlaceThe Vienna World Exhibition (Weltausstellung 1873 Wien) was held from May 1 to November 2, 1873, in the Austro-Hungarian capital. It was the fifth world exposition and the first to be held in a German-speaking country. The exhibition was designed to showcase industrial, cultural, and scientific achievements from around the world and coincided with Emperor Franz Joseph I's 25th anniversary as ruler.
Viik
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Villa
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Villa 55
PersonA villa property owned by the Bashkirtseff family in Nice, serving as a private retreat and social gathering place.
Villa 77
PlaceStub entry — needs research.
Villa Baquis (Villa Buffa)
PlaceVilla Baquis, which Marie contemptuously calls "Buffa," was the Bashkirtseff family's residence in Nice during 1873. Located in what Marie considered an inferior neighborhood, the villa represented a significant step down from their previous accommodations and became a symbol of the family's declining social position.
Villa Bashkirtseff
PlaceVilla Bashkirtseff was the family property in Nice that bore their name. The Bashkirtseff family occupied several properties in Nice during their years on the Riviera, beginning around 1871. The family first rented Villa Acquaviva at 51 Promenade des Anglais, then acquired the property at 55 bis, known as Villa Romanoff. The designation "Villa Bashkirtseff" may refer to the family renaming one of their acquired properties or to a later residence.
Villa Borghese
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Villa Carlone
PersonA substantial property in Nice that the Bashkirtseff family purchased in February 1874 for 218,000 francs. Located on rue de la Préfecture, it became their new residence.
Villa Fortunee
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Villa Gambart
PersonVilla in Nice, landmark on the route to the races.
Villa Gioia
PlaceVilla Gioia (Italian: "Joy") was a property in Nice referenced in Marie Bashkirtseff's diary. The Italian name reflects the mixed French-Italian culture of Nice, which had been part of the Kingdom of Sardinia until 1860. Many properties in Nice bore Italian names from the pre-annexation period. Villa Gioia may have been one of the Bashkirtseff family's residences or a property associated with their social circle.
Villa Leon
PlaceStub entry — needs research.
Villa Meynadier
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Villa Peillon
PlaceStub entry — needs research.
Villa Reale
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Villa Souvoroff (Villa Suvorov)
PlaceVilla Souvoroff was a property in Nice, likely named after the famous Russian military commander Alexander Suvorov (1730-1800). The use of the name "Souvoroff" (the French transliteration of Suvorov) for a Nice villa reflects the strong Russian presence in the city. It may have been one of the properties occupied by the Bashkirtseff family or by members of their Russian social circle in Nice.
Ville dAvray
Place[Research needed]
Villefranche
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Villemessant
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vinay
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Vincenzo Bellini
CultureVincenzo Bellini (1801-1835) was an Italian opera composer of the bel canto era. His opera "La Sonnambula" (The Sleepwalker) was performed at the Cercle de la Méditerranée on February 7, 1873.
Vingt ans apres
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vinogradoff
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Vintimille
PlaceFrench-Italian border town (Ventimiglia in Italian) where the Bashkirtseff family's Genoa trip ended in chaos.
Violet
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Violette
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Violettes
Person[Research needed]
Virgil
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Virgile
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Virgin Mary
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Virot
CultureMaison Virot was one of the most prestigious millinery houses in late 19th-century Paris, renowned for creating elaborate and fashionable hats. The house was run by Mme Virot, who was considered one of the leading modistes (milliners) of the era, alongside Reboux and others. Located in the fashionable commercial district near the Rue de la Paix, Virot dressed the heads of the Parisian elite and aristocracy.
Virouboff
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Visconti
PersonA business establishment in Nice where Marie obtained carnival tickets. The Nice Carnival was (and remains) one of the major social events of the Riviera season, typically held in February before Lent. For Marie's social circle, attending the carnival would have been an important occasion for seeing and being seen.
Viviani
PersonSocial acquaintance who invites the Bashkirtseff family to Beaulieu.
Vocha Danilovski
PersonMan who made acquaintance with Marie's mother. Had smallpox.
Voisin
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Voiture
Culture"Voiture" is the general French word for carriage (and later, car). In Marie's diary, it most often refers to the family's private horse-drawn carriage, without specifying the exact type. When Marie writes "en voiture" (in the carriage), she typically means her family's own equipage, driven by their coachman, with the social display that implies.
Volga
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Volkoff
PersonStub entry — needs research.
Volotchisk
PlaceStub entry — needs research.
Voltaire
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Von Derwies
CultureA reference to the von Derwies (or de Derviz) family, a prominent Russian noble family enriched by railway concessions in the 1860s-1870s. Pavel Grigorievich von Derwies (1826-1881) amassed an enormous fortune building the Moscow-Ryazan and Ryazan-Kozlov railways, becoming one of the wealthiest men in Russia. He later settled on the French Riviera, where he built the opulent Villa Valrose in Nice.
Voronine
Person- Type: people - mentioned
Voyeïkoff (Madame Voyeïkoff)
PersonMadame Voyeïkoff was a Russian acquaintance of the Bashkirtseff family, living in Paris with her children in August 1873. Marie had known the family previously and is disappointed by how much Madame Voyeïkoff has changed.