Deník Marie Bashkirtseff

Tcherniakovka

Také známý jako: Tchernakowka, Chernakovka

Place places/residences Standard Aktualizováno: 2026-02-12
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Overview

Former Bashkirtseff family estate in the Poltava region of Ukraine. The name may derive from "chornyi" (black/dark in Ukrainian/Russian), suggesting a dark feature of the landscape. The suffix -ovka indicates a village or estate. The property was lost as part of the family's broader economic decline following the 1861 emancipation reforms, but continued to provide agricultural income that supported the Bashkirtseff family's lifestyle abroad.

Relevance to Marie

Tcherniakovka carries dual significance for Marie:

  • Negative: represents the provincial ways she rejects in her pursuit of Parisian sophistication
  • Nostalgic: the lost family grandeur she never knew, romanticized through her father's stories
  • Economic: part of the Ukrainian world she left as a child but which remained economically vital

Context

  • Location: Poltava governorate, Russian Empire (now Ukraine)
  • Purpose: Agricultural estate providing income to the family
  • Management: Run by stewards or family members while Marie's mother traveled Europe

Diary References

Preface (Carnet 000)

  • 000-04, 000-05: Mentioned in context of Nadine Martinoff's story and the family's Ukrainian roots

1873

  • March 3: Baba/nostalgia scene - evokes Marie's complex relationship with the family past

1874

  • March 6: Marie criticizes the family for doing party preparations themselves like "domesticite de Tcherniakovka" (servants from Tcherniakovka) instead of hiring London House professionals
  • April 13: Papa reminisces about its past glories: "papa raconte les grandeurs passees de Tcherniakovka, pourquoi ce n'est plus? Comme je l'aimerais" (papa tells of the past grandeurs of Tcherniakovka, why is it no more? How I would love it)
  • April 23: The parrot-costume fantasy - further exploration of Marie's romanticized past

Historical Context

  • Ukrainian noble estates underwent major upheaval after the 1861 Emancipation of Serfs
  • Economic pressures on the landed gentry led to widespread property losses
  • Many families like the Bashkirtseffs were forced into emigration patterns
  • The estate symbolizes the broader decline of the Ukrainian-Russian minor nobility

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