File:Myasoedov 16.jpg
Grigoriy Myasoyedov, (Чтение Положения 19 февраля 1861 года). Reading of the manifesto of February 19, 1861 (on abolition of serfdom in Russia) 1873. Oil on canvas. 138.2x209 cm. Tretyakov Gallery.
Source: http://www.picture.art-catalog.ru/picture.php?id_picture=7778
This file is in the public domain in countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years or less. | ||||
|
This is a candidate to be copied to Wikimedia Commons. Freely licensed or public domain media are more accessible to other Wikimedia projects if placed on Commons. Any user may perform this move—please see Moving images to the Commons for more information. Please thoroughly review the copyright status of this file and ensure that it is actually eligible for transfer to Commons. If you are concerned that this file could have problems with its attribution information and/or copyright status, then remove this notice and DO NOT transfer it to Commons. By transferring this file to Commons, you acknowledge you have read this message and are willing to accept any and all consequences for inappropriate transfers. Repeat violators will be blocked from editing. If you have checked the file and it is OK to move to Commons add "|human=username" to the template so other users can see it has been checked and can help you copy the file to Commons. If the file has already been moved to Commons, then consider nominating the file for deletion or changing the template to {{Already moved to Commons}} If the file can't be moved to Commons because it doesn't fit Common's scope, then use {{Do not move to Commons|reason=Why it can't be moved to Commons}} If you think that a local copy of this file should be kept, then use {{Keep local}}. Consider using {{Keep local|reason=Why the English Wikipedia needs a local copy}} Copy to Commons: via CommonsHelper |
|||
|
File usage
Wikipedia for Schools...
Schools Wikipedia was created by children's charity SOS Children's Villages. SOS Childrens Villages helps more than 2 million people across 133 countries around the world. Will you help another child today?