Telling falsehoods is a culture in Kilil Tigray ruled by Adwan dogs!
Posted: 12 Feb 2020, 23:21
Ethiopian News & Opinion
https://mereja.forum/content/


pastlast wrote: ↑13 Feb 2020, 01:26Nah Pushkin was a Russian Not an Eritrean.
If per PFDJ history, "Eritrea starts with Italian Colonisation", then 1890 being the Start of Eritrea in Name and Geographical boundaries, then Pushkin was Never Eritrean and was Russian from 1799 - 1837 (No ERITREA at that time)
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Al ... ch-Pushkin
Aleksandr Pushkin, in full Aleksandr Sergeyevich Pushkin, (born May 26 [June 6, New Style], 1799, Moscow, Russia—died January 29 [February 10], 1837, St. Petersburg), Russian poet, novelist, dramatist, and short-story writer; he has often been considered his country’s greatest poet and the founder of modern Russian literature.
Pushkin’s father came of an old boyar family; his mother was a granddaughter of Abram Hannibal, who, according to family tradition, was an Abyssinian princeling bought as a slave at Constantinople (Istanbul) and adopted by Peter the Great, whose comrade in arms he became. Pushkin immortalized him in an unfinished historical novel, Arap Petra Velikogo (1827; The Negro of Peter the Great). Like many aristocratic families in early 19th-century Russia, Pushkin’s parents adopted French culture, and he and his brother and sister learned to talk and to read in French. They were left much to the care of their maternal grandmother, who told Aleksandr, especially, stories of his ancestors in Russian. From Arina Rodionovna Yakovleva, his old nurse, a freed serf (immortalized as Tatyana’s nurse in Yevgeny Onegin), he heard Russian folktales. During summers at his grandmother’s estate near Moscow he talked to the peasants and spent hours alone, living in the dream world of a precocious, imaginative child. He read widely in his father’s library and gained stimulus from the literary guests who came to the house.