Temira Pachmuss, Tatiana Manukhina, Anna Hippius, Zinaida Hippius, Dmitrii Merezhkovskii, and Vladimir Zlobin:

An Inventory of the Temira Pachmuss and Vladimir Zlobin Collection at the University of Illinois Archives.



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Anna Hippius' Papers   Anna Nikolaevna Hippius (1872-1942), was one of Zinaida Hippius's three younger sisters. After the Revolution she fled Soviet Russia (their two other sisters, Tatiana and Natalia, stayed there for the rest of their lives) and settled in Paris. Although Anna Hippius studied medicine in Russia and practiced it for several years, in emigration she made her living on final preparation of Russian writers' manuscripts. She also wrote and published (under the pen name Anna Giz) her own works. In 1927 she published a hagiography of St. Tikhon Zadonskii (Sviatoi Tikhon Zadonskii). Her diary "Obitel' Solovetskaia" (The Cloister of Solovetsk) appeared posthumously in an abridged form in Vozrozhdenie (1959, No. 83).

Box
5 Manuscripts (5 notebooks)
[Diary] -- 1 notebook. , April-May 1919
"Katolichestvo i Pravoslavie" (Catholicism and Orthodoxy) -1 notebook, including a map, , 1924
"Moi memuary" (Memoirs)-- 1 notebook , 1904-1911
"Prepodobnye Savvatii i Zosima, solovetskie chudotvortsy i obitel' Solovetskaia" (St. Savvatii and Zosima, the Miracle-Workers of Solovetsk, and the Cloister of Solovetsk), 1 notebook. , 1926    Published in abridged version in Vozrozhdenie,No. 53.,1959
"Sviatoi Tikhon Zadonskii" (St. Tikhon Zadonskii), - 1 notebook, , undated   Published in Paris, 1927
Memorabilia -Album of photographs



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