I would like to talk about a member of the British Royal family, Kate Middleton or Catherine the Duchess of Cambridge. She was born in 1983 on January 9. She was born in the family of a pilot and a flight attendant. She has a younger brother and sister Pippa and James Middleton. Her childhood nickname was sQuick.
In 2002, she went to St Andrew's University where she met Prince William. They started Dating in 2007. However, in 2010, when they announced their engagement, they broke up. And in 2011, they reunited again.
On July 29, 2011, Catherine Middleton and Prince William married, and on July 22, 2013, their son George was born. Second child Charlotte was born in 2015 on may 2 and became the first Princess in the last 25 years . Louie's third child was born on April 23, 2018.
I would like to do Royal duties like Kate. I think it would be very exciting and surprising. It would definitely be the most interesting experience of my life.
Alexander Pushkin Born into the Russian aristocracy in 1799, Pushkin was brought up in a heavily European-influenced environment. From his early years in Moscow, Pushkin had easy access to French and British literature—Voltaire, Byron, and Scott would become his early literary models. After graduating from a government lycée at Tsarskoe Selo in 1817, he obtained an appointment to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in St. Petersburg. While there he alternated between periods of reckless dissipation and intense writing, finishing his first full-length work Ruslan i Lyudmila (Ruslan and Lyudmila) in 1820. Just prior to its publication, however, Czar Alexander I exiled Pushkin to southern Russia for the allegedly revolutionary political sentiments expressed in his poetry. During the first four years of his six-year exile, he retained his civil service position and lived in various towns in the Caucasus and Crimea. Despite bouts of gambling and drinking, he was productive during his years in southern Russia and wrote prolifically. Pushkin was eventually pardoned by Nicholas I in 1826, though the czar appointed himself the poet's personal censor, keeping him under strict observation and forbidding him to travel freely or leave Russia. In 1831 Pushkin married Natalia Nikolaevna Goncharova, and in the final ten years of his life he lived primarily in St. Petersburg, producing his most enduring poetic works, including Eugene Onegin and all of his shorter fiction. In 1837 he was severely wounded in a duel with George d'Anthès, an Alsatian nobleman who had openly made sexual advances toward Pushkin's wife. Pushkin died two days later
I would like to talk about a member of the British Royal family, Kate Middleton or Catherine the Duchess of Cambridge. She was born in 1983 on January 9. She was born in the family of a pilot and a flight attendant. She has a younger brother and sister Pippa and James Middleton. Her childhood nickname was sQuick.
In 2002, she went to St Andrew's University where she met Prince William. They started Dating in 2007. However, in 2010, when they announced their engagement, they broke up. And in 2011, they reunited again.
On July 29, 2011, Catherine Middleton and Prince William married, and on July 22, 2013, their son George was born. Second child Charlotte was born in 2015 on may 2 and became the first Princess in the last 25 years . Louie's third child was born on April 23, 2018.
I would like to do Royal duties like Kate. I think it would be very exciting and surprising. It would definitely be the most interesting experience of my life.
Born into the Russian aristocracy in 1799, Pushkin was brought up in a heavily European-influenced environment. From his early years in Moscow, Pushkin had easy access to French and British literature—Voltaire, Byron, and Scott would become his early literary models. After graduating from a government lycée at Tsarskoe Selo in 1817, he obtained an appointment to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in St. Petersburg. While there he alternated between periods of reckless dissipation and intense writing, finishing his first full-length work Ruslan i Lyudmila (Ruslan and Lyudmila) in 1820. Just prior to its publication, however, Czar Alexander I exiled Pushkin to southern Russia for the allegedly revolutionary political sentiments expressed in his poetry. During the first four years of his six-year exile, he retained his civil service position and lived in various towns in the Caucasus and Crimea. Despite bouts of gambling and drinking, he was productive during his years in southern Russia and wrote prolifically. Pushkin was eventually pardoned by Nicholas I in 1826, though the czar appointed himself the poet's personal censor, keeping him under strict observation and forbidding him to travel freely or leave Russia. In 1831 Pushkin married Natalia Nikolaevna Goncharova, and in the final ten years of his life he lived primarily in St. Petersburg, producing his most enduring poetic works, including Eugene Onegin and all of his shorter fiction. In 1837 he was severely wounded in a duel with George d'Anthès, an Alsatian nobleman who had openly made sexual advances toward Pushkin's wife. Pushkin died two days later