Musorgsky's Gravestone

William Ryan wfr at SAS.AC.UK
Thu Jan 24 11:14:49 UTC 2013


The hexagram is not by any means an exclusively Jewish symbol. Of the 
other uses of the symbol the masonic seems the most likely in the case 
of Pushkin and Musorgskii. There is a fair amount of conspiracy theory 
and antisemitic stuff about this on Yandex. One also has to wonder how 
many people design their own monuments and gravestones.
Will

On 24/01/2013 00:35, William Nickell wrote:
> I am not an expert on this, but was curious.  A bit of browsing on the 
> web turned up similar stars on the graves of Pushkin and Nekrasov, and 
> conjectures that they appear there in a Judeo-Christian context.
>
> Bill Nickell
>
>
> William Nickell
> Asst. Professor of Russian Literature
> Dept. of Slavic Languages & Literatures
> University of Chicago
>
> On Jan 23, 2013, at 4:03 PM, Olga Meerson wrote:
>
>> �� ������ ������� ������������ ����� ������ �������� ������ = "so 
>> that the posterity of the Orthodox [Christians] would know the past 
>> [destiny] of their native land,' not "And thus the future 
>> generations/Will of their faith and people learn the past."  The 
>> presence of Mussirgsky's Christian Orthodox identity, at least 
>> insofar as his task parallels Pimen's (as a co-chronicler with, say, 
>> Pushkin), is ensured by these words. The star of David may reflect 
>> the fact that Mussorgsky had many sources for his music in Jewish 
>> pubs, or that the motifs interested him at least as much as the 
>> native Russian themes and motifs (cf. Pictures at an Exhibition), as 
>> later they would interest Shostakovich. On the other hand, the star 
>> may mean the same thing it does in the portal of the Florentine 
>> Church dedicated to the Holy Cross (the Santa Croce)---namely, be at 
>> least as Christian in its symbolism as it would be Jewish for the 
>> Modern times. This happens to many other symbols and 
>> notions---virtually all of them in the Old Testament :)
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Jan 21, 2013 at 2:31 PM, Patricia A. Krafcik 
>> <krafcikp at evergreen.edu <mailto:krafcikp at evergreen.edu>> wrote:
>>
>>     Dear SEELANGERS:
>>
>>     Might anyone know why the composer Modest Musorgsky's gravestone
>>     does not sport a cross or any evident Christian or Orthodox
>>     Christian symbol, but instead what appears a Star of David above
>>     the engraving of his head? Gravestones
>>     of other Russian composers routinely included Christian symbols,
>>     but not his (unless there is something I cannot discern in the
>>     photos). The monument, according to biographers, was designed by
>>     an architect by the name Bogomolov, and the bust by a young
>>     sculptor by the name of Ginzburg. On the stone is an inscription
>>     of two lines from Pimen's narrative (from "Boris Godunov"): "And
>>     thus the future generations/Will of their faith and people learn
>>     the past."
>>
>>     Thanks in advance for your thoughts and perhaps specific
>>     information about this issue.
>>     --Patricia Krafcik
>>     The Evergreen State College
>>     krafcikp at evergreen.edu <mailto:krafcikp at evergreen.edu>
>>
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