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Guerrier Courses

The Higher Courses for Women in Moscow (Russian: Московские высшие женские курсы, romanizedMoskovskiye Vysshiye Zhenskiye Kursy, lit.'Moscow Higher Women's Courses') was a university for women between 1872 and 1918 (with a break in 1888-1900), after which they were transformed into the 2nd Moscow State University. It was one of the largest and most prominent women's higher education institutions in the Russian Empire, second only to the Bestuzhev Courses in Saint Petersburg.[1] It was founded and administered by Vladimir I. Guerrier.[2][3][4]

The main building of the Higher Courses for Women (built in 1909-1913)

Historical information edit

First period (1872-1888) edit

At the beginning of 1871, the supernumerary professor of general history of Moscow University , V.I. Guerrier, sent a note to the trustee of the Moscow educational district, Prince A.P. Shirinsky-Shikhmatov , about the advisability of opening higher women's courses in Moscow, to which he added the draft "Regulations on Higher Women's Courses", in which he outlined the purpose and program of the created courses. Guerrier persuaded the Minister of Public Education Count Dmitry A. Tolstoy to sanction a higher school for women in Moscow. In May 1872, the Minister of Public Education, Count D. A. Tolstoy , agreed to the opening of higher women's courses in Moscow as a private educational institution and approved the "Regulations on Higher Women's Courses".[2]

On November 1, 1872, at Volkhonka 16, in the building of the First Men's Gymnasium , the grand opening of the Moscow Higher Women's Courses (courses of Professor V. I. Guerrier) took place, where professors of the Imperial Moscow University, priest A. M. Ivantsov-Platonov , S. M. Solovyov spoke and V. I. Guerriere.[2]

The course budget consisted of tuition fees and voluntary donations. The first donations came from Guerrier's wife Evdokia Ivanovna, her aunt E. K. Stankevich (500 rubles annually) and K. T. Soldatenkov (100 rubles annually). 13.44% of the sources of income for the courses were dividends from bonds purchased by Guerrier with a portion of the income from the activities of the courses. In addition, additionally (1%) the course participants collected money to purchase books for the course library. To replenish the course budget, Guerrier staged charity performances at the Solodovnikov Theatre. For income from performances in 1883, 46 listeners were given allowances. In addition, funds were sought through the sale of books and postcards printed in their own printing house.

Initially, training was designed for 2 years, and since 1879, according to the new Charter, 3 years. The Moscow courses had a historical and philological orientation, the compulsory subjects were approved: the history of Russia and general history, Russian literature and general literature, the history of civilization and the history of art, physics.  For those who wished, it was supposed to teach foreign languages, mathematics and hygiene. Classes were paid: 30 rubles a year were paid for the entire course of a student, and 10 rubles a year for a separate subject - volunteers. In 1875, the fee was 50 rubles a year; then - 100 rubles a year. In the total volume of incoming financial resources, tuition fees amounted to more than 75%; part of the funds (up to 7%) were voluntary donations; from 1875 to 1882 Moscow Merchant Administration allocated 500 rubles a year for 10 scholarships. [5]

In 1872-1873, the courses were located on Volkhonka in downtown Moscow, in 1873-1876 - in the premises of the Museum of Applied Knowledge on Prechistenka 32, and in 1877-1888 - in a building specially built for the Polytechnic Museum.

Regular students had to provide a certificate of secondary education upon entry or pass entrance exams in Russian and general history, Russian and general literature. The listeners also submitted an autobiography, a certificate of moral conduct and political integrity from the governor general, two photographs and, without fail, permission from the eldest man in the family or spouse.

The number of students in the courses at that time was quite high: in the first year after the opening of the courses, it reached 70 (most of the students moved from the Lubensky courses), then until 1878 it fluctuated between 103-107, and from 1879 the number of students gradually increased , reaching 256 in the 1884/85 academic year.

In 1881, a new humanitarian discipline was introduced in the courses - the history of philosophy.

Lectures at the courses were given by well-known professors of Moscow University (it was specifically stipulated in the Charter that mainly university professors would be invited as teachers). Among the first teachers were: Professor Fyodor A. Bredikhin (physics, astronomy), Professor Alexander N. Veselovsky (Russian literature), Professor Pavel G. Vinogradov (History of the Middle Ages), Professor Vasily O. Klyuchevsky (Russian history) , Rector of Moscow University, Professor Vladimir S. Solovyov (history of philosophy), L. M. Lopatin (history of philosophy), Vladimir I. Guerrier (history), Professor Nikolay I. Storozhenko (general literature), Professor N. S. Tikhonravov (ancient Russian literature),[6] Fyodor I. Buslayev (art history). Since 1877, the history of the Russian language and ancient Russian literature was taught by V. F. Miller . Later , Aleksandr I. Chuprov (political economy), Aleksandr G. Stoletov (physics), and Professor A. A. Shakhov (history of foreign literature).

The work of the courses was supervised by the Pedagogical Council, headed by Professor Sergey M. Solovyov. The trustee committee of the courses included E. K. Stankevich (nee - Bodisko (1824-1904), wife of A. V. Stankevich ), Kozma T. Soldatyonkov , E. I. Guerrier.

For 16 years, the courses issued 41 diplomas, which gave the right to teach in the senior classes of women's gymnasiums, in addition, 322 students passed the final exams, which gave them the right to teach in the junior classes of gymnasiums.[5]

In 1886, the Ministry of Public Education, represented by Minister I.D. Delyanov, forbade admission to all higher women's courses, motivating this measure by the need to develop new curricula and transfer courses to state support and in 1888 they have been closed.

The feeble-minded people who ruled in the 80s believed that they had won a great success over the revolution by forbidding the admission of girls to the Higher Women's Courses. But ten years later, they themselves were convinced of their mistake and began to think about restoring courses.

— V.I. Guerrier

Like its Saint Petersburg counterpart, the Guerrier Courses was established to prevent Russian women from studying abroad, which they had done since the universities were closed to women in Russia in 1863. The courses provided university level education, but in contrast to the courses for men, they were not allowed to issue any formal degree, nor were they given government funding. They were closed in 1888 but opened again in 1900.

Second period (1900-1918) edit

In 1900, graduates of secondary educational institutions from 41 provinces entered the courses. The new courses were no longer a private institution, receiving part of the funds from the Ministry of Public Education.

The term of study in courses in 1900 increased to four years. The newly opened courses had two departments - historical-philosophical and physical-mathematical. In 1906, according to the new Charter, the faculty structure of the Courses was established. In addition to the two existing ones, a Medical Faculty was opened (now the Russian National Research Medical University named after N.I. Pirogov ), which made the structure of the courses close to the structure of a classical university (before the revolution, universities in Russia, as a rule, consisted of four faculties: historical - philological, physical and mathematical, medical and legal). Since 1911, the Bakhrushinskaya Hospital has become the clinical base of the Medical Faculty. [7] In the 1906 -1907 academic year, the subject cycle system of teaching was introduced in the courses instead of the course system with specialization in the senior year. New curricula were also approved at all faculties. 15 hours a week were allotted for the study of compulsory subjects.

Until 1905, V. I. Guerrier was again the director of the courses. In 1905 , in the absence of V. I. Guerrier, who was abroad, Vladimir I. Vernadsky was elected director. However, due to the fact that Vernadsky was simultaneously elected assistant rector of the Imperial Moscow University, he never took up his duties in the Courses. In the same year, Sergey A. Chaplygin was elected director of courses. [8]

The courses were taught by such outstanding scientists as Vladimir I. Vernadsky (with his student V. V. Karandeev ), Sergey A. Chaplygin, Sergey S. Nametkin , Nikolay D. Zelinsky , Alexander A. Eichenwald , Boleslav K. Mlodzeevskii , Aleksandr N. Reformatsky , Ivan A. Ilyin , Alexander V. Zinger , Bogdan A. Kistyakovski and others. One of the first women professors was Olga N. Tsuberbiller, a graduate of courses, the author of the textbook on Analytic Geometry, "Problems and Exercises in Analytic Geometry", which was reprinted many times.

Since 1910, Professor N. D. Vinogradov began to read a course in the history of pedagogical teachings .

In 1905, the Moscow City Council decided to provide courses free of charge with a land plot on Devichye Pole . On June 3, 1907, the laying of educational buildings took place (architect S. U. Solovyov ) on a land plot along Malaya Tsaritsynskaya Street (now Malaya Pirogovskaya street). In 1908, the buildings of the Faculty of Physics and Chemistry ( now part of Moscow State University of Fine Chemical Technologies)  and the Anatomical Theater (architect A. N. Sokolov) (nowadays part of Russian National Research Medical University ) were opened on Trubetskoy Lane (now Kholzunova Lane ), and in 1913, the Auditorium Building of the Courses (now the main building of the Moscow Pedagogical State University, it is depicted on the current emblem of the Moscow State Pedagogical University.).

1911 became a milestone in the life of the Moscow Higher Women's Courses. In connection with the outbreak of a conflict between the Imperial Moscow University and the Minister of Public Education Lev A. Kasso (named Kasso Case ), a large group of professors and teachers left the university, most of whom began to work at the Courses. By 1912, 227 professors, teachers, lecturers and assistants were involved in the courses, more than a third of whom had doctoral or master's degrees; among them: former rector of Moscow University Alexander A. Manuilov, astronomer Pavel K. Shternberg, mathematician Nikolay A. Izvolsky , biologists Mikhail A. Menzbier and Nikolai K. Koltsov, physiologists Mikhail N. Shaternikov and Lazar S. Minor , philosophers Leo M. Lopatin , Pavel I. Novgorodtsev , historians Matvei K. Lyubavsky , Yury V. Gotye, Ivan V. Tsvetaev. Alexandre A. Kiesewetter , sociologist Veniamin M. Khvostov , biologist Lev A.Tarassevitch , historian of philosophy Alexander V. Kubitsky. There were also women among the staff of the courses: Maria Egorovna Becker, assistant to the course inspector; Olga Aleksandrovna Alferova, librarian; Nina Evgenievna Vedeneeva, assistant of the Department of Inorganic Chemistry (1914) and the Department of Physics (1916).

In 1911, women were finally accepted at the Russian universities.

In 1912, Courses graduates for the first time received the right to take exams at the Imperial Moscow University. On November 17, 1912, the Council of Courses approved the “Regulations on leaving students at the Moscow Higher Women's Courses”, which allows leaving graduates at the faculty to prepare them for teaching on the proposal of a professor (professors) for 2 years.

In 1913, Aleksandr F. Kots ' zoological collection was acquired for Courses , which laid the foundation for the Darwin Museum. [9]

In the 1915 - 1916 academic year, the Moscow Higher Women's Courses were granted the right to conduct final exams and issue diplomas of higher education. By 1918, the courses numbered 8.3 thousand students, second only to Moscow State University .

On the initiative of former students, the "Society for the Delivery of Funds to Moscow Higher Women's Courses" was established.

During 1900 -1913 the number of female students increased from 223 to 7155. However, the annual graduation was no more than 30% of the number of applicants, which was due to the inability of the students to withstand heavy teaching loads and most of the time to study on their own. Courses became one of the largest universities in the Russian Empire.

According to the protocol of the commission of the People's Commissariat of Education of the RSFSR dated October 16, 1918, the Moscow Higher Women's Courses was transformed into the 2nd Moscow State University (later split into several institutions, including the Moscow State Pedagogical University).[citation needed]

Famous graduates edit

In 1882-1885, Maria Pavlovna Chekhova studied at the courses , after which she taught history and geography for 18 years at the private Moscow women's gymnasium L. F. Rzhevskaya.

The graduates of the Higher Women's Courses of this period were: Zinaida Ivanova (Zinaida Mirovich) and Ekaterina Kletnova.

At different times, the courses were attended by: Vera Muromtseva, the future wife of Ivan A. Bunin, translator, publicist; a close friend of Anton P. Chekhov, Lidia Mizinova, an actress, translator, memoirist, literary and theater critic, who became the prototype of Nina Zarechnaya in the play "The Seagull "; Nadezhda Afanasyevna Bulgakova, sister of Mikhail A. Bulgakov.

Vera Stepanovna Nechayeva became a well-known researcher of the work of Fyodor M. Dostoevsky , the author of the most complete scientific biography of Vissarion G. Belinsky.

In 1910, Nadezhda Nikolaevna Sushkina (1889-1975), a soil scientist and microbiologist, graduated from the natural department and was the first to assess the influence of microorganisms on the composition of natural formations. [10] 

In 1907-1914, Bella Rosenfeld , the first wife of Marc Chagall , studied at the courses. [11] 

In 1917, Lidia Karlovna Lepin (1891-1985), a specialist in physical and colloidal chemistry, a future academician of the Academy of Sciences of the Latvian SSR, graduated from the course. [12]

Vera Varsanofieva was the first woman to be awarded the degree of Doctor of Geological and Mineralogical Sciences, geologist, geomorphologist, a member-correspondent of the USSR Academy of Pedagogical Sciences, and an honored scientist of the RSFSR.

Eugenia Gertsyk noted Russian translator and literary figure from the Silver Age.

Alexandra Glagoleva-Arkadieva the first Russian woman and physicist to become internationally known for her physics research on medical imaging using X-rays, mechanisms for generating microwaves, and spectrometry in the far infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Srbui Lisitsian was an Armenian-Soviet ethnographer known for her development of a novel mathematical method for describing folk dance precisely using film techniques.

Olga Tsuberbiller was a Russian mathematician noted for her creation of the textbook Problems and Exercises in Analytic Geometry was designated as an Honored Scientist of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in 1955.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rochelle Goldberg Ruthchild. Equality and Revolution: Women's Rights in the Russian Empire, 1905-1917. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010. ISBN 978-0-8229-6066-9. Page 56.
  2. ^ a b c Положение о Высших женских курсах в Москве и речи, произнесенные при открытии Курсов 1 ноября 1872 года профессорами Московского университета св. А. М. Иванцовым-Платоновым, С. М. Соловьевым и В. И. Герье [Regulations on the Higher Women's Courses in Moscow and the speeches delivered at the opening of the Courses on November 1, 1872 by professors of the Moscow University A. M. Ivantsov-Platonov, S. M. Solovyov and V. I. Guerrier] (in Russian).
  3. ^ "ГЕРЬЕ КУРСЫ • Большая российская энциклопедия - электронная версия" [GERIE COURSES (Moscow Higher Women's Courses)]. bigenc.ru. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  4. ^ Владимир Иванович Герье: у истоков высшего женского образования [Vladimir Ivanovich Guerrier: at the origins of higher education for women] (in Russian). Litres. 2019-07-25. ISBN 978-5-04-182226-2.
  5. ^ a b T︠S︡ygankov, D.A. (2008). "В.И. Герье и Московский Университет его эпохи : вторая половина ХІХ--начало ХХ вв. | WorldCat.org" [V.I. Guerrier and the Moscow University of his era: the second half of the 19th - the beginning of the 20th centuries.]. www.worldcat.org. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  6. ^ [Moscow Higher Women's Courses. 1872-1918]. 2013-05-26. Archived from the original on 2013-05-26. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  7. ^ "Бахрушинская больница" [Bakhrushin hospital]. PastVu. 1902. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  8. ^ "Московскому педагогическому государственному университету — 130 лет" [Moscow Pedagogical State University is 130 years old]. rl-online.ru. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  9. ^ "No. 2. Collection of Zoology and Ecology named after Professor A.F. Kots Institute of Biology and Chemistry".
  10. ^ "Чувашская Энциклопедия | Сушкина Надежда Николаевна" [Chuvash Encyclopedia | Sushkina Nadezhda Nikolaevna]. enc.cap.ru. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  11. ^ Shishanov, V. (2008). "Шишанов В. «Желая поступить…» (Документы об учёбе Беллы Розенфельд на Московских высших женских курсах) // Шагаловский сборник. Вып. 3. Материалы X — XIV Шагаловских чтений в Витебске (2000—2004)" [“Wishing to enter ...” (Documents about Bella Rosenfeld's studies at the Moscow Higher Women's Courses)]. issuu.com. Shagalovsky Collection. Issue. 3. Materials of X-XIV Chagall readings in Vitebsk (2000-2004). (in Russian). Minsk: Riftur. pp. 176–182. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  12. ^ "Лепинь Лидия Карловна | Летопись Московского университета" [Lepin Lidia Karlovna | Chronicle of Moscow University]. letopis.msu.ru. Retrieved 2022-11-30.

55°43′56.6″N 37°34′34.7″E / 55.732389°N 37.576306°E / 55.732389; 37.576306

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian September 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Russian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 2 680 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru Moskovskie vysshie zhenskie kursy see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated ru Moskovskie vysshie zhenskie kursy to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Higher Courses for Women in Moscow Russian Moskovskie vysshie zhenskie kursy romanized Moskovskiye Vysshiye Zhenskiye Kursy lit Moscow Higher Women s Courses was a university for women between 1872 and 1918 with a break in 1888 1900 after which they were transformed into the 2nd Moscow State University It was one of the largest and most prominent women s higher education institutions in the Russian Empire second only to the Bestuzhev Courses in Saint Petersburg 1 It was founded and administered by Vladimir I Guerrier 2 3 4 The main building of the Higher Courses for Women built in 1909 1913 Contents 1 Historical information 1 1 First period 1872 1888 1 2 Second period 1900 1918 2 Famous graduates 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistorical information editFirst period 1872 1888 edit At the beginning of 1871 the supernumerary professor of general history of Moscow University V I Guerrier sent a note to the trustee of the Moscow educational district Prince A P Shirinsky Shikhmatov about the advisability of opening higher women s courses in Moscow to which he added the draft Regulations on Higher Women s Courses in which he outlined the purpose and program of the created courses Guerrier persuaded the Minister of Public Education Count Dmitry A Tolstoy to sanction a higher school for women in Moscow In May 1872 the Minister of Public Education Count D A Tolstoy agreed to the opening of higher women s courses in Moscow as a private educational institution and approved the Regulations on Higher Women s Courses 2 On November 1 1872 at Volkhonka 16 in the building of the First Men s Gymnasium the grand opening of the Moscow Higher Women s Courses courses of Professor V I Guerrier took place where professors of the Imperial Moscow University priest A M Ivantsov Platonov S M Solovyov spoke and V I Guerriere 2 The course budget consisted of tuition fees and voluntary donations The first donations came from Guerrier s wife Evdokia Ivanovna her aunt E K Stankevich 500 rubles annually and K T Soldatenkov 100 rubles annually 13 44 of the sources of income for the courses were dividends from bonds purchased by Guerrier with a portion of the income from the activities of the courses In addition additionally 1 the course participants collected money to purchase books for the course library To replenish the course budget Guerrier staged charity performances at the Solodovnikov Theatre For income from performances in 1883 46 listeners were given allowances In addition funds were sought through the sale of books and postcards printed in their own printing house Initially training was designed for 2 years and since 1879 according to the new Charter 3 years The Moscow courses had a historical and philological orientation the compulsory subjects were approved the history of Russia and general history Russian literature and general literature the history of civilization and the history of art physics For those who wished it was supposed to teach foreign languages mathematics and hygiene Classes were paid 30 rubles a year were paid for the entire course of a student and 10 rubles a year for a separate subject volunteers In 1875 the fee was 50 rubles a year then 100 rubles a year In the total volume of incoming financial resources tuition fees amounted to more than 75 part of the funds up to 7 were voluntary donations from 1875 to 1882 Moscow Merchant Administration allocated 500 rubles a year for 10 scholarships 5 In 1872 1873 the courses were located on Volkhonka in downtown Moscow in 1873 1876 in the premises of the Museum of Applied Knowledge on Prechistenka 32 and in 1877 1888 in a building specially built for the Polytechnic Museum Regular students had to provide a certificate of secondary education upon entry or pass entrance exams in Russian and general history Russian and general literature The listeners also submitted an autobiography a certificate of moral conduct and political integrity from the governor general two photographs and without fail permission from the eldest man in the family or spouse The number of students in the courses at that time was quite high in the first year after the opening of the courses it reached 70 most of the students moved from the Lubensky courses then until 1878 it fluctuated between 103 107 and from 1879 the number of students gradually increased reaching 256 in the 1884 85 academic year In 1881 a new humanitarian discipline was introduced in the courses the history of philosophy Lectures at the courses were given by well known professors of Moscow University it was specifically stipulated in the Charter that mainly university professors would be invited as teachers Among the first teachers were Professor Fyodor A Bredikhin physics astronomy Professor Alexander N Veselovsky Russian literature Professor Pavel G Vinogradov History of the Middle Ages Professor Vasily O Klyuchevsky Russian history Rector of Moscow University Professor Vladimir S Solovyov history of philosophy L M Lopatin history of philosophy Vladimir I Guerrier history Professor Nikolay I Storozhenko general literature Professor N S Tikhonravov ancient Russian literature 6 Fyodor I Buslayev art history Since 1877 the history of the Russian language and ancient Russian literature was taught by V F Miller Later Aleksandr I Chuprov political economy Aleksandr G Stoletov physics and Professor A A Shakhov history of foreign literature The work of the courses was supervised by the Pedagogical Council headed by Professor Sergey M Solovyov The trustee committee of the courses included E K Stankevich nee Bodisko 1824 1904 wife of A V Stankevich Kozma T Soldatyonkov E I Guerrier For 16 years the courses issued 41 diplomas which gave the right to teach in the senior classes of women s gymnasiums in addition 322 students passed the final exams which gave them the right to teach in the junior classes of gymnasiums 5 In 1886 the Ministry of Public Education represented by Minister I D Delyanov forbade admission to all higher women s courses motivating this measure by the need to develop new curricula and transfer courses to state support and in 1888 they have been closed The feeble minded people who ruled in the 80s believed that they had won a great success over the revolution by forbidding the admission of girls to the Higher Women s Courses But ten years later they themselves were convinced of their mistake and began to think about restoring courses V I GuerrierLike its Saint Petersburg counterpart the Guerrier Courses was established to prevent Russian women from studying abroad which they had done since the universities were closed to women in Russia in 1863 The courses provided university level education but in contrast to the courses for men they were not allowed to issue any formal degree nor were they given government funding They were closed in 1888 but opened again in 1900 Second period 1900 1918 edit In 1900 graduates of secondary educational institutions from 41 provinces entered the courses The new courses were no longer a private institution receiving part of the funds from the Ministry of Public Education The term of study in courses in 1900 increased to four years The newly opened courses had two departments historical philosophical and physical mathematical In 1906 according to the new Charter the faculty structure of the Courses was established In addition to the two existing ones a Medical Faculty was opened now the Russian National Research Medical University named after N I Pirogov which made the structure of the courses close to the structure of a classical university before the revolution universities in Russia as a rule consisted of four faculties historical philological physical and mathematical medical and legal Since 1911 the Bakhrushinskaya Hospital has become the clinical base of the Medical Faculty 7 In the 1906 1907 academic year the subject cycle system of teaching was introduced in the courses instead of the course system with specialization in the senior year New curricula were also approved at all faculties 15 hours a week were allotted for the study of compulsory subjects Until 1905 V I Guerrier was again the director of the courses In 1905 in the absence of V I Guerrier who was abroad Vladimir I Vernadsky was elected director However due to the fact that Vernadsky was simultaneously elected assistant rector of the Imperial Moscow University he never took up his duties in the Courses In the same year Sergey A Chaplygin was elected director of courses 8 The courses were taught by such outstanding scientists as Vladimir I Vernadsky with his student V V Karandeev Sergey A Chaplygin Sergey S Nametkin Nikolay D Zelinsky Alexander A Eichenwald Boleslav K Mlodzeevskii Aleksandr N Reformatsky Ivan A Ilyin Alexander V Zinger Bogdan A Kistyakovski and others One of the first women professors was Olga N Tsuberbiller a graduate of courses the author of the textbook on Analytic Geometry Problems and Exercises in Analytic Geometry which was reprinted many times Since 1910 Professor N D Vinogradov began to read a course in the history of pedagogical teachings In 1905 the Moscow City Council decided to provide courses free of charge with a land plot on Devichye Pole On June 3 1907 the laying of educational buildings took place architect S U Solovyov on a land plot along Malaya Tsaritsynskaya Street now Malaya Pirogovskaya street In 1908 the buildings of the Faculty of Physics and Chemistry now part of Moscow State University of Fine Chemical Technologies and the Anatomical Theater architect A N Sokolov nowadays part of Russian National Research Medical University were opened on Trubetskoy Lane now Kholzunova Lane and in 1913 the Auditorium Building of the Courses now the main building of the Moscow Pedagogical State University it is depicted on the current emblem of the Moscow State Pedagogical University 1911 became a milestone in the life of the Moscow Higher Women s Courses In connection with the outbreak of a conflict between the Imperial Moscow University and the Minister of Public Education Lev A Kasso named Kasso Case a large group of professors and teachers left the university most of whom began to work at the Courses By 1912 227 professors teachers lecturers and assistants were involved in the courses more than a third of whom had doctoral or master s degrees among them former rector of Moscow University Alexander A Manuilov astronomer Pavel K Shternberg mathematician Nikolay A Izvolsky biologists Mikhail A Menzbier and Nikolai K Koltsov physiologists Mikhail N Shaternikov and Lazar S Minor philosophers Leo M Lopatin Pavel I Novgorodtsev historians Matvei K Lyubavsky Yury V Gotye Ivan V Tsvetaev Alexandre A Kiesewetter sociologist Veniamin M Khvostov biologist Lev A Tarassevitch historian of philosophy Alexander V Kubitsky There were also women among the staff of the courses Maria Egorovna Becker assistant to the course inspector Olga Aleksandrovna Alferova librarian Nina Evgenievna Vedeneeva assistant of the Department of Inorganic Chemistry 1914 and the Department of Physics 1916 In 1911 women were finally accepted at the Russian universities In 1912 Courses graduates for the first time received the right to take exams at the Imperial Moscow University On November 17 1912 the Council of Courses approved the Regulations on leaving students at the Moscow Higher Women s Courses which allows leaving graduates at the faculty to prepare them for teaching on the proposal of a professor professors for 2 years In 1913 Aleksandr F Kots zoological collection was acquired for Courses which laid the foundation for the Darwin Museum 9 In the 1915 1916 academic year the Moscow Higher Women s Courses were granted the right to conduct final exams and issue diplomas of higher education By 1918 the courses numbered 8 3 thousand students second only to Moscow State University On the initiative of former students the Society for the Delivery of Funds to Moscow Higher Women s Courses was established During 1900 1913 the number of female students increased from 223 to 7155 However the annual graduation was no more than 30 of the number of applicants which was due to the inability of the students to withstand heavy teaching loads and most of the time to study on their own Courses became one of the largest universities in the Russian Empire According to the protocol of the commission of the People s Commissariat of Education of the RSFSR dated October 16 1918 the Moscow Higher Women s Courses was transformed into the 2nd Moscow State University later split into several institutions including the Moscow State Pedagogical University citation needed Famous graduates editIn 1882 1885 Maria Pavlovna Chekhova studied at the courses after which she taught history and geography for 18 years at the private Moscow women s gymnasium L F Rzhevskaya The graduates of the Higher Women s Courses of this period were Zinaida Ivanova Zinaida Mirovich and Ekaterina Kletnova At different times the courses were attended by Vera Muromtseva the future wife of Ivan A Bunin translator publicist a close friend of Anton P Chekhov Lidia Mizinova an actress translator memoirist literary and theater critic who became the prototype of Nina Zarechnaya in the play The Seagull Nadezhda Afanasyevna Bulgakova sister of Mikhail A Bulgakov Vera Stepanovna Nechayeva became a well known researcher of the work of Fyodor M Dostoevsky the author of the most complete scientific biography of Vissarion G Belinsky In 1910 Nadezhda Nikolaevna Sushkina 1889 1975 a soil scientist and microbiologist graduated from the natural department and was the first to assess the influence of microorganisms on the composition of natural formations 10 In 1907 1914 Bella Rosenfeld the first wife of Marc Chagall studied at the courses 11 In 1917 Lidia Karlovna Lepin 1891 1985 a specialist in physical and colloidal chemistry a future academician of the Academy of Sciences of the Latvian SSR graduated from the course 12 Vera Varsanofieva was the first woman to be awarded the degree of Doctor of Geological and Mineralogical Sciences geologist geomorphologist a member correspondent of the USSR Academy of Pedagogical Sciences and an honored scientist of the RSFSR Eugenia Gertsyk noted Russian translator and literary figure from the Silver Age Alexandra Glagoleva Arkadieva the first Russian woman and physicist to become internationally known for her physics research on medical imaging using X rays mechanisms for generating microwaves and spectrometry in the far infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum Srbui Lisitsian was an Armenian Soviet ethnographer known for her development of a novel mathematical method for describing folk dance precisely using film techniques Olga Tsuberbiller was a Russian mathematician noted for her creation of the textbook Problems and Exercises in Analytic Geometry was designated as an Honored Scientist of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in 1955 See also editBestuzhev Courses Russian National Research Medical University Moscow State Pedagogical University Moscow State University of Fine Chemical TechnologiesReferences edit Rochelle Goldberg Ruthchild Equality and Revolution Women s Rights in the Russian Empire 1905 1917 University of Pittsburgh Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 8229 6066 9 Page 56 a b c Polozhenie o Vysshih zhenskih kursah v Moskve i rechi proiznesennye pri otkrytii Kursov 1 noyabrya 1872 goda professorami Moskovskogo universiteta sv A M Ivancovym Platonovym S M Solovevym i V I Gere Regulations on the Higher Women s Courses in Moscow and the speeches delivered at the opening of the Courses on November 1 1872 by professors of the Moscow University A M Ivantsov Platonov S M Solovyov and V I Guerrier in Russian GERE KURSY Bolshaya rossijskaya enciklopediya elektronnaya versiya GERIE COURSES Moscow Higher Women s Courses bigenc ru Retrieved 2022 11 30 Vladimir Ivanovich Gere u istokov vysshego zhenskogo obrazovaniya Vladimir Ivanovich Guerrier at the origins of higher education for women in Russian Litres 2019 07 25 ISBN 978 5 04 182226 2 a b T S ygankov D A 2008 V I Gere i Moskovskij Universitet ego epohi vtoraya polovina HIH nachalo HH vv WorldCat org V I Guerrier and the Moscow University of his era the second half of the 19th the beginning of the 20th centuries www worldcat org Retrieved 2022 11 30 Moskovskie vysshie zhenskie kursy 1872 1918 Moscow Higher Women s Courses 1872 1918 2013 05 26 Archived from the original on 2013 05 26 Retrieved 2022 11 30 Bahrushinskaya bolnica Bakhrushin hospital PastVu 1902 Retrieved 2022 11 30 Moskovskomu pedagogicheskomu gosudarstvennomu universitetu 130 let Moscow Pedagogical State University is 130 years old rl online ru Retrieved 2022 11 30 No 2 Collection of Zoology and Ecology named after Professor A F Kots Institute of Biology and Chemistry Chuvashskaya Enciklopediya Sushkina Nadezhda Nikolaevna Chuvash Encyclopedia Sushkina Nadezhda Nikolaevna enc cap ru Retrieved 2022 11 30 Shishanov V 2008 Shishanov V Zhelaya postupit Dokumenty ob uchyobe Belly Rozenfeld na Moskovskih vysshih zhenskih kursah Shagalovskij sbornik Vyp 3 Materialy X XIV Shagalovskih chtenij v Vitebske 2000 2004 Wishing to enter Documents about Bella Rosenfeld s studies at the Moscow Higher Women s Courses issuu com Shagalovsky Collection Issue 3 Materials of X XIV Chagall readings in Vitebsk 2000 2004 in Russian Minsk Riftur pp 176 182 Retrieved 2022 11 30 Lepin Lidiya Karlovna Letopis Moskovskogo universiteta Lepin Lidia Karlovna Chronicle of Moscow University letopis msu ru Retrieved 2022 11 30 55 43 56 6 N 37 34 34 7 E 55 732389 N 37 576306 E 55 732389 37 576306 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