ST Petersburg
ST Petersburg
ST Petersburg
st. petersburg
churches • music
palaces • history
restaurants • WALKs
Hermitage • architecture
canals • ballet • hotels
the guides that show you what
others only tell you
St Petersburg
tersburg Area
A by Area
reea
This book divides central St Petersburg into five areas,
each of which has its own chapter. Often the city’s
waterways create natural area boundaries but some-
times a main road defines the border. Most sights are
concentrated within this part of town, but there are a
number of places of interest just outside the colour-
coded centre. These are covered in the chapter Further
Afield (see pp124–131). The sights outside the city limits
are described in Beyond St Petersburg (see pp140–165).
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EYEWITNESS TRAVEL
ST PETERSBURG
by Toshkolab
EYEWITNESS TRAVEL
ST PETERSBURG
MAIN CONTRIBUTORS:
CATHERINE PHILLIPS
CHRISTOPHER AND MELANIE RICE
www.touristas.clan.su
CONTENTS
HOW TO USE
THIS GUIDE 6
GETTING AROUND
ST PETERSBURG
221
ST PETERSBURG
STREET FINDER
230
Little Stable Bridge crossing the Moyka river
GENERAL INDEX 246
PETROGRADSKAYA TRAVELLERS’
64 NEEDS
PALACE EMBANKMENT WHERE TO STAY
74 168
FURTHER AFIELD
124
THREE
GUIDED WALKS
132
BEYOND
ST PETERSBURG
140 St Isaac’s Cathedral, lavishly decorated inside with more than
40 different stones and minerals
6 H O W T O U S E T H I S G U I D E
Each of the seven sightseeing areas is colour- by-Street map illustrating a particularly interes-
coded for easy reference. Every chapter opens ting part of the area; for sights beyond the city
with an introduction to the area it covers, limits, by a regional map. A simple numbering
describing its history and character. For system relates sights to the maps. Important
central districts, this is followed by a Street- sights are covered by several pages.
For easy reference, the sights are
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Museums
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other areas of the
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See pp
Tram s
River b
The golden dome off St Isaac’s Cathedral above elegant façades along the Neva
3 Detailed information
on each sight
All the important sights are described
ndividually. They are listed to follow
he numbering on the area map at
he start of the section. The key to
he symbols summarizing practical
nformation is on the back flap.
FOUR GREAT
A DAYS IN
ST PETERSBURG
RUSSIAN CITY
Morning
This itinerary leads you to the
best traditional RRussian sights
of St Petersburg, a city where
European influences can be
more evident then Russian.
Rastrelli’s masterly main staircase at the Winter Palace Start at the Russian Museum
(see pp104–7), the world’s
Afternoon finest collection of Russian
IMPERIAL CITY Head back along Galernaya art. Marvel at the Church on
ulitsa to Decembrists’ Square Spilled Blood’s (see pp100–1)
• Art and opulence (see p78) – the Bronze Horse- glittering interior, then head to
• Grand squares and views man, a statue of Peter the Kalinka-Malinka (see p187)) for
• Remembering Rasputin Great, rears up at its centre. a traditional R
Russian lunch.
There are fine views across
TWO ADULTS allow at least US$215 the river to Vasilevskiy Island,
lined with rich mansions and
Morning handsome institutions.
The day starts at the centre Turn round, and take in
of the city with the Baroque St Isaac’s Cathedral (see
Winter Palace (see pp92–3), pp80–1), topped by a gilded
once the official residence of dome. It took from 1818 to
the imperial family and now 1858 to construct this colos-
the heart of the Hermitage sal structure, which, since
museum (see pp84–93). the Soviet era, has been
Concentrate on the magnifi- designated a museum.
cent state rooms, where the Under 1 km (half a mile)
Tsars received important west, the Yusupov Palace (see
guests. Do not miss the view p120) has an exhibition on
over vast Palace Square (see Grigoriy Rasputin, the “holy
p83), which incorporates the man” murdered here by
glorious sweep of the General Prince Felix Yusupov. Dine in
Staff Building, formerly home the garden pavilion of the pal-
to the state ministries and now ace at Noble Nest (see p188)
part of the museum. Relax or, for a more modest outlay,
with a leisurely walk along at 1913 (see p186) – the year
the embankment to Krokodil the Romanovs celebrated 300 The Russian Revival-style Church on
(see p186) for a light lunch. years on the throne. Spilled Blood
Afternoon
Inspired by the morning’s
sights, nip across to the
Souvenir Market (see p199),
which sells everything from
icons to fur hats.
Then take the green metro
line from Gostinyy Dvor to
Ploshchad Aleksandra Nev-
skovo to Alexander Nevsky
Monastery (see pp130–1).
Many of Russia’s notables,
including Tchaikovsky and
Dostoevsky, are buried here.
As the afternoon fades, you
may like to attend a magical The still-operational mint at Peter and Paul Fortress
candlelit choral service at the
Church of the Annunciation. cells, displays on the history sounded the 1917 Revolution,
Round off the day with a of the city, Peter the Great’s is moored a short distance
visit to nearby Slavyanskiy rowing boat, and a rampart away. For lunch, Georgian
stil (see p191), a shop selling climb. In summer, the park Salkhino (see p185) is nearby.
wonderful Russian linen. surrounding the fortress has
In the evening, visit the all kinds of family attractions. Afternoon
ballet (see pp202–3) or dine Also in the park is Zver A little further north, the
among folk dancers at St (see p185), a restaurant small Kirov Museum (see
Petersburg (see p188). For surrounded by trees where p72) is devoted to the head
both, book ahead. adults can relax while their of the city’s Communist
children run around. Party, Sergey Kirov, whose
After supper, take the assassination in 1934 promp-
A FAMILY DAY OUT metro to Krestovskiy Ostrov, ted a wave of executions.
then a short walk to the To appreciate the Soviet
• Awesome views western spit of Yelagin Island glorification of the People’s
• Gruesome specimens (see pp136–7), where there achievements, take the metro
• Food in a forest are fine sunsets and an ice to Moskovskaya and the
• Skating or the circus rink in winter. Or, if it is too Victory Monument (see p131),
cold, how about a visit to the whose awesome underground
FAMILY OF 4 allow at least US$130 Circus (see p201) ? Memorial Hall shows life
during the Siege of Leningrad.
Morning Then take the metro back to
The day starts with a stiff SOVIET CITY Tekhnologicheskiy Institute
climb up to the colonnade and ride the red line between
of St Isaac’s Cathedral (see • Revolutionary heritage sites Avtovo and Ploshchad Voss-
p80–1) for panoramic city • Monuments to the People taniya, where each station tells
views. Then cross the Neva • Soviet-themed dining a part of the history of the city
to the Strelka (see pp58–9) of (see p214). Finally, dine at
Vasilevskiy Island to take in TWO ADULTS allow at least US$90 Lenin’s Mating Call (see p188)
one of the museums there or Russian Kitsch (see p184).
(see p60): the Zoological, the Morning
Naval or – if your family likes To indulge a fascination for
pickled freaks and weird Leningrad, “Cradle of the
wonders – the Kunstkammer. Revolution”, start at the city
A pleasant walk across the centre’s edge at the Smolnyy
river takes you to Petrograd- Institute (see p128), home of
skaya (see pp64–73). Head to the Revolution and later of
the inexpensive Pelmeni Bar the Communist Party.
for a filling lunch or, for Opposite, catch bus No. 46
something lighter, try vegetar- or No. 76 and ride past the
ian T
Troitskiy Most (see p193). monument to Dzerzhinsky,
father of the Soviet secret
Afternoon police, past the Field of Mars
The focus of Petrogradskaya (see p94) where the dead of
is the Peter and Paul Fortress the Revolution are buried,
(see pp66–7), with its opulent and across the river to the
cathedral and grim history. Museum of Russian Political
Attractions include the tombs History (see p72). The Cruiser The Avtovo metro station celebrat-
of the Romanovs, prison Aurora (see p73), whose guns ing post-war car production
12 I N T R O D U C B U R G
Putting St Pete bu
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P U T T I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G O N T H E M A P 15
Petrogradskaya
Burial place of the Roma-
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Major sight
Main sight
Sennaya Ploshchad
Q Metro station Yusopov Palacee (see p120) as ornate interiors
4 River boat pier and houses an exhibition on Gregory
Rasputin. The surrounding area, with quiet
ª Police station
streets lining its canals, is perfect for walks
Orthodox church during the atmospheric White Nights.
I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G 17
THE HISTORY OF
ST PETERSBURG
F
ounded in 1703, within ten years St Petersburg had become
capital of the vast Russian empire and quickly gained a reputa-
tion as one of Europe’s most beautiful cities. In the 20th century
it underwent three name changes, three revolutions and a 900-day
siege. For a city less than 300 years old, it has an amazing history.
Some 850 years before St Within 50 years, an army
Petersburg became capital led by Moscow’s Grand
of R
Russia, local Slavic tribes Prince Dmitriy Donskoy
invited the Viking chieftain won a first victory over the
Rurik to rule them. His suc-
R Mongols, and the idea of
cessor founded Kiev, which aRRussian nation was born.
grew into a great prince- During the long reign of
dom. In 988 Grand Prince Ivan III (1462–1505) the
Vladimir adopted Orthodox Mongols were finally van-
Christianity with profound quished and Moscow’s
consequences; Orthodoxy prestige increased. Ivan
was to become a corner- the Terrible (1533–84)
stone of Russian identity. was the first to be called
Paradoxically, Russia only Ivan IV “the Terrible” “Tsar of All the Russias”.
emerged as a united entity Yet his reign, which began
during the 250-year domination of in glory, ended in disaster. Ivan killed
the Muslim Mongols. In 1237 these his only heir, and the so-called Time
fierce tribes conquered all the princi- of T Troubles followed as Russia came
palities except Novgorod. In the 14th under a succession of weak rulers and
century the Mongols chose Moscow’s Polish usurpers invaded Moscow.
power-hungry grand prince, Ivan I
(1325–40), to collect tribute from other THE FIRST ROMANOVS
subjugated To end this strife, in 1613 the leading
principalities. citizens chose Mikhail Romanov to
This sealed be tsar, thus initiating the 300-year
the fate of the Romanov rule. Under Mikhail, Russia
Mongols for, recovered from her upheavals, but
as Moscow his greatest legacy was his son Aleksey.
thrived under Intelligent and pious, Aleksey moder-
their bene- nized the state, encouraging an influx
volence, she of foreign architects, codifying laws
Mongol warriors in a 14th- also became and asserting the power of
century manuscript illustration a real threat. the state over the church.
TIMELINE
862 Rurik establishes Viking 1480 Ivan III stops
stronghold at Novgorod 1147 Moscow paying tribute to
is founded Mongols 1605–13
863 Cyril and Methodius create Time of Boris
early version of Cyrillic 1462–1505 Reign of Ivan III T
Troubles Godunov
Peter the Great instructing his workers during the building of St Petersburg (Alexander von Kotzebue, 1862)
18 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
View of St Petersburg in the early 17th century, with the Admiralty shipyard to the left
TIMELINE
1672 Birth of 1689 Peter banishes 1697–8 Peter tours 1698 Peter 1703 St Petersburg is founded
Peter the Great at Sophia to Novodevichy western Europe destroys the
Kolomenskoe Monastery, Moscow Streltsy Guards 1712 Seat of government
Palace, Moscow (see p20). moves to St Petersburg
1682 The Streltsy 1696 Ivan V dies; 1700 Start of Northern 1714 Peter
rebellion. Peter Peter becomes War against Sweden forbids the
becomes co-tsar with sole ruler. use of stone
half-brother Ivan V, 1709 Victory over Charles XII in buildings,
under regency of his of Sweden at Battle of Poltava except in
half-sister Sophia Sophia, regent 1682–9 St Petersburg
T H E H I S T O R Y O F S T P E T E R S B U R G 19
1721 Peace of Nystad ends war with Sweden 1738 Russia’s 1745 Tsarevich 1757
first ballet school Peter marries the St Petersburg
1733 Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul is founded in St future Catherine Academy of
is finished after 12 years’ work Petersburg the Great Arts is founded
Menshikov
palace
ul
Wine Goblet
t was here
The tsar, who
e 1880s.
could hold his
drink, enjoyed
mmer pressing alcohol
e on his guests until
they passed out. This
elegant crystal goblet
belonged to his close
friend Alexander
Menshikov and is
engraved with
his coat of arms.
Marshy soil and a lack of local
stone made construction difficult.
Thousands of labourers died
during the first stages.
Catherine I
After an unsuccess-
ful first marriage,
Peter was drawn
to a Lithuanian
girl who had
followed the army
back from the wars
in 1704. Her healthy
good looks were brought to
the tsar’s attention by Alexander
Menshikovv (see p62). Although
Mice Bury the Cat only two daughters survived,
Coloured woodcuts, lubki, served as political their marriage was happy and
cartoons in Peter’s day. The tsar was always Catherine succeeded Peter as the
portrayed as a cat on account of his moustache. first woman on Russia’sthrone.
22 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
TIMELINE
1762 Death of Elizabeth. Peter III 1783 1787–92 1801 Paul I 1805–1807
becomes emperor but is murdered Annexation 2nd Russo- murdered. War with France
after six months. His wife takes of the Turkish Alexander I ends with
the throne as Catherine II Crimea War becomes tsar Treaty of Tilsit
T
The medal is
presented to
Count Orlov
for his
victory over
the Turks
at Chesma
in 1770.
Pretender Pugachev
The greatest threat to
Catherine’s reign was
caused by the Cossack
Catherine’s Instructions Pugachev who claimed
In 1767 the 36-year-old to be Peter III. He was
Catherine published her arrested, but escaped
22-chapter Great Instruction to lead a widespread
(Bolshoy Nakaz). The book peasant uprising which
is a collection of ideas on broke out in 1773 and
which a reform of Russia’s only ended with his
legal system was to be based. execution in 1775.
T H E H I S T O R Y O F S T P E T E R S B U R G 25
Mikhail Lomonosov
A philosopher, historian,
linguist and scientist,
Lomonosov (1711–65) Grigoriy Potemkin (1739–91)
personified the intel- Of all her lovers, Catherine respected
lectual enlightenment and admired Prince Potemkin
of 18th-century Russia the most. He was a successful
(see p61). This sculpture of general and an influential
him as a boy by the seashore counsellor. They remained
refers to his fisherman origins. friends until his death.
26
TIMELINE
1881 Alexander II is 1902 Lenin publishes What is to be Done? The Romanov
assassinated by the family in
“People’s Will” group. 1898 Social-Democratic 1913 1913 300th
Alexander III becomes tsar. Workers’ party is founded. anniversary of
Russian museum opens Romanov rule
1880 1900
1917 The Russian Revolution (see p29) 1929 Collec- 1934 Leningrad 1939 Nazi-Soviet pact
tivization of Party Secretary 1947 The term
1918 Civil War 1924 Lenin dies; private land Kirov is killed; 1941 Nazis attack “Cold War” is
starts. Capital Petrograd is Stalin’s purges Russia; Siege of coined
moves to Moscow named Leningrad intensify Leningrad starts
1920 1940
The Cossacks,
who defended
the palace with
some cadets
and members
of the Women’s
Battalion, were
too few to offer
any serious
resistance.
Revolutionary Plate
Various ceramics
with revolutionary
themes, mixed
Lenin, Leader of the People with touches of
A charismatic speaker, as shown Russian folklore,
in this painting by Victor Ivanov, were produced to
Lenin returned from exile in April celebrate every
to lead the Revolution. By 1918, occasion, in this
his Bolshevik faction had shown case the Third
their determination to rule. International.
T H E H I S T O R Y O F S T P E T E R S B U R G 29
Propaganda
One hallmark of the
Soviet regime was its
propaganda. Artists
were employed to de-
sign posters spreading
its message through
striking graphics.
War Communism
during the Civil War
(1918–20) was
Leon Trotsky encouraged by posters
The intellectual Trotsky played such as this one,
a leading military role in the extolling the “Workers’
Revolution. In 1927, during and Peasants’
the power struggle after Lenin’s Defence”.
death, he was exiled by Stalin.
In 1940 he was murdered in
Mexico by a Stalinist agent. Avant Garde Art
Even before 1917,
Russia’s artists had
been in a state of
revolution, producing
the world’s first truly
abstract paintings. A
great example of this
new movement is
Supremus No. 56,
painted in 1916 by
Kazimir Malevich.
Ministers of the Provisional Government
tried to keep order but were arrested.
New Values
Traditions were
radically altered by
the Revolution;
instead of church
weddings, couples
exchanged vows
under the red flag.
Loudly trumpeted
sexual equality
meant that women
had to work twice
as hard – at home
and in the factories.
TIMELINE
1917 The March The tsar is October Bolsheviks storm March Bolsheviks sign Brest-Litovsk
February persuaded to abdicate. Winter Palace after signal peace treaty with Germany. Capital
Revolution Provisional Government from Aurora and expel is moved to Moscow
is led by Prince Lvov Provisional Government
1917 1918
ST PETERSBURG TODAY
The economic reforms which Russia
has undergone since 1991 have
widened the gap between rich and
poor and, while some revel in the new A church wedding, popular again since religion
opportunities for work and travel, has gained new importance among the young
Boris Yeltsin
1991 Yeltsin becomes with Russian
President of Russia. flag in 1991 2004 Beslan Siege; 300
1989 USSR leaves Dissolution of the USSR people killed in a Beslan
Afganistan on 25 December school by Chechen rebels
1990 2000 2010
1984 Andropov is
replaced by Chernenko 1998 Nicholas II is 2000 Putin becomes
reburied with his family in President of Russia
SS Peter and Paul Cathedral
1990 Gorbachev is elected on 17 July
President of the USSR and
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize Vladimir Putin
I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G 33
ST PETERSBURG AT A GLANCE
A city built on water, St Petersburg
offers beautiful scenery and a
wide range of sights. The Peter
and Paul Fortress (see pp66–7), the
city’s first building, contrasts with
memorabilia of the Revolution in the
Kshesinskaya Mansion (see p72).
To help you make the most of your
stay, the following 12 pages are a time-
saving guide to the best museums and
Baroque monasteries and Neo-Classical palaces and the most interesting of the
palaces. The city’s short but stormy many bridges and waterways. The cul-
history is reflected in many of its tural figures that made St Petersburg
museums, which display everything a city of importance are also featured.
from Catherine the Great’s fine art Below is a selection of sights that
collection in the Her mitage to should not be missed by any visitor.
ST PETERSBURG’S TOP TEN ATTRACTIONS
Nevskiy Prospekt
See pp46–9
Stieglitz Museum
See p127
The Hermitage
See pp84–93
Church on
Spilled Blood
See p100
Cathedral of SS
St Isaac’s Cathedral Peter and Paul Alexander Nevsky Monastery
See pp80–81 See p68 See pp130–31
The Neo-Classical Kazan Cathedral with its impressive semi-circle of granite columns
34 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
Lieutenant Shm
Rebuilt in 1936–8
still retains its ori
cast-iron seahorse
designed by Bryul
Lion Bridge
One of the earliest of its kind, this
pedestrian suspension bridge
dates from 1825–6. Its cables are
anchored inside four cast-iron
lions, by sculptor Pavel Sokolov.
Egyptian Bridge
This bridge spanning
the Fontanka was
decorated in the
Egyptian style fashion-
able at the time of its
construction, in 1826. 0 yards 500
35
Trinity Bridge
The ten-arched Trinity Bridge (1897–1903)
is famous for its Style-Moderne lampposts
and railing decorations, the work of the
skilful French engineers Vincent Chabrol
and René Patouillard.
Swan Canal
This tree-lined canal (1711–19)
leading out to the Neva is named
after the swans which were once
drawn to its peaceful waters.
Bridge Passage
Cleverly designed
to span the conflu-
ence of the Moyka
and the Griboedov,
the Theatre and
Small Stable bridges
were constructed
by Traitteur and
Adam in 1829–31.
hkov Bridge
span bridge,
ying Nevskiy
kt across the
a, was built
41. At each
er are Pyotr
’s impressive
ptures of men
ng wild horses.
monosov
Bridge
The distinctive
domed granite
towers, built in
1785–7, originally
contained the Bank Bridge
bridge’s opening Dating from the same time as the Lion
mechanism. The Bridge, and designed by the same team,
bridge was rebuilt this bridge is adorned by four magnificent
in 1912, but the cast-iron griffons. Its name derives from
towers were kept. the nearby former Assignment Bank.
36 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
The Hermitage
Incorporating the breathtaking state
rooms of the Winter Palace, the world
famous Hermitage holds nearly thr
million exhibits which range from
Arts to archaeological finds.
Menshikov Palace
This grandiose Baroque palac
Vasilevskiy Island is testimony t
the power of Peter the Great’s frie
and advisor, Prince Menshikov.
S T P E T E R S B U R G A T A G L A N C E 39
Kshesinskaya Mansion
Built for a prima ballerina
the Mariinskiy Theatre,
this attractive Style-
ne mansion now
e Museum of
History
Summer Palace
Interiors and furniture,
such as Peter the Great’s
original four-poster bed,
give an idea of the tsar’s
relatively modest lifestyle.
tieglitz Museum
A rich collection
of applied art is
displayed in
Messmacher’s
magnificent
uilding which
as inspired by
palaces of
the Italian
enaissance.
y
he
r an
ection
ranging
val icons to
mporary pain-
s and sculptures.
This semi-abstract
work Blue Crest by
Vasily Kandinsky
dates from 1917.
Pushkin House-Museum
Period furnishings and
personal belongings such as
this inkstand recreate the 0 metres 500
atmosphere of Alexander
Pushkin’s last home. 0 yards 500
40 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
HISTORY MUSEUMS
Celebrated St Petersburgers
As the residence of the Russian imperial family
and court from the early 18th century, St
Petersburg was the focus of patronage and an
almost boundless source of wealth. It was the
perfect seed bed for creativity and the flower-
ing of ideas. Institutions such as the Academy
of Arts, the University, the Kunstkammer and
the Imperial School of Ballet trained generations
of cultural figures and scientists to the highest
standards. So successful were they that, by the
dawn of the 20th century,
St Petersburg had become
one of the most important
cultural centres in Europe.
Nikolai Gogol
A merciless satirist of
St Petersburg society,
Gogol lived on Malaya
Morskaya ulitsa (see p82)
for three years.
Ilya Repin
This outstanding realist painter
is seen here teaching life draw-
ing at the Academy of Artss (see
p63) where he was a professor.
Pyotr Tchaikovsky
Tchaikovsky graduated
from the Conservatory
(see p120) in 1865
and went on to com-
pose his world-famous
- tour
operas and ballets. with the Ballets Russes.
S T P E T E R S B U R G A T A G L A N C E 43
Alexander Pushkin
The great poet, who sketched this
self-
f-portrait on a manuscript,
died in the flat which is now
a house-museum (see p113).
Sergey Diaghilev
Driving force behind the
ets Russes, Diaghilev also
oduced the influential
Art magazine in his
Liteynyy prospekt.
shown here with
Cocteau (left).
Anna Akhmatova
The poetess’ most famous poem, Requiem, m
is a powerful and moving indictment of
the Stalinist regime. Akhmatova, seen
here in a portrait by Nathan Altman,
lived in the service quarters of the
Sheremetev Palacee (see p129).
ostakovich
h’s Seventh
broadcast
dio from the
Philharmonia
gust 1942, while
under siege. Many
ts role in boosting the
of the besieged citizens.
vsky
ostoevsky
r many years
ong the slums of
Sennaya Ploshchad
(see p122) which pro-
vided the setting for his 0 metres 500
greatest work, Crime
and Punishment. 0 yards 500
44 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
Remarkable St Petersburgers
The streets of St Petersburg are redolent with literary
and artistic associations. Fascinating art collections, MUSICIANS
house-museums, theatres and concert halls evoke the
memory of famous St Petersburgers. The world of the The first important composer
to emerge from the nationalist
18th-century genius Lomonosov and 19th-century writers movement was Mikhail
Pushkin and Dostoevsky can be imagined. So too, can Glinka (1804–57), the earliest
the spirit of Russian ballet when dancers such as Anna composer of Russian opera.
Pavlova and Vaslaw Nijinsky thrilled the Mariinskiy In 1862, the Conservatoryy (see
audiences. During these early years of the 20th century, p120) was founded by Anton
writers, musicians, dancers and painters flocked to St Rubinstein (1829–94) and
Petersburg, bringing with them a wealth of creativity. this became the focus of
musical life in St Petersburg.
Poetry, which flourished in Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
the “Golden Age” of Pushkin, (1844–1908) taught here for
only regained its ascendancy 37 years and together with
over the novel in the “Silver composers such as Modest
Age” during the first decade Mussorgsky (1839–81), and
of the 20th century. Some of Aleksandr Borodin (1834–
the most exciting poets of the 87), he formed “the mighty
period, including Aleksandr handful”. They were a largely
Blok (1880–1921), Andrei self-taught group aiming to
Bely (1880–1934) and Anna develop a musical language
Akhmatova (1889–1966), based on Russian folk music
gathered at The Tower, a flat and Slav traditions. Many of
overlooking the Tauride them wrote operas premiered
Gardens (see p128). Bely later at the Mariinskiyy (see p119).
Symbolist “Silver Age” poet, wrote Petersburg, one of the One of the musical geniuses
Andrei Bely (1880–1934) earliest stream-of-conscious- of the 20th century was Igor
ness novels. Akhmatova is Stravinsky (1882–1971). He
honoured by a museum in spent much time abroad but,
WRITERS the Sheremetev Palace (see as works like The Rite of
p129) while one of her Springg testify, his cultural roots
Considered the father of protégés, Joseph Brodsky were firmly in his homeland.
modern Russian literature, (1940–96) went on to receive The city’s most important
Alexander Pushkin (1799– the Nobel Prize for literature concert venue is the Great Hall
1837) was simultaneously in 1987. Brodsky became the of the Philharmonia (see p202)
intoxicated by St Petersburg’s bête-noire of the Leningrad where Pyotr Tchaikovsky’s
beauty and sensitive to the literary establishment in the (1840–93) Sixth Symphony
underlying climate of political 1960s. The refusal of the was premiered in 1893 and
suspicion and intolerance authorities to publish his poe- Dmitriy Shostakovich’s
which constrained writers in try, which they condemned as (1906–75) Seventh Symphony,
the wake of the Decembrist decadent, finally forced him his most famous work, was
rebellion of 1825 (see p23). to emigrate in 1972. performed in 1942.
Nikolai Gogol (1809–52) res-
ponded to these constraints
by satirising the status quo.
In The Nose, he targeted the
city’s bureaucrats with their
inflated sense of self worth and
mind-numbing conformity.
Another aspect of the city
altogether is revealed by
Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821–
81). His novel Crime and
Punishment, one of more than
30 works set in the city, takes
place against a backdrop of
squalor in the notorious slums
of Sennaya Ploshchad (see
p122). The story of the mur-
der of an old moneylender
was based on a real crime
and the novel’s publication in
1866 was blamed for a series
of subsequent copy-cat killings. Portrait of composer Mikhail Glinka painted by Ilya Repin in 1887
S T P E T E R S B U R G A T A G L A N C E 45
Nevskiy Prospekt
From the Admiralty to the Griboedov Canal
A pleasant stroll along this first stretch of
St Petersburg’s main artery reveals a wealth of
attractive buildings. A profusion of architectural
styles ranges from the Baroque Stroganov Palace
to the magnificent Neo-Classical Cathedral of Our
Lady of Kazan and the striking Style-Moderne
Singer House. The stately avenue was once
known as the “Street of Tolerance”, referring to
the clutch of churches of different denominations
that were established here in the late 18th and
Literary Café
early o p108.)
Once called the Wolf and Beranger,
this café was known for its fashionable
Adm clientele. Pushkin left from here
(p78 atal duel in 1837 7 (see p83).
at Nos. 8
Admiralty Garden
This garden was laid out in
1872–4. Near the fountain
are busts of composer Mikhail
Glinka, writer Nikolai Gogol 0 metres
Aeroflot Building
Marian Peretyatkovich’s severe granite STAR SIGHT
building (1912) is uncharacteristic of the
. Cathedral of Our Lady
city’s architecture. The upper storeys were
inspired by the Palazzo Medici in Florence, of Kazan
the arcades by the Doge’s Palace, Venice.
S T P E T E R S B U R G A T A G L A N C E 47
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Stroganov Palace
The façade of this splendid Baroque
palace, one of the oldest buildings
on the street (1753), is embellished
with sculptural ornaments and the
Stroganov coat of armss (see p112).
Continued
(pp48–9)
he Griboedov Canal,
commu originally known as the
a swimming pool Catherine Canal, was renamed
Soviet era, it is once again in 1923 after the 19th-century
open as a church (see p112). Russian playwright
Aleksandr Griboedov.
. Cathedral of
Our Lady of Kazan
Ninety-six Corinthian col-
umns, arranged in four rows,
form an arc facing Nevskiy
prospekt. Andrey Voronikhin’s
design was inspired by
Bernini’s colonnade for St
Peter’s in Romee (see p111).
48 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
Nevskiy Prospekt
From the Griboedov Canal to the Fontanka
Nevskiy Prospekt has been the main focus for St
Petersburg’s shopping and entertainment since
the mid-18th century. As the prospekt continues towards
the handsome Anichkov Bridge on the Fontanka river,
there are growing numbers of cafés, bars and restaur-
ants as well as three historic shopping arcades, the Silver
Rows, Gostinyy Dvor and Passazh. Bustling with life,
this stretch of the avenue also has many sights of historic
and architectural interest, including the Anichkov Palace.
Church on The Small The Church of Saint Catherine Passazh Arcade
Spilled Blood Hall of the (1762–82), by Vallin de la Mothe, This popular shopping mall
(p100) Philharmonia is a mixture of Baroque and Neo- is covered by a glass canopy
was the city’s Classical styles. It is the oldest
stretching 180 m (590 ft). The
main concert Roman Catholic church in Russia.
arcade opened in 1848 and
VA
is a fine example
of Yuriy Velten’s
ULI
decorative Neo-
YA
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Q
(see p108).
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The R
National Library
houses over 33 million items,
including the earliest surviving
handwritten Russian book (1057).
LOCAT
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. Yeliseev’s
Famous for its beautiful Style-
Moderne decor, this building
houses Yeliseev’s delicatessen on
the ground floorr (see p109).
STAR SIGHTS
Beloselskiy-Belozerskiy Palace
. Yeliseev’s Now a cultural centre and Waxworks Museum, this
sumptuous palace was designed in Neo-Baroque style
. Gostinyy Dvor by Andrey Stakenschneider in 1847–8. The red
façade is decorated with Corinthian pilasters and
atlantes upholding balconies.
Aleksandrinsk
Theatre
A statue of Moskovskiy
Catherine the railway station
Great stands in
Ostrovskiy Square
(see p110).
Anichkov Bridge
Four dynamic
The Anichkov Palace was
bronze statues of
first built as a present from
Tsarina Elizabeth to her rearing horses and their tamers
lover, Aleksey Razumovskiy. adorn this well-known landmark.
It later became the winter They were designed in the 1840s by
residence of the heir to the Pyotr Klodtt (see p35).
throne (see p109).
50 I N T R O D U C I N G S T P E T E R S B U R G
APRIL
SPRING
Musical Spring in St
Spring has set in for good Petersburg (Muzikalnaya
when the first sunbathers Vesna v Sankt-Peterburge),
gather on the beaches outside mid-Apr.
- As warm clothing and
the Peter and Paul Fortress heavy boots are laid aside
(see pp66–7) and when, in after the cold winter months,
early April after the waterways the public flock to concert halls
have thawed, the city’s bridges throughout the city.
open to allow ships through. Cosmonauts’ Day (Den
To warm themselves up Kosmonavtiki), 12 Apr.
after the months of cold, locals Candles lighting up Russian Ortho- Space exploration was one of
celebrate “maslennitsa”, the dox church during Easter service the glories of the Soviet Union
making of pancakes (blini) i and this occasion is celebrated
prior to Lent. They then gather tradition to say s prazdnikom with fireworks at 10pm.
bunches of willow as a sym- (congratulations on the holi-
bol of the approaching Palm day) to everyone. There are MAY
Sunday. On the eve of Lent, even special performances and
“Forgiveness Sunday”, it is concerts and, however sexist Labour Day (International
common practice to ask for- it may seem to non-Russians, Workers’ Solidarity Day (Den
giveness of those you might it is a very popular day. Truda), 1 May. Public holiday.
have offended during the year. From the Avant Garde to the Peterhof Fountains (Fontany
Once the snows have gone, Present (Ot avangarda do v Petergofe), first weekend in
the first trips to the dacha, or nashih dney), mid-Mar. A cele- May. Bands and orchestras
country house, are made to bration of 20th-century art and accompany the switching on
put the gardens in order. music in a city-wide festival. of the famous fountains at
Virtuosi 2000, late Mar/early Peterhoff (see p151). Victory
Apr. Aspiring young musicians Day (Den Pobedy), 9 May.
from all over the world come After a sombre ceremony at
together to perform and com- Piskarevskoe Cemeteryy (see
pete on St Petersburg’s stages. p126), smartly-dressed vet-
Easter Sunday (Paskha). erans fill Nevskiy prospekt
The dates on which Lent and (see pp46–9) and Palace
Easter fall change every Square (see p83) in
year. On Easter Sunday, commemoration of the
St Petersburg churches Nazi surrender in 1945.
are filled with worship- City Day (Den goroda),
pers, the evocative sound last week of May. A great
Early sunbathers on the banks of of ethereal music and variety of events,
the Peter and Paul Fortress chanting and the smell mainly taking place
of incense. Russians around the Peter
MARCH traditionally greet and Paul Fortress
each other with (see pp66–7),
International Women’s Day Khristos voskres mark the founding
(Mezhdunarodnyy zhenskiy (Christ is risen), of the city on 27
den), 8 Mar. Men rush around to which the reply May 1703.
the city buying flowers for is Voistine voskres Proud war veteran
their womenfolk. It is a (He is truly risen). on Victory Day
S T P E T E R S B U R G T H R O U G H T H E Y E A R 51
AUGUST
0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Rainfall (from axis)
NOVEMBER
Temperature Chart
AVERAGE MONTHLY TEMPERATURE St Petersburg’s climate
is maritime and milder
°C °F
than might be expected.
30 86
Summers are warm and
20 68 often punctuated with hot
10
days as early as May,
50 though during the winter
15 months temperatures
32
0 often fall below freezing.
14 St Petersburg’s average
-10
minimum and maxi-
-20 -4 mum temperatures
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec throughout the year
are shown in this chart.
WINTER
VASILEVSKIY ISLAND
I t was Peter the Great’s intention (linii), which run from north to south.
that Vasilevskiy Island (Vasilevskiy The focal point of the island is at the
ostrov), the largest island in the
Neva delta, was to be the administrative
heart of his new capital. However,
east end with the fine ensemble
of public buildings around the spit
or Strelka. The rest of the island
lack of access (the first per- developed with the spread of
manent bridge was not industrialization in the
built until 1850) and the 19th century and it
hazards of floods and became a middle-
stormy crossings led class haven. There
to the abandonment Allegorical sculpture of Neptune on the was also a thriving
of Peter’s project, and façade of the Naval Museum German community
the centre grew up here which is reflect-
across the river around the Admiralty ed in the several Lutheran churches.
(see p78) instead. The island’s original Today much of the island has a sedate
street plan, based on canals that were air, with broad tree-lined avenues, a
never dug (see p20), survives in the clutch of museums and some attractive
numbered streets known as lines 19th-century architecture.
SIGHTS AT A GLANCE
Museums Churches
Kunstkammer 4 St Andrew’s Cathedral 8
Menshikov Palace 6
Streets and Bridges
Naval Museum 2
Bolshoy Prospekt 7
Zoological Museum 3
Lieutenant Shmid
midt Bridge 0
Historic Buildings
and Monuments
Academy of Arts 9
Rostral Columns 1
Twelve Colleges 5
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58
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Exchange Bazaar
was designed by
Quarenghi in the
early 19th century.
VA
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the shoppers, as
AYA
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A YA learnt to sail 2
EV
ZH
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Rostral Columns
Originally lighthouses
guiding ships through
the busy port of St
Petersburg, these
imposing 32-m (105-ft)
high columns are a
distinctive feature of
St Petersburg’s skyline.
They are still lit for
Navy Dayy (see p51)
0 yards 4 and other festivals 1
60 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
The restrained Baroque façade of the Kunstkammer (1718–34), St Petersburg’s first museum
the most celebrated anatomist Twelve Colleges 5 square with an unbroken view
of his day. He was so impres- Двенадцать коллегий across the Strelka. Another
sed with Ruysch’s collection Dvenadtsat kollegiy popular theory is that Prince
of rarities that on a return Menshikov changed the plan
visit in 1717, he purchased the Universitetskaya naberezhnaya 7. in Peter’s absence so that the
entire collection of over 2,000 Map 1 C5. @ 7, 47, K-47, K-128, K- building would not encroach
anatomical preparations. He 129, K-147. 1, 10. ¢ to public. on his grounds. Domenico
transported it to St Petersburg Trezzini won the competition
T
and exhibited it to a wide-eyed This distinguished for the design in 1723, but
public, who were enticed by Baroque building of subsequent bureaucratic
free glasses of vodka. At the red-and-white stuccoed wrangling delayed its
time, Peter’s collection also brick is almost 400 m completion for 20 years.
included bizarre, live exhibits (1,300 ft) in length. The building’s function
of deformed or unusual It was intended for gradually changed
people, including an herma- Peter the Great’s and in 1819 part of
phrodite. This, Russia’s first newly-streamlined it was acquired by
museum, also included a administration of 12 St Petersburg Uni-
library, an anatomical theatre colleges or ministries. versity. A string
and an observatory. The single, uninter- of revolutionaries,
Today the Kuntskammer rupted façade was including Lenin
houses the Museum of Anthro- designed to symbo- in 1891, were
pology and Ethnography, lize the government’s Mikhail Lomonosov educated here.
with the remnants of Peter’s unity of purpose, while (1711–65) Among the
bizarre collection on display the curious alignment, famous Russian
in the central rotunda. In- at right angles to the embank- lecturers to teach here were
cluded are the heart and ment, is explained by Peter’s the chemist Dmitriy Mendeleev
skeleton of Peter’s personal unrealized plan for a large (1834–1907) (see p45) and
servant, “Bourgeois”, a giant the physiologist Ivan Pavlov
at 2.27 m (7.5 ft), and a (1849–1936) (see p45).
cabinet of teeth extracted by Overlooking the Neva, out-
the tsar who was an enthu- side the TTwelve Colleges, is an
siastic amateur dentist. Most engaging bronze statue of the
gruesome of all is the collec- great 18th-century polymath
tion of pickled oddities which Mikhail Lomonosov (unveiled
include Siamese twins and a in 1986). The son of a fisher-
two-headed sheep. man, Lomonosov was the first
The halls surrounding the Russian-born member of the
Kuntskammerr collection con- nearby Academy of Sciences.
tain exhibitions on the peoples A “universal genius”, he wrote
of the world. Unfairly neg- poetry, systematized Russian
lected by most foreign visitors, grammar and was a pioneer
these marvellously old-fash- in mathematics and the physi-
ioned displays present a vast cal sciences. Thanks to his
and informative range of scientific discoveries, the art
artifacts, from an Inuit kayak A section of the west façade of of porcelain, glass and mosaic
to Javanese shadow puppets. Trezzini’s Twelve Colleges production began in Russia.
62 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
The Academy of Arts (1764–88) on the Neva embankment, an example of early Russian Neo-Classicism
PETROGRADSKAYA
T he city was founded on
the northern banks of the
Neva river in 1703, at the
height of the Great Northern War
(see p18). Building began with the
Petrogradskaya was sparsely
populated until the late 1890s
when the construction of the
Trinity Bridge made the area
accessible from the city centre.
construction of a wooden fortress The bridge caused a housing
and Petrogradskaya, or the boom at the height of a fashion
Petrograd Side, soon became a for Style-Moderne architecture
marshy suburb of wooden cab- which is still in evidence today.
ins occupied by craftsmen work- Detail on bridge The population quadrupled and
ing on Peter the Great’s new city. to Peter and Paul the area became very popular
Nearby, the area around Trinity Fortress with artists and professionals.
Square was originally a small The highlight of the area,
merchants’ quarter centred around which is still largely residential, is the
a now demolished church and St Peter and Paul Fortress with its cathe-
Petersburg’s first stock exchange. dral, museums and grim history.
SIGHTS AT A GLANCE
Museums Gates
Artillery Museum 7 Neva Gate 5
Cabin of Peter the Great e St Peter’s Gate 1
Commandant’s House 4
Cruiser Aurora w Cathedrals
Engineer’s House 2 Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul 3
Mansion q
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66 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
Trubetskoy Bastion
From 1872–1921 the
dark, damp, solitary- Th
confinement cells in the foun
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The N
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. Cathedral of SS
Peter and Paul
Marbled columns, glit-
tering chandeliers and
painted decor combine PETROGRADSKAYA
magnificent setting
for the tombs of the
LOCATOR MAP
Romanov monarchs 3 See Street Finder, map 2
now a ticket
ir shop.
STAR SIGHT
. SS Peter and Paul
Cathedral
metres 100
ds 100
Ravelin
ket office.
, in the outer
constructed
–40.
novskiy most
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t, Gorkovskaya
and Trinity Bridge
is b
Chemiakin House
B building, dating from
1748–9, houses temporary
KEY exhibitions of artifacts used in
everyday life in St Petersburg
Suggested route
before the revolution 2
68 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
Kshesinskaya Mansion
reveals von Gogen’s
relatively severe version
of Style Moderne. Asym-
metrical in composition,
it is enlivened with
wrought iron and
glazed tiles (see p72).
Singer House
(1910 –14) reveals
Pavel Syuzor’s use of
an unusually eclectic
mix of architectural
1–3 Kamennoostrovskiy pr styles. Ornate Style-
is the work of St Petersburg’s Moderne wrought-
master of Style Moderne, Fyodor iron balconies and
Lidval. Delicate details such as decorative wooden
floral and animal reliefs stand window frames com-
out against a background of bine with elements of
discreetly elongated proportions Renaissance and
and unusual window shapes. Baroque revivals.
72 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
The historic cruiser Aurora (1900), moored in front of the Neo-Baroque Nakhimov Naval Academy (1912)
Cruiser Aurora w the construction of his new derived from the Church of
Крейсер Аврора cityy (see pp20–21). Catherine the Trinity (built in 1710;
the Great, ever keen to glorify demolished 1930s) in Trinity
Kreyser Avrora
Peter, had a protective brick Square, which formed the
Petrogradskaya naberezhnaya 4. shell erected round the cabin. nucleus of the city’s merchant
Map 2 F3. Tell 230 8440. v 6. # There are only two rooms, quarter. Despite having no
10:30am–4pm Tue–Thu, Sat & Sun. both with period furnishings, direct links to the mainland
8 English, German or French, for a and a hallway which doubled until the early 20th century, the
fee. Phone to book. as a bedroom. Among Peter’s area flourished with shops, a
personal possessions are a printing house and the city’s
According to the annals of compass, frock coat and his first stock exchange.
the Revolution, at 9:40pm on rowing boat. In the 1905 Revolution (see
25 October 1917, the cruiser Adorning the steps outside p26) the square witnessed
Aurora signalled the storming are two statues of the Shih Tze one of the worst massacres
of the Winter Palace (see frog-lions, brought from of “Bloody Sunday” when 48
p28), by firing a single blank Manchuria during the Russo- workers were killed by gov-
round from its bow gun. Japanese War (1904–5). ernment troops. During the
The ship entered active Communist era, the square
service in 1903. It was later became known as ploshchad
converted into a training ship Trinity Square r Revolyutsii, commemorating
and at the start of the Siege Тройцкая площадь those who had lost their lives.
of Leningrad (see p27) it was Troitskaya ploshchad From the square, across the
sunk to protect it from German widest point of the Neva, the
forces. The ship was raised in Map 2 E3. q Gorkovskaya. @ 46. Style-Moderne Trinity Bridge
1944, 950 days later, and has v 2, 6, 40. (see p35) stretches nearly
been a museum since 1956. 600 m (1,970 ft). Its construc-
The famous gun, bell and the Throughout the early 18th tion led to a building boom on
crew’s quarters can be viewed, century, the whole of Petro- Petrogradskaya (see p65) and
along with an exhibition on gradskaya was known as its completion in 1903 coinci-
the history of the Aurora. Trinity Island. The name was ded with the city’s bicentenary.
PALACE EMBANKMENT
I n terms of sheer scale and gran-
deur, St Petersburg’s magnificent
south waterfront has few equals.
Its formidable granite quays,
stretching over 2 km (1 mile) from
in honour of the Decembrist rebels
who rose up against the tsarist
regime in 1825. In Palace Square,
Rastrelli’s Winter Palace (part of the
Hermitage) evokes the opulence of
the Senate building in the west to Imperial Russia while the Eternal
Peter the Great’s Summer Palace in Flame, flickering in the Field of
the east, and the surrounding area Mars, is a more sombre reminder
of stately aristocratic palaces and of revolutionary sacrifice.
ornamental canal bridges are Dominating St Petersburg’s
Alexander
justly famous worldwide. Column, skyline are the magnificent
Every aspect of the city’s history Palace Square dome of St Isaac’s Cathedral and
is juxtaposed in this rich area. the gilded spire of the Admiralty.
Falconet’s statue of Peter the Great, Some of the best views can be appre-
the Bronze Horseman, is an eloquent ciated by making a boat trip along
testimony to imperial ambition while the waterways (see pp226–7), or by
the square in which it stands is named strolling through the Summer Gardens.
SIGHTS AT A GLANCE
Palaces and Gardens Streets and Squares
Marble Palace r Decembrists’ Square 2
Summer Garden y Field of Mars t
Summer Palace u Malaya Morskaya Ulitsa 8
Millionaires’ Street e
Museums Palace Square q
The Hermitagee pp84–93 w St Isaac’s Square 6
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The golden dome of St Isaac’s Cathedral above elegant façades along the Neva
76 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
Street-by-Stree
Th
is t
cen
is t
thi
qu
Detail from the frieze on afte
the Admiralty gate tower Pete
this
used as a market place in
is now at the heart of an
and statues of historical
Among them are the Ad
Palace and the Bronze H
Decembrists’ Square
Dominating the western s
square are Carlo Rossi’s m
mental Senate and Synod
linked by a triumphal arc
. St Isaac’s
Cathedral
The magnificent
golden dome of the
cathedral is visible
all across the city.
100kg (220lb) of
gold leaf were
needed to cover the
dome’s surface 5
PA L A C E E M B A N K M E N T 77
P
PETROG
GRADSKAYA
GR
va
Ne
GOSTINYY
PALA
ACE DVOR
EMBANK
KMENT
LOCATOR MAP
See Street Finder maps 2, 5 & 6
The Admiralty
Sculptures and reliefs,
celebrating the power of
Russia’s navy, decorate the
Admiralty’s façade. The arch-
way of the main entrance is
framed by nymphs carrying
globes on their shoulders 1
rince
Rostovskiy
is now a STAR SIGHT
stitute. The
ront of the . St Isaac’s Cathedral
e by Italian
Paolo Triscorni.
leterre Hotel
elegant ground floor hallway of the Angleterre
ell (see p174) reflects the major refurbishment
ertaken in the early 1990s. Now under new
nagement, the hotel enjoys an enviable
tion in the heart of the city 7
Isaac’s Square
Overlooking the
square is Pyotr
Klodt’s statue of
Tsar Nicholas I.
he reliefs on the
pedestal depict
isodes from his
eign. Tellingly,
o of them show
the suppression
of rebellions 6
78 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
Horseguards’
Manège 4
Конногвардейский манеж
Konnogvardeyskiy manezh St Isaac’s Cathedral, statue of St Nicholas I and the Astoria, St Isaac’s Square
Isaakievskaya ploshchad 1. Map 5 C2. although a few of its earlier Astoria Hotel 7
Tell 312 2243, 571 4157 (ticket buildings date from the 18th Гостиница Астория
office). # variable. @ 3, 22, 27. century. The monument to Gostinitsa Astoriya
5, 22. & - Nicholas I at its centre was
also designed by Montferrand. Bolshaya Morskaya ulitsa 39. Map 6
The enormous indoor riding Erected in 1859 and sculpted D2. Tell 313 5757. @ 3, 10, 22, 27,
school of the Life Guards’ by Pyotr Klodt, it depicts the K-169, K-180, K-190, K-252, K-289.
Mounted Regiment was built tsar in the uniform of one of 5, 22. See Where to Stay p180.
by Giacomo Quarenghi in Russia’s most prestigious regi-
1804–7 to resemble a Roman ments, the Kavalergardskiy Now one of St Petersburg’s
basilica. Two clues to the guards. The pedestal is em- leading hotels, the seven-
building’s original function are bellished with allegorical storey Astoria was designed
the dynamic frieze of a horse sculptures of his daughters and by Fyodor Lidval in the Style
race beneath the pediment and his wife who represent Faith, Moderne (see p71) in 1910–12.
the statues on either side of the Wisdom, Justice and Might. American writer, John Reed,
portico. The statues of the un- On the western side of the author of the famous eyewit-
clad twin sons of Zeus reining square at No. 9, the Myatlev ness account of the Revolution
in wild horses are copies from House is a Neo-Classical man- Ten Days that Shook the World,
the Quirinale Palace in Rome. sion, dating from the 1760s, was staying here when the
The Holy Synod, scandalized which belonged to one of Bolsheviks seized power.
by this display of nakedness Russia’s most illustrious fami- In 1925, the poet Sergey
so near to St Isaac’s Cathedral, lies. The French encyclopedist, Y Yesenin, husband of Isadora
ordered their removal. The Denis Diderot, stayed here in Duncan, hanged himself in
statues were re-erected in 1954. 1773–4 following an invitation the annexe, after daubing the
Next to the manège, which from Catherine the Great. In walls of his room with a
is now used as an exhibition the 1920s it became the pre- farewell verse in his blood
hall, are two marble pillars mises of the State Institute of “To die is not new – but
surmounted by bronze angels Artistic Culture where some neither is it new to be alive”.
cast in Berlin, which were of Russia’s most influential The hotel’s banqueting hall
sent over as a gift in 1840. avant-garde artists, including was to be the venue for Hitler’s
Kazimir Malevich and Vladimir prematurely planned victory
Tatlin (see p107), worked. celebration, so sure was he that
St Isaac’s Cathedral 5 The forbidding granite-faced he would conquer the city.
building alongside is
See pp80–81. the former German
embassy, designed
in 1911–12 by the
St Isaac’s Square 6 German architect,
Исаакиевская площадь Peter Behrens.
Issakievskaya ploshchad Across the 100-m
(330-ft) wide Siniy
Map 5 C2. @ 3, 10, 22, 27. most (Blue Bridge),
5, 22. which was the site
of a serf market
Dominated by Auguste de until 1861, the
Montferrand’s majestic Mariinskiy Palace
St Isaac’s Cathedral, this im- (see p77) dominates
pressive square was created the southern end Restored Style-Moderne foyer in the Astoria
during the reign of Nicholas I, of the square. Hotel, on the eastern edge of St Isaac’s Square
80 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
St Isaac’s Cathedral 5
Исаакиевский собор
Isaakievskiy sobor
The north
pediment is orna-
mented with a bronze
relief (1842–4) of the
Resurrection designed
by François Lemaire.
Exit
. Iconostasis
Malachite and lapis St Catherine’s Chapel
Three rows of icons surround the lazuli columns frame has an exquisite white
royal doors through which a stained-
d the iconostasis. About marble iconostasis,
glass window (1843) is visible. Above 16,000 kg (35,280 lbs) crowned by a sculpted
the doors is Pyotr Klodt’s gilded of malachite decorate Resurrection (1850–4)
sculpture, Christ in Majesty (1859). the cathedral. by Nikolay Pimenov.
PA L A C E E M B A N K M E N T 81
. Ceiling Painting
The celestial Virgin in Majesty
by Karl Bryullovv (see p105), dating
to 1847, covers an area of 816 sq m
(8,780 sq ft). It is ringed by exuberant
gilded stucco mouldings and white marble.
The entrance is
through the side
doors on
St Isaac’s
Square.
South Doors
Three great doors
of oak and bronze
(1841–6), weighing
20 tonnes, are
decorated with
carved reliefs by
Ivan Vitali. The
exteriors of the
doors show scenes
from the life of
Christ and saints,
including Alexander
Nevskyy (see p17).
The relief of
St Isaac blessing
the Emperor Theodosius
and his wife Flaccilla is by
Ivan Vitali. On the extreme left,
Montferrand is depicted clutching
a model of his cathedral.
House of Fabergé 9
Дом Фаберже
Dom Faberzhe
The Hermitage w
Эрмитаж The New Hermitage
Ermitazh (1839–51) was
designed by Leo von
One of the most famous museums in the world, the Hermitage Klenze to form a
coherent part of the
occupies a grand ensemble of buildings. The most impressive is Large Hermitage. It
the Winter Palace (see pp92–3), to which Catherine the Great is the only purpose-
added the more intimate Small Hermitage. In 1771–87, she built built museum within
the Large Hermitage to house her growing collection of art. The the whole complex.
Theatre was built in 1785–7, the New Hermitage in 1839–51.
The New and Large Hermitages were opened by Nicholas I in
1852 as a public museum. From 1918 to 1939 the Winter Palace Court
was slowly incorporated into the museum ensemble. In the late ministries
1990s the majestic, Neo-Classical General Staff Building was added. were located
Mid and late 19th-century collections are gradually moving there. here until
the 1880s.
Atlantes
Ten 5-m (16-ft) tall
granite Atlantes hold up
what was the public
entrance to the Hermitage
museum from 1852 until
after the Revolution.
. Raphael Loggias
Catherine was so impressed by engravings
of Raphael’s frescoes in the Vatican that in
1787 she commissioned copies to be made
on canvas. Small alterations were made,
such as replacing the Pope’s coat of arms
with the Romanov two-headed eagle.
T H E H E R M I T A G E 85
River Neva
First Floor
STAR EXHIBITS
. Abraham’s Sacrifice
by Rembrandt
. Ea Haere Ia Oe
m
by Gauguin The
=
Hall of
. La Danse by Matisse Twenty =
Columns -
(1842–51) is =
GALLERY GUIDE painted in
Individual visitors enter via m
Etruscan style.
Palace Square, then cross the -
main courtyard; group tours use
other entrances by arrangement.
Start with the interiors of the =
Winter Palace state rooms on the
first floor to get an overview of the
museum. 19th- and 20th-century d
European Art is best reached by d
either of the staircases on the
Palace Square side of the Winter
Palace. Note collections may move.
Main
. Abraham’s Sacrifice (1635) entrance
In the 1630s Rembrandt was
painting religious scenes in a High
Baroque style, using dramatic Entrance for tours
and striking gestures rather than and guided groups
detail to convey his message.
T H E H E R M I T A G E 87
Stairs to
Second first floor
Floor The Numismatic
Collection consists of
more than 900,000
coins and medals.
Only part of it is
on display in
= temporary
exhibitions.
. Ea Haere Ia Oe (1893)
This is one of the first paintings
by Paul Gauguin after he had
left France for Tahiti. His desire
Stairs to to escape convention and
first floor artificiality found expression in
his innovative use of primitive
art as inspiration.
Stairs to
Numismatic
collection
. La Danse (1910)
d
Henri Matisse used strong tones of three
Stairs to colours – blue, green and red – to heighten
second floor, the drama and concentration of the figures,
Numismatic
Collection totally lost in their dance.
only
KEY TO FLOORPLAN
Prehistoric: Rooms 11–24, 26, 33
RUSSIAN ART
Universal sundial (1714–19) from
Although major Russian Peter the Great’s collection
8th-century fresco of a wounded works of art were transferred
warrior from Tajikistan to the Russian Museum (see craftsmen and artists to train
pp104–107) in 1898, every- locals. Peter studied with them
Amenemhet III. The star of thing else that belonged to the and his fascination for practical
the Egyptian collection is an imperial family was national- things is reflected in his large
extremely rare, small, wooden ized after the Revolution. This collection of sundials, instru-
statue of a standing man from included anything from official ments and wood-turning lathes
the 15th century BC. portraits and thrones to looking which includes the universal
From the Far East – Japan, glasses and petticoats. Over sundial by Master John Rowley.
India, Indonesia, China and 300 items of apparel belong- A bust by Bartolomeo Carlo
Mongolia – comes an array of ing to Peter the Great alone Rastrelli (1723–30), however,
objects ranging from Buddhist survive. Later, the department portrays Peter as the mighty
sculptures and fabrics to a dis- also began acquiring medieval and cruel emperor.
play of tiny netsukes (ivory Russian art, including icons Russian artists were soon
toggles). Excavations at the and church utensils. combining traditional art forms
cave temple of the Thousand The tsars from Peter the with European skills to create
Buddhas near Dun Huan in Great onwards invited foreign such intricate marvels as the
western China revealed 6th– openwork walrus ivory vase
10th-century icons, wall paint- by Nikolay Vereshchagin
ings and plaster sculptures, (1798), and the large silver
including the lions that once sarcophagus and memorial
guarded the cave. During the to Alexander Nevsky, truly
13th-century Mongol invasion, Russian in scale (1747–52).
the town of Khara-Khoto was The gunsmiths of Tula (south
destroyed and taken over by of Moscow) perfected their
the surrounding desert. The technique to such an extent
sand preserved many usually that they began producing
perishable objects, from 12th- unique furniture in steel inlaid
century silks to woodcuts. with gilded bronze, such as
From Byzantium come early the decorative, Empire-style
secular items, such as icons, dressing table set (1801).
religious utensils and a 5th- The state interiors (see
century ivory diptych with pp92–3) are the pride of the
scenes from a Roman circus. Russian department, revealing
Iran produced a large num- the work of Russian and
ber of silver and bronze foreign craftsmen from the
vessels, many of which were mid-18th to the early 20th cen-
taken by medieval traders to tury. The discovery of large
Siberia and the Urals where deposits of coloured stones
they were rediscovered by in the Urals inspired Russian
specialists in the 19th century. artists to decorate whole
There is also a large collec- rooms with malachite and
tion of traditional Persian to fill every corner of the
miniatures and a rich Winter Palace with marble
display of 19th-century vases. It was through these
Persian court portraits, rooms that the imperial
which combine traditional family paraded on state
elements with western oil occasions, greeting courtiers
painting, as in the Portrait of Steel dressing table set from Tula and ambassadors en route in
Fatkh-Ali Shah (1813–14). dating from 1801 the Field Marshals’ Hall.
90 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
subjects, as in Renoir’s
charming Portrait of the Actress
Jeanne Samaryy (1878) and
Degas’ pastels of women
washing (1880s–90s).
Pissarro’s Boulevard Mon-
tmartre in Pariss (1897) is
typical of his urban scenes.
A change in colour and tech-
nique appeared as artists
investigated new possibilities.
Van Gogh used deeper tones
in his Women of Arless (1888)
and stronger brushstrokes in
Cottagess (1890). Gauguin
turned to a different culture for
inspiration, and his Tahitian
period is represented by
enigmatic works, such as
Ea Haere Ia Oee (1893). In
Still Life with the Attributes of the Arts (1766), by Jean-Baptiste Chardin The Smokerr (c.1890–2) and
Mont Ste-Victoiree (1896–8),
heroines represent the more Cézanne introduced
wicked side of 18th-century 19TH- & 20TH-CENTURY experiments with plane and
taste, but Catherine the Great EUROPEAN ART surface which were to have
preferred didactic or instruc- a strong influence on the
tional works. She bought Still Although the royal family did next generation.
Life with Attributes of the Arts not patronize the new Matisse played both with
(1766) by Chardin and, on the movements in art in the 19th colour and surface, in the
advice of Denis Diderot, Jean- century, there were far-sighted carpet-like effect of The Red
Baptiste Greuze’s moralizing private individuals whose col- Room (1908–9) and the flat-
The Fruits of a Good lections were nationalized ness of the panels La Musique
Education (1763). She and entered the Hermitage and La Dansee (1909–10). His
also patronized sculptors, after the 1917 Revolution. visit to Morocco introduced
purchasing works Thanks to them, the new light effects, as in Arab
by Etienne- Barbizon school Coffeehousee (1913), but it was
Maurice Falconet is represented Picasso who took Cézanne’s
(Winter, carved by works such experiments one stage further.
1771) and Jean- as Camille Corot’s In early works such as Visit
Antoine Houdon The Green Frog Service, charming silvery (1902) from his Blue Period,
(Voltaire, 1781). Wedgwood (1773–4) Landscape with Picasso concentrates on mood,
Catherine also a Lake, French but the surface destruction of
acquired English works, Romanticism by two richly- the Cubist period of 1907–12,
including a portrait of the coloured Moroccan scenes of including L’Homme aux Bras
philosopher John Locke (1697) the 1850s by Delacroix. But Croisés, fills a whole room.
by Sir Godfrey Kneller, who Nicholas I himself did
was also author of a portrait acquire works by the
of Pyotr Potemkin (1682) in German Romantic
Russian 17th-century court painter Caspar David
dress. From Sir Joshua Rey- Friedrich, among
nolds Catherine commissioned them On the Prow of
The Infant Hercules Strangling the Shipp (1818–20).
the Serpentss (1788). Her most Two collectors, Ivan
daring purchase was of works Morozov and Sergey
by the still largely unknown Shchukin, brought the
Joseph Wright of Derby. The Hermitage its superb
Iron Forgee (1773) is a master- array of Impressionist
piece of artificial lighting, but and Post-Impressionist
Firework Display at the Castel paintings. Monet’s art
Sant’Angelo (1774–5) is a truly can be admired both
romantic fiery spectacle. She in his early Woman
provided much work for Eng- in a Garden (1860s)
lish cabinet-makers and carvers and in the later, more
of cameos. She became one of exploratory Waterloo
Josiah Wedgwood’s most pre- Bridge, Effect of Mist s
stigious clients, ordering the (1903). Renoir and
famous Green Frog Service for Degas perpetually L’Homme aux Bras Croisés, painted by
her Chesma Palace (see p130). returned to women as Pablo Picasso in 1909
92 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
The Field
Marshals’ Hall
(1833) was the
reception room
where the
devasta-
ting fire of
1837 broke out.
The Hall of St
George (1795) has
monolithic columns
and wall facings of
Italian Carrara marble.
The Nicholas Hall, the largest
room in the palace, was always
used for the first ball of the season. North façade
overlooking
the Neva
. Malachite Room
Over two tonnes of
ornamental stone
. Main Staircase were used in this
This vast, sweeping staircase sumptuous room
(1762) was Rastrelli’s master- (1839) which is deco-
piece. It was from here that the rated with malachite
imperial family watched the columns and vases,
Epiphany ceremony of baptism gilded doors and
in the Neva, which celebrated ceiling, and rich
Christ’s baptism in the Jordan. parquet flooring.
T H E H E R M I T A G E 93
BARTOLOMEO RASTRELLI
The Italian architect Rastrelli (1700–
71) came to RRussia with his father in
1716 to work for Peter the Great. His
rich Baroque style became highly
fashionable and he was appointed
Chief Court Architect in 1738.
During Elizabeth’s reign, Rastrelli
designed several buildings, including
the Winter Palace, the Palace of Tsarkoe
Selo (see pp152–7) and Smolnyy Convent (see p128).
Unlike Elizabeth, Catherine the Great preferred Classical sim-
Alexander Hall plicity and Rastrelli retired in 1763, after she came to power.
Architect Aleksandr Bryullov
employed a mixture of Gothic The French Rooms,
vaulting and Neo-Classical designed by Bryullov in
stucco bas-reliefs of military 1839, house a collection
themes in this reception of 18th-century French art.
room of 1837.
The White Hall was deco-
rated for the wedding of the
future Alexander II in 1841.
South façade
on Palace
Square Dark Corridor
The French and Flemish tapes-
tries here include The Marriage
of Emperor Constantine, made
in Paris in the 17th
century to designs
by Rubens.
The Rotunda
(1830) connected
the private apartments in
the west with the state apart-
ments on the palace’s north side.
West wing
Summer Garden y
Летний сад
Letniy sad
GOSTINYY DVOR
T he Great Bazaar, Gostinyy Dvor, haute couture. Increasing commercial
was the commercial heart of St and financial activity created a new
Petersburg at the beginning of middle class of business entrepreneurs.
the 18th century and today it still
hums with activity. A pro-
By the Revolution, banks proliferated
around Nevskiy prospekt, their
fusion of smaller retail imposing new offices
outlets soon appeared introducing diverse
on and around architectural styles
Nevskiy prospekt. to a largely Neo-
Thriving commu- Statues on façade of the Russian Museum Classical setting.
nities of foreign Today the wheels of
T
merchants and businessmen also took capitalism are turning again and
up residence in the neighbourhood. Nevskiy prospekt still attracts a
Until the mid-19th century, shops in wealthy clientèle. In contrast to the
this area catered almost exclusively for bustling commercial atmosphere of
the luxury end of the market, fulfilling much of the area is the calm oasis of
the limitless demand, created by the Arts Square, with the Russian Museum
royal and aristocratic households, for and other institutions which act as a
gold and silverware, jewellery and reminder of the city’s rich cultural life.
SIGHTS AT A GLANCE
Churches Historic Buildings
Armenian Church 7 Glinka Capella i
Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan t Imperial Stables p
Church on Spilled Blood p100 1
Lutheran Church u
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Side view of the imposing Mikhaylovskiy Castle (see p101), a branch of the Russian Museum
98 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
MOY
KA
OVA
A
DOV
OED
. Russian Museum
BOE
RIB
ERN
AY
A ULI
TSA
I T A
L Y A
N S
K A
Y A
ULI
TSA
Statue of
Pushkin (1957)
Nevskiy prospekt
GOSTINYY DVOR
SENNAYA
PLOSHCHAD
LOCATOR MAP
The Panteleymon Bridge was
See Street Finder map 6
rebuilt in 1907–8 to support a
new tramway but it retains its
original Empire-style decor by
Ilyin (see p37).
Statue of
Peter the
NA
Great (1747)
B
RE
Mikhaylovskiy Castle
KI
A
ITS
UL
FO
Y A
VA
NT
MK
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AN
STAR SIGHTS
SA
. Russian Museum
ULIT
A PLOSCHAD
ITS BELINSKOVO
UL . Church on Spilled
KA
A
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RAVA
RN Blood
VAYA
E NE
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SADO
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Suggested route
ALL
EYA
0 metres 100
A 0 yards 100
Y
NA D
ZH A
A NE SCH
M PLO
Nevskiy
prospekt
The Circus or “tsirk”,
advertised by a colourful neon
Museum of Hygiene, sign, began performing in the
with macabre displays of 19th century when it was
preserved human organs, known as the Ciniselli Circus.
was established in 1919 It still offers traditional per-
to teach the public about formances (see p201) in its
health and hygiene. original venue by the Fontanka.
100 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
The tent-roofed
steeple is 81 m
(265 ft) high.
Coat of Arms
The 144 mosaic coats
of arms on the bell Intricate Detailing
tower represent the The flamboyant
regions, towns and Russian Revival style
provinces of the of the exterior
Russian empire. provides a dra-
They were intended matic contrast to
to reflect the grief the Neo-Classical
shared by all and Baroque
Russians in architecture
the wake of which dominates
Alexander’s the centre of
assassination. St Petersburg.
Russian Museum 3
The Benois Wing,
named after its main
Русский Музей architect Leontiy
Russkiy Muzey Benois, was added
71
in 1913–19.
The museum is housed in the Mikhaylovskiy Palace,
72
70
one of Carlo Rossi’s finest Neo-Classical creations Stairs to
89
73
which was built in 1819–25 for Grand Duke ground
90
69
floor
Mikhail Pavlovich. Alexander III’s plans to
88
91
74
68
create a public museum were realized by
75
his son, Nicholas II, when the Russian
67
92
Museum opened here in 1898. Today,
76
87
93
10
the museum holds one of the world’s
66
0
77
94
greatest collections of Russian art.
78
99
85
95
86
79
84
98
96
. Princess Olga
80
97
Konstantinovna
83
81
Orlova (1911)
82
By the turn of the
20th century,Valentin
Serov was the most Entrance
successful portrait
10
7
10 8
painter in Russia.
10
8
11
6
10
d
9
Temporary exhibitions
of 20th-century art are m
11
11
7
0
often displayed. 11
1
11
10
11
6
5
2
11
5
11
10
3
11
11
4
4
10
12
3
0
10
47
2
48
10
1
50
Stairs to
first floor of
Benois Wing
A Meal in the Monastery (1865–76)
Vasiliy Perov’s canvas exposes the
hypocrisy of the Orthodox clergy, with GALLERY GUIDE
the juxtaposition of good and evil, rich The main entrance on Arts
65
60
VISITORS’ CHECKLIST
Inzhenernaya ulitsa 4. Map 6 F1.
Tell 595 4248. q Nevskiy Pros-
pekt, Gostinyy Dvor. @ 3, 7, 22,
K 128, K-
K- K 169. 1, 5, 7,
K 129, K-
10, 22. v 3. # 10am–5pm
Mon; 10am–6pm Wed–Sun (last
ticket an hour before closing). &
7 phone for details. 8 English
(tel: 314 3448). = - 9
English. www.rusmuseum.ru
. The Last Day of Pompeii (1833)
Karl Bryullov’s Classical subject em-
bodies the aesthetic principles of the
Academy of Arts. This vivid depiction
of the eruption of Vesuvius won him
the Grand Prix at the Paris Salon.
14
Stairs to . Barge-Haulers on
15
The White
forced labour imbues the oppressed
9
Hall contains
victims with sullen dignity.
8
original Empire-
1
style furniture
7
by Carlo Ros
Rossi.
2
3
exhibition
4
45
44
43
51
49
42
41
33
Entrance points
52
40
from basement
53
34
32
ticket office
54
in Eleusin (1889)
35
31
55
56
=
28
38
27
=
KEY
26
25
24
19
18th-century art
23
20
18TH–19TH-CENTURY ART
Gostinyy Dvor 8
Гостиный двор
Gostinyy dvor
Ulitsa Zodchevo
Rossi w
У лица 3одчего Росси
Ulitsa Zodchevo Rossi
Apraksin Market r
Апраксин двор
Apraksin dvor
Imperial Stables p
Конюшенное Ведомство
Konyushennoe Vedomstvo
Konyushennaya ploshchad 1.
Map 2 E5. Church # 10am–7pm
Personal effects in Pushkin’s study, Pushkin House-Museum daily. ^
SENNAYA PLOSHCHAD
T he western part of St Petersburg St Nicholas’ Cathedral, which stands
is an area of contrasts, home to on the site of the naval parade ground.
some of the city’s wealthiest res- Theatre Square has been a hub of enter-
idences and most poverty-stricken tainment since the mid-18th century.
dwellings. The palatial It is dominated by the
architecture along the prestigious Mariinskiy
English Quay is a world Theatre and the Rimsky-
away from the decrepit Korsakov Conservatory,
living quarters around where many of Russia’s
Coat of arms on
bustling Sennaya ploshchad, greatest artists began their
Yusupov Palace
which have changed little since careers. Before 1917, the
Dostoevsky (see p123) described them. streets leading off the square were
In between lies the old maritime quar- home to theatre directors, actors, bal-
ter, once inhabited by Peter the Great’s lerinas, artists and musicians. Today,
shipwrights, many of whom were performing artists are once more
English. This area extended all the way returning to live in this shady backwa-
from the New Holland warehouses to ter, attracted by the peace of the tree-
SIGHTS AT A GLANCE
Cathedrals Theatres
St Nicholas’ Cathedral 2 Mariinskiy Theatre p119 1
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See pp116–17
q Metro 0 metres 600
v Tram stop
0 yards 600
The Monument to
Rimsky-Korsakov,
whoo taught at the
Connservatory for 37
yearrs, was designed by
niamin Bogolyubov
Ven
and
d Vladimir Ingal and
ereccted in 1952.
Yusupov Palace
Historic site of the gruesome murder off Rasputin
(see p121), this grand palace belonged to the
wealthy Yusupov family. Its opulent inteeriors
include this Italian marble stair-
case and a tiny Rococo theatre 4
Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory
Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev and
Shostakovich (see p43) were
among the talents nurtured by
Russia’s first conservatory,
founded in 1862 by pianist and
composer Anton Rubinstein 3
Monument to
Mikhail Glinka
(see p44)
. Mariinskiy Theatre
This theatre has been home to
the world-famous
- Mariinskiy
(Kirov) Opera and Ballet
Company since 1860. Hidden
behind its imposing façade is
the sumptuous auditorium where
many of Russia’s greatest dancers
(see p118) have performed 1
S E N N AYA P L O S H C H A D 117
LOCATOR MAP
See Street Finder, map 5
S Nicholas’ Cathedral
St
A fine example of 18th-
ccentury Russian Baroque,
tthe lofty upper church is
rrichly decorated with icons,
ggilding and this carved
iiconostasis. The lower church,
bbeautifully lit with candles,
iis also open for worship 2
KEY
Suggested route
Ballet in St Petersburg
Admired throughout the world, Following the 1905 Revolution,
Russian ballet traces its origins a reaction against Classicism
back to 1738 when a French led to an increasing num-
dancing master, Jean-Baptiste ber of defections from the
Landé, established a school Imperial theatres to the new
in St Petersburg to train the private companies like Sergey
children of palace employees. Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. The dis-
The Imperial Ballet School, as it persion of talent increased after
soon became known, flourished Matilda the Bolsheviks seized power in
under a string of distinguished Kshesinskaya’s 1917 and many artists went into
foreign teachers, culminating in ballet shoes exile abroad. Fortunately for
Marius Petipa (1818–1910). Petipa first Soviet Russia, the distinguished prima
joined the school in 1847 as a principal ballerina Agrippina Vaganova remained
dancer and later choreographed over 60 to train the next generation of dancers.
ballets, inspiring such famous dancers St Petersburg’s Russian Ballet Academy
as Matilda Kshesinskaya (see p72). now bears her name (see p110).
Rudolf Nureyev
(1938–93), seen here
in Sleeping Beauty
at the Mariinskiy,
defected to the West in
1961. As both choreo-
grapher and dancer,
Nureyev continued to
enthral audiences for
over 30 years until
his death in 1993.
St Nicholas’
Cathedral 2
Никольский собор
Nikolskiy sobor
Moyka which
THE GRIM DEATH creates an
OF RASPUTIN atmospheric
The Russian peasant and entrance to the
mystic Grigoriy Rasputin timber yard. Barges
(1869–1916) exercised an would pass through
extraordinarily powerful the arch and into a
influence over the court turning basin
and government of Russia
R beyond, then return
(see p26). The mysterious loaded with timber
circumstances of his drama- along the canals
tic death on 17 December Vallin de la Mothe’s impressive arch on the towards the
1916 are legendary. Lured Moyka, leading into New Holland Admiralty ship-
to YYusupov’s palace on yards. Today the
the pretext of a party, prayer to survive the repres- overgrown and inaccessible
Rasputin was poisoned, sions of the 1930s. It continued island holds a certain charm
then shot by Prince Felix to function even during the in its isolation.
Yusupov and left for dead.
Y Siege of 1941; the community
Returning to the scene the remaining largely intact whilst
prince found Rasputin still other Jewish communities in The English
g Quay
Q y 7
alive and a struggle ensued Eastern Europe were decim- Английская набережная
before Rasputin disappear- ated. Today, the Synagogue Angliyskaya naberezhnaya
ed into the courtyard. still has an active community.
Pursued by the Map 5 A2. v 11, K-154, K-124, K-186.
conspirators he was
shot another three New Holland 6 English merchants settled
times and brutally Новая Голландия here in the 1730s, and were
battered before Novaya Gollandiya soon followed by craftsmen,
being dumped in architects, artists, innkeepers
the river. When Naberezhnaya reki Moyki and factory owners. By 1800
his corpse was 103. Map 5 B3. @ 3, 22. the area was one of the city’s
found three days v 1, 11, 31, 42. most fashionable addresses.
later, clinging to It still boasts impressive
the supports of Created when the buildings. The Neo-Classical
a bridge, water Kryukov canal was mansion at No. 10 was the fic-
in his lungs constructed between the tional setting for the debutante
indicated death Moyka and Neva rivers ball of Natasha Rostova in
by drowning. in 1719, this triangular Tolstoy’s novel War and Peace.
T
island was originally No. 28 was occupied by the
used for storing ship timber. lover of ballet dancer Matilda
Choral Synagogue 5 The name is in honour of the Kshesinskaya (see p72), and is
Хоральная Синаrоrа Dutch shipbuilders who the former headquarters of the
Khoralnaya Sinagoga inspired Peter the Great’s Socialist-Revolutionary Party.
naval ambitions. On ploshchad T Truda, the
Lermontovskiy prospekt 2. In 1765, the original former palace of Grand Duke
Map 5 B3. @ 3, K-3, 6, 22, K-22, wooden warehouses were Nikolai Nikolaevich (son of
27, K-27, T-169, T-180. rebuilt in red brick by Savva Nicholas I) was given in 1917
Chevakinskiy. At the same to the trades unions. No. 44,
In 1826 T Tsar Nicholas I decreed time Vallin de la Mothe Rumyantsev Palace, is part of
that all Jews, save 29 employed designed the austere but the State Museum of the
on behalf of the Court, be romantic arch facing onto the History of St Petersburg.
exiled from St Petersburg.
Further “purifications” took
place in the 1830s. However,
after Nicholas’ death in 1855
the Jewish population grew
rapidly and in 1879 a site was
approved for a permanent
house of prayer. Designed in
Moorish style by architects
Ivan Shaposhnikov and Viktor
Shreter, the Synagogue opened
in 1893, by which time the
Jewish community had reached
16,500, nearly 2% of the city’s
population. Accommodating
1,200 or more, the Synagogue
was the only Jewish place of Quarenghi’s grand porticoed façade, at No. 32 on the English Quay
122 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
FYODOR
DOSTOEVSKY
One of Russia’s greatest
writers, Fyodor Dostoevsky
(see pp43–4) was born in
1821 in Moscow but spent
most of his adult life in St
Petersburg, where many of
his novels and short stories
are set. A defining moment
in his life occurred in 1849
when he was arrested and
charged with revolution-
ary conspiracy. After eight The guardhouse on bustling Sennaya ploshchad
months of solitary confine-
ment in the Peter and Paul
Fortress (see pp66–7),
contemptuous hero of the
novel, Raskolnikov, wanders
Railway Museum q
Музей железнодорожного
Dostoevsky and 21 other around the market, he ab-
“conspirators” from the транспорта
sorbs the “heat in the street….
socialist Petrashevsky Circle the airlessness, the bustle and Muzey zheleznodorozhnovo
were subjected to a maca- the plaster, scaffolding, bricks transporta
bre mock execution before and dust…. that special St
Sadovaya ulitsa 50. Map 6 D4.
being exiled to hard labour Petersburg stench…. and the
Tell 315 1476. q Sennaya
in Siberia until 1859. The numerous drunken men”
Ploshchad, Sadovaya. # 11am–5pm
sinister experience is re- which “completed the revol-
Sun–Thu. 8 English.
called in his novel The Idiot ting misery of the picture”.
(1868). He died in 1881. The novel was finished in
1866 while Dostoevsky was More than 6,000 fascinating
living at Alonkin’s House, exhibits illustrate the history
(No. 7 Przhevalskovo ulitsa), of the Russian railway system
to the west of the square. since 1813. The most
During the Soviet era the interesting sections of the
square was given a new image, museum deal with the earliest
stallholders were banished, railways, including Russia’s
trees were planted and it was first from Tsarskoe Selo to
optimistically renamed Peace St Petersburg which began run-
Square (ploshchad Mira). The ning in 1837, and the 650-km
five-storey, yellow and white (404-mile) line from Moscow
apartment blocks that surround to St Petersburg (1851).
the square today were also Exhibits include models of
built then, in Stalin’s version the first Russian steam engine,
of Neo-Classicism. Sadly, in built by the Cherepanovs in
1961, the square’s most attrac- 1834, and of an armoured train
tive monument, the Baroque used by T Trotsky in the defence
oldest building, at the centre Church of the Assumption, of the city during the Civil War
of the square, is the former built in 1765, was pulled down (see p27). An insight into lux-
guardhouse, a single-storey to make way for one of the ury travel in the late tsarist
Neo-Classical building with a city’s earliest period can be gained from the
columned portico, which metro stations. walk-through section of a first-
dates to 1818–20. The guards- class sleeping compartment
men’s duties ranged from with velvet upholstery and
supervising the traders to Style-Moderne decoration.
flogging serfs, mostly for
minor misdemeanours. By
that time the neighbourhood
had become synonymous
with dirt, squalor, crime and
vice. At No. 3 is the site of
“Vyazemskiy’s Monastery”,
the nickname for a notori-
ous tenement overrun with
pubs, gambling dens and
brothels in the 1850s and ‘60s.
This was the squalid world
so vividly evoked in Fyodor
Dostoevsky’s masterpiece
Crime and Punishment. As the Model of 1830s engine for the Tsarskoe Selo railway, Railway Museum
S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A 125
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The Baroque Sheremetev Palace on the east bank of the Fontanka river
126 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
Dolls in 17th–19th century Russian folk costumes, in front of the Terem Room, Stieglitz Museum
128 S T P E T E R S B U R G A R E A B Y A R E A
Tauride Palace 6
Таврический дворец
Tavricheskiy dvorets
Alexander Nevsky a stream and into the main statues by Fedot Shubin. This
monastic complex. The oldest leads to the impressive red
Monastery q building is the Church of the agate and white marble icono-
Александро-Невская лавра
Annunciation (1717–22), de- stasis, which features copies
Aleksandro-Nevskaya lavra signed by Domenico Trezzini.
T of works by Van Dyck, Rubens
R
The church, its ground floor and others. To the right of the
Ploshchad Aleksandra Nevskovo.
recently opened to the public, iconostasis is a silver reliquary
Map 8 E4. Tell 274 2635 or 274 1124.
was the burial place for non- that contains the remains of
q Ploshchad Aleksandra Nevskovo.
ruling members of the Russian
R Alexander Nevsky, transferred
@ 8, 27, 46. 1, 14, 16, 22. v 7,
royal family. A series of red
65. Holy Trinity Cathedral # 6am–
and white, mid-18th-century
8pm daily. Church of the Annuncia-
monastic buildings, including
tion Tell 274 2635. # 9:30am–
the Metropolitan’s House
5pm; closes 6pm in summer.
(1755–8), surround the
¢ Mon & Thu. & cemeteries &
courtyard. Among the
Church of the Annunciation. 8
trees in the courtyard
Founded by Peter the lie the graves of atheist
Great in 1710, this Soviet scholars and
monastery is named leading Communists.
after Alexander Dominating the
Nevsky, the prince of essentially Baroque
Novgorod, who complex is the twin-
defeated the Swedes towered and domed
in 1240. Peter himself Dostoevsky’s Neo-Classical Holy
defeated them again in tombstone Trinity Cathedral, con-
T
1709 (see p18). structed by architect
From the entrance, a path Ivan Starov in 1776–90. The
runs between two large, wide nave inside is flanked Reliquary with Alexander Nevsky’s
walled cemeteries, then across by Corinthian columns with remains, Trinity Cathedral
F U R T H E R A F I E L D 131
Victory Monument e the Siege (see p27), and its prises 900 dim, orange lamps,
Монумент Защитникам survivors. It was designed by one for each day of the Siege.
Ленинграда Sergey Speranskiy and Valentin On the marble walls are tablets
Kamenskiy and sculpted by inscribed with the names of
Monument Zashchitnikam
Mikhail Anikushin. A 48-m the 650 Heroes of the Soviet
Leningrada (157-ft) high obelisk of red Union who were awarded the
Ploshchad Pobedy. Tell 293 6563. granite is near a vast, circular title after the war; and a
q Moskovskaya. Memorial Hall enclosure which symbolizes mosaic depicts the women of
# 10am–6pm Thu & Sat–Mon, the vice-like grip of the siege. the city greeting their menfolk
10am–5pm Tue & Fri. ¢ last Tue of Sculptures of soldiers, sailors at the end of the conflict.
each month. 8 book by phone. and grieving mothers Around the hall a small
surround the monument. display of artifacts, including
Erected in 1975 to coincide An underpass on Moskovskiy Shostakovich’s violin (see p43),
with the 30th anniversary of prospekt leads to the gloomy, records the contribution of
the end of World War II, this is subterranean Memorial Hall. different sections of the com-
on the site of a temporary Here solemn music gives way munity to the war effort, while
triumphal arch built to greet to the persistent beat of a an illuminated relief map
the returning troops. Named metronome, the wartime radio illustrates the battle lines.
the Monument to the Heroic signal, intended to represent Most disturbing is the tiny
Defenders of Leningrad, it the city’s defiant heartbeat. piece of bread, which was
commemorates the victims of The subdued lighting com- many people’s daily ration.
Heroic partisans facing south towards the enemy during the Siege of Leningrad, detail of Victory Monument
THREE GUIDED W
WA LKS
M any of St Petersburg’s sights
are best appreciated on foot.
The three walks chosen
present different aspects of the
city’s character, though water
The second walk explores Yelagin
and Kamennyy islands, where
Y
A 90-Minute Walk
Along the
Embankment
(se pp138–9)
(see
A Two-Hour Walk on
Kamennyy and Yelagin
Islands (see pp136–7)
A Two-Hour Walk
Along the City’s
Waterways
(see pp134–5)
KEY
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Walk route
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T H R E E G U I D E D WA L K S 135
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small red-brick Church of St ment date to 1824. From this
John the Baptist 1, designed point you can see across to
in Neo-Gothic style by Yuriy Aptekarskiy or Apothecary’s
Velten in 1776–8. Nearby a Island, named after the medi-
yellow gateway leads to the cinal herb gardens founded by
grounds of Kamennoostrovskiy Peter the Great. St Petersburg’s
Palace 2 (now a retirement Botanical Gardens are still
home) from where Alexander I located there. Continue along
led the 1812 Russian campaign the path, which turns into
against Napoleon (see p26). naberezhnaya reki Krestovki.
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prospekt to the Malaya Nevka path are the remains of Peter
river, then turn right on to the Great’s oak tree 4, said to
naberezhnaya Maloy Nevki have been planted by the tsar
where there is an imposing in 1718. The house on the left,
wooden mansion 3 at No. 11 towards the Malo-krestovskiy
with a white-columned portico. most, is the former home of
The Dolgorukov Mansion was Sergey Chaev 5, the chief
built in 1831–2 by Smaragd engineer of the Trans-Siberian The tower of the Church of
Shustov for the Dolgorukovs, railway. Chaev commissioned St John the Baptist (1776–8) 1
T H R E E G U I D E D WA L K S 137
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View across the frozen River Neva featuring the golden dome of St Isaac’s Cathedral on the south embankment
in May 1703, and Peter lived shots that signalled the storm-
here for 6 years, supervising ing of the Winter Palace. This TIPS FOR WALKERS
the building of his city. The event brought the Bolsheviks Starting point: Sobornaya
brick shell was added later by to power in 1913. The battle- Mosque.
Catherine the Great. On the ship is now partly open and Getting there: Gorkovskaya
steps outside the cabin are contains a museum. metro station (see p223).
the Manchurian Lions 7, Further along the embank- Length: 3.5 km (2 miles).
two odd statues brought ment, the Neo-Baroque Stopping off points: There are
from Manchuria
Mancchu during the building
ild g o on the left is the places selling snacks along the
disastrous (fo
(for Russia) Nakhimov
khimov Naval Academy 9, north embankment, especially
Russo--Jap
Japanese War of builtt in
n 11910–11. around the cruiser Aurora and
1904–5. Now w ccross Sampsonievskiy the Cabin of Peter the Great.
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K
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Walk route the end of the walk. Ploshchad Lenina to
Continuing on foot, Finland Station
Metro station the embankment leads Statue of Lenin in w (see p126),
Tram stop down to Arsenalnaya Ploshchad Lenina q, home to the train
nab, past the Military near Finland Station that brought
Train station Medical Academy 0 – Lenin to Russia
built in the time of Tsar Paul I to lead the 1917 October
The Cruiser Aurora in a High-Classical style. Turn Revolution – and to alter the
Follow the embankment to left onto Ploshchad Lenina q. destiny of the largest country
Petrogradskaya nab and the In the centre of the square on earth. From here, it is a
historic old cruiser Aurora 8 stands one of the city’s few short walk to Ploshchad
(see p73), famous for firing the remaining statues of Lenin. Lenina metro station.
ST PETERSBURG
REPINO 146
ORANIENBAUM 146
GATCHINA 147
PETERHOF 148151
TSARSKOE SELO 152157
PAVLOVSK 158161
NOVGOROD 162165
B E Y O N D S T P E T E R S B U R G 143
BEYOND ST PETERSBURG
T
he countryside around St Petersburg is typical of northwest
Russia. Among its flat sweeps of land, pine forests and lakes
there are sights of cultural interest, including the imperial
palaces and the walled medieval city of Novgorod. Venturing away from
St Petersburg allows a richer and deeper insight into this splendid land.
Before St Petersburg was founded accommodate her extravagant balls,
in 1703, the surrounding landscape hence the grand Baroque palace
was a marshy and inhospitable at Tsarskoe Selo. Catherine the
wilderness, inhabited by wolves. Great’s love of intimacy led her
Nevertheless, the area from the to add private apartments to
Gulf of Finland to Lake Ladoga Tsarskoe Selo, and the exquisite
was of strategic importance for Chinese Palace at Oranienbaum.
trading and thus one of the rea- Paul I’s military mania made him
sons for continuous wars between turn Gatchina into a castle, while
Sweden and Russia. At the time his wife Maria Fyodorovna created
the only city of importance here a feminine, elegant residence at
was Novgorod, an independent Pavlovsk. All the palaces except
and quite wealthy principality Oranienbaum suffered devastating
(see p17). It has retained its Muse of love damage during World War II (see
medieval atmosphere, so dif- and poetry,
Pavlovsk
p27). A great deal of effort has
ferent from the imperial palaces been made to restore them pains-
adorning the countryside south of St takingly over the last 50 years.
Petersburg. They each reflect the tastes While the aristocracy indulged in
of their owners. Peter the Great’s fine their extravagances, the middle classes
residence, Peterhof, is dominated by had more modest country houses. The
water; the Gulf and the fountains comfortable dacha of the artist Repin,
mirror his maritime interest. Elizabeth northwest of the city, gives visitors a
wanted vibrant colour and excess to feel of his more bohemian lifestyle.
The Novgorod Kremlin with the Cathedral of St Sophia and its belfry
Exploring St Peterr
Most St Petersburgers
time at their dacha or co
weekends and holiday
ways of experiencing t CP H 1
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GETTING AROUND JW Z
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imperial palaces, and to Rep
urban train or by taking a guided
by coach (see p208). Drivin
convenient, often taking lon
train, and driving standards
In the summer, the hydrofo
an alternative way to get to Peterhof
(see p229). Each of these sights can
easily be visited in a day. Novgorod is
situated further away, however, and so
it makes sense to spend longer there.
Mainline trains depart from Moscow
railway station (see p229) for Novgorod. Coastal landscape along the Gulf of Finland
.
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Gilded cupolas of the
Main railway
chapel of Catherine
Minor railway Palace at Tsarskoe Selo
146 B E Y O N D S T P E T E R S B U R G
Repino 1
Репино
Repino
Gatchina 4
Гатчина
Gatchina
Peterhof 3
Петергоф
Petergof
With its commanding views of the Baltic, Peterhof is
a perfect expression of triumphalism. Originally
designed by Jean Baptiste Le Blond, the Great Palace
(1714–21) was transformed during the reign of Tsarina
Elizabeth when Bartolomeo Rastrelli added a third
storey and wings with pavilions at either end. He
tried to preserve Le Blond’s early Baroque exterior,
but redesigned the interiors, indulging his love for
gilded Baroque decoration. Peterhof stands at the View from palace of Grand Cascade
centre of a magnificent landscaped leading down to the Gulf of Finland
park, with both French and Neptune
English gardens. Fountain Oak
Fountain
Mezheumnyy
Fountain
VISITORS’ CHECKLIST
PETER THE GREAT’S PALACE
After his victory over the Swedes at Poltava in 1709, Peter the Petrodvorets, 30 km (19 miles) W
Great decided to build a palace “befitting to the very highest of St Petersburg. Tell 420 0073.
of monarchs”. A visit to Versailles in 1717 furthered Peter’s £ from Baltic station (see p220)
ambitions and he employed more than 5,000 labourers, serfs to Novyy Petergof. g Hermitage
and soldiers, supported by architects, water-engineers, land- (May–Oct) (see p220). Great
scape gardeners and sculptors. Work proceeded at a frenetic Palace # 10:30am–5pm
pace from 1714 until Peterhof was officially opened in 1723. Tue–Sun. ¢ last Tue of each
Le Blond’s Great Palace was month. Other pavilions #
completed in 1721 and has May–Sep: 11am– 5pm Tue–Sun;
changed considerably over Oct–Apr: 11am–5pm Sat & Sun.
the decades. Catherine the Fountains # May–early Oct:
Great commissioned Yuriy 10:30am–5pm. & 8 = 0 -
Velten to redecorate some of
Rastrelli’s interiors in the
1770s, including the Throne
Room and the Chesma Room.
. Main Staircase
Caryatids and gilded carvings adorn
Rastrelli’s glittering staircase. The
ceiling fresco depicts Aurora and
Genius chasing away the night.
Golden Hill Cascade
Marly and
Hermitage
Eve
Fountain
STAR FEATURES
. Grand Cascade
. Main Staircase
Hydrofoil
and Gulf of . The State Rooms
Finland
The Hermitage
Standing in splendid isolation
on the shores of the gulf, this
elegant pavilion (1721–5), by
Braunstein, was conceived as
a private dining venue for the
tsar and his friends. To high-
light the need for solitude, the
Monplaisir palace (1714–22), overlooking the Gulf of Finland building was raised on a plinth
and surrounded by a moat that
Monplaisir the Great was staying here in was crossed by a small draw-
This delightfully unpretentious 1762 when her lover, Count bridge. The stuccoed façade
palace was designed in 1714 Orlov, arrived with news of is decorated with Corinthian
by Johann Braunstein. Even the coup which was to bring pilasters, elaborate wrought-
after the Great Palace was built, her to the throne (see p24). iron balconies and enlarged
Peter continued to live and windows. All the servants were
entertain at Monplaisir where Marly Palace confined to the ground floor
his guests were usually sub- Named after Marly-le-Rois, the and a mechanical device took
jected to a punishing regime of king of France’s hunting lodge meals up from the kitchen.
heavy drinking. At breakfast which Peter the Great visited
the coffee cups were filled on a tour of Europe in 1717, Cottage Palace
with brandy and by nightfall this beautifully proportioned The romantic landscaped
guests were often discovered country residence was built grounds of Alexandria Park,
wandering drunk in the park. for the tsar’s guests. The named after Alexandra, wife of
While not as lavish as those rooms open to the public Nicholas I, provide a perfect
of the Great Palace the inter- setting for the Cottage Palace.
iors are still impressive, in The Neo-Gothic house is more
particular the wood-panelled imposing than the term cottage
Ceremonial Hall. A painting suggests. The Scottish architect,
on its vaulted ceiling depicts Adam Menelaws, designed it in
Apollo surrounded by char- 1826–9 for Nicholas I and his
acters from a masque. Russian wife, who wanted a domestic
icon painters skilfully carried environment in keeping with
out the decoration of the ex- their bourgeois tastes.
quisite Lacquered Study in the The Gothic theme is pursued
Chinese style then in vogue. throughout, most effectively in
Peter’s collection of canvases the Great Drawing Room with
by Dutch and Flemish artists the rose window motif in the
hang in the rooms and there carpet and the lace-like tracery
are wonderful views of the gulf of the stuccoed ceiling. The
from the tsar’s Naval Study. exquisite 5,200-piece crystal
Adjoining Monplaisir is the and porcelain dinner service
Catherine Wing, which was in the Dining Room was made
built for Tsarina Elizabeth by Elaborate tiled kitchen in the for the royal couple at the
Rastrelli in 1747–54. Catherine Marly Palace (1720–3) Imperial Porcelain factory.
P E T E R H O F 151
Tsarskoe Selo 5
Царское Село
Tsarskoe Selo
metres
R
p1
part
impe
and fa
semi-pr
stones fr
the Urals
(Temporar
closed.)
The Camero
Gallery (see p
The tab
gentlemen-in
and white room created by Rastrelli.
T S A R S K O E S E L O 153
the Lycée
d the Church of
e Sign (see p155)
ture
y displays
ry
vases by Italian,
French, Dutch and
Flemish masters of the
17th and 18th centuries. . Green Dining Room
Cameron’s restrained Neo-Classical
The French-style formal
style contrasts with the Baroque
gardens were laid out in the
1740s. Their formality and
flamboyance of Rastrelli’s work.
symmetry contrasts with the The exquisite stucco bas-reliefs,
naturalistic English-style sculpted by Ivan Martos, were
landscaping of the park (see based on motifs from frescoes
p154), created in 1768. discovered in Pompeii.
Small Enfilade
A varied selection of furniture STAR FEATURES
and objets d’art make up the
exhibition in these unrestored . The Great Hall
rooms. Chinese lacquer furniture
and Oriental rugs were among . Amber Room
the treasures used to furnish the . Green Dining Room
palace in the 19th century.
154 B E Y O N D S T P E T E R S B U R G
Cameron Gallery 3
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Pavlovsk 6
Павловск
Pavlovsk
Cameron’s
Dairy (1782)
housed both
a milking
shed and a
stylish salon.
VISITORS’ CHECKLIST
Pavlovsk. Tell 470 2125. c from
Green Woman Vitebsk, Kupchino or Moscovskay
Alley
stations, then bus 370, 383, 383a,
Pavlovsk
493, K-286, K-299 (see p228).
Railway Station
Grounds # daily. & May–Nov
10am–5pm. Palace # 10am–
Visconti Bridge 5pm Sat–Thu. ¢ winter: first
One of the most famous bridges Mon of month. & 0 - =
which cross the winding 8 English. www.pavlovsk.org
Slavyanka, it was
designed by
Andrey
Voronikhin
in 1807.
The Étoile
The Étoile, the earliest
landscaped area in the
park, was laid out by
Cameron in 1780. The
circle of statues represents
the nine Muses, protectresses
of the arts and sciences.
The Beautiful
Valley was the
favourite spot of 0 metres 200
Elizabeth, wife
of Alexander I. 0 yards 200
Paul’s Mausoleum
(1808–9) bears the
inscription
“To my beneficient
The Rose Pavilion
consort”.
was the favourite
haunt of Maria
Fyodorovna STAR FEATURES
from 1812. She
held many . Temple of
concerts and Friendship Pil Tower and Bridge
literary evenings Brenna’s tower (1795–97) contained a
in this cottage. . Great Palace spiral staircase, lounge and library. The
bridge was a later addition made in 1808.
160 B E Y O N D S T P E T E R S B U R G
Once back in Russia, they brought in Brenna to add ivory and gilded bronze, made
taller, more elaborate wings to Cameron’s elegant by Maria’s herself. Next door,
the Tapestry Room is named
Palladian mansion, turning it into a true palace. after the Don Quixote tapes-
tries made by Gobelin and
PLAN OF PAVLOVSK PALACE, FIRST FLOOR presented to Paul by Louis XVI.
The mahogany writing table
KEY was actually made for the new
State rooms
Engineers’ Castle (see p101)
but, after Paul’s murder there in
Southern wing 1801 (see p22), Maria moved
much of the specially-designed
furniture to Pavlovsk Palace.
The corner rooms are a Hall
of War for Paul and Maria’s
Stairs to private contrasting Hall of Peace, both
apartments and richly adorned with bas-reliefs
Egyptian Vestibule and heavy gilding. Between
on the ground floor
the two lies the magnificent
Grecian Hall, Cameron’s
1 Italian Hall Neo-Classical masterpiece.
2 Paul’s Study Maria Fyodorovna’s rooms
3 Tapestry Room
commence with a small, com-
4 Hall of War
5 Grecian Hall 8 Boudoir
fortable library. The chair at the
6 Hall of Peace 9 State Bedroom 12 Throne Room desk was designed for her by
7 Maria Fyodorovna’s 10 Dressing Room 13 Hall of Knights Voronikhin; note the pots built
Library 11 Picture Gallery 14 Chapel into the spine for flowers. Her
Boudoir has pilasters painted
feminine tastes which have with motifs copied from the
STATE ROOMS given Pavlovsk a distinct Raphael Loggias in the Vatican,
charm rather than grandeur. and a porphyry fireplace. The
A fire in 1803 necessitated State Bedroom was reputedly
some remodelling of the palace never slept in, but was part of
interiors by Andrey Voronikhin. court ceremony. Opposite the
The entrance hall, or Egyptian
Vestibule, gained its present
appearance after he added the
painted bronze figures and
zodiac medallions. At the top
of the stairs is Brenna’s State
Vestibule, where the bas-reliefs
reflected Paul’s passion for all
things military. It leads onto the
Italian Hall, situated beneath
the central cupola, with lantern
windows and heavy doors of
rosewood and mahogany.
The Italian Hall, originally by The northern row of rooms
Cameron and Brenna, 1789 on this floor were for Paul, the
southern ones for Maria. Paul’s
Nearly all of the palace apart- Study is dominated by Johann
ments at Pavlovsk, including Lampi’s fine portrait of Maria
the official ones, are relatively (1794), who holds a drawing of
modest in scale. They reflect six of their children. Beneath it Maria Fyodorovna’s Boudoir,
Maria Fyodorovna’s intensely is a model temple of amber, designed by Brenna, 1789
PAV L O V S K 161
PRIVATE APARTMENTS
Novgorod 7
Yuriev Monastery walls and bell tower with the silvery domes of the Cathedral of St George in the background
Beyond Yaroslav’s Court frescoes contrast with the three asymmetrical cupolas was
In the 12th century, Novgorod harsher colours found in most restored in the 19th century,
boasted over 200 churches, 14th-century Novgorod fres- and unfortunately most of the
while there are only 30 today. coes. The Annunciation, for interior murals were lost. There
Many of these are hidden away example, combines sensitivity were once 20 monastic build-
in the quiet hinter- and charm with ings in the complex, dating
land of 19th-century religious intensity. mainly from the 19th century.
streets to the east In the woods across the
of Yaroslav’s Court. Further Afield road lies the fascinating open-
On Ilyina ulitsa, the A pleasant stroll 3 air Museum of Wooden
arrangement of km (2 miles) south Architecture, which displays
windows, niches along the river churches and peasant huts
and inset crosses bank leads to the moved from local villages. Of
on the Church of Yuriev Monastery. particular interest are the 17th-
the Saviour of the This is the largest century two-tiered Kuritsko
Transfiguration and most important Church of the Dormition and
façade (1374) is monastery in the the tiny wooden church of St
almost whimsical. area, founded in Nicholas from Tukhel village.
Inside, there are 1030 and built on
original frescoes Fresco inside the orders of Prince Yuriev Monastery
by one of Russia’s Znamenskiy Cathedral Vsevolod. Its im- Yurevskaya nab. Tell (81622)
greatest medieval posing Cathedral of 73020. # 10am–6pm daily.
artists, Theophanes the Greek St George was built in 1119–30 E Museum of Wooden
(1335–c.1410), who came from by “Master Peter”, the first Architecture (Vitoslavlitsi)
Constantinople and decorated named architect in Russian Yurevo. Tell (81622) 73770. # 24 hrs.
40 Russian churches. Andrey chronicles. This beautifully Exhibitions: 10am–6pm (mid-Oct–
Rublev (1360–1430), Russia’s proportioned church with its mid-Apr: 10am–4pm) daily. & 8
most famous icon painter,
worked under Theophanes at
the beginning of his career.
On the same street, the
five-domed Znamenskiy
Cathedral, or Cathedral of the
Sign (1682–8), has an attractive
gateway and faded frescoes
on the outer walls. The beau-
tiful interior was decorated in
1702 by Ivan Bakhmatov.
The Church of Theodore
Stratilates on Mstinskaya
ulitsa to the north was built in
1360–61 by the widow of a
wealthy Novgorod merchant.
The delicate purple and pink Rebuilt 19th-century peasant hut (izba), Museum of Wooden Architecture
N O V G O R O D 165
Battle of Novgorod
and Suzdal
This mid-15th-century
work of the Novgorod
School is thought to be
Russia’s earliest histor-
r
ical painting. Icons
could have a political
purpose – in this case to
use Novgorod’s great
past as a justification
for its independence
from Moscow. Note the
multiple touches of
red – a colour central
Virgin of Vladimir to everyday Russian life
The most venerated and typical for icons of
icon in Russia, this the Novgorod School.
12th-century work
was made in Con-
stantinople. Its huge
influence on Russian
icon painting can-
not be overstated.
THE ICONOSTASIS
The iconostasis screens off the sanctuary from the main part of
the church, as if it were a boundary between heaven and earth.
In Russian practice it is covered with icons strictly arranged in
up to six tiers, each with its own dogmatic purpose.
WHERE TO STAY
C elebrations in 2003 of the 300th centre. These provide reasonable ser-
anniversary of the founding of St
Petersburg did wonders for the
range of hotel accommodation avail-
able. The city has sprouted many
vice and full amenities such as restau-
rants, bars and fitness facilities.
Travelling outside the White Nights
period cuts costs and opens up the
“mini-hotels” (privately run estab- opportunity for booking one of
lishments in or near the centre the many excellent deals avail-
with anything from 4 to 15 rooms), able at more central hotels.
and investors have opened large, Bookings can be made inde-
luxury hotels in outstanding loca- pendently or via an agency. For
tions. The quality of service has the summer months, particularly
also risen dramatically. Many during the White Nights, reser-
tourists visiting in the summer Doorman at vations should be made well in
with a package tour, however, Hotel Europe advance for accommodation at
are still housed in large, somewhat all price levels. There is a selection of
anonymous modern hotels outside the hotels on pp174–7.
PRICE
hosts will be keen to talk to dachass let them to people travel company that does to
you about their life in Russia they know. None of the firms make a booking. The best
and Western perceptions of specializing in lets to foreigners option for cheaper living with
their country. deal in dachas, and demand modern facilities is to rent a
Many Russian apartments within 100 km (62 miles) of chalet attached to a motel.
are reached through scruffy the city far outstrips proper- Retur Camping offers chalets,
entrance halls or courtyards, ties available. As a result, camp sites, a swimming pool,
but do not let this put you rental costs can be exorbitant sauna, tennis courts and riding.
off, as it gives little indication (about US$5,000 per week).
of the quality of the accom- In order to find anything at EXTENDED STAYS
modation inside. all, book as early as February.
The best range of dachas Those intending to stay in
CAMPING AND (from around US$500 per St Petersburg for a month or
OUTDOOR LIVING week) is available through more will find the cost of
Alexander, but you will need renting apartments much
Russians love getting out of to speak Russian or use a cheaper. While hostels do not
town for walks, swimming offer long-term reductions,
and mushroom gathering. All Bednbreakfast and City Realty
are possible on day trips from have plenty of flats that are
the city, but staying out of available at more modest
town is more complicated. rates than those advertised for
St Petersburg’s cold winter short lets. Be aware, however,
weather does not make it that tourist visas cannot
ideal for camping, though the usually be registered (see
forests along the north side of p210) for more than three
the Gulf of Finland are months, and that a longer
excellent in milder seasons. stay will require a non-tourist
Those thinking of renting a visa aranged through a
dacha or small house in the company that can legally
country will find this difficult. Dacha in pine forest near Repino on register you for the period
Most people with modest the Gulf of Finland (see p146) you will be in the country.
DIRECTORY
ACCOMMODATION HOFA Host Families Hotels on Nevsky Prima Sport Hotel
AGENCIES Association Tell 703 3860. Ul Dobrolyubova 14.
Tavricheskaya ul 5, Faxx 703 3861. Map 1 B3.
Alexander Apartment 25. Map 6 D1. www.hon.ru Tel / Fax
x 324 7077.
Potemkinskaya ul 13. Tel / Fax275
x 1992. www.prima-nomerov.net
www.hofa.ru
Rinaldi Bed &
Map 3 C4. Breakfast St Petersburg
Tell 327 1616. MIR Travel Company Tell 973 5140. International Youth
www.an1.spb.ru Nevskiy pr 11/2. Faxx 325 4189. Hostel
Map 6 D1. Tell 325 7122. www.rinaldi.ru 3-ya Sovetskaya ul 28.
Bednbreakfast Fax
x 315 3001. Map 7 C2.
Tel / Fax
x 325 6536. www.mir-travel.com HOSTELS Tell 329 8018.
Faxx 329 8019.
www.discount-travel- Ost-West Hostel “5 Minutes www.ryh.ru
petersburg.ru Nevskiy pr 105. to the Hermitage” Sleep Cheap
Tell 327 3416. Kazanskaya ul 11.
City Realty Faxx 327 3417. Mokhovaya ul 18,
Map 6 E2. Apartment 32. Map 3 A5.
Bolshaya Morskaya ul 35. www.ostwest.com
Tell 325 6536. Tell 715 1304.
Map 5 B2.
Sindbad Faxx 325 7237. Faxx 273 5709.
Tell 312 7842. 2-ya Sovetskaya ulitsa 12. www.discount-travel- www.sleepcheap.spb.ru
Fax
x 710 6457. Map 7 C2. Tell 332 2020. petersburg.ru
www.cityrealtyrussia.com
Useful Website
Hostel All Seasons www.russia-hostelling.ru
MINI-HOTEL
Eridan Travel Yakovlevskiy per 11.
NETWORKS
Company Tell 327 1070. CAMPING
Anabel Faxx 327 1033.
Ul Artilleriyskaya 1, Retur Camping
Tell 717 0800. www.hostel.ru
Business Centre Europa Bolshaya Kupalnaya str. 28,
Faxx 717 0255.
House, Office 619. Nord Hostel Sestroretsk.
www.mini-hotel.com
Bolshaya Morskaya ul 10. 26 km (16 miles)
Map 3 B5.
Filippov Hotels Map 6 D1. NW of St Petersburg.
Tell 324 23 05. Tell 571 0342.
Tell 274 5363. Tell 434 5022.
Fax
x 322 57 38. Faxx 274 9084. Faxx 312 7302. Faxx 437 7533
www.rus-tours.com www.filippovhotel.ru www.nordhostel.com www.retur.ru
172 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
Prestige Hotel
This hotell (see p174) is tucked
away on a small residential street.
Stay here and feel like a local,
but with all modern comforts.
Rennaisance
St Petersburg Baltic
Central and prestigious,
yet set apart from the
hurly-burly of Nevskiy
prospekt, the Baltic feels
like a small hotel while
offering “big” hotel
servicee (see p175).
Sovetskaya
This 1970s hotell (see p176) offers wond
views of the city centre from its bar. At
sunset or during White Nights the vista is
particularly magical.
Astoria Ho
One of the city
and centrally loca
Astoria (see p174) is
exploring St Petersburg o
The attractive building overloo
St Isaac’s Square and Cathedral.
St Petersburg
The package-holiday tourists who usual-l
ly stay here get a wonderful, sweeping
view across the broad expanse of the
ver Neva, towards Palace Embank-
from the bel-étagee (see p177).
Europe
heart of the city, this historic
5) is one of the finest in
Elegant decor and refined
omplemented by many facilities.
Hotel Dostoevsky
Located just a stone’s
throw from the
tourist heart of
St Petersburg, the
Dostoevskyy (see p176)
combines old and
new, historical and
modern, in both its
design and its service.
Pulkovskaya
able and clean, this
dern hotell (see p176)
any business facilities,
luding an auditorium.
e hotel’s main advantage
its proximity to the airport.
0 kilometres 2
0 miles 2
174 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
CITY CENTRE
GOSTINYY DVOR Grand Hotel Europe Гранд отель Европа e0:÷zå \\\\\
FURTHER AFIELD
EAST OF THE FONTANKA Fifth Corner Business Hotel Пятый угол 0zå \\\
y Советская
SOUTH OF THE CENTRE Sovetskaya e0:zå \\
y Пулковская
SOUTH OF THE CENTRE Pulkovskaya у e0zå \\\
Key to Price Guide see p174 Key to Symbols see back cover flap
W H E R E T O S T AY 177
y Прибалтийская
WEST OF THE CENTRE Pribaltiyskaya
y р e0zå \\\
g Санкт-Петербург
NORTH OF THE NEVA St Petersburg р ур e0å \\
Pirogovskaya
g y naberezhnaya
y 5/2 Tell 380 1919 Fax
x 380 1920 Rooms 410 Map 3 A2
A modern package-tour hotel, in a central location, but a little cut off from public transport. Its main attraction lies in the
stunning views that can be had from rooms along the south side and the breakfast room on the bel-étage. In summer,
however, when the sun hardly sets, guests may wish to trade the views for the restful dark. www.hotel-spb.ru
BEYOND ST PETERSBURG
RUSSIAN COUNTRYSIDE
Kulebiaka Rich, buttery puff Pelmeni These meat-stuffed Kissel A mix of red berries is
pastry is wrapped around a dumplings may be served in used to make this soft, fruity
mix of fish, hard-boiled eggs, a clear broth, or with tomato jelly, which is served topped
rice, onion and chopped dill. sauce or soured cream. with a swirl of fresh cream.
182 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
CLEAR VODKA
FLAVOURED VODKA
Moldova Georgia
Ukraine Armenia
Azerbaijan
International boundaries
WINE
VASILEVSKIY
S S ISLAND
S
Chintamani ¤:©, \
Czardas :f © \\
PETROGRADSKAYA
OG S
Demyanova Ukha :f \
Tbiliso Тбилисо :f \\
Volna Волна :˚ \\
Austeria Аустерия
у р : \\\
6th floor, City Centre Business Centre, Petrogradskaya naberezhnaya 18 Tell 332 0200 Map 2 F2
This self-styled “panoramic restaurant” offers great views from its upper platform. Tucked away at the top of a business
centre, art rubs shoulders with money here in yet another professionally designed, minimalist interior. Popular for
creative events, product launches and exhibitions, Moskva also hosts big-name performers occasionally at weekends.
Aquarel Акварель
р :˚f \\\\\
Terrace Террас
рр : \\\\\
Flying Dutchman, Mytninskaya naberezhnaya, Birzhevoy most Tell 336 3737 Map 1 C4
On board the frigate Flying Dutchman, this modern restaurant boasts a fireplace and broad views across the Neva to
the Winter Palace. European and Latin American dishes are on the menu; there are sushi and salad bars, and a
selection of elegant pastries. A nanny is available, and you can halve your bill by dining in the Zebra Bar.
PALACE EMBANKMENT
Da Albertone 7:, \
1913 7:f˚©, \\
Gastronom Гастроном :© \\
Krokodil Крокодил
р :©, \\
Spoon :˚© \\
Vienna :˙f \\
g Эрмитажный
Hermitage р :˚© \\\
Under the arch of the General Staff Building, Palace Square Tell 314 4772 Map 6 D1
On the ground floor of the General Staff Building, a wing of the Hermitage Museum, this eaterie divides customers
into VIPs (who get the tables with views), “general” and tourists. Food is average Euro-Russian fare, though attractively
served, but nobody who loves the museum, and that includes some very famous people, can resist eating here.
Key to Price Guide see p184 Key to Symbols see back cover flap
R E S T A U R A N T S A N D C A F E S 187
GOSTINYY DVOR
Fasol Фасоль : \
La Strada :© \
Sukawati :f©, \
Kalinka-Malinka Калинка-Малинка :f \\
Grand Hotel Europe, Mikhaylovskaya ulitsa 1/7 Tell 329 6651 Map 6 F1
Open in the evenings only, this bar-restaurant has the most elegant and varied ways of serving caviar and fish in
town. Try caviar in quail’s egg, salmon marinaded in vodka, or one of the monthly special Russian regional dishes.
The interior is tiny with a small fountain, rather like a grotto in an 18th-century park.
L’Europe Европа
р 7:f˙˚©, \\\\
Grand Hotel Europe, Mikhaylovskaya ulitsa 1/7 Tell 329 6630 Map 6 F1
This cavernous, Art-Nouveau (Style-Moderne) hall with stained-glass ceiling is not a re-creation of St Petersburg’s glorious
past, but the real thing, beautifully restored. The food is first-class European – lobster soup, steak tartare – but there
are regular special events and celebrations of Russian cuisine. Sunday brunch attracts many Russian and ex-pat locals.
g Санкт-Петербург
St Petersburg р ур 7:f© \\\\\
SENNAYA PLOSHCHAD
Olimpos Олимпос :© \
Caravan Караван
р :© \\
Key to Price Guide see p184 Key to Symbols see back cover flap
R E S T A U R A N T S A N D C A F E S 189
FURTHER AFIELD
WEST OF THE CENTRE Karl & Friedrich Карл и Фридрих :f, \\\
Key to Price Guide see p184 Key to Symbols see back cover flap
R E S T A U R A N T S A N D C A F E S 191
BEYOND ST PETERSBURG
NOVGOROD Detinets :f \
Sankt-Peterburgskoe shosse 111, between Strelna and Petrodvorets Tell 331 9999
Set in a stylized Russian tower at the heart of the Shuvalovka Russian Village (a sort of Russian Disneyland on the
road to Peterhof), Sobranie is a good place to try traditional Russian rural dishes and listen to folk songs – even for
those who have not been sliding down snowhills and riding in a troika in the Village.
192 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
Despite their plastic chairs and metal tables, Russian All bars serve a good range of
and ethnic cafés often serve very tasty food – from food. In addition to the
simple sandwiches to hefty meat dishes. Look out for standard English and Irish
the word кфfe (café) and try one. Cautious travellers pubs, where food is unadven-
can experiment in one of the restaurants listed turous and the clientele is
composed mostly of ex-pats,
opposite, which frequently offer moderately priced there are now a number of
meals between noon and 4pm. A number of bars and Russian “pubs”, such as
“art cafés” with live music (see p205) also have Pivnaya 0.5, that offer a range
excellent kitchens. (In the evening these may be filled of excellent local beers. Argus
with people and noise, but at lunchtime they are and Tinkoff make their own
calmer.) During the summer many cafés add tables beer on the premises.
outside – which is great for people-watching. In colder One of the joys of summer
weather, the ground-floor cafés of the Moika or Radisson is to drink beer sitting on one
of the pontoons that appear
SAS hotels, Jili-bili or Il Patio are almost as good. with the warm weather on
the canals and rivers,
RUSSIAN FAST FOOD, PIZZA AND particularly around Nevskiy
PASTA prospekt. Whilst such places
Traditional Russian dishes such do not usually offer food,
as borshch and dranikii (potato The first Russian fast food was they do allow customers to
pancakes) are widely offered. an open sandwich with cheese linger and watch the sunset
Pelmenii (dumplings filled with or salami, or pirozhkii (small on the water.
meat, potatoes or mushrooms) buns) filled with rice, cabbage
and varenikii (dumplings filled or something sweet like apple. SUSHI
with fruit) are in a class of their The best pirozhkii come from
own. Specialist pelmeni Stolle. A slightly cheaper An enduring craze for sushi
establishments are truly “local”, version is available from the bars – which tend to be
with no flashy decor or tourists. Bulochnaya on Bolshaya quite good – means that there
Try the Pelmeni Bar behind Konyushennaya ulitsa. Always are plenty of good alterna-
the Peter and Paul Fortress. avoid fried pirozhkii with meat. tives for quick, healthy
Russian blinyy and blinchiki Never buy them on the street. lunches in St Petersburg.
(flat pancakes) come in both In addition to the well- Menus are easy to understand
sweet and savoury varieties at known fast-food chains, local because they include pictures
the outstandingly cheap options include the 24-hour of each dish. Try Dve Palochki
Russkie Bliny U Natashi. Layma and U Tyoshi Na or Planet Sushi.
Some places listed are quite Blinakh, where customers
plain, notable mainly for their choose by pointing. Teremok EATING OUT ON DAY
location. Priboy is behind the specializes in pancakes. TRIPS
Hermitage (see pp84–93), Est Green Crest salad bar and the
is next to the Mariinskiy Troitskiy Most chain are good More effort is required when
Theatre, Café de Clie is next vegetarian options. Pizza and seeking a place for a modest
to the Peter and Paul Fortress. pasta houses are popular. (Il lunch outside the city.
The Stroganoff Yard is in the Patio caters for children.) Pavlovsk (see pp158–61) and
(heated) courtyard of the Peterhoff (see pp148–51) have
Stroganov Palace (see p112). PASTRIES AND SWEETS reasonable cafés in the
Near St Isaac’s Square (see p79) palaces, although space is
is Idiot, a vegetarian café Russians are sweet-toothed, limited in summer. Peterhof’s
popular with ex-pats. Luna is and in private homes tea tiny Trapeza is always a
cheap, cheerful and crowded. is never offered without favourite. At Tsarskoe Selo
U Kamina is known for its cosy biscuits or cakes. Ice cream – (see pp152–5), there are
fire and generous portions. best bought from one of the several cafés along and
many street sellers – is around Oranzhereynaya
ETHNIC FOOD enjoyed all year round. ulitsa, leading off the park.
Sladkoezhka sells an amazing Gatchina Palace (see p147)
Georgian and Armenian foods range of fresh cream desserts has cafés in the grounds and
are popular in St Petersburg. and pastries, and is probably even Oranienbaum (see p146)
The Kavkaz-Bar restaurant (see the city’s favourite spot for a has a tiny café, too. In
p188) and Magrib have small hit of sugar. Coffee shops, general, however, the best
café sections, and many other such as Albina and the option is to take a picnic to
small cafés offer Caucasian Idealnaya Chashka chain, also Gatchina or Oranienbaum.
dishes. Filling Uzbek food is offer a variety of cheesecakes (Delicious take-away pies can
on offer at Asia, a tiny, and cakes. At Stirka 40° be bought from Stolle.) In
bustling and cheap café in the customers drink tea while Novgorod (see pp162–5), the
heart of the residential and doing their washing (it Golden Ladle serves many
consulate area. doubles as a launderette). kinds of beer and snacks.
É S 193
DIRECTORY
RUSSIAN Russkie Bliny U Teremok (pancakes) PUBS AND BARS
Natashi (pancakes) Tеремок
Café de Clie Pусские блины у Hаташи Nevskiy prospekt 60. Argus
Kronverkskiy prospekt 27. 5-ya Sovetskaya ulitsa 24. Map 7 A2. Tell 314 2701. Apгyc
Map 2 D2. Map 7 C1. Tell 271 5958. Bolshaya Konyushennaya
Tell 232 3606. Troitskiy Most ulitsa 15.
Soiree Tроицкий мост
Map 6 E1.
Chaynaya Khizhina Суаре Kronverkskiy prospekt 35.
Чaйная xижина Tell 717 0154.
Ulitsa Zhukovskovo 28. Map 2 D2. Tell 326 8221.
Bolshaya Konyushennaya Map 7 B1. Tell 272 3512. 6-ya liniya 27, Pivnaya 0.5
ulitsa 19 (entrance from Vasilevskiy ostrov. Пивнaя 0.5
Volynskiy pereulok). The Stroganoff Map 1 A5. Tell 327 4622. 44/2 Zagorodnyy prospekt.
Map 6 E1. Yard
U Tyoshi Na Blinakh Map 6 E4.
Tell 314 9786. Строгановский лвор
(pancakes) Tell 315 1038.
Nevskiy prospekt 17.
Est Map 6 E1. Tell 315 2315. У тёши на блинах Tinkoff
Естъ Ligovskiy prospekt 29.
U Kameni Tинкофф
Ulitsa Glinki 5. Map 7 C2. Tell 275 9782.
У Камина Kazanskaya ulitsa 7.
Map 5 B3.
Malyy prospekt 68, Map 6 E2.
Tell 315 4962. COFFEE, PASTRIES
Petrogradskaya Storona. Tell 718 5566.
Idiot AND SWEETS
Map 1 C1. Tell 235 0458.
Плиoт Albina SUSHI
Naberezhnaya reki ETHNIC FOOD Aльбинa
Moyki 82. Ulitsa Vosstaniya 10.
Dve Palochki
Map 5 C2. Asia Map 7 B1. Две пaлoчки
Tell 315 1675. Aзия Tell 273 7459. Ulitsa Vosstaniya 15.
Ulitsa Ryleeva 23. Map 7 C1.
Jili-bili Denisov-Nikolaev
Map 3 B5. Tell 272 0168. Tell 449 6464.
Жили-были Confectionery
Nevskiy prospekt 52. Magrib Лениeoв и Hикoлaeв Eurasia
Map 6 F1. Maгpиб Naberezhnaya kanala Eврaзия
Tell 314 6230. Nevskiy prospeckt 84. Griboedova 77. Nevskiy prospekt 3.
Lidval Map 7 B2. Tell 275 7620. Map 6 D3. Map 6 D1.
Лидваль Tell 571 9495. Tell 571 8286.
FAST FOOD, PIZZA
Ulitsa Vosstaniya 15. Idealnaya Chashka Planet Sushi
AND PASTA
Map 7 C1. Идeaльная чaшкa Плaнетa Cуши
Tell 579 1251. Bulochnaya Nevskiy prospekt 112. Nevskiy prospekt 94.
Luna Булoчнaя Map 7 B2. Tell 275 7140. Map 7 B2.
Луна Bolshaya Konyushennaya Vladimirskiy prospekt 1. Tell 273 3558.
Bolshaya Konyushennaya ulitsa 15. Map 2 E5. Map 7 A2. Tell 310 3735.
ulitsa 7. Map 2 E5. Nevskiy prospekt 66. Kamennoostrovskiy DAY TRIPS
Tell 312 4260. Map 7 A2. Tell 314 8559. prospekt 2.
Map 2 E2. Tell 233 4953. Bashnya
Pel I Men (pelmeni) Green Crest Бaшня
Пель и мень Гpин Креcт Lavka Smirdina
Sankt-Peterburgskiy
Ulitsa Mokhovaya 45. Vladimirskiy prospekt 7. Лaвкa Cмирлинa
Nevskiy prospekt 22. prospekt 46, Petrodvorets
Map 7 A1. Map 7 A2. Tell 713 1380.
Map 6 E1. (Peterhof).
Tell 327 1350. Il Patio Tell 315 9017. Tell 427 7878.
Pelmeni Nevskiy prospekt 30.
Sladkoezhka Delvig
Пельмени Map 6 E1. Tell 380 9183.
Слaдoeжкa Дельвиг
Ulitsa Vosstaniya 12 (entry Nevskiy prospekt 182.
Marata ulitsa 2. Oranzhereynaya ulitsa 20,
from ulitsa Zhukovskogo). Map 8 E3. Tell 271 3177.
Map 7 B2. Tsarkoe Selo.
Map 7 B1.
Layma Tell 571 1420. Tell 466 2958.
Tell 272 8302.
Лaимa Sadovaya ulitsa 60.
Pelmeni Bar Naberezhnaya kanala Golden Ladle
Map 5 C4.
Пельмени-бap Griboedova 16. Map 6 E1. Зoлoтoй Кoвш
Tell 310 8144.
Kronverkskiy prospekt 53a Tell 315 5545. Malaya morskaya ulitsa 9. Novo-Luchanskaya ulitsa
(entry from ulitsa Markina). Map 6 D1. 14, Novgorod.
Stolle Tell (8162) 73 05 99.
Map 1 C3. Tell 238 0977. Tell 312 9771.
Штoллe
Priboy Ulitsa Dekabristov 19. Stirka 40° Trapeza
Прибoй Map 5 C3. Стирка 40° Tpaпезa
Naberezhnaya reki Tell 714 2571. Kazanskaya ulitsa 26. Kalininskaya ulitsa 9,
Moyki 19. Map 2 E5. Konyushennyy pereulok 1/6. Map 6 D2. Petrodvorets (Peterhof).
Tell 315 0438. Map 2 E5. Tell 312 1862. Tell 314 5371. Tell 427 9393.
194 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
A trip round St Petersburg’s shops so, Russian linen, the city’s celebrated
and markets provides an
insight into local life. Even
today, shopping in the city requires
flexibility and even a sense of
Krupsksaya chocolates, vodka,
caviar, and R
Russian crafts and toys
all make wonderful gifts. Larger
shops are concentrated around
adventure: you can never depend main streets such as Nevskiy and
on finding what you set out to Bolshoy prospekts, and metro
find, but may confidently expect stations, notably Sennaya Plos-
to end up buying something you chad and V Vasilievskiy Ostrov.
never guessed you needed. In Matryoshka doll However, most buildings are
recent years, imported goods have occupied by shops or restaurants at
pushed out many local products. Even ground level. Do venture in.
(see p214). More- BUYING ART AND
over, many stores ANTIQUES
now accept credit
cards. In some Under Russian law, all objects
shops, customers made before 1956, and all
are forced to objects made from valuable
peer at goods materials such as gold, silver,
stacked behind precious stones and fur, are
the counter. If subject to strict export
you would like a controls. Works of art,
closer look, just including contemporary
Ladies’ fashion at one of the numerous up-scale point to what you watercolours, also fall under
boutiques along Nevskiy prospekt want and say this ruling, likewise books
“mozhno” published before 1946.
OPENING HOURS (“may I?”). To pur- Be aware that,
chase something, although there are
Hours vary, but shops usually pay for it at the now green and
open from 10am until at least cash desk and red channels at
7pm, though “fashionable” then return to the airport
outlets may open later. A few, collect the item customs, and not
mainly cheap food shops, close from the counter. all suitcases are
for lunch. On Sundays depart- Shop assistants x-rayed, there are
ment stores remain open, as do will usually realise random checks.
other large shops. During the if you do not speak In practice,
summer, smaller places may Russian, and will customs officials
reduce their hours and close at write down the prices Second-hand may turn a blind eye
weekends. There are 24-hour for you to hand to the bookshop sign to prints and water-
food shops all over town. cashier. Defective colours without
goods can be returned frames, and unless a book is
HOW TO PAY provided they are accom- extremely rare you are likely
panied by a receipt. to be able to export it without
In some shops, prices may be authorization. In all other
expressed in “y.e.” or “condi- BARGAINING ETIQUETTE cases, strict rules are applied.
tional units”. One y.e. is Permission to export both
usually worth about one US If a set price is displayed at books and art objects can be
dollar or one Euro (check at markets, this indicates no obtained from a department
the shop for their exchange bargaining. In all other cases of the Ministry of Culture.
rate), but the customer must you can usually get some This process is relatively
still pay in roubles. Paying reduction if you speedy. The gallery from
in non-Russian currency haggle, especially which or the artist from
is a criminal offence. The since visitors
only place you might (and prosperous- EXPORT PERMISSIONS
be able to pay in looking Russians)
foreign currency is are likely to be Ministry of Culture
at a tourist market. quoted a higher Министерство культуры
There are numerous, price. Haggling
Ministerstvo kultury
reliable exchange in Russia, however,
offices and automatic is a serious matter, Malaya Morskaya Ulitsa 17.
teller machines so do not bother Map 6 D1. Tell 571 5196.
inside metro stations Russian box- unless you genuinely # Mon–Fri 11am–5pm.
and outside banks camera (1920s) intend to buy.
S H O P S A N D M A R K E T S 195
Malachite Amber
egg ring
Semi-precious Stones
Red Malachite, amber, jasper and
Clear caviar a variety of marbles from the
vodka Ural mountains are used to
Flavoured Black caviar make a wide range of items –
vodka Wooden Toy everything from jewellery and
These crudely carved chess sets to inlaid table tops.
wooden toys often
have moving parts.
They are known
as Bogorodskiye
toys and make
charming gifts.
Matryoshka Dolls
These dolls fit one inside the other and
come in a huge variety of styles. The
traditional dolls are the prettiest, but
those painted as Russian, Soviet and
world leaders are also very popular.
Chess Sets
Attractive chess sets made
from all kinds of beautiful
materials, including
malachite, are widely
available. This wooden chess
set is painted in the same style
as the matryoshka dolls.
S H O P S A N D M A R K E T S 197
Musical Instruments
Russian folk music uses a wide range of musical
instruments. This gusli is similar to the Western
psaltery and is played by plucking the strings
with both hands. Also available are the brightly
painted balalaika and the bayan (accordion).
Soviet Memorabilia
An eclectic array of
memorabilia from the
Soviet era is on sale. Gzhel Vase
Old banknotes, coins, Ceramics with a distinctive blue and white pattern
pocket watches are produced in Gzhel, an area near Moscow.
and Red Army Ranging from figurines to household crockery,
kits, including they are popular with Russians and visitors alike.
belt buckles,
badges and
other items of
uniform, can be
found along-
side watches
with cartoons
of KGB agents Pocket Badge with Red Army
on their faces. watch Soviet symbols leather belt
198 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
DIRECTORY
DEPARTMENT Sever Ars Magna Kailas
STORES Ceвep Kamennoostrovskiy Кaйлac
Nevskiy prospekt 104. prospekt 26/28, No. 45. Pushkinskaya ulitsa 10.
Gostinyy Dvor Map 7 B2. Tell 273 7436. Map 2 D1. Tell 232 4535. Map 7 B2. Tell 764 2668.
Гостиный двор
Nevskiy prospekt 35. Yeliseev’s Borey Na Liteynom
Map 6 F2. Елисеевский гастроном Борей Hа Литейном
Nevskiy prospekt 56. Liteynyy prospekt 58. (Books and antiques)
Passazh Map 6 F1. Tell 312 1865. Map 7 A1. Tell 273 3693. Liteynyy prospekt 61
Пассаж Map 7 A2. Tell 275 3874.
Nevskiy prospekt 48. SOUVENIRS AND Pushkinskaya 10
Map 6 F1. CRAFTS Пушкинcкaя 10 Severnaya Lira
(Galleries Kino-Fot-703, Северная лира
Vladimirskiy Imperial Porcelain New Academy of Fine Nevskiy prospekt 26.
Passazh Импеpaтoрский Arts, Nonconformists’ Map 6 E1. Tell 312 0796.
Владимирский пассаж фapфopoвый зaвoд Museum)
Vladimirskiy prospekt 19. Staraya Kniga
151 Obukhovskoy Ligovskiy prospekt 53.
Map 7 A3. Старая книга
oborony prospekt. Map 7 B3.
Nevskiy prospekt 3
Map . 8 F4. Tell 560 8544.
MARKETS Rapsodiya Map 6 D1. Tell 312 1620.
Vladimirskiy prospekt 7.
Pапсодия
Map 7 A2. Tell 713 1513. Writers’ Bookshop
Andreevskiy Bolshaya Konyushennaya
Nevskiy prospekt 160. Книжнaя
Market ulitsa 13 (in courtyard).
Map 8 D3. Tell 717 4838. Nevskiy prospekt 66.
Андреевский рынок Map 2 E5. Tell 314 4801.
Map 7 A2. Tell 314 4858.
Bolshoy prospekt 18,
SOVIET Russkaya Starina
Vasilevskiy Island. FURS AND
MEMORABILIA Pусскaя Cтарина
Map 5 A1. FASHION
Nevskiy prospekt 20.
Apraksin Dvor Commission Shop Map 6 E1. Tell 320 6622.
Кoмиccиoнный Ananov
Апраксин двор
1-ya Sovietskaya ulitsa 12 S.P.A.S. Анaнов
Sadovaya ulitsa.
(in courtyard). C. П.A.C. Nevskiy prospekt 31.
Map 6 E2. naberezhnaya reki
Map 7 C2. Tell 717 4932. Map 6 E1. Tell 314 1952.
Kuznechnyy Market Moyki 93.
D.V.K. (Dom Map 5 C2. Tell 571 4260.
Hat Shop
Кузнечный рынок
Voyennoy Knigi) Шляпнвый мaгaзин
Kuznechnyy pereulok 3. Tertia
Д.B. К. (Дом ulitsa Zhukovskovo 11.
Map 7 A3. Tepция
военной книги) Map 7 B1.
Souvenir Market Nevskiy prospekt 20. Italyanskaya ulitsa 5.
Map 6 E1. Tell 710 5568.
Lena
Рынок сувениров Map 6 E1. Tell 312 4936.
Лена
Naberezhnaya kanala Union of Artists
Sekunda Nevskiy prospekt 50.
Griboedova, by Church on Coюз xyдoжникoв
Секунда Map 6 F1. Tell 571 7169.
Spilled Blood. Map 2 E5. (Sovet memorabilia) Bolshaya Morskaya
ulitsa 38. Map 6 D2.
Paloma
Vernisazh Liteynyy prospekt 61
Пaлoмa
Вернисаж (in the yard).
BOOKS, FILM AND Bolshaya Konyushennaya
Nevskiy prospekt 32–4. Map 7 A2. Tell 275 7524.
MUSIC ulitsa 27.
Map 6 E1. Sobiratel Map 6 E1. Tell 314 7262.
Coвбиpaтeль Akademkniga Malaya Morskaya ulitsa 8.
FOOD AND DRINK Sadovaya ulitsa 135. Aкaдeмкнигa Map 6 D1. Tell 315 7912.
Chocolate Museum Map 6 F1. Tell 973 3727. Liteynyy prospekt 57.
Samotsvety
Myзeй шoкoлaдa Map 7 A1. Tell 272 3665.
ANTIQUES AND Самоцветы
Nevskiy prospekt 17. Anglia 7-ya liniya 40, Vasilevskiy Is.
ART
Map 6 E1. Tell 315 1348. Aнглия Map 1 A5.
Krupskaya Fabrika Anna Nova Naberezhnaya reki Tell 327 1956.
Кондитаeрская фабрика ulitsa Zhukovskovo 28. Fontanki 40.
Slavyanskiy Stil
Map 7 B1. Tell 275 9762. Map 7 A2. Tell 579 8284.
им. Н.К. Крупской Cлaвянcкий cтикль
Ulitsa Vosstaniya 15. Antikvariat Bookvoed Pushkinskaya ulitsa 3.
Map 7 C1. Aнтиквариат Бyквоед Map 7 B2.
Tell 346 5532. Malaya Morskaya ulitsa 21. Ligovskiy prospekt 10. Tell 764 5455.
Map 6 D1. Tell 571 2643. Map 7 C2. Tell 346 5327.
Liviz Tatyana Parfyonova
ЛИBИЗ Antique Centre Dom Knigi Татьяна Парфенова
ulitsa Zhukovskovo 27. Цeнтp aнтиквapнoй Дом книги модный дом
Map 7 B1. Tell 282 1969. тopгoвли Nevskiy prospekt 62. Nevskiy prospekt 51.
Liteynyy prospekt 12. 3-ya Sovetskaya ulitsa 36/5. Map 7 A2. Map 7 B2.
Map 3 A4. Tell 273 6755. Map 7 C2. Tell 327 8271. Tell 314 5888. Tell 713 3669.
200 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
ENTERTAINMENT IN ST PETERSBURG
S t Petersburg has an impressive in music, theatre and cinema. The St
and varied choice of entertain-
ment. Its ballet, opera, classical
music and theatre are among the
best in the world. In addition
Petersburg Philharmonia and the
Mariinskiy (Kirov) ballet and opera
(see p119) deserve their impressive
international reputations, though
to the high culture, a thriving this does mean that they are
and vibrant nightlife is made often away on tour.
up of numerous rock and jazz St Petersburg’s entertainment
clubs, bars, art cafés, discos, changes with the seasons. In
nightclubs and casinos. winter there are concerts and
Increasingly, international artists Folk dancer other traditional indoor events.
are adding St Petersburg to their Summer starts with the White
tours, and mainstream now exists Nights, followed by a mass of festivals
harmoniously alongside underground and outdoor events.
BUYING TICKETS
DIRECTORY
USEFUL ADDRESSES
Central Theatre Ticket
Office
Nevskiy pr 42. Map 6 F1.
Tell 380 8050.
www.bileter.ru (Russian only)
Ticket Kiosks
Hermitage foyer. Map 2 D5.
Pl Ostrovskovo. Map 6 F2.
Gostinyy dvor (corner of ul
Spectacular performance of the famous Sleeping Beauty
y ballet Lomonosova). Map 6 F2.
Gostinyy Dvor metro. Map 6 F1.
LATE-NIGHT TRANSPORT Shuvalovka, a reproduction
Russian village. Located INTERNET GUIDE
The metro closes its doors 30 km (19 miles) out of town, www.bileter.ru
soon after midnight and buses Shuvalovka is open throughout www.mariinsky.ru
run until 12:15 (infrequently the year and includes wooden www.spb.afisha.ru
after 11pm). There is no all- houses in 17th-century Russian www.spb.kassir.ru
night public transport, so style, a skating rink, ice slides, www.spb.timeout.ru
expect to take a taxi late at a working smithy and a
night. Avoid any taxis which museum of peasant life. Take CHILDREN’S
wait outside foreign hotels any minibus to Peterhof from ENTERTAINMENT
and bars as they charge Avtovo metro and ask the
extortionate prices (see p227). driver to stop at Shuvalovka. Circus
Цирк
CHILDREN’S FESTIVALS Tsirk
ENTERTAINMENT Nab reki Fontanki 3. Map 7 A1.
The several White Nights Tell 313 4260.
Many theatres put on plays festivals (see p51) draw some
in Russian especially for of the big names of pop and Dolphinarium
children. See the children’s classical music, and ticket Делфнapнй
section of Afisha or Time prices go up accordingly – as Delfinariy
Out. Unfortnately, few give do accommodation rates – Konstantinovskiy pr 19.
English-language perform- during this time. But there are Tell 235 46
631.
ances except at New Year. plenty of other worthwhile
No language problems occur seasonal festivals. The White Fairytale Puppet Theatre
at the Circus, however, or at Days (taking in Russian Kyкoльный тeapт cкaзки
the Dolphinarium on Christmas on 7 January, when Kukolnyy teatr skazki
Krestovskiy Island. the city is shrouded in snow) Moskovskiy pr 121. Map 6 D3.
Some of the best shows and and Shrovetide festivals place Tell 388 0031.
concerts for children are held the accent on Russian culture.
Large Puppet Theatre
at Zazerkalye, while the Numerous jazz festivals
puppet theatres usually have (look out for SKIF in April), Большой театр кукол
several productions based on the long-standing Early Music Bolshoy teatr kukol
well-known fairytales. Festival (Sep and Oct), along Ul Nekrasova 10. Map 7 B1.
For the “real” Russian winter with feature and documentary Tell 273 6672.
experience, try a troika
a (sleigh) cinema festivals ensure that Marionette Puppet
ride. These are offered at the city entertainment scene Theatre
Pavlosk (see pp158–61) and at thrives all year round. Театр марионеток
Teatr marionetok
THE RUSSIAN CIRCUS Nevskiy pr 52. Map 6 F1.
Circuses first appeared in Russia in the Tell 310 5879.
early 19th century, but it was not until Shuvalovka
1876–7 that Russia’s first permanent
Шyвaлoвкa
circus building was erected for Gaetano
Sankt-Peterburgskoe shosse
Ciniselli’s Italian circus. St Petersburg’s
111.
circus is still based at this historic site,
Tell 331 9999.
which was modernized in 1963, and
www.russian-village.ru/english.
continues to practise the traditional
htm
training, skills and animal acts which
have made the Russian circus famous Zazerkalye
throughout the world. Зазеркалье
Acrobatic performers, St Petersburg’s circus Ul Rubinshteyna 13. Map 7 A2.
202 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
For a city renowned worldwide for its rich tradition The music of an Orthodox
of ballet and classical music, it is not surprising that choir is one of the most
St Petersburg has a wide range of cultural events on evocative sounds in Russia.
offer. An evening at the Mariinskiy Theatre is a high- The best are heard on Saturday
evenings and Sunday mornings
light of any visit, but, unfortunately, the venue is at the Holy Trinity Cathedral in
currently being renovated. However, it is well worth Alexander Nevsky Monastery
venturing into the many other theatres, music halls (see p130)) and at the Cathedral
and churches to absorb the city’s cultural diversity. of the Transfiguration (see
Classical music is vastly popular and local orchestras p127). Services in the
are much in demand the world over. In addition, Cathedral of our Lady of Kazan
there are the evocative sounds of church choirs, the (see p111) are also of a high
lively ambience of folk cabarets, and numerous standard. More formal religious
music is performed in the
festivals ((see pp50–53) held to encourage young Smolnyy Cathedral (see p128).
musicians, composers, film-makers and dancers.
FOLK MUSIC
MARIINSKIY THEATRE OPERA
The tourist industry encour-
The Mariinskiy Theatre (see Tchaikovsky’s opera Eugene ages visits to concerts of
p119), the epitome of the Onegin and Mussorgsky’s Russian folk music and danc-
best in Russian ballet and Boris Godunovv remain ing, some of which are very
opera, is being renovated. stalwarts in any repertory. good. The best are found at
Not only is a new stage being Operas are performed Beloselskiy-Belozerskiy and
built next door to the old (usually in their original Nikolaevskiy Palace. Many
building, but the main language) at the Mussorgsky restaurants, such as St
building itself is closing for Opera and Ballet Theatre and Petersburg (see p188), have
repairs for several months. At at the Mariinskiy. Look out a folk cabaret, though these
the time of writing the closing for local stars Anna Netrebko can be kitsch and loud.
and re-opening dates have yet and Olga Borodina, or the Podvorye restaurantt (see p191
1)
to be to determined, but the tenor Vladimir Galuzin. Less in Pavlovsk, however, has an
orchestra, and opera and ballet common works, including excellent, small ensemble.
troupes will continue to 18th-century chamber operas,
perform on other Petersburg are performed by St Peters- STREET MUSIC
stages. Check the website, and burg Opera on their own
keep an eye on the listings. stage, and at the Hermitage Democracy had the unex-
and tiny Yusupov Theatres. pected effect of allowing many
BALLET Look out for sparkling informal activities such as
productions at the children’s busking, which brought some
Some of the best dancers in theatre Zazerkalye (see p201). highly talented musicians onto
the world come from the the streets. Today, as skilled
Mariinskiy (see p119). Tickets CLASSICAL MUSIC players stake their pitches, the
for performances by leading sound of music fills the city’s
ballerinas Ulyana Lopatkina The city’s classical repertoire streets. The two underpasses
and Diana Vishneva are hard is huge. Tchaikovsky, beneath Nevskiy prospekt by
to come by. One of the high- Shostakovich, Mussorgsky and Gostinyy Dvor are busy
lights of the year is the Rimsky-Korsakov lived in busking spots, while other
Christmas performance of St Petersburg and their music metro stations are popular
The NNutcracker, danced by is performed here frequently. sites for old ladies singing
children from the Vaganova
V The Great Hall of the Russian ballads of love.
Ballet School (see p110). Philharmonia (see p98), the
Ballet at the Mussorgsky Small Hall of the Philharmonia THEATRE
Opera and Ballet Theatre and (see p48)) and the Academic
the Conservatory Opera and Capella (see p112)) are historic All performances are in
Ballet Theatre (see p120) are venues for classical concerts. Russian. For non-Russian
of more varied quality but still The former is the home of the speakers, productions of
provide good entertainment. St Petersburg Philharmonic classic plays such as The
In summer, many troupes Orchestra. Other historic Cherry Orchard d may be
perform for tourists in various locations used for concerts interesting to experience, but
theatres, but with inconsistent include the Hermitage (see p84)4, more obscure works can
levels of skill. Boris Eifmann’s and the palaces of Tsarskoe
T prove difficult.
modern ballet company and Selo (see p150)) and Sheremetev Since the days of the Soviet
Valery Mikhaylovskiy’s all-male
V (see p129). Events are adver- Union, the leading light in the
Muzhskoy Ballet are popular tised specially. By contrast, drama world has been the
with locals, and play at venues Dom Kochnevoy y is an intimate Bolshoy Drama Theatre
like the October Concert Hall. space for chamber music. (BDT). The Alexandriinskiy
E N T E R T A I N M E N T I N S T P E T E R S B U R G 203
DIRECTORY
TICKETS St Petersburg Opera Cathedral of the Bolshoy Drama
Tickets are sold in city Сaнкт-Петepбypг oпepa Transfiguration Theatre (BDT)
kiosks and at individual Sankt-Petersburg opera Спасо-Преображенский Большой
theatres unless stated Galernaya ul 33. собор драматический театр
Map 5 B2. Tell 312 3982. Spaso-Preobrazhenskiy Bolshoy dramaticheskiy
otherwise.
sobor teatr
Yusupov Theatre
BALLET AND Preobrazhenskaya pl 1. Nab reki Fontanki 65.
Юсуповский театр
Map 3 B5. Map 6 F2.
OPERA Yusupovskiy teatr
10am & 6pm daily. Tell 310 9242.
Yusupov Palace, nab reki
Conservatory Opera Holy Trinity
Moyki 94. Map 5 B3. Malyy Drama
and Ballet Theatre Tell 314 9883, 314 8893. Cathedral
Tеатр oпepы и бaлетa
Theatre (MDT)
Свято-Тройцкий собор
МЛT – Teaтp Eвpoлы
Koнcepвaтopии CLASSICAL MUSIC Svyato-Troitskiy sobor
MDT – Teatr Evropy
Teatr opery baleta Alexander Nevsky
Academic Capella Ul Rubinshteyna 18.
Konservatorii Monastery, pl Aleksandra-
Академическая Капелла Map 7 A2.
Teatralnaya pl 3. Nevskovo.
Akademicheskaya Kapella Tell 713 2078.
Map 5 C3. Tell 312 2519. Map 8 E4.
Nab reki Moyki 20. 10am & 6pm daily. Molodyozhnyy
Hermitage Theatre Map 2 E5.
Эрмитажный театр Smolnyy Cathedral Theatre
Tell 314 1058, 314 1034. Молодёжный театр нa
Ermitazhnyy teatr Смольный собор
Dom Kochnevoy Smolnyy sobor фoнтaнкe
Dvortsovaya nab 34.
Лoм Кoчневoй Ploshchad Rastrelli 3. Molodyozhnyy teatr na
Map 2 E5. Tell 571 5059.
Nab reki Fontanki 41. Map 4 F4. Fontanke
(Tickets from city kiosks and
Map 6 F2. Tell 577 1421. Nab reki Fontanki 114.
hotels only.)
Tell 310 2987. Map 6 D4.
Mariinskiy Theatre FOLK MUSIC Tell 316 6564.
Мариинский театр
Great Hall of the
Philharmonia Beloselskiy- CINEMA
Mariinskiy teatr
Большой зал Belozerskiy Palace
Teatralnaya pl 1.
филармонии Дворец Белосельских- Aurora Cinema
Map 5 B3.
Bolshoy zal Filarmonii Белозерских Аврора
Tell 714 1211, 326 4141.
Mikhaylovskaya ul 2. Dvorets Beloselskikh- Nevskiy pr 60.
¢ intermittently for repair.
Map 6 F1. Belozerskikh Map 7 A2.
www.mariinsky.ru
Tell 710 4257. Nevskiy pr 41. Tell 315 5254.
Mussorgsky Opera Small Hall of the Map 7 A2.
and Ballet Theatre Crystal Palace
Philharmonia Tell 315 5236.
Кристаль–Палас
Театр оперы и балета Малый зал филармонии Nikolaevskiy Palace Kristal-Palace
имени Мусоргского Malyy zal Filarmonii Николаевский дворец Nevskiy pr 72.
Teatr opery i baleta imeni Nevskiy pr 30. Nikolaevskiy dvorets Map 7 A2.
Musorgskovo Map 6 F1. Pl Truda 4. Tell 272 2382.
Pl Iskusstv 1. Tell 571 8333, 312 4582. Map 5 B2.
Map 6 E1. Tell 312 5500. Dom Kino
Tell 595 4284, 571 9025. CHURCH MUSIC Дом Кино
¢ late Jul–Aug. THEATRE Ul Karavannaya 12.
www.mussorgsky.narod.ru Cathedral of Our Map 7 A1.
Lady of Kazan Alexandriinskiy Tell 314 0638.
October Concert Hall Собор Казанский Theatre
Большой концертный Богоматери Александриинский Mirage
эал Октябрьский Sobor Kazanskoy театр Mиpaк
Bolshoy kontsertnyy zal Bogomateri Aleksandriinskiy teatr Bolshoy pr 35,
Oktyabrskiy Kazanskaya ploshchad 2. Ploshchad Ostrovskovo 2. Petrogradskaya.
Ligovskiy pr 6. Map 6 E1. Map 6 F2. Map 1 C2.
Map 7 C1. Tell 275 1273. 9am & 7:30pm daily. Tell 710 4103. Tell 238 0563.
204 T R AV E L L E R S ’ N E E D S
DIRECTORY
ART AND CAFE Red Club Tsinik GAY CLUBS
CLUBS Poltavskaya ul 7. Циник
Map 7 C3. Per Antonenko 4. Cabaret (A.K.A.
Che Tell 717 1366. Map 6 D2.
Matrosskaya
Poltavskaya ul 3. www.clubred.ru
Tishina)
Tell 312 9526.
Map 8 D3. Kaбaре
www.cinic.spb.ru
Tell 277 7600.
Yubileynyy Dvorets Nab Obvodnogo kanala
Sporta 181.
# 24 hours. NIGHTCLUBS AND
Двoрец cпopтa Tell 259 9512.
www.cafeclubche.ru DISCOS
фбилейный
Greshniki
Fish Fabrique Pr Dobrolyubova 18. Griboedov Грешники
Ligovskiy pr 53. Map 1 B3. Грибоедов Nab kanala Griboedova 29.
Map 7 B3. Tell 119 5615. Voronezhskaya ul 2A. Map 6 E2.
Tell 764 4857. Map 7 B4. Tell 570 4291.
# 3pm–6am daily. JAZZ VENUES Tell 764 4355. www.greshniki.ru
www.fishfabrique.spb.ru Jazz Philharmonic # 6pm–6am Wed–Mon.
TriEl
Hall www.griboedovclub.ru
GEZ-21 5-ya Sovetskaya ul 45.
ГЕЗ-21 филармоник лжазoвoй Havana Club Map 8 D2.
Ligovskiy pr 53. мyзыкн Moskovskiy pr 21. Tell 710 2016.
Zagorodnyy prospekt 27. Map 6 D5. www.triel.spb.ru
Map 7 B3.
# 8–11pm Tue–Sun. Tell 259 1155.
Tell 764 5263.
# 5pm–6am daily. CASINOS
www.tac.spb.ru JFC
Shpalernaya ulitsa 33. www.havanaclub.ru
Platforma Astoria
Map 3 C4. Jakata Кaзинo-кдyб астория
Плaтфopмa
Tell 272 9850. Ul Bakunina 5. Malaya Morskaya ul 22.
Ul Nekrasova 40.
# 7–11pm daily. Map 8 D2. Map 6 D1.
Map 7 C1. www.jfc.sp.ru Tell 346 7462. Tell 313 5020.
Tell 314 1104. # 24 hours daily.
# 24 hours daily. Jimi Hendrix Blues Metro
www.platformaclub.ru Club Метро Golden Garden
Дкиммн Xeндpикc Ligovskiy pr 174. Vladimirskiy pr 9.
ROCK VENUES бдюз-кдyб Tell 766 0204. Map 7 A2.
Liteynyy prospekt 33. Tell 572 2244.
# 10pm–6am daily.
Arctica Map 3 A5. # 24 hours daily.
www.metroclub.ru
Apктикa Tell 579 8813. Olympia
Ul Beringa 38. # 11am–1am daily. Port
Кaзинo-клуб Олимпия
Tell 715 4838. Concerts 8:30pm. Порт
Liteynyy pr 14.
Per Antonenko 2 (in yard).
Street Life Map 7 A1.
Ledovyy Dvorets Map 6 D2.
2-ya Krasnoarmeyskaya Tell 275 5060.
Педoвый дврец Tell 314 2609.
Ul 6. # 24 hours daily.
Pr Pyatiletok 1. # 3pm–6am daily.
Tell 716 6620. Map 6 D5. Premier
Tell 575 0545. Prosvet Премьер
Money Honey / www.street-life.spb.ru Пpocвет Nevskiy prospekt 47.
City Club Ul Bryantseva 11. Map 7 A2. Tell 703 5370.
Apraksin dvor block 13, BARS WITH MUSIC Tell 594 5000. # 24 hours daily.
Sadovaya ul 28–30.
Datscha Revolution
Map 6 E2. Ul Sadovaya 28/30.
Дaчa
Tell 310 0549. Map 6 E2.
Dumskaya ul 9.
Oktyabrskiy Map 6 E2. Tell 717 5915, 571 2391.
Bolshoy # 6pm–6am daily. # 1pm–6am daily.
Kontsertnyy Zal Liverpool Tribunal
БКЗ Oктябpьcкни Ливерпуль Pl Dekabristov 1.
Ligovskiy prospekt 6. Ul Mayakovskovo 16. Map 5 C1.
Map 7 C1. Map 7 B1. Tell 311 1690.
Tell 275 1300. Tell 279 2054. # noon–6am daily.
PRACTICAL INFORMATION
T he street signs and maps of as foreign exchange offices, are often
St Petersburg are not as
difficult to negotiate as it
may first appear when con-
fronted with daunting Cyrillic
concentrated in hotels and other
areas frequented by foreigners.
Once out on the street, things
will seem unfamiliar, but with
letters. Not only do hotels, restau- patience and determination
rants and all service sectors everything is possible, from
attempt to compensate by being Logo off the h Neva making international telephone
helpful to foreigners, but in Travel Company p y calls and exchanging money to
recent times the city has started putting finding emergency medical treatment.
up English signs pointing out major Telecommunications are rapidly gain-
sights and shops. Conventional tourist ing ground and, as quality improves,
offices do not exist in the city and infor- prices come closer to, and occasionally
mation points, along with services such outstrip, Western equivalents.
REGISTRATION
DIRECTORY
TOURIST VISA FORMALITIES EMBASSIES AND US
INFORMATION AND IN UK AND US CONSULATES Furshtatskaya ul.15.
GUIDED TOURS Panorama Travel Ltd
Map 3 B4. Tell 331 2600.
Australia Fax
x 531 2852.
156 Fifth Ave, Suite 1019,
Baltic Airlines Moscow, Podkolokolny
New York, NY 10010. DISABLED TRAVEL
Baltiyskie avialinii pereulok 10/A2.
T l (212) 741 0033.
Tel
Nevskiy pr 7/9. Map 6 D1. T l (495) 956 6070.
Tel RADAR
Tell 104 1676. Progressive Tours
www.australianembassy.ru Unit 12, City Forum, 250
www.balticairlines.ru 12 Porchester Place,
City Road, London EC1V
London W2 2BS. Canada
Cosmos 8AF. Tell (020) 7250 3222.
Tell (020) 7262 1676. Malodetskoselskiy pr 32.
Vasilevskiy Island, 2-ya Soc. for Advance-
Map 6 E5. Tell 325 8448.
Liniya 35. Map 1 A5. VISA FORMALITIES ment of Travel for
T l 327 7256.
Tel IN RUSSIA Ireland the Handicapped
www.guide.spb.ru Moscow, Grokholskiy per 5. 347 Fifth Ave, Suite 610,
OVIR
Tell (095) 742 0907. New York, NY 10016.
MIR Travel Company Овир Tell (212) 447 7284.
Nevskiy pr 11. Map 6 D1. (Tsentralnyy district) New Zealand
Tell 325 7122. Foreign department, Moscow, Povorskaya ul 44. STUDENT TRAVEL
www.mirtc.ru Pereulok Krylova 5.
Tell (095) 956 3579.
Map 6 F2. Tell 315 7936. St Petersburg Int.
Neva Travel Company # 10am–6pm Mon–Fri. UK Youth Hostel
Ul Prof Popova 28. (Central) Ul Kirochnaya 4. Pl Proletarskoy Diktatury 5. 3-ya Sovetskaya ul 28.
T l 234 0082.
Tel Map 3 B5. Tell 278 3486. Map 4 E4. Tell 320 3239. Map 7 C2. Tell 329 8018.
www.nevatravel.ru www.visatorussia.com www.britain.spb.ru www.ryh.ru
212 S U R V I VA L G U I D E
Several kinds of If you fall ill, seek advice Mosquitoes (komari) are
police operate on at your hotel, which should rife between June and late
St Petersburg’s have its own doctor. Several September. Repellents are
streets. Their companies, notably the available locally but to avoid
uniforms International Clinic and missing any sleep it is best to
change Euromed, specialize in come well equipped. Burning
according to dealing with foreigners. They oils or plugs which heat
the weather, cover everything from dental chemical tablets are recom-
with the very care, X-rays and pre-natal mended for use at night time.
neccessary care to medical evacuation.
addition of fur Their charges are fairly high, DIRECTORY
hats and big but they are used to dealing
overcoats in with foreign insurance poli- EMERGENCY SERVICES
the winter. cies. They all have English- Fire (pozhar)
The street speaking Russian doctors, and Tell 01.
officers or can deal competently with Police (militsiya)
militia minor emergencies.
Tell 02.
(militsya) For those in need of imme-
wear dark diate attention, the casualty Ambulance (skoraya pomoshch)
blue-grey department of the Trauma Tell 03.
combat- Clinic of the Central District is
Militsya policeman style just off Nevskiy prospekt. MEDICAL SERVICES
uniforms English is not spoken here, but
and many carry guns. Their basic care involving stitches or British-American Family
uniform is very similar to that injections can be administered. Practice
worn by the riot police or If you are taken to a local Grafskiy per 7. Map 7 A2.
OMON, the only obvious hospital and require further Tell 327 6030. # 24 hours.
difference being in the badges. treatment, it is best to contact www.british-americanclinic.com
Separate from both these either your consulate or one
are the traffic police, whose of the above medical centres. Clinic Complex
uniforms carry the logo ДПС They can either have you Ao Poliklinicheskiy compleks
(DPS) on the chest and moved or they can oversee Moskovskiy pr 22. Map 6 D5.
shoulder. They have the your treatment in the hospital. Tell 316 6272. # 24 hours.
authority to stop any vehicle A good dentist can be
to check documents. fiendishly expensive in Dental Palace
Both the militia and traffic St Petersburg. The medical Millionnaya ul 10. Map 2 E5.
police supplement their low clinics listed opposite are T l 314 1459 or 325 7500.
Tel
income by fining people for good and are covered by Euromed
minor infringements of the insurance paolicies. Others Suvorovskiy pr 60. Map 4 E4.
law, notably for crossing such as the Dental Palace are
Tell 327 0301. # 24 hours.
Nevskiy prospekt between also good, but costs will not
www.euromed.ru
signals. It is best to pay the be reimbursed.
moderate “fine” imposed – International Clinic
about 100 roubles – but HEALTH PRECAUTIONS Ul Dostoevskovo 19/21.
object if more is demanded. Map 7 A3.
Neither visitors nor residents Tell 336 3333. # 24 hours.
PHARMACIES should drink tap water, which
www.icspb.com
contains heavy metals and
The best pharmacies (apteka), giardia, a parasite causing Trauma Clinic of the
are located along Nevskiy stomach problems. To be safe Central District
prospekt. These sell many drink bottled water only. If Travmpunkt pri poliklinike n. 35
imported medicines, some you do pick up giardia, it can Malaya Konyushennaya ul 2.
with Russian instructions, be treated with metronidazole. Map 6 E1.
others in their original Russian food, on the other Tell 571 4396. # 24 hours.
language. Strong medications hand, is unlikely to do much
can be bought over the harm. AAvoid the meat pies PHARMACIES
counter, so prescriptions are sold on the streets.
not necessary. Every assistant On the rise are syphilis, HIV Nevskiy pr 83.
is a trained pharmacist and and other sexually transmitted Tell 277 6012.
can advise alternative drugs. diseases, so all due caution 24-Hour Pharmacy
If you have specific should be exercised. Nevskiy pr 22.
requirements,
Tell 314 5401 or 314 0859.
particularly insulin,
bring sufficient Zagorodnyy pr 21.
supplies for Tell 315 6112 / 9636 or 713 3541
your stay. Sign for pharmacy or apteka
214 S U R V I VA L G U I D E
Banknotes
There are 6 denominations of notes, with
values of 10, 50, 100, 500, 1,000 and
5,000 roubles. They have the same design
as their pre-revaluation equivalents.
When changing money check that the
notes correspond to those shown here.
10 roubles
50 roubles
100 roubles
500 roubles
Coins
The revaluation of the
1,000 roubles
Russian rouble in 1998
led to the revival of the
long-redundant but much-
loved kopek. Traditionally,
the rouble had always
consisted of 100 kopeks.
As well as coins for 1, 2
and 5 roubles, there are
now coins for 1, 5, 10
and 50 kopeks. Any coins 1 rouble 2 roubles 5 roubles
which were issued before
1997, prior to revaluation,
are essentially valueless
and you are perfectly
within your rights to
refuse to accept them if
they are given to you in
your change. 1 kopek 5 kopeks 10 kopeks 50 kopeks
216 S U R V I VA L G U I D E
DIRECTORY
TELEPHONE POSTAL SERVICES INTERNET CAFES COURIER SERVICES
SERVICES
Main Post Office Cafe Max DHL International
Peregovornyy Главпочтамт Kафе Mакс Centre
punkt (Call Centre) Glavpochtamt Nevskiy prospekt 90–92. Nevskiy prospekt 10.
Bolshaya Morskaya ul 28. Pochtamtskaya ul 9.
Map 6 E1. Map 7 B2.
Map 6 D1. Map 5 C2.
Tell 273 6655 or 272 6315. Tell 325 6100.
Tell 571 7011. Tell 312 8302.
# 24 hours daily. Fax
x 325 6116.
# 24 hours. # 9am–9pm Mon–Sun.
¢ public holidays. # 8am–8pm Mon–Fri.
Information Centre
MOBILE PHONE Post International of the Russian DHL International
SERVICES Nevskiy prospekt 34. National Library Centre
Map 6 E1. Информационно- Izmaylovskiy pr 4.
Megafon
Tell 570 4472. Cервисньій Центр Map 5 C5.
Мегафон
# 10am–7pm Mon–Fri, Pоссийская библиотека Tell 326 6400.
Artilleriyskaya ul.1.
11am– 4pm Sat. Sadovaya ul 20. F x 326 6410.
Fax
Map 3 B5.
Westpost Map 5 A5. Tell 310 9676. # 9am–7pm Mon–Fri,
Tell 329 4747.
www.megafon.ru Nevskiy prospekt 86. # 10am–7pm Mon–Sat. 10am– 4pm Sat.
Map 7 B2.
MTS Quo Vadis? Fedex
Tell 275 0784 or 336 6352.
МТС Kво Bадис Per Grivtsova 6.
Faxx 275 0806.
Kazanskaya ul 45. # 9:30am– 8pm Nevskiy prospekt 24. Map 6 D2.
Map 6 D2. Mon–Fri,r noon– 8pm Map 6 E1. Tell 325 8825.
Tell 380 0000. Sat & Sun. T l 571 0071 orr 571 8011.
Tel # 9am–7pm Mon–Fri,
www.mts.ru www. westpost.ru # 24 hours daily. 10am–4pm Sat.
218 S U R V I VA L G U I D E
GETTING TO ST PETERSBURG
DIRECTORY
UK AND US TOUR AIRLINE OFFICES Pulkovo Airlines Moscow Station
COMPANIES Pulkovo-Express, 1-ya Московский вокзал
Austrian Airlines Krasnoarmeyskaya ul 4. Moskovskiy vokzal
Noble Caledonia Nevskiy pr 32. Map 7 B2. Map 6 D5. Tell 303 9268. Pl Vosstaniya. Map 7 C2.
Tell 331 2005.
11 Charles Street, Okdail
Tell 324 3244 (Pulkovo 2). SAS
London W1X 8LE. Nevskiy pr 24. Moscow Station (24 hrs) &
Tell (0207) 409 0376. British Airways Map 6 F2. Tell 326 2600. Central Train Ticket Office.
Malaya konyushennaya Tell 324 3244 (Pulkovo 2). Tell 335 9807, 740 1324.
Panorama Travel Ltd ulitsa 1/3A. Map 6 E1.
156 Fifth Ave, Suite 1019, Tell 380 0206. Transaero Vitebsk Station
New York, NY 10010. Tell 346 8146 (Pulkovo 2). Liteynyy pr 48. Map 7 A1. Витебский вокзал
Tell 279 6463/1974. Vitebskiy vokzal
Tell (212) 741 0033. Central Air Com- Zagorodnyy prospekt 52.
Faxx (212) 645 6276. munication Agency Map 6 E4.
TRAINS
Scott’s Tours Nevskiy pr 7/9. Map 6 D1.
141 Whitfield Street,
Tell 315 0072 (inter). All Train Enquiries COACHES
Tell 571 8093 (dom & CIS). Tell 055.
London W1P 5RY. Finnord
Tell (0207) 383 5353. Delta Airlines Central Train Ticket Italyanskaya ulitsa 37.
Faxx (0207) 383 3709. Bolshaya Morskaya 36. Map 6 F1. Tell 314 8951.
Map 5 C2.
Office
Центральные железно-
Voyages Jules Verne Tell 571 5819. BOATS
дорожные кассы
21 Dorset Square, Tsentralnye zhelezno-
Finnair
London NW1 6QG. Malaya Konyushennaya ul. dorozhnye kassy Maritime Passenger
Tell (0207) 616 1000. 1/3A. Nab kanala Griboedova 24. Terminal
Faxx (0207) 723 8629. Map 6 E1. Tell 303 9898. Map 6 E2. Tell 162 3344. Морской пассажирский
Tell 324 3249 (Pulkovo 2). вокзал (Morskoy
Finland Station passazhirskiy vokzal)
AIRPORT KLM финляндский вокзал Pl Morskoy Slavy.
INFORMATION Zagorodnyy prospekt 5. Finlyandskiy vokzal Tell 322 6052.
Map 7 A3. Tell 572 1108. Pl Lenina 6. Map 3 B3.
Pulkovo 1 River Terminal
Пулково 1 Tell 704 3822. Lufthansa Ladozhskiy Station жечной вокзал
Nevskiy pr. 32. Map 6 F2. Ладoжcкий вокзал Rechnoy vokzal
Pulkovo 2 Tell 320 1000. Ladozskniy vokzal Prospekt Obukhovskoy
Пулково 2 Tell 704 3444. Tell 324 3244 (Pulkovo 2). Zanevskiy pr 73. Oborony 195. Tell 262 0239.
G E T T I N G A R O U N D S T P E T E R S B U R G 221
A lthough public transport in the city Nevskiy prospekt is where many of the
is abundant, efficient and very city’s transport routes and main roads
cheap, the most enjoy-
able way to get around and fully
appreciate St Petersburg is on
meet. Metro lines, tram, bus and
trolleybus routes radiate out
from here, criss-crossing the city
foot. A glance at a map reveals with a network of rail tracks
that some attempt was made to and overhead wires. It is pos-
bestow the city with a rational, sible to travel without too much
organized layout, which makes difficulty to almost anywhere
it considerably easier to nego- Sign indicating
in town from this main avenue.
tiate. When exhaustion sets in, pedestrian crossing Driving is not recommended
however, a boat cruise along due to the combination of poor
the waterways can be a wonderful way road conditions, aggressive Russian
to become acquainted with the city. driving and over-efficient traffic police.
Travelling by Metro
Since overland transport is the most
efficient means of getting around the
city centre, the metro is used mainly to
get to and from the outskirts of the
city. As a tourist attraction, however,
the metro’s stunning stations, intended
by Stalin to be “palaces for the people”, Steep escalators to platforms
Blue neon metro sign should be high on your itinerary. The
metro is extremely safe and runs a the centre ten minutes after
full service until after midnight. Travelling in the late this. There is no rush hour as
evening will avoid most of the two million people esti- such but the metro tends to
mated to use the metro each day. The main setback is be full at most times of day,
that signs are mostly in Cyrillic but, with just four lines, which makes it very safe.
Platforms are not staffed,
negotiating the network is still fairly straightforward. but there is an attendant in
a booth at the bottom of
The metro now each escalator who can call
has 60 stations, for assistance.
ranging in style Because of the many
and ambience waterways in the city, stations
from the dim light- are buried deep underground
ing and memorial and long escalators lead
atmosphere of down to the platforms.
Ploshchad Muz- Passengers are required to
hestva (Courage stand on the right, leaving the
Square, 1975) left side free for those who
near Piskarovskoe prefer walking.
Memorial Ceme- New stations are still being
teryy (see p126), to added to the St Petersburg
the 1980s vulgarity metro, the latest ones being
Exterior of Ploshchad Vosstaniya metro station of Udelnaya and Krestovskiy Ostrov, Staraya
the cool of Komen- Derevnya and Komendantskiy
THE METRO AS A dantskiy Prospekt (2005). Prospekt on the yellow line.
TOURIST ATTRACTION
THE NETWORK
The Soviet Union’s best archi-
tects were employed to The metro is vital for getting
design St Petersburg’s metro to and from the further afield
stations. Thousands of tonnes hotels and the airport. Directional sign listing all stops
of marble, granite and lime- The four lines run from the on this line in Cyrillic
stone were used to face the outskirts through the centre,
walls, and sculptures, mosaics where they intersect at one of
and chandeliers were com- six main stations.
missioned from leading artists. Trains run every few
The first line opened in 1955, minutes during the day and
its eight stations connecting every five minutes late at Interchange sign listing all
ploshchad Vosstaniya with the night and, although doors stations on the other line
new Stalinist blocks of flats in into stations close at
the southwest and the city’s midnight, the last trains leave FINDING YOUR WAY
largest factory, the Kirov
Factory. This line is one Before setting foot in St
of the most fascinating, Petersburg’s metro, ensure you
being the supreme em- have a network map with the
bodiment of Stalinist Cyrillic and transliterated
style and ideals. The names to hand. Signs inside
station at Kirovskiy the metro are mainly in
Zavod is a fine example, Cyrillic and wall maps have
a vast basilica, a temple become rare in station ticket
to the factory workers. halls and on the trains. Inside
The line’s crowning a station, the name is only
glory has to be Avtovo, written on the far wall of the
incorporating a wealth platform which means that, if
of style and detail, even the train is in the station, or if
down to the moulded Mosaics and unusual glass columns at you are on the train itself, it is
glass columns. richly decorated Avtovo metro station not possible to see the sign.
G E T T I N G A R O U N D S T P E T E R S B U R G 223
ST PETERSBURG’S METRO
Пp Пpocвещения Девяткинo
Pr Prosveshcheniya Devyatkino
Koмендaнтекий
Пpoеneкt Озеpки Гpaждaнcкий np
Metro platform sign showing Komendantskiy pr Ozerki Grazhdanskiy Pr
stations and interchanges Cтapaя деpевня
Staraya derevnya Удельнaя Aкaдемичеcкaя
Udelnaya Akademicheskaya
Kpеcтoвcкий ocтpoв
Busy stations in the city centre Krestovskiy ostrov Пиoнеpcкaя Пoлитеxничеcкaя
Pionerskaya Politekhnicheskaya
have a central concourse with
Чкaлoвcкaя
safety doors between this and Chkalovskaya Чеpнaя pечкa Пл Мyжеcтвa
Пpимopcкaя Chernaya Rechka Pl Muzhestva
the trains. When the train Primorskaya Cnopтивнaя Петpoгpaдcкaя
stops, these doors open, and Bacилеocтpoвcкaя
Sportivnaya Petrogradskaya Пеcнaя
only then do the train doors Vasileostrovskaya
Гopкoвcкaя
Lesnaya
open. At these stations, a map Gorkovskaya Bыбopгcкaя
Гocтиный двop Vyborgskaya
of the line you are on is to be Gostinyy Dvor
G
found on the concourse. Other Пл Ленинa
Pl Lenina
stations have platforms and the Пл Boccтaния Чеpнышевcкaя
Pl Vosstaniya Chernyshevskaya
map of the line is on the wall Hевcкий np
on the far side of the tracks. Nevskiy Pr Мaякoвcкaя
Cеннaя nл Caдoвaя Mayakovskaya
Before the train doors close, Sennaya Pl Sadovaya Bлaдимиpcкaя
pc
the driver will announce, Vladimirskaya
ka
“Ostorozhno. Dveri zakryva- Дocтoевcкaя
кa
Пy
Пyшкинcкaя Dostoevskaya
Do kay
yutsya”” (Be careful. The doors Pus
Pushkinskaya
ya Пигoвcкий
o np
are closing). As the train Tеxнoлoгичеcкий инcт Ligovskiy
Li ov Pr
approaches a stop, he will Tekhnologicheskiy Inst Tеxнoлoгичеcкий инcт
Tekhnologicheskiy Inst
say the name of the station Пл Aлекcaндpa Hевcкoгo
and mention if you need to БaлTийcкaя Pl Aleksandra Nevskovo
change here for another line, Baltiyskaya Фpyнзенcкaя
Frunzenskaya Пл Aлекcaндpa Hевcкoгo
followed by the name of the Hapвcкaя Eлизapoвcкaя Pl Aleksandra Nevskovo
Narvskaya Мocк вopoтa Elizarovskaya
next station. It is always best Mosk vorota Hoвoчеpкaccкaя
to keep count of the stops, Kиpoвcкий зaвoд Лoмoнocoвcкaя Novocherkasskaya
Kirovskiy Zavod Электpocилa Lomonosovskaya
in case you do not catch Elektrosila Лaдoжcкaя
Aвтoвo Пpoлеaapcкaя Ladozhskaya
the announcements. Avtovo Пapк Пoбеды Proletarskaya
To change to another line, Park Pobedy Пp бoлшевикoв
Ленинcкий np Обyxoвo Pr Bolshevikov
follow the interchange signs Leninskiy Pr Мocкoвcкaя Obukhovo
Moskovskaya Ул Дыбенкo
for переход (perekhod
( d– Пp Bетеpaнoв Pыбaцкoе Ul Dybenko
crossing). The exception is at Pr Veteranov 3везднaя Rybatskoe
Zvezdnaya
Tekhnologicheskiy Institut,
where the two southbound Kynчинo
Kupchino
lines are on parallel platforms,
as are the two northbound
lines: thus to continue with the magnetic strip Visitors who plan to stay in
in the same direction facing up. If you try the city for a while may find
on another line you to go through a it worthwhile to purchase a
simply cross the machine without personal “smart” card bearing
central concourse. paying, an their photograph, to which
Exits are marked automatic barrier they can transfer credit to
выход (vykhod) d . Some closes in front of you. fund future journeys at any
stations, such as Metro token At the far right an metro station. Such cards are
Moskovskaya (for the attendant checks not inserted into the barrier
airport) and Gostinyy Dvor, passes and allows you to put machines that check tickets
have two or more exits. your token in a machine and tokens, but placed briefly
which does not have automa- onto a sensor marked with a
TICKETS AND tic barriers. Those with mag- white circle. There are no
TRAVEL CARDS netic cards cannot pass further ticket checks once past
through this machine. the barriers, inside the station.
The most common means of Monthly magnetic passes for
paying for the metro is the the metro or for all forms of
token (zheton), purchasable public transport are valid for 70
only from metro stations. metro journeys and an infinite
Magnetic cards, which can be number of journeys on over-
topped up with as many trips ground transport during a cal-
as needed, are also available. endar month. They can only be
Barrier machines are installed purchased from the 10th to
at the top of the escalators; the 20th of the current month,
most take both cards and and are valid until the 15th of Card with magneticstrip, for travel
tokens. Cards must be inserted the next month. on the metro system
224 S U R V I VA L G U I D E
sport you are unlikely to get a seat during the day. More
TRAMS
frequent and comfortable, and slightly more expensive,
are the commercial bus and minibus routes. Note that the Trams offer a marvellous way
newer outlying areas are often accessible only by bus, to see St Petersburg and are
and that during rush-hour it is often faster to walk. less crowded than trolleybuses.
Tram stops are marked by red
and white signs suspended on
wires above the tram rails.
Separate islands for people to
embark are found only on
wide roads outside the centre;
elsewhere passengers wait on
the pavement. When the tram
doors open, the oncoming
traffic is obliged to wait and
let passengers cross to and
from the pavement. In
practice, there is always one
car which cannot wait, so
take care before stepping out.
At various crossroads along
the route, the driver may need
to change points on the rails.
Tram at a stop in front of the Mariinskiy Theatre He will open his door or the
front passenger door to do
GENERAL INFORMATION As a stop approaches, people this. Do not attempt to board
near an exit may be asked Vy or exit a tram when it has
Trams, buses and trolleybuses vykhodite?? (“are you getting stopped for this purpose.
start at around 5:30am, and a out?”), which really means
little later along the middle of “could you move aside?”. At
the routes. The services busy times, head for the exit
operate with rather arbitrary well before your stop, or pre-
frequency during the day and pare to do some pushing.
very infrequently after 11pm, Good for sightseeing is the
grinding more or less to a halt No. 10 trolleybus, which runs
around midnight. Only a few from ploshchad Vosstaniya
V
of the city bus routes display through the centre and across
timetables. Each form of over- V
Vasilevskiy Island (see pp56–
ground transport has its own 63) to Primorskaya metro Sign for a bus stop, showing name
separate stops, and distances station. Other scenic routes are of stop and bus numbers
between them can be great. the No. 2 tram from the Field
Queueing is not standard of Mars (see p94) to the Chern- BUSES AND MINIBUSES
practice, so be prepared for aya Rechka metro station, the
an unruly rush to get on first. No. 22 bus from the Smolnyy All services run about every
Trams, buses and trolleybuses Institute (see p128)) via St Isaac’s 20 minutes, sometimes less
can be boarded at the front, Square (see p79) and the often. Bus stops in the city
middle or back. The front eight Mariinskiy Theatre (see p119) centre are marked by white
seats are reserved for the dis- towards the Stalinist architect- and yellow signs with a red
abled, the elderly and people ure in the southwest, and the letter “A” for avtobus, placed
with children, all of whom No. 46 or 76 bus from the Field by the side of the road or
have precedence getting on of Mars up Kamennoostrov- attached to lamp-posts. These
and off at the front. On board, skiy prospekt (see p70) and to are slowly replacing the old-
a conductor collects the fares. Kamenniy Island d (see pp136–7). style yellow signs.
G E T T I N G A R O U N D S T P E T E R S B U R G 225
GETTING TO PETERHOF
AND ORANIENBAUM
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0 kilometres 1
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KEY TO STREET FINDER
Major sight 4 River boat pier N Post office
Birzhevoy most
Birzhevoy pereulok
БИРЖЕВОЙ МОСТ 1 C4
D
Decembrists’ Square 5 C1
БИРЖЕВОЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 1 B4
Degtyarnaya ulitsa ДЕГТЯРНАЯ УЛИЦА 8 D2
Birzhevoy proezd БИРЖЕВОЙ ПРОЕЗД 1 C5
Degtyarnyy pereulok
Blagoeva, ulitsa БЛАГОЕВА, УЛИЦА 1 C3
ДЕГТЯРНЫЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 4 E5, 8 D1
Blokhina, ulitsa БЛОХИНА, УЛИЦА 1 B3
Dekabristov, ulitsa
Bobruyskaya ulitsa БОБРУИСКАЯ УЛИЦА 3 B1
ДЕКАБРИСТОВ, УЛИЦА 5 A3
Bolshaya Konyushennaya ulitsa
Dekabristov, Proezd
БОЛЬШАЯ КОНЮШЕННАЯ УЛИЦА 6 E1
ДЕКАБРИСТОВ, ПРОЕЗД 5 C1
Bolshaya Monetnaya ulitsa
Derptskiy pereulok
БОЛЬШАЯ МОНЕТНАЯ УЛИЦА 2 D2
ДЕРПТСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 5 B5
Bolshaya Morskaya ulitsa
Divenskaya ulitsa ДИВЕНСКАЯ УЛИЦА 2 E2
БОЛЬШАЯ МОРСКАЯ УЛИЦА 5 B2
Dmitrovskiy pereulok
Bolshaya Moskovskaya ulitsa
ДМИТРОВСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 7 B2
БОЛЬШАЯ МОСКОВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 7 A3
Dnepropetrovskaya ulitsa
Bolshaya Podyacheskaya ulitsa
ДНЕПРОПЕТРОВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 7 C5
БОЛЬШАЯ ПОДЬЯЧЕСКАЯ УЛИЦА 5 C4
Dobrolyubova, prospekt
Bolshaya Posadskaya ulitsa
ДОВРОЛЮБОВА, ПРОСПЕКТ 1 B3
БОЛЬШАЯ ПОСАДСКАЯ УЛИЦА 2 E2
Dostoevskovo, ulitsa
Bolshaya Pushkarskaya ulitsa
ДОСТОЕВСКОГО, УЛИЦА 7 A4
БОЛЬШАЯ ПУШКАРСКАЯ УЛИЦА 1 C2
Dostoevsky House-Museum 7 B3
Bolshaya Raznochinnaya ulitsa
Drovyanaya ulitsa ДРОВЯНАЯ УЛИЦА 5 B5
БОЛЬШАЯ РАЗНОЧИННАЯ УЛИЦА 1 A1
Drovyanoy pereulok
Bolshaya Zelenina ulitsa
ДРОВЯНОЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 5 A4
БОЛЬШАЯ ЗЕЛЕНИНА УЛИЦА 1 A1
Dumskaya ulitsa ДУМСКАЯ УЛИЦА 6 E2
Bolsheokhtinskiy most
БОЛЬШЕОXТИНСКИЙ МОСТ 4 F5 Dvortsovaya naberezhnaya
ДВОРЦОВАЯ НАБЕРЕЖHАЯ 2 D5
Bolshoy prospekt (Vasilievskiy Island)
БОЛЬШОЙ ПРОСПЕКТ 1 A5, 5 A1 Dvortsovaya ploshchad
ДВОРЦОВАЯ ПЛОЩАДЬ 6 D1
Bolshoy prospekt (Petrogradskaya)
БОЛЬШОЙ ПРОСПЕКТ 1 B3, 1 C1 Dvortsovyy most ДВОРЦОВЫЙ МОСТ 1 C5
Bolshoy Sampsonievskiy prospekt
БОЛЬШОЙ САМПСОНИЕВСКИЙ ПРОСПЕКТ 3 A1 E
Bonch-Bruevicha, ulitsa Egipetskiy most ЕГИПЕТСКИЙ МОСТ 5 B5
БОНЧ-БРУЕВИЧА, УЛИЦА 4 F5 Egorova, ulitsa ЕГОРОВА, УЛИЦА 6 D5
Borodinskaya ulitsa Engineers’ Castle 2 F5
БОРОДИНСКАЯ УЛИЦА 6 F3 Engineer’s House 2 D3
Borovaya ulitsa БОРОВАЯ УЛИЦА 7 A4 The English Quay 5 B2
Botkinskaya ulitsa Evgenevskaya ulitsa
БОТКИНСКАЯ УЛИЦА 3 A2 ЕВГЕНЬЕВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 8 D2
Boytsova, pereulok
БОЙЦОВА, ПЕРЕУЛОК 6 D4 F
Bronnitskaya ulitsa БРОННИЦКАЯ УЛИЦА 6 E5 Feodosiyskaya ulitsa
Bronze Horseman, The 5 C1 ФЕОДОСИЙСКАЯ УЛИЦА 4 F1
Field of Mars 2 F5
C Finland Station 3 B3
Cabin of Peter the Great 2 F3 Finskiy pereulok
Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul 2 D4 ФИНСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 3 B2
Cathedral of the Transfiguration 3 B5 Fonarnyy most ФОНАРНЫЙ МОСТ 5 C2
Chapaeva, ulitsa ЧАПАЕВА, УЛИЦА 2 F1 Fonarnyy pereulok
Chekhova, ulitsa ЧЕХОВА, УЛИЦА 7 B1 ФОНАРНЫЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 5 C2
Chernomorskiy pereulok Furshtatskaya ulitsa
ЧЕРНОМОРСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 5 C1 ФУРШТАТСКАЯ УЛИЦА 3 B4
Chernyakhovskovo, ulitsa
ЧЕРНЯХОВСКОГО, УЛИЦА 7 B5 G
Chernyshevskovo, prospekt Gagarinskaya ulitsa
ЧЕРНЫШЕВСКОГО, ПРОСПЕКТ 3 B4 ГАГАРИНСКАЯ УЛИЦА 3 A4
Chernyshevskovo, sad im Galernaya ulitsa ГАЛЕРНАЯ УЛИЦА 5 A2
ЧЕРНЫШЕВСКОГО, САД ИМ 8 D2 Gatchinskaya ulitsa
Chaykovskovo, ulitsa ГАТЧИНСКАЯ УЛИЦА 1 B1
ЧАЙКОВСКОГО, УЛИЦА 3 A4 Gazovaya ulitsa ГАЗОВАЯ УЛИЦА 1 B1
Chkalovskiy prospekt Gimnazicheskiy pereulok
ЧКАЛОВСКИЙ ПРОСПЕКТ 1 A2 ГИМНАЗИЧЕСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 1 A2
Circus 7 A1 Glinka Capella 2 E5
Commandant’s House 2 D4 Glinki, ulitsa ГЛИНКИ, УЛИЦА 5 B3
Cruiser Aurora 2 F3 Glinyanaya ulitsa ГЛИНЯНАЯ УЛИЦА 8 D5
S T P E T E R S B U R G S T R E E T F I N D E R 233
O Podezdnoy pereulok
ПОДЪЕЗДНОЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 6 F4
Obukhovskaya ploshchad
Podkovyrova, ulitsa
ОБУХОВСКАЯ ПЛОЩАДЬ 6 D4
ПОДКОВЫРОВА, УЛИЦА 1 C1
Obukhovskiy most ОБУХОВСКИЙ МОСТ 6 D4
Podolskaya ulitsa ПОДОЛЬСКАЯ УЛИЦА 6 E5
Obukhovskoy Oborony, prospekt
Podrezova, ulitsa ПОДРЕЗОВА, УЛИЦА 1 C1
ОБУХОВСКОЙ ОБОРОНЫ ПРОСПЕКТ 8 F4
Polozova, ulitsa ПОЛОЗОВА, УЛИЦА 1 C1
Obvodnovo Kanala, naberezhnaya
Poltavskaya ulitsa ПОЛТАВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 7 C3
ОБВОДНОГО КАНАЛА, НАБЕРЕЖНАЯ 6 F5, 7 A5
Polyustrovskiy prospekt
Ochakovskaya ulitsa ОЧАКОВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 4 E4
ПОЛЮСТРОВСКИЙ ПРОСПЕКТ 4 F1
Odesskaya ulitsa ОДЕССКАЯ УЛИЦА 4 E4
Potseluev most ПОЦЕЛУЕВ МОСТ 5 B3
Ofitserskiy pereulok
Potemkinskaya ulitsa
ОФИЦЕРСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 1 A3
ПОТЕМКИНСКАЯ УЛИЦА 3 C4
Oranienbaumskaya ulitsa
Povarskoy pereulok
ОРАНИЕНБАУМСКАЯ УЛИЦА 1 B1
ПОВАРСКОЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 7 B2
Ordinarnaya ulitsa ОРДИНАРНАЯ УЛИЦА 1 C1
Prachechnyy pereulok
Orenburgskaya ulitsa
ПРАЧЕЧНЫЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 5 C2
ОРЕНБУРГСКАЯ УЛИЦА 3 A2
Pravdy, ulitsa ПРАВДЫ, УЛИЦА 7 A3
Orlovskaya ulitsa ОРЛОВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 4 D3
Preobrazhenskaya ploshchad
Orlovskiy pereulok ПРЕОБРАЖЕНСКАЯ ПЛОЩАДЬ 3 B5
ОРЛОВСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 7 C2
Predtechenskiy most
Ostrovskovo, ploshchad ПРЕДТЕЧЕНСКИЙ МОСТ 7 B5
ОСТРОВСКОГО, ПЛОЩАДЬ 6 F2
Professora Ivashentseva, ulitsa
Ozernyy pereulok ОЗЕРНЫЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 7 C1 ПРОФОССОРА ИВАШЕНЦЕВА, УЛИЦА 8 D3
Professora Kachalova, ulitsa
P ПРОФЕССОРА КАЧАЛОВА, УЛИЦА 8 F5
Palace Square 6 D1 Proletarskoy Diktatury, ulitsa
Panteleymonovskiy most ПРОЛЕТАРСКОЙ ДИКТАТУРЫ, УЛИЦА 4 E4
ПАНТЕЛЕЙМОНОВСКИЙ МОСТ 2 F5 Proletarskoy Diktatury, ploshchad
Paradnaya ulitsa ПАРАДНАЯ УЛИЦА 4 D5 ПРОЛЕТАРСКОЙ ДИКТАТУРЫ, ПЛОЩАДЬ 4 E4
Pavlogradskiy pereulok Pryadilnyy pereulok
ПАВЛОГРАДСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 7 B5 ПРЯДИЛЬНЫЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 5 B5
236 S T P E T E R S B U R G S T R E E T F I N D E R
Volynskiy pereulok
T ВОЛЫНСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 6 E1
Tambovskaya ulitsa ТАМБОВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 7 B5
Voronezhskaya ulitsa
Tatarskiy pereulok
ВОРОНЕЖСКAЯ УЛИЦА 7 A5
ТАТАРСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 1 C3
Vorontsov Palace 6 F2
Tauride Palace 4 D4
Voskova, ulitsa ВОСКОВА, УЛИЦА 1 C2
Tavricheskaya ulitsa
ТАВРИЧЕСКАЯ УЛИЦА 4 D5 Vosstaniya, ploshchad
ВОССТАНИЯ, ПЛОЩАДЬ 7 C2
Tavricheskiy pereulok
ТАВРИЧЕСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 4 D4 Vosstaniya, ulitsa
Tavricheskiy sad ТАВРИЧЕСКИЙ САД 4 D4 ВОССТАНИЯ, УЛИЦА 3 C5, 7 C1
V Zhdanovskaya naberezhnaya
ЖДАНОВСКАЯ НАБЕРЕЖHАЯ 1 A2
Vatutina, ulitsa ВАТУТИНА, УЛИЦА 4 D1
Zhdanovskaya ulitsa
Vereyskaya ulitsa ВЕРЕЙСКАЯ УЛИЦА 6 E5
ЖДАНОВСКАЯ УЛИЦА 1 A2
Vitebskaya ulitsa ВИТЕБСКАЯ УЛИЦА 5 A4
Zhukova, ulitsa ЖУКОВА УЛИЦА 4 F1
Vilenskiy pereulok
ВИЛЕHCКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 2 C5 Zhukovskovo, ulitsa
ЖУКОВСКОГО, УЛИЦА 7 B1
Vladimirskaya ploshchad
ВЛАДИМИРСКАЯ ПЛОЩАДЬ 7 A3 Zodchevo Rossi, ulitsa
Vladimirskiy prospekt ЗОДЧЕГО РОССИ, УЛИЦА 6 F2
ВЛАДИМИРСКИЙ ПРОСПЕКТ 7 A2 Zoo 2 D3
Vodoprovodnyy pereulok Zoological Museum 1 C5
ВОДОПРОВОДНЫЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 4 D4 Zvenigorodskaya ulitsa
Volkhovskiy pereulok ЗВЕНИГОРОДСКАЯ УЛИЦА 6 F4, 7 A4
ВОЛХОВСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 1 B4 Zverinskaya ulitsa ЗВЕРИНСКАЯ УЛИЦА 1 B3
Volodi Yermaka, ulitsa
ВОЛОДИ ЕРМАКА, УЛИЦА 5 A4
Volokolamskiy pereulok
ВОЛОКОЛАМСКИЙ ПЕРЕУЛОК 7 A4
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246 G E N E R A L I N D E X
General Index
Page numbers in bold
d type refer to Alexandra, Tsarina (wife of Astoria Casino 205
main entries. Nicholas I) 150 Astoria Hotel 79, 169, 172, 174
Alexandria Park (Peterhof) 150 Aurora seee Cruiserr Aurora
A Alexandriinskiy Theatre 110, 203 Austeria 185
Abamelek-Lazarev, Prince 134 Alfabank 214 Austerlitz, Battle of (1805) 22
Abraham’s Sacrificee (Rembrandt) Altman, Nathan 43 Australian Embassy 211
86 Ambulances 212, 213 Austrian Airlines 220
Academic Capella 112, 203 Amenemhet III, Pharaoh 89 Autumn in St Petersburg 52
Academy of Arts 19, 40, 57, 63 Amenhotep III, Pharaoh 63 Avant-garde 29, 107
A
Academy of Sciences 25 American Express 214 Avtovo metro station 11
A
Street-by-Street map 58 Anabel 171
Academy of Sciences Library Ananov 199 B
Street-by-Street map 59 Andreevskiy Market 199 Bach, Robert
Adam, Yegor Andrey Vladimirovich, Grand Duke statue of Glinka 120
Bridge Passage 35 72 statue of Pushkin 155
Great Stables Bridge 134 Andropov, Yuri 30, 31 Bakhmatov, Ivan 164
Singers’ Bridge 37, 112 The Angel with the Golden Hair Bakst, Léon 26, 45, 107, 119
Adamini, Domenico 134 (icon) 106 Ballet 202, 203
Adamini House 134 Angelico, Fra 90 Ballet in St Petersburg 118
Addresses, writing 209 Angleterre Hotel 174 Ballets Russes 107, 118, 119
Admiralty 78 Street-by-Street map 77 dancers and choreographers 45
Street-by-Street map 77 Anglia 199 Imperial School of Ballet 45, 110
Admiralty (Tsarskoe Selo) 154 Anichkov, Lieutenant Colonel Matilda Kshesinskaya 72
Admiralty Garden 46 Mikhail 109 and “World of Art” movement 26
Admission charges 208 Anichkov Bridge 37 Baltic Airlines 211
Aeroflot Building 46 St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and Baltic Star Hotel (Strelna) 177
Agate Rooms (Tsarskoe Selo) 154 Waterways 35 Baltic Station 229
Air travel 218–19, 220 statues 49 Balzac, Honoré de 94
travelling between Moscow and Anichkov Palace 49, 109, 110 Bank Bridge 37, 135
St Petersburg 219 Anikushin, Mikhail 101, 131 St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and
Airports 218, 220 Anna Akhmatova Museum 41, 129 Waterways 35
Aivazovskiy, Ivan 106 Anna Ivanovna, Tsarina 19 Banking 214
Akademkniga 199 Anna Nova 199 Banknotes 215
Akhmatova, Anna 43, 44, 129 d’Anthès, Georges 83, 113 Baranovskiy, Gavriil 71, 109, 137
Anna Akhmatova Museum 41, 129 Antikvariat 199 Barbizon school 91
“The Bivouac of the Comedians” Antique Centre 199 Barclay de Tolly, Mikhail
134 Antiques statue of 111
portrait by Nathan Altman 43 export permissions 194–5 Bargaining 194
Albina 193 shops 198, 199 Barge-Haulers
- on the Volga (Repin)
Alcohol 182–3 Apartments, renting 171 105
Aleksandrovskiy Park 70 Apothecary’s Island 136 Bars 192, 193
Aleksey, Tsar 17 Apraksin family 111 music 204, 205
Aleksey, Tsarevich 66, 69 Apraksin Market 111, 199 opening times 179
Alexander I, Tsar 23 Apsheron 188 Bashnya (Peterhof) 193
Alexander Column 83 Apyshkov, Vladimir 136 Basquiat, Jean-Michel 94
Alexander Palace (Tsarskoe Selo) Aquarel 185 Batignol 138
155 Arakcheev, Count Aleksey 135 Bazaars 195, 199
and Carlo Rossi 110 Arbat Nord Hotel 175 Bazhenov, Vasiliy 101
Gonzaga Cameo 88 Archbishop’s Court (Novgorod) 162 Beauharnais, Josephine 88
Kamennoostrovskiy Palace 136 Architecture Bed and breakfast 170
Lycée (Tsarskoe Selo) 155 Style Moderne 65, 71 Bednbreakfast 171
Napoleonic Wars 22 Archives of the War Ministry Beer 183
Yelagin Island 126 Street-by-Street map 66 Beethoven, Ludwig van 101
Alexander II, Tsar Arctica 205 Behrens, Peter 76, 79
assassination 26, 92, 100, 134 Argunov, Fyodor 129 Bellevue 18
assassination attempt 135 Argus 193 Beloselskiy-Belozerskiy Palace 49,
Church on Spilled Blood 100 Aristov, Leonid 82 203
Edict of Emancipation 23 Armenian Church 48, 108 Bely, Andrei 44
tomb of 68–9 Ars Magna 199 Benois, Alexandre 117
Winter Palace 93 Art Ballets Russes 119
Alexander III, Tsar 26 artists 45 “World of Art” movement 26, 45,
Anichkov Palace 109 export permissions 194–5 107
Church on Spilled Blood 100 Russian icon painting 165 Benois, Leontiy 104, 112
Fabergé Easter eggs 82 shops 198, 199 Benois House
Gatchina 147 see also Museums and galleries Street-by-Street map 117
Russian Museum 104 Art and café clubs 204 Beresta Palace Hotel (Novgorod)
statue of 94 Art Nouveau see Style Moderne 177
Alexander (accommodation Artillery Museum 41, 70 Bergholts, Olga 126
agency) 171 Artists 45 Bernini, Gian Lorenzo 47
Alexander Column 83 Arts Square 101 Bessel and Co 49
Alexander House Club 175 Street-by-Street map 98–9 Bird statue (Gabriadze) 99
Alexander Nevsky Bridge 37 Asia (café) 193 “The Bivouac of the Comedians”
Alexander Nevsky Monastery 11, Assignment Bank 135 134
130–31 Association of Travelling Art Blank, Ivan 151
Alexander Palace (Tsarskoe Selo) 155 Exhibitions 106 Der Blaue Reiter 107
G E N E R A L I N D E X 247
Blinnyy domik 187 Budget hotels 170 Catherine II (the Great) (cont.)
Blok, Aleksandr 44, 134 Bufet 189 Alexander Palace (Tsarskoe Selo)
“Bloody Sunday” (1905) 26, 73, 83, Bulochnaya 193 155
138 Buses 224–5 Anichkov Palace 109
Blue Crestt (Kandinsky) 39 Bush, George 30 Bronze Horseman (Falconet)
Boat House Bush, John 154 78–9
Street-by-Street map 67 Byron, Lord 113 Cabin of Peter the Great 73, 139
Boats Chesma Palace 130
boat trips 36 C The Enlightened Empress 24–5
canal and river cruises 226–7 Cabaret (A
( .K.A. Matrosskaya Gatchina 147
Cruiser Aurora 11, 41, 73, 139 Tishina) 205 Griboedev Canal 36
ferries and cruises 220 Cabin of Peter the Great 41, 73, Hermitage 84–7, 88, 91
hydrofoils 229 138–9 Marble Palace 94
Naval Museum 59, 60 Café de Clie 193 Monplaisir (Peterhof) 150
water taxis 227 Café Max 217 monument to 110
Bogolyubov, Veniamin 116 Cafés Oranienbaum 146
Bogolyubskiy, Prince Andrey 163 internet cafés 217 Pavlovsk 158, 160, 161
Bolshaya Morskaya ulitsa 122 light meals and snacks 192–3 Peterhof 149
Bolshaya Zelinina ulitsa, No. 28 71 opening times 179 Smolnyy Convent 128
Bolsheviks Cameron, Charles statue of 49
Finland Station 126 Chinese Village (Tsarskoe Selo) Summer Garden 95
Kshesinskaya Mansion 72 154 Tauride Palace 128
Russian Revolution 26, 27 Pavlovsk 25, 158–9, 160 Tsarskoe Selo 143, 152, 154
Smolnyy Institute 128 Tsarskoe Selo 152, 153, 154 Voltaire’s library 110
“Bolshoi Dom” 139 Cameron Gallery (Tsarskoe Selo) 154 Catherine Palace seee Tsarskoe Selo
Bolshoy Drama Theatre (BDT) 203 Camping 171 Catherine Park (Tsarskoe Selo) 154
Bolshoy Prospekt (Vasilevskiy Canadian Embassy 211 Caucasian food 181, 193
Island) 62 Canals 34–7 Caviar Bar and Restaurant 188
Bonazza, Giovanni 151 cruises 226–7 Caviar shops 198
Book shops 198, 199 St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and Celebrated St Petersburgers 42–5
Bookvoed 199 Waterways 34–5 Cemeteries
Borey 199 A Walk along St Petersburg’s Lazarus Cemetery 131
Boris Godunov, Tsar 17 Waterways 134–5 Piskarevskoe Memorial Cemetery
Borodin, Aleksandr 44 Canova, Antonio 90 126
Borodino, Battle of (1812) 23 Canvas 18 Tikhvin Cemetery 131
Botanical Gardens 136 Caravaggio Central Air Communication Agency
Boucher, François 90 A Young Man Playing a Lute 90 220
Brandy 183 Caravan 188 Central Asian food 181
Braunstein, Johann 150 Cars Central District Tax Office 49
Brenna, Vincenzo chastnikii 227 Central Park of Culture and Rest 126
Gatchina 147 driving in St Petersburg 229 Central Theatre Ticket Office 201
Mikhaylovskiy Castle 101 hiring 229 Central Train Ticket Office 220
Pavlovsk 158, 159, 160, 161 Casa Leto 174 Ceramics shops 199
Brest-Litovsk, Treaty of (1917) 29 Cash dispensers 214 Cézanne, Paul 91, 107
Brezhnev, Leonid 30, 53 Casinos 204, 205 Chabrol, Vincent 35
Bridge Passage Castle, Mikhaylovskiy 97, 99, 101 Chaev, Sergey 136
St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and Cathedrals Chagall, Marc 45, 107
Waterways 35 Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan The Circuss 45
Bridges 34–7 33, 47, 111, 135, 203 Chagin, Vladimir 137
Lieutenant Shmidt Bridge 34, 63 Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul Chaliapin (Repino) 191
opening times 209 19, 41, 65, 67, 68–9, 138 Chalyapin, Fyodor 70, 146
St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and Cathedral of St Sophia Chamber of Facets (Novgorod) 162,
Waterways 34–5 (Novgorod) 143, 162, 163 163
British Airways 220 Cathedral of the Transfiguration Chardin, Jean-Baptiste
British-American Family Practice 127, 203 Still Life with the Attributes of the
213 Holy Trinity Cathedral 130, 203 Artss 91
Brodsky, Joseph 44 St Andrew’s Cathedral 63 Charles XII, King of Sweden 18, 21,
Bronze Horseman (Falconet) 10, St Isaac’s Cathedral 10, 11, 23, 75, 68
75, 78–9
8 76, 80–81, 139 Chastnikii 227
Street-by-Street map 76 St Nicholas’ Cathedral 115, 117, Chaynaya Khizhina 193
The Bronze Horseman (Pushkin) 120 Che 205
37, 69, 78 St Nicholas’ Cathedral CHEKAKA 29
Brothers Karamazov Hotel 175 (Novgorod) 163 Chekhov, Anton 110
Brullo, Nikolay 122 Smolnyy Cathedral 203 Chemiakin, Mikhail 67
Bryullov, Aleksandr Smolnyy Convent 128 Cherepanov family 123
Guards Headquarters 83 Znamenskiy Cathedral Chernenko, Konstantin 30, 31
Lieutenant Shmidt Bridge 34, 63 (Novgorod) 164 Chesma Church 130
Lutheran Church 112 see also Churches Chesma Column (Tsarskoe Selo)
Marble Palace 94 Catherine I, Tsarina 19, 21 154
St Isaac’s Cathedral 80 and Prince Menshikov 62 Chesma Palace 130
Winter Palace 93 St Andrew’s Cathedral 63 Chevakinskiy, Savva
Bryullov, Karl 45, 163 Summer Palace 95 New Holland 121
The Last Day of Pompeii 105, 106 Tsarskoe Selo 152 St Nicholas’ Cathedral 120
Virgin in Majestyy 81 Catherine II (the Great) 19, 22, 93, Sheremetev Palace 129
Buddhist Temple 137 108 Tsarskoe Selo 153
248 G E N E R A L I N D E X
Petipa, Marius 45, 118, 131 Prosvet 205 Rastrelli, Bartolomeo (cont.)
Petrashevsky Circle 123 PTS card-operated phones 216 Vorontsov Palace 111
Petro Palace Hotel 174 Public holidays 53 Winter Palace 10, 85, 92
Petrogradskaya 15, 65–73 Public toilets 211 Rastrelli, Bartolomeo Carlo
area map 65 Pubs 192, 193 bust of Peter the Great 89
Peter and Paul Fortress 66–7 Pugachev Rebellion (1773–5) 22, 24 statue of Peter the Great 101
restaurants 184–5 Pulkovo Airlines 220 Razumovskiy, Aleksey 49, 109
Style Moderne in St Petersburg 71 Pulkovskaya Hotel 173, 176 Red Army 27
Petrol 229 Puppet theatres 201 Red Bridge 37
Pharmacies 213 Pushka Inn 175 Red Club 205
Philharmonia Pushkin Red Guard 28
Great (Shostakovich) Hall 43, hotels 177 Reed, John 79
101, 203 restaurants 191 Registration of foreigners 210
Small (Glinka) Hall 48, 203 Pushkin, Alexander 43, 44 Rembrandt 90
Photography 211 The Bronze Horseman 23, 37, 69, Abraham’s Sacrifice 86
Phryne at the Festival of Poseidon 78 Renaissance St Petersburg Baltic
in Eleusin
l (Siemiradzki) 105 death 83, 113 Hotel 172, 175
Picasso, Pablo 91, 94, 107 Fountain at Tsarskoe Selo 154 Reni, Guido 90
L’Homme aux Bras Croisés 91 Literary Café 46, 83 Renoir, Pierre Auguste 91
Pickpockets 212 Pushkin House-Museum 39, 113, Repin, Ilya 42, 45, 106–7
Pimenov, Nikolay 80 134 Academy of Arts 63
Pimenov, Stepan 83, 110 Repin’s portrait of 146 Barge-Haulers on the Volga 105
Pineau, Nicholas 148 statues of 101, 155 dacha 143
Pirosmani 191 Tsarskoe Selo 41, 155 grave of 146
Piskarevskoe Memorial Cemetery Pushkin, Natalya seee Goncharova, Portrait of Mikhail Glinka 44
126 Natalya Repino 41, 146
Pissarro, Camille 91 Pushkin (town) seee Tsarskoe Selo Repino 41, 146
Pivnaya 0.5 193 Pushkin House-Museum 41, 113, 134 restaurants 191
Pizza houses 192, 193 St Petersburg’s Best: Palaces and travelling to 229
Platforma 205 Museums 39 Restaurants 178–93
Ploshchad Lenina 139 Pushkin’s Dacha (Tsarskoe Selo) 155 children in 179
Podvorie (Pavlovsk) 191 Pushkinskaya 10 199 disabled travellers 179
Polenov, Vasiliy 107 Putin, Vladimir 31 dress code 179
Police 212, 213 Pyatnitsa 205 The Flavours of St Petersburg
Polikoff Hotel 175 180–81
Political prisoners 69 Q Gostinyy Dvor 187–8
Polovtsov, Aleksandr 122, 127, 137 Quarenghi, Giacomo live music 179
Poltava, Battle of (1709) 19, 21 Academy of Sciences 25, 58 Novgorod 191
Polyglot 189 Alexander Palace (Tsarskoe Selo) opening times 179
Popov, Aleksandr 45 155 Palace Embankment 185–6
Porcelain shops 199 Anichkov Palace 109 Pavlovsk 191
Port 205 English Quay buildings 121 payment and tipping 178
Portik Ruska Perinnyie R Ryadi 48 grave of 131 Petrogradskaya 184–5
Portrait of E I Nelidova (Levitskiy) Hermitage 84 Pushkin 191
106 Horseguards’ Manège 76, 79 reading the menu 178
Portrait of the Director Vsevolod New Exchange Bazaar 59 Repino 191
Meyerhold d (Grigoriev) 107 Round Market 134 reservations 179
Post International 217 Smolnyy Institute 128 Sennaya Ploshchad 188
Postal services 216–17 Tsarskoe Selo 154 Shuvalovka 191
Main Post Office 122, 217 Quarenghi’s Stalls 49 smoking in 179
Postel, Fyodor von 71 Quo Vadis? 217 types of restaurant 178
Potemkin, Prince Grigoriy 25 Vasilevskiy Island 184
Anichkov Palace 109 R vegetarian food 179
Peacock Clock 85 RADAR R 211 websites 179
Tauride Palace 128 Radio 217 where to eat 178
Potemkin, Pyotr 91 Radisson SAS Royal Hotel 176 Retur Camping 171
Poussin, Nicolas 90 Raiffeisen Bank 214 Revolution (1905) 26
Povari 189 Railway Museum 41, 123 Palace Square 83
“Prague Spring” 30 Railways seee Trains Trinity Square 73, 138
Premier 205 Rainfall 52 Revolution (1917) 26, 28–9
Preobrazhenskiy Life-Guards 134 Raphael 63, 84, 90, 130 Cruiser Aurora 73, 139
Prestige Hotel 172, 174 Rapsodiya 199 Finland Station 126
Prestige Hotel Centre 174 Rasputin, Grigoriy 26 Kshesinskaya Mansion 72, 138
Pri Dvorye (Novgorod) 191 Chesma Palace 130 Palace Square 83
Pribaltiyskaya Hotel 168, 177 death 40, 72, 121 Smolnyy Institute 128
Priboy 193 Yusupov Palace 10, 120 Revolution (disco) 205
Prima Sport Hotel 171 Rastrelli, Bartolomeo 19, 93 Reynolds, Sir Joshua 91
Prince Lobanov-Rostovskiy Mansion Catherine Palace (Tsarskoe Selo) Rezanov, Aleksandr 94
Street-by-Street map 77 38 Ribera, José de 90
Princess Olga Konstantinovna Gostinyy Dvor 108–9 Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai 44, 202
Orlova (Serov) 104 Monplaisir (Peterhof) 150 Academic Capella 112
Prisoners, political 69 Peterhof 148, 149 Monument to Rimsky-Korsakov
Probka 190 Smolnyy Convent 128 116
Progressive Tours 211 Stroganov Palace 112 Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory
Prokofiev, Sergey 116, 120 Tsarskoe Selo 152, 154 120
G E N E R A L I N D E X 255
Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai (cont.) Russian Orthodox Church (cont.) Serov, Vasiliy 163
tomb of 131 history 17 Serov, Valentin
Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory 120 Iconostasis 165 Princess Olga Konstantinovna
Street-by-Street map 116 music 202, 203 Orlova 104
Rinaldi, Antonio revival of 31 7:40 191
Chesma Column (Tsarskoe Selo) Russian icon painting 165 Sever 199
154 visiting churches 208–9 Severnaya lira 199
Gatchina 147 Russian Revolution see Revolution Shakespeare, William 42, 113
Marble Palace 94 Russkaya Starina 199 Shaposhnikov, Ivan 121
Oranienbaum 146 Russkie bliny u Natashi 193 Shchedrin, Silvestr 45, 106
Rinaldi Bed & Breakfast 171 Russkiye Kruizy 226 Shchukin, Sergey 91
River Terminal 220 Russo-Japanese War (1904–5) 26, Shebuev, Vasiliy 63
Rivers 36 139 Shelfort Hotel 174
cruises 226–7 Russo-Turkish Wars 22 Sherbet 189
A Walk along St Petersburg’s Ruysch, Frederik 60–61 Sheremetev, Field Marshal Boris
Waterways 134–5 129
Rizhskiy Dvorik 189 S Sheremetev family 41, 129
Robert, Hubert 161 Saburov, Pyotr 88 Sheremetev Palace 125, 129
Rock music 51, 204, 205 Safety 212–13 Shinok 189
Rodchenko, Alexander 107 St Andrew’s Cathedral 63 Shmidt, Lieutenant Pyotr
Romanov dynasty 10, 94 St Isaac’s Cathedral 10, 11, 23, 75, Lieutenant Shmidt Bridge 37, 63
beginning of 17 80–81, 139 Shopping 194–9
end of 27, 28 Street-by-Street map 76 art and antiques 194–5, 198, 199
Rossi, Carlo 37, 110 St Isaac’s Square 79 bargaining etiquette 194
Anichkov Palace 109 Street-by-Street map 76–7 books, film and music 198, 199
Arts Square 98, 101 St Nicholas’ Cathedral 115, 120 department stores 195, 199
Decembrists’ Square 78 Belfry 117 furs and fashion 198, 199
General Staff Building 83, 135 Street-by-Street map 117 how to pay 194
grave of 131 St Nicholas Cathedral (Novgorod) markets and bazaars 195, 199
Mikhaylovskiy Palace 39, 98, 104, 163 museum shops 195
105 St Panteleymon’s Bridge 37 opening hours 194
Ostrovskiy Square 110 St Paraskeva Pyatnitsa (Novgorod) souvenirs and crafts 198, 199
Palace Square 83 163 Soviet memorabilia 198
Russian Library 110 SS Peter and Paul Cathedral see vodka and caviar 198
Senate building 76, 78 Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul What to Buy in St Petersburg
Synod building 76, 78 St Peter’s Gate 68 196–7
ulitsa Zodchevo Rossi 110 Street-by-Street map 67 Shostakovich, Dmitriy 43, 44, 202
Yelagin Palace 136–7 St Petersburg (restaurant) 11, 188 film music 45
Rossiya Hotel 176 A 90-Minute Walk Along the Mariinskiy Theatre 119
Rostral Columns 60 Embankment 138–9 Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory
Street-by-Street map 59 St Petersburg Hotel 173, 177 116, 120
Round Market 134 St Petersburg International Youth Seventh Symphony 27, 43, 44
Rowley, Master John 89 Hostel 171, 211 Victory Monument 131
Rubens, Peter Paul 90, 93, 130 St Petersburg Opera 203 Shreter, Viktor 121
The Marriage of Emperor St Petersburg University Shubin, Fedot 130, 151
Constantine 93 Twelve Colleges 58, 61 Shury Mury 189
Rubinstein, Anton 44, 116, 120 St Sophia’s Belfry (Novgorod) 162 Shustov, Smaragd 136
Rublev, Andrey 106, 164 Sakharov, Andrei 30, 31 Shuvalovka 201
Old Testament Trinityy 165 Salkhino 11, 185 restaurants 191
Rudnev, Lev 94 SALT talks 30 Shyolk 188
Rurik, Prince 17, 162, 163 Samotsvety 199 Siege of Leningrad (1941–4) 27, 43
Rusca, Luigi 48 Samovars 183 Hermitage 85
Russia Day 51 SAS 220 Monument to the Heroic
Russian Federation Sberbank 214 Defenders of Leningrad 41
map 12–13 Schädel, Gottfried 62, 146 Piskarevskoe Memorial Cemetery
Russian Fishing 190 Schlüsselburg Fortress 69 126
Russian food 192, 193 Schlüter, Andreas 95, 153 Victory Monument 131
Russian Kitsch 11, 184 Schmidt, Karl 82 Siemiradzki, Henryk
Russian Museum 40, 97, 104–7 Schöne, Vasiliy 137 Phryne at the Festival of Poseidon
18th–19th-century art 106–7 School No. 210 46 in Eleusin 105
floorplan 104–5 Schröter, Viktor 119 “Silver Age”, poetry 44, 129
folk art 107 Scientists 45 Sindbad 171
icons 106 Scott’s Tours 220 Singer House 47, 71, 135
Marble Palace 94 “Secret House” 66, 69 Singers’ Bridge 37, 112, 135
Old Russian art 106 Security 212–13 The Six-Winged Seraph (Vrubel) 107
St Petersburg’s Best: Palaces and in hotels 169 Skating 53
Museums 39 Sekunda 199 Skiing 53
Street-by-Street map 98 Senat Bar 18 Sladkoezhka 193
20th-century art 107 Sennaya Ploshchad 15, 115–23 Slavs 17
Visitors’ Checklist 105 area map 115 Slavyanskiy stil 11, 199
Russian National Library 48, 110 Ballet in St Petersburg 118 Sledges 53
Information Service Centre 217 hotels 175 Sleep Cheap 171
Russian Orthodox Church restaurants 188 Small Hall of the Philharmonia 48,
Christmas 53 Sennaya Ploshchad 122–3 203
Easter Sunday 50 Theatre Square 116–17 Small Hermitage 84, 85
256 G E N E R A L I N D E X
Small Stable Bridge 35, 37 Stroganov, Count Sergey 112 Thirty Years War 151
Smoking 179, 209 Stroganov Palace 40, 47, 112 Thomon, Thomas de 60, 131
Smolnyy Cathedral 203 A Walk along St Petersburg’s Tickets
Smolnyy Convent 128 Waterways 135 entertainments 200
Smolnyy district 125 Stroganoff Yard 193 kiosks 201
Smolnyy Institute 11, 128–9 Student travellers 210, 211 travel 223, 225
Snow 52 Style Moderne 65, 71 Tiepolo, Giovanni Battista 90
Sobchak, Anatoly 31 Kamennoostrovskiy prospekt 70, Tikhvin Cemetery 131
Sobiratel 199 138 Tilsit, Peace of (1807) 22
Sobornaya Mosque 70, 138 Kshesinskaya Mansion 72 Time of Troubles (1605–13) 17
Sobranie (Shuvalovka) 191 Yeliseev’s 109 Time zones 211
Social-Democratic Workers party 26 Suburban trains 228–9 Tinkoff 193
Socialist Realism 27 Sukawati 187 Tipping 209
Society for the Advancement of Suliko 187 Titian 63, 90
Travel for the Handicapped 211 Summer Garden 95 Toasts 209
Soiree 193 Summer in St Petersburg 51 Toilets 211
Sokolov, Pavel 34 Summer Palace 40, 95 Tolstoy, Leo
Girl with a Pitcherr 154 St Petersburg’s Best: Palaces and War and Peacee 23, 111, 121
Solzhenitsyn, Alexander 30 Museums 39 Torelli, Stefano 94
Sophia, Regent 18 Sunduk 190 Tour companies 220
Sound Ways Modern Music Festival Sunshine 51 Tourist information 208, 211
52 Supermarket 199 Trains 220
Souvenir Market 11, 199 Suprematism 107 Finland Station 126
Souvenir shops 198 Supremus No. 56 6 (Malevich) 29 Railway Museum 41, 123
Sovetskaya Hotel 172, 176 Surikov, Vasiliy 107 suburban trains 228–9
Soviet memorabilia 198 Sushi 192, 193 travelling between Moscow and
Space race 30, 50 Sushi Planet 193 St Petersburg 219
S.P.A.S. 199 Swan Canal 36 travelling to St Petersburg 219
Speranskiy, Sergey 131 St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and Traitteur, Georg von 35, 37, 135
Sphinx 57 Waterways 35 Trams 224
Spoon 18 Swimming 53 Transaero 220
Sport 51 Symbolists 107 Trapeza (Petrodvorets) 193
Spring in St Petersburg 50 Synagogue, Choral 121 Trauberg, Leonid 45, 70
Sputnik 30 Syuzor, Pavel 47, 71 Trauma Clinic of the Central District
Stakenschneider, Andrei 49, 85, 94 213
Stalin, Joseph 125 T Travel 218–29
assassination of Kirov 41, 72 Tamanskiy, Pyotr 70 air 218–19, 220
dictatorship 27 Tatlin, Vladimir 79 buses and minibuses 224–5
Khrushchev denounces 30 Tatyana Parfyonova modnyy dom canal and river cruises 226–7
metro stations 222 199 cars 229
purges 27, 72, 129 Tauride Palace 128 coaches 220
Staraya Bashnya (Pushkin) 191 Taurit, Robert 126 ferries and cruises 220
Staraya Derevnya 191 Taxis 201, 226, 227 hydrofoils 229
Staraya kniga 199 airport 219 insurance 212
Starov, Ivan 128, 130 Tbiliso 185 late night transport 201
Stars of the White Nights Classical Tchaikovsky, Pyotr 42, 44, 49, 202 Metro 222–3
Music Festival 51 death 82 St Petersburg’s surroundings 144
Staryy Dom 190 Mariinskiy Theatre 119 taxis 201, 226, 227
Stasov, Vasiliy Pathétique symphony 101 trains 219, 220
Cathedral of the Transfiguration Rimsky-Korsakov Conservatory trams 224
127 116, 120 travelling out of St Petersburg
Imperial Stables 113 tomb of 11, 131 228–9
Literary Café 83 Tea 183 trolleybuses 225
Pavlovskiy Guards barracks 94 Telegrams 217 walking 221
Smolnyy Convent 128 Telephones 169, 216 water taxis 227
Stieglitz, Baron Aleksandr 127 Television 217 Travel cards 223, 225
Stieglitz Museum 40, 127 Telex 217 Travellers’ cheques 212, 215
St Petersburg’s Best: Palaces and Temperatures 53 Tres Amigos 190
Museums 39 Terborch, Gerard 90 Trezzini, Domenico
Still Life with the Attributes of the Teremok 193 Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul 68
Artss (Chardin) 91 Terrace 185 Church of the Annunciation 130
Stirka 40E 193 Tertia 199 Peter and Paul Fortress 66
Stolle 193 Teutonic Knights 17 St Peter’s Gate 67, 68
Stone Bridge 135 Theatre 202–3 Summer Palace 95
Stony Island Hotel 177 Kamennoostrovskiy Theatre 136 Twelve Colleges 61
La Strada 187 Mariinskiy Theatre 116, 119, 202, Trezzini, Giuseppe 63
Stravinsky, Igor 44, 119 203 Tribunal 205
Street Life 205 Theatre Festival of the Baltic TriEl 205
Street music 202, 203 Countries 52 Trinity Bridge 37, 65, 73, 138
Strelka 11 Theatre Museum 41, 110 St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and
Street-by-Street map 58–9 Theatre Bridge 37, 134 Waterways 35
Strelna Theatre Square Trinity Square 73, 138
hotels 177 Street-by-Street map 116–17 Trinity Sunday 51
Streltsy Guards 18, 20 Theft 212 Triscorni, Paolo 77
Streltsy Rebellion (1682) 18, 20 Theophanes the Greek 164 Troika 190
G E N E R A L I N D E X 257
Troitskiy Most 11, 193 Victory Day 50, 53 White Nights Rock Music Festival
Trolleybuses 225 Victory Monument 11, 131 51
Trotsky, Leon 27 Vienna (restaurant) 18 White Nights Swing Jazz Festival 51
Civil War 123 Virgin in Majestyy (Bryullov) 81 White Russians 27
imprisonment 69 Virtuosi 2000 50 Wine 183
murder 29 Visas 210, 211 Winter Canal 36
Russian Revolution 28, 29 rail travel 219 St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and
Trubetskoy, Prince Pavel 94 Vist, Aleksandr 63 Waterways 34
Trubetskoy Bastion 41, 69 Vitali, Ivan 80, 81 A Walk along St Petersburg’s
Street-by-Street map 66 Vitebsk Station 220, 229 Waterways 134–5
Tsarskoe Selo 40, 139, 143, 152–5 Vladimir, Grand Prince 17 Winter in St Petersburg 53
in Autumn 52 Vladimir Aleksandrovich, Grand Winter Palace 10, 40, 85, 87, 92–3
Catherine Park 154 Duke 94 storming of 28–9
eating out on day trips 193 Vladimir Kirilovich, Grand Duke 67 Witte, Count Sergey 70
map 155 Vladimirskiy Passazh 199 Women, safety 212
St Petersburg’s Best: Palaces and Vodka 182, 198 “World of Art” movement 26, 45,
Museums 38 Volkhov, River 162 107
Town of Tsarskoe Selo 155 Volkhov Hotel (Novgorod) 177 World War I 26–7
travelling to 228 Volna 185 World War II 27
Tsarskoe Selo Park 155 Voltaire 22, 113 Monument to the Heroic
Visitors’ Checklist 153 correspondence with Catherine Defenders of Leningrad 41
Tsarskoe Selo Carnival 51 the Great 24 Victory Day 50
Tsinik 205 library of 110 Victory Monument 131
Tunnel (disco) 205 statue of 87 seee also Siege of Leningrad
Turkish Bath (Tsarskoe Selo) 154 Voronikhin, Andrey Wright of Derby, Joseph 91
“Turreted House” 70 Academy of Arts 63 Writers 44
Twelve Colleges 61 Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan Writers’ Bookshop 199
Street-by-Street map 58 111
Centaur Bridge (Pavlovsk) 158 X
U grave of 131 X.O. 190
U tyoshi na blinakh 193 Kazan Cathedral 47 Xren 190
UK Embassy 211 Pavlovsk 160, 161
Ulitsa Zodchevo Rossi 110 Visconti Bridge (Pavlovsk) 159 Y
Union of Artists 199 Vorontsov, Prince Mikhail 111 Yaroslav the Wise 163
US Embassy 211 Vorontsov Palace 111
Yaroslav’s Court (Novgorod) 163
Vostochynyy Ugolok 187 Yefimov, Nikolay 77
V Voyages Jules Verne 220 Yegorov, Pyotr 95
Vaganova, Agrippina 45, 110, 118 Vrubel, Mikhail 107 Yelagin Island 11, 133
Valeriani, Giuseppe 152 The Six-Winged Seraph 107 A Walk around Kamennyy and
Vallin de la Mothe, Jean-Baptiste Vsevolod, Prince 164 Yelagin Islands 136–7
Academy of Arts 63 Yelagin Palace 40, 126, 133
Church of St Catherine 48 W A Walk around Kamennyy and
Gostinyy Dvor 109 Walks in St Petersburg 133–9, 221 Yelagin Islands 137
New Holland 121 A 90-Minute Walk Along the Yeliseev, Pyotr 109
Small Hermitage 85 Embankment 138–9 Yeliseev’s 49, 109, 199
Yusupov Palace 120 A Walk along St Petersburg’s Style Moderne in St Petersburg 71
Van Dyck, Anthony 90, 130 Waterways 134–5 Yeltsin, Boris 30, 31, 53
Van Gogh, Vincent 91 A Walk around Kamennyy and Yesenin, Sergey 79
Vasilevskiy Island 14, 57–63 Yelagin Islands 136–7 A Young Man Playing a Lute
area map 57 Wanderers (Peredvizhniki) 45, 63, (Caravaggio) 90
hotels 174 106–7 Yubileynyy dvorets sporta 205
restaurants 184 Warhol, Andy 94 Yuriev Monastery 164
Strelka 58–9 Warsaw Pact 30 Yusupov, Prince Felix 111, 120, 121
Vasiliev, Aleksandr 126 Warsaw Station 229 Yusupov family 116, 120
Vasnetsov, Viktor Water Yusupov Palace 10, 40, 120
Church on Spilled Blood mosaics health precautions 213 Street-by-Street map 11
100 mineral waters 183 Yusupov Theatre 203 6
Knight at the Crossroads 106, 107 Water taxis 227
Vegetarian food 179 Waterways 34–7 Z
Velázquez, Diego de Silva y 90 St Petersburg’s Best: Bridges and Zakharov, Andrey 63, 78, 131
Velten, Yuriy Waterways 34–5 Zakuskii 181
Armenian Church 48, 108 A Walk along St Petersburg’s Zarudnyy, Ivan 67, 68
Chesma Church 130 Waterways 134–5 Zazerkalye 201
Chesma Palace 130 Watteau, Antoine 90 Zeck, Johann 161
Church of St John the Baptist 136 Weather 50–53 Zelenogorsk
Creaking Pavilion (Tsarskoe Selo) Websites hotels 177
154 entertainments 201 Zhivago 80
Hermitage Theatre 34 restaurants 179 Znamenskiy Cathedral (Novgorod)
Large Hermitage 84 Wedgwood, Josiah 91, 130 164
Peterhof 149 Weenix, Jan 62 Zoological Museum 11, 41, 60
Small Hermitage 85 Westpost 217 Street-by-Street map 58
Summer Garden 95 Weyden, Rogier van der 90 Zurbarán, Francisco 90
Venus and Cupid d (Cranach) 90 Wheelchair access see Disabled Zver 11, 185
Vereshchagin, Nikolay 89 travellers Zverkov House 135
Vernisazh 199 White Nights festivals 51, 201
258 A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S
Acknowledgments
Dorling Kindersley would like to thank Design and Editorial Assistance
the following people whose contribu- Gillian Allan, Douglas Amrine, Liz
tions and assistance have made the Atherton, Laurence Broers, Lucinda
preparation of this book possible. Cooke, Vivien Crump, Dawn Davies-
Cook, Alexandra Farrell, Claire Folkard,
Main Contributor Freddy Hamilton, Paul Hines, Leanne
Christopher Rice holds a PhD in Russian Hogbin, Vicki Ingle, Kathryn Lane, Sam
history from the University of Birming- Merrell, Fiona Morgan, Jane Oliver,
ham. He and his wife Melanie, also a Marianne Petrou, Amir Reuveni, Ellen
writer, first visited Russia in 1978 and Root, Luke Rozkowski, Alison Stace,
have been returning regularly ever since. Ingrid Vienings, Veronica Wood.
W
Together they have written numerous
travel guides to the city, and to a variety Additional Illustrations
of other destinations, including Prague, Claire Littlejohn, John Woodcock.
W
Berlin and Istanbul, as well as the
Eyewitness Travel Guide to Moscow. Additional Photography
Valentin Baranovsky, Victoria Buyvid,
Catherine Phillips is an art historian who Andy Crawford, Erich Crichton, Neil
arrived in Russia in 1985 and has lived Fletcher, Steve Gorton, Paul Miller, Ian
there ever since, moving to St Petersburg O’Leary, Clive Streeter; KOMMERSANT
in 1989. She covered major events for Photo Agency: Yevgeny Pavlenko,
British and American T TV and radio during Sergey Semyenov.
the early years of perestroika and authored
and contributed to some of the first guides Photography Permissions
to the new Russia. Today she concent- The publisher would like to thank all
rates on translating and editing scholarly those who gave permission to photograph
texts and writing for works of reference. at their establishments, including hotels,
museums, churches, shops and other
Additional Contributor sights, too numerous to thank individually.
Rose Baring began to study Russian at
Picture Credits
the age of 12. She has an MA in Modern
History and divided her time between t = top; tl = top left; tlc = top left centre;
London, Moscow and St Petersburg for tc = top centre; trc = top right centre;
much of the early 1990s. She has written tr = top right; cla = centre left above;
ca = centre above; cra = centre right
guides to St Petersburg, Moscow and
above; cl = centre left; c = centre;
other destinations, including the
Eyewitness Travel Guide to Istanbul. cr = centre right; clb = centre left below;
cb = centre below; crb = centre right
Special Assistance below; bl = bottom left; b = bottom;
Dorling Kindersley would like to thank bc = bottom centre; bcl = bottom centre
Marc Bennetts (walks writer), Anastasia left; br = bottom right; d = detail.
Makarova (factchecker), Hilary Bird
The publisher would like to thank the
(indexer), Ian W
Wizniewski (food and drink
following individuals, companies and
consultant), Valera Katsuba (photo
picture libraries for their kind permission
permissions), Marina Maydanyuk
to reproduce their photographs:
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A C K N O W L E D G M E N T S 259
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260 P H R A S E B O O K
Phrase Book
In this guide the Russian language has been In particular, the names of Russian rulers,
transliterated into Roman script following a such as Peter the Great, are given in their
consistent system used by the US Board on anglicized forms. Throughout the book, trans-
Geographic Names. All street and place names, literated names can be taken as an accurate
and the names of most people, are transliterated guide to pronunciation. The Phrase Book also
according to this system. For some names, gives a phonetic guide to the pronunciation of
where a well-known English form exists, this words and phrases used in everyday situations,
has been used – hence, Leo (not Lev) Tolstoy. such as when eating out or shopping.
Transport odinnadtsat
12 двенадцать dvyenatsat’
a
north север syever dvenadtsat
sever 13 тринадцать treenatsat’
a
south юг yook trinadtsat
yug 14 четырнадцать chyetirnatsat’
east восток vastok chetyrnadtsat
vostok 15 пятнадцать pyatnatsat’
a
west запад zapat pyatnadtsat
zapad 16 шестнадцать shestnatsat’
a
airport аэропорт aeraport shestnadtsat
aeroport 17 семнадцать syemnatsat’
a
aeroplane самолёт samalyot semnadtsat
samolet 18 восемнадцать vasyemnatsat’
a
traffic police ДПС day-pay-ess vosemnadtsat
DPS 19 девятнадцать dyevyatnatsat’
a
bus автобус aftoboos devyatnadtsat
avtobus 20 двадцать dvatsat’
a
bus station автобусная aftoboosna-ya dvadtsat
станция stantsee-ya 21 двадцать один dvatsat’
a adeen
avtobusnaya
dvadtsat odin
stantsiya
22 двадцать два dvatsat’
a dva
bus stop остановка автобуса astanofka aftoboosa
dvadtsat dva
ostanovka avtobusa
23 двадцать три dvatsat’
a tree
car машина masheena
dvadtsat tri
mashina
24 двадцать четыре dvatsat’
a chyetir-ye
flight рейс ryeys
dvadtsat chetyre
reys
metro (station) (станция) метро (stantsee-ya) myetro 25 двадцать пять dvatsat’
a pyat’
(stantsiya) metro dvadtsat pyat
no entry нет входа nyet fkhoda 30 тридцать treetsat’
net vkhoda tridtsat
no exit нет выхода nyet vikhada 40 сорок sorak
net vykhoda sorok
parking автостоянка aftostoyanka 50 пятьдесят pyadyesyat’
a
avtostoyanka pyatdesyat
petrol бензин byenzeen 60 шестьдесят shes’dyesyat
a
benzin shestdesyat
railway железная дорога zhelyezna-ya daroga 70 семьдесят syem’dyesyat
zheleznaya doroga semdesyat
railway station вокзал vagzal 80 восемьдесят vosyem’dyesyat
vokzal vosemdesyat
return ticket обратный билет obratnee
a beelye
l t 90 девяносто dyevyanosta
obratniy bilet devyanosto
seat место m sta
mye 100 сто sto
mesto sto
suburban train пригородный поезд preegaradnee 200 двести dvye
v stee
prigorodniy poezdd po-yezd dvesti
straight on прямо prya
r ma 300 триста treesta
pryamo trista
taxi такси taksee 400 четыреста chyetiryesta
taksi chetyresta
ticket билет beelyet 500 пятьсот pyat’sot
bilet pyatsot
token (for a single жетон zheton 1,000 тысяча tisyacha
metro journey) zheton tysyacha
to the left налево nalye
l va 2,000 две тысячи dvye tisyachi
nalevo dve tysyachi
to the right направо naprava
a 5,000 пять тысяч pyat’ tisyach
napravo pyat tysyach
train поезд po-yezd 1,000,000 миллион meelee-on
poezd million
tram трамвай tramvay
tramvay
trolleybus троллейбус tralyeyboos
y
trolleybus
Time, Days and Dates
one minute одна минута adna meenoota
odna minuta
Numbers one hour час chas
1 один/одна/однo adeen/adna/adn
a o chas
odin/odna/odno half an hour полчаса polchasa
2 два/две dva/dvye polchasa
dva/dve day день dyen’
3 три tree den
tri week неделя nyedye
d l-ya
4 четыре chyetir-ye nedelya
chetyre Monday понедельник panyedye
d l’neek
5 пять pyat’ ponedelnik
pyat Tuesday вторник ftorneek
6 шесть shest’ vtornik
shest Wednesday среда sryeda
7 семь syem’ sreda
sem Thursday четверг chyetvye
v rk
8 восемь vosyem’ chetverg
vosem Friday пятница pyatneetsa
a
9 девять d vyat’
dye pyatnitsa
devyat Saturday суббота soobota
10 десять d syat’
dye subbota
desyat Sunday воскресенье vaskryesyen’ye
11 одиннадцать adeenatsat’ voskresene
St Petersbur
Petersburg
rg Transport
Tr rt Map
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Eyewitness TRAVEL
“Eyewitness Travel Guides are marvels of
writing, color photography, and illustration”
New York
Y Times Syndicate
PACKED
K WITH PHOTOGRAR PHS,
ILLUSTRA
RATIONS, AND
A M PS
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•
FOUR GREAT A DAYS
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•
CUTAWA
T AYS AND
A FLOOR PLANS
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OF ALL THE MA
MAJOR SIGHTS
•
3-D AERIAL
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ST. PETERSBURG’S MOST
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HUGE SELECTION OF HOTELS,
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ENTERTA
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