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PUSHKIN
Located twenty-five kilometers south of St.
Petersburg, the town of Pushkin, originally called
Tsarskoye Selo, came into existence when Catherine I
built a little surprise palace here for her husband,
Peter the Great. The Empress Elizabeth had the palace
(named Yekaterininsky Dvorets, or Catherine's Palace)
expanded and renovated in 1752, and work continued
through Catherine the Great's reign. After the
Revolution the town was renamed Detskoye Selo until
1937 when it was changed to Pushkin to honor the
centennary of the poet's death. The estate was
completely devastated during the war and restoration
is not yet complete; pictures inside Catherine's
Palace show its state after the German retreat. The
baroque Catherine Palace was left in ruins by the
Germans at the end of WWII but today is a masterpiece
of restoration. The facade features golden domes and
blue and white detailing, while the interior
positively gleams and glitters with mirrors,
chandeliers and tumescent cherubs. Just north of the
Catherine Palace is the classical Alexander Palace.
Favourite haunt of Nicholas and Alexandra, it
ironically became their prison when they were put
under house arrest before being shunted off to
Yekaterinburg. It's the least touristy palace, so in
some ways the most pleasant, and now open after an
eons-long renovation.
Usually people are admitted to Catherine's Palace
only as part of a group, though once in it's no
problem to abandon the group and poke around on your
own; in fact if the tour is in Russian it's
recommended, as the guides yell at anyone not
listening attentively to every word they say. The
palace, a slew of white and gold, looks a lot like
all the other palaces - oodles of 18th century
paintings; a huge ballroom called the Grand Hall
(located just to the south of the main staircase), a
candelabra-gold-and-mirror menagerie with an 18th
century propaganda fresco entitled Russia's Triumph
on the ceiling; ornately decorated drawing rooms,
studies, and dining rooms; and of course the
ubiquitous Portrait Room. Probably the most famous
room in the palace is the Amber Room, the walls of
which were covered with huge amber panels given to
Peter I by Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia, taken back
by the Nazis during World War II, and now probably
someplace in Paraguay.
Surrounding the palace is a park covering more than
570 hectares (1400 acres) peppered with bridges,
terraces, fountains, and small galleries. Of note is
the Agate Pavilion, a bathhouse of semi-precious
stones just southeast of the palace. Farther south
lies the Great Pond. During the summer you can rent
rowboats and in the winter it serves as a skating
rink (bring your own skates). North of Catherine's
Palace is the Alexander Palace, built for the future
Alexander I at the end of the 18th century, which is
unfortunately closed to the public.
Pushkin is also the sight of the Lyceum where Pushkin
himself studied from 1811 to 1817, thus the old
school houses the inevitable Pushkin Museum.
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