Kamenny Islands
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Template:Infobox islands Kamenny Islands (Template:Langx, Kamenny Ostrova, meaning 'Stony Islands') are a group of three islands in the Neva delta, in Saint Petersburg, Russia.
Geography
The three islands are flat. They are divided by channels and have bridges connecting each other, as well as the group with the mainland. The Kamenny Islands are part of the city of Saint Petersburg.
Kamenny Island
Kamenny Island (Template:Langx, meaning 'Stone Island'), with an area of 1.06 km2, it is the easternmost island and gives its name to the group.[1] It was renamed as Workers' Island (Template:Langx) in Soviet times.[2] Since that era and to this day, government residences have been located on Kamenny Island.
Yelagin Island
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Yelagin Island (Template:Langx) lies in the centre/north, where the Yelagin Palace is located.[3]
Krestovsky Island
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Krestovsky Island (Template:Langx) is the westernmost and largest island. It is the location of the Kamenny Island Palace.[4]
History of Kamenny Island
Peter the Great presented Kamenny Island to Count Gavriil Golovkin, Chancellor of the Russian Empire. After his family fell into disgrace, the island passed to his successor, Count Aleksei Petrovich Bestuzhev-Ryumin. A decade later, Empress Elizabeth granted it to the future Peter III of Russia.
During the 19th century, the island was home to summer retreats ("dachas") of the Russian royalty and nobility. At the easternmost tip of the island stands the Kamennoostrovsky Palace, built by Georg von Veldten for Paul I and the Neo-Gothic church of Saint John of Jerusalem (1776–81) constructed in honor of the victory at Chesma and frequented by Alexander Pushkin during his stay at a dacha on Kamenny Ostrov. A cluster of Pushkin's last poems, including his version of Exegi monumentum, date from that period.
To the west lies a park with numerous mansions from the beginning of the 20th century, and some of the finest Moderne constructions in the city: the Shene Mansion (3 Skvoznoi Proyezd), the Follenweider Mansion (13 Bolshaya Alleya) and the Meltser Mansion (8 Polevaya Alleya). The Polovtsov Dacha (1911–13), with its opulent interiors, is a gem of the 20th-century Neoclassicism.
Further reading
- Витязева В. А. Каменный остров. Л., 1975.
References
External links
- Views of Kamenny Island
- View of Kamennoostrovsky Palace
- Dachas of Kamenny Island
- History of architecture
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- ↑ Городские имена сегодня и вчера: Ленинградская топонимика/Сост С. Алексеева, А. Владимирович, А. Ерофеев и др. — Л.:Добровольное общество любителей книги РСФСР, Ленингр. орг-ция/РПК «ЛИК», 1990 — с.24
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".