Pavlovsk

From Free net encyclopedia

Pavlovsk (Template:Lang-ru) is a town situated in Russia, 30 km from and under jurisdiction of St. Petersburg, just to the south of Tsarskoye Selo. It is located at Template:Coor dm, with a population of 14,960 (2002 census). The town developed around the Pavlovsk Palace, one of the most splendid residences of the Russian imperial family.

The palace of Pavel I

Image:Pavlovsk palace.jpg

The town's history started in 1777 when Catherine II granted some 362 desyatinas of land along the Slavyanka river to her son Paul upon the birth of his first child. The name Pavlovsk derives from Paul's name in Russian, Pavel.

In 1780, the fashionable Scottish architect Charles Cameron was made responsible for construction activities in Pavlovsk. His Neoclassical design for the Grand Palace was approved by Paul two years later. Around the palace a huge English park was laid out, with numerous temples, colonnades, bridges, and statues.

When Paul ascended the throne as Paul I in 1796, a settlement near the palace was large enough to be incorporated as city. After Paul's death the palace was proclaimed a residence of his widow, Maria Feodorovna. Then it passed to the Konstantinovichi branch of the Romanov dynasty.

Later history

Image:Pavlovsk fort.jpg

Prior to the revolution, Pavlovsk was a favourite summer retreat for well-to-do inhabitants of the Russian capital. The life of Pavlovsk dachniki was described by Dostoyevsky in his novel The Idiot.

To facilitate transportation, the first railway in Russia was opened between St Petersburg and Pavlovsk on October 10, 1837. The railway station was used as a sort of concert hall, with Johann Strauss II, Franz Liszt, and Robert Schumann among many celebrities that performed there. The impressive 'Vauxhall Pavilion' is also used to attract customers to the railway line. Strauss' finer pieces result around the time he held his concerts there.

The Pavlovsk palace is probably the best preserved of Russian imperial residences outside the capital. The sumptuous neoclassical interior of the palace was faithfully restored after the great fire in 1803. A damage sustained by the palace during the German occupation in 19411943, though considerable, was not so devastating as in the case of Peterhof and Tsarskoe Selo.

External links

eo:Pavlovsk (Sankt-Peterburgo) fr:Pavlovsk io:Pavlovsk ru:Павловск (Санкт-Петербург)