• Toggle the table of contents. Monument to the Sunken Ships. 9 languages. ... Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monument to Sunken Ships, Sevastopol.
  • Monument to the Sunken Ships is the calling card of Sevastopol. This attraction collects a huge number of tourists but only a few know its interesting story.
  • The monument, now called “The Sunken Ships”, originally had a slightly different name: “To the memory of sunken ships in 1854 – 1855 to protect the entrance...
  • History of the monument to the sunken ships The monument was completed in 1905 in honor of the 50th anniversary of the end of the city’s defense.
  • ...17-metre-high monument was built in 1905 to mark the 50th anniversary of the first defence of Sevastopol, when the commanders decided to sink the ships...
  • The Monument to the Sunken Ships is the symbol of the city of Sevastopol, on the disputed Crimean peninsula.
  • The Monument to the Sunken Ships is a symbol of the disputed city of Sevastopol in Crimea. The monument was designed by sculptor Amandus Adamson.
  • In any case, this is indicated in the document of 1907. But the simpler and more understandable "Monument to Sunken Ships" is widely used.
  • Monument to the Sunken or Flooded Ships is one of the most famous monuments dedicated to the Russian Nave.
  • Monument to the Scuttled Ships - a monument in Sevastopol the emblem of the city designed by sculptor Amandus Adamson, architect Valentin Feldman and...
  • Monuments to the Heroes of the First World War. ... Feldman Valentin Augustovich created a Monument to sunken ships in 1905. •
  • Sevastopol Monument to the sunken ships is a 3.7 mile (8,500-step) route located near Sevastopol, Crimean Peninsula, Ukraine.