• Probably he used this word for a proper rhyme, but ever since then Russians have called the bronze monument - ‘the copper horseman’.
  • The Bronze Horseman is an equestrian statue of Peter the Great in the Senate Square in Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was opened to the public on 7 August 1782.
  • According to a 19 th century legend, enemy forces will never take St. Petersburg while the "Bronze Horseman" stands in the middle of the city.
  • Bronze Horseman, monument dedicated to Peter the Great, became one of the symbols of St. Petersburg. There are a lot of myths and legends about it.
  • It is often said that the crucible from which these tales stem is the folkloric figure of the Bronze Horseman.
  • The Bronze Horseman – a monument to Peter I on Senate Square in St. Petersburg – is one of the main symbols of the city on the Neva.
  • Bronze Horseman is likely to be the most famous monument in St. Petersburg.
  • The poem “The Bronze Horseman” was written in the autumn of 1833 in Boldin after a trip to the Urals in Pugachev’s places.
  • Bronze Horseman is an statue to remember Peter I, the king, who began to built the city. It is located near St. Isaac Cathedral, in Saint Petersburg.
  • One of his earlier works, Benois created this illustration for Alexander Pushkin’s Bronze Horseman, a poem written about a statue of Peter the Great in St...
  • Monument dedicated to the founder of the city, Peter the Great, located on Senate Square. The Bronze Horseman appeared at the request of Empress Catherine II.