• The 16-metre sculpture was placed by the sea where the promenade from Kadriorg Palace comes down to meet the Bay of Tallinn.
  • In 1725, when Estonia was part of the Russian empire, Tsar Peter the Great built a summer palace in Tallinn for his wife Catherine.
  • Kadriorg Palace is easily the grandest venue in town, and it’s no wonder – it was made to order for none other than Russian Tsar Peter the Great.
  • An exuberant canopy boasting palatial caliber, the Kadriorg Art Museum is the very quintessence of northern Baroque architecture.
  • Kadriorg Palace (Estonian: Kadrioru loss, German: Schloss Katharinental) is an 18th-century Petrine Baroque palace in Kadriorg, Tallinn, the capital of Estonia.
  • It is famous for the Kadriorg Palace, that was built by the Russian emperor Peter the Great, today an art museum.
  • Kadriorg Palace, also known as Schloss Katharinental, is a magnificent Petrine Baroque palace in Tallinn, Estonia.
  • Kadriorg Palace is a Petrine Baroque palace built for Catherine I of Russia by Peter the Great in Tallinn, Estonia.
  • A. Weizenbergi 37, 10127 Tallinn. The construction Kadriorg Palace and Park in Estonia began in 1718 under the orders of Russian Tsar Peter the Great.