• Hızlı yanıt
  • Winter Palace, former royal residence of the Russian tsars in St. Petersburg, on the Neva River. Several different palaces were constructed in the 18th century, with the fourth and final version built in 1754–62 by Baroque architect Bartolomeo Francesco Rastrelli; it was restored following a fire in 1837, though the destroyed interior was largely redesigned. The palace is now part of the Hermitage art museum.
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  • Arama sonuçları
  • The Winter Palace is a palace in Saint Petersburg that served as the official residence of the House of Romanov, previous emperors, from 1732 to 1917.
  • Also, the city’s central street - Nevsky Avenue - starts at the Winter Palace and then heads deep into the city.
  • - Route 1, when visiting which the Main Halls of the Winter Palace, as well as the expositions of the Old and New Hermitage are available first of all.
  • It attracts attention with the smallest details, including the famous gate with eagles, which are captured in the film about the capture of the winter palace.
  • The Winter Palace interior. Anne’s palace was demolished and its foundations were used as the base for the west wing of the new stone palace.
  • The pinnacle of Russian imperial heritage, the Winter Palace is an icon that stretches over 700 ft along the Neva River in the second largest city of Russia.
  • The Winter Palace is a massive imperial palace home to the world-famous Hermitage Museum, which is, of-course an absolute must-see.
  • The first Imperial residence on the site of the Winter Palace was a wooden house in the Dutch style built in 1708 for Peter the Great and his family.
  • Within the Winter Palace, continual improvements and revisions were made to the interiors throughout the 18th and 19th centuries.
  • Shown from left to right are: the Hermitage Theatre (green building), the Old Hermitage, the Small Hermitage, and the Winter Palace.