The first Cathedral on St. Isaac's square appeared in Peter's time, as workers from the Admiralty needed their religious building. The current Isaac is the fourth and largest in the city. It is still one of the tallest buildings in St. Petersburg (204 meters). It was built under three sovereigns. The talented young architect Auguste Montferrand gave his project to Alexander I in 1818, near the temple under construction there was a Decembrist uprising, the main curator of the construction was Nicholas I, who did not live to see the consecration of the Cathedral. One of the most complex structures in the history of St. Petersburg, the resources for the construction of which were brought from all over the country, was completed only in 1858. Its brilliant author, who for 40 years managed to change the appearance of St. Petersburg, died almost immediately after the consecration of the Cathedral. Largely because of this, there is still a legend that Montferrand divined that he would die as soon as the construction of Isaac, and that is why the construction of the Cathedral was so long. While Isaac is still a Museum. There are still important artifacts like Foucault's pendulum that are worth seeing. And you should definitely climb the colonnade of the Cathedral and look at the city from above, reminding yourself that St. Petersburg is especially beautiful from a bird's eye view.
Hermitage and Palace square
The ensemble of the Palace consists of the Imperial Winter Palace, the building of the Guards corps, the General staff building with a triumphal arch and the Alexander column. I must say that before there was a meadow, cows grazed on it, and the Palace owes its present gloss to the era of Alexander I, when a huge area was brought to a single style, and Montferrand erected the famous pillar of Alexandria, which became the new dominant. A visit to the Hermitage and the General staff should spend more than one day: the number of exhibits in the luxurious halls of the account is not. However, one visit will be enough to feel the atmosphere of the main repositories of art in the city on the Neva river, to imagine the weekdays of the August persons who ruled the country in the past.
The embankment of the Winter canal
Petersburg is a city of bridges and embankments. Citizens can not do without walking by the water under the soothing rustle of the Neva river, and tourists anyway at least once will go to the waterway of the Northern capital to at least admire the bridges. That's when they begin to understand the city. But to feel the special romance of St. Petersburg, we offer a walk along the embankment of the Winter canal. It is a small canal connecting the Neva river and the Moika river near the Winter Palace. Winter groove became famous for the tragic story of poor Lisa, who jumped off a bridge, holding a portrait of a loved one. This story so impressed the great Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky that he decided to insert a scene of a girl's suicide in his new Opera the Queen of spades. However, today nobody remembers it, but there are true romantics who catch the dawn breaking from under an arch before filling city streets. And all this splendor is complemented by the cries of seagulls-a reminder that Petersburgers live by the sea.
The St. Petersburg datsan
Buddhist temple "Datsan Gunzechoyney — -" the source of the Holy teachings of the all-Suffering Lord hermit " and the northernmost Buddhist temple in the world, as well as the most expensive in Europe, built in the early XX century. Permission for the construction of the temple was obtained in 1900, after which in 1909 the representative of the Dalai Lama XIII in Russia Agvan Dorzhiev purchased a plot of land on the banks of the Malaya Nevka. The temple was built by the author of the Eliseevsky shop in St. Petersburg, Baranovsky, with the involvement of several Orientalists and specialists in Buddhism, who made sure that the building complies with all religious canons. The result is one of the most expensive Buddhist temples in Europe, which many people know about today, but have never been there. Although there, for example, you can admire the stained glass Windows, made according to the sketches of Nicholas Roerich, eat ethnic food and feel that you are not in St. Petersburg at all. A tourist after visiting the temple will note that the Northern capital is a city of many cultures.
Давным-давно, на далекой-далекой земле жила очень бедная пара в лачуге недалеко от кромки моря. Их единственным средством питания была рыба, которую старик поймал в море. Однажды утром, как обычно, рыбак спустил свою рыболовную Сеть в море. Но в этот день произошло нечто необычное, в этот день рыбак поймал золотую рыбу. Золотая рыбка умоляла рыбака пощадить его жизнь и предлагала взамен исполнить любое желание рыбака. Но добросердечный рыбак ничего не просил и вернул золотую рыбу в море. Однако жена рыбака не была так добра, она разгневалась, когда он рассказал ей эту историю, и отправила его обратно в море, чтобы поймать золотую рыбу и пожелать буханки хлеба. Рыбак сделал, как ему сказали, поймал рыбу и пожелал буханки хлеба. Вернувшись домой, он обнаружил на столе свежеиспеченную буханку хлеба. Жена рыбака тогда решила, что она хочет больше, чем просто буханку хлеба. На следующее утро она послала своего мужа попросить нового. Он вернулся домой, чтобы найти свою жену с новым washtub, но она все еще не была удовлетворена. На следующий день мужа отправили на море, чтобы найти волшебную рыбу и пожелать нового дома. Это желание, как и предыдущие, было исполнено рыбаку. Но на следующий день рыбака снова отправили назад, чтобы он пожелал, чтобы его жена стала губернатором. На этот раз он вернулся домой, чтобы найти свою жену, одетую в богатство и приказ о слугах. Но женщина все равно была несчастна и требовала стать королевой всей земли. В конце концов, даже будучи царицей всей земли, она не удовлетворила свою жену, и поэтому в последний раз отправила своего мужа в море, чтобы поймать золотую рыбу и пожелать, чтобы она была правителем моря и всех существ, которые живут в нем. Рыбак поймал рыбу и загадал желание. Однако, когда он вернулся домой, его жена была одета в свои старые лохмотья, стоя рядом со своей старой сломанной раковиной, внутри старой хижины, даже буханки хлеба не было.
1. Экономисты изучают нашу повседневную жизнь. Исследования экономистов должны быть объективными и научными. 2. Он делает много разных вещей в свое свободное время. 3. Первая в мире бизнес-школа была основана в 1819 году во Франции. 4. Сегодняшние организации хранят и обрабатывают огромные объемы данных, которые менеджеры и другие сотрудники должны превращать в полезную информацию. 5. Задача миссия состоит в том, чтобы разработать планы развития земельных и водных ресурсов, которые будут использоваться менеджерами ресурсов на районном уровне. 6. Структуры, такие как дороги, железные дороги, здания всех типов, являются основными свидетельствами человеческой оккупации в ландшафте. 7. В любом случае, жизнь жителя деревни под защитой его лорда была лучше, чем жизнь странника.
Isaakievsky cathedral
The first Cathedral on St. Isaac's square appeared in Peter's time, as workers from the Admiralty needed their religious building. The current Isaac is the fourth and largest in the city. It is still one of the tallest buildings in St. Petersburg (204 meters). It was built under three sovereigns. The talented young architect Auguste Montferrand gave his project to Alexander I in 1818, near the temple under construction there was a Decembrist uprising, the main curator of the construction was Nicholas I, who did not live to see the consecration of the Cathedral. One of the most complex structures in the history of St. Petersburg, the resources for the construction of which were brought from all over the country, was completed only in 1858. Its brilliant author, who for 40 years managed to change the appearance of St. Petersburg, died almost immediately after the consecration of the Cathedral. Largely because of this, there is still a legend that Montferrand divined that he would die as soon as the construction of Isaac, and that is why the construction of the Cathedral was so long. While Isaac is still a Museum. There are still important artifacts like Foucault's pendulum that are worth seeing. And you should definitely climb the colonnade of the Cathedral and look at the city from above, reminding yourself that St. Petersburg is especially beautiful from a bird's eye view.
Hermitage and Palace square
The ensemble of the Palace consists of the Imperial Winter Palace, the building of the Guards corps, the General staff building with a triumphal arch and the Alexander column. I must say that before there was a meadow, cows grazed on it, and the Palace owes its present gloss to the era of Alexander I, when a huge area was brought to a single style, and Montferrand erected the famous pillar of Alexandria, which became the new dominant. A visit to the Hermitage and the General staff should spend more than one day: the number of exhibits in the luxurious halls of the account is not. However, one visit will be enough to feel the atmosphere of the main repositories of art in the city on the Neva river, to imagine the weekdays of the August persons who ruled the country in the past.
The embankment of the Winter canal
Petersburg is a city of bridges and embankments. Citizens can not do without walking by the water under the soothing rustle of the Neva river, and tourists anyway at least once will go to the waterway of the Northern capital to at least admire the bridges. That's when they begin to understand the city. But to feel the special romance of St. Petersburg, we offer a walk along the embankment of the Winter canal. It is a small canal connecting the Neva river and the Moika river near the Winter Palace. Winter groove became famous for the tragic story of poor Lisa, who jumped off a bridge, holding a portrait of a loved one. This story so impressed the great Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky that he decided to insert a scene of a girl's suicide in his new Opera the Queen of spades. However, today nobody remembers it, but there are true romantics who catch the dawn breaking from under an arch before filling city streets. And all this splendor is complemented by the cries of seagulls-a reminder that Petersburgers live by the sea.
The St. Petersburg datsan
Buddhist temple "Datsan Gunzechoyney — -" the source of the Holy teachings of the all-Suffering Lord hermit " and the northernmost Buddhist temple in the world, as well as the most expensive in Europe, built in the early XX century. Permission for the construction of the temple was obtained in 1900, after which in 1909 the representative of the Dalai Lama XIII in Russia Agvan Dorzhiev purchased a plot of land on the banks of the Malaya Nevka. The temple was built by the author of the Eliseevsky shop in St. Petersburg, Baranovsky, with the involvement of several Orientalists and specialists in Buddhism, who made sure that the building complies with all religious canons. The result is one of the most expensive Buddhist temples in Europe, which many people know about today, but have never been there. Although there, for example, you can admire the stained glass Windows, made according to the sketches of Nicholas Roerich, eat ethnic food and feel that you are not in St. Petersburg at all. A tourist after visiting the temple will note that the Northern capital is a city of many cultures.