Путеводитель пользователя Katerina

Katerina
Путеводитель пользователя Katerina

Достопримечательности

The most immediate attraction of Voznesenky, or Ascension Bridge is the pavement covered with a metal grille and floorlamps. These were installed during the last major rebuilding of the bridge, half a century ago. And the bridge itself has been here since time immemorial – or more precisely, since the days of Empress Anna Ioannovna. It’s in the neighbourhoods around the Voznesensky Bridge that many of the works of novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky are set. For example in his story “Someone else’s wife, and the husband under the bed” the hero is complaining about the complicated set-up. “Her husband is standing there on Voskresensky Bridge, and he wants to catch me, but doesn’t dare to – he still can’t believe it, like every husband of his kind…” Voznesensky Bridge also appears as a backdrop in “Crime & Punishment” – the book’s antihero Raskolnikov frequently meditates while on the bridge. He also witness the suicide of a woman who jumped off the bridge into the Catherine Canal below.
Voznesenskiy Most
23 Voznesensky Ave
The most immediate attraction of Voznesenky, or Ascension Bridge is the pavement covered with a metal grille and floorlamps. These were installed during the last major rebuilding of the bridge, half a century ago. And the bridge itself has been here since time immemorial – or more precisely, since the days of Empress Anna Ioannovna. It’s in the neighbourhoods around the Voznesensky Bridge that many of the works of novelist Fyodor Dostoyevsky are set. For example in his story “Someone else’s wife, and the husband under the bed” the hero is complaining about the complicated set-up. “Her husband is standing there on Voskresensky Bridge, and he wants to catch me, but doesn’t dare to – he still can’t believe it, like every husband of his kind…” Voznesensky Bridge also appears as a backdrop in “Crime & Punishment” – the book’s antihero Raskolnikov frequently meditates while on the bridge. He also witness the suicide of a woman who jumped off the bridge into the Catherine Canal below.
Please take note! If your boat is going along with the current, then to the right you’ll find the right bank, and the left bank to the left. But if you’re going against the flow of the river, then the right bank will on your left – and the left bank on your right. The environs of Haymarket Square – the one on the left bank of the canal, are often called “Dostoyevsky’s St Petersburg”. There’s a lot here connected with both the writer himself and the characters of his books. Life was often sleazy around the market – crowded, dirty, badly-run institutions, taverns and flophouses. The area used to be one of the most notorious in old St Petersburg – it was well-known for brothels and houses of ill-repute. The Demidov Bridge is a single-span bridge on stone piers. It’s fenced by metal railings and decorated with cast-iron lampposts. The lamps and some decorations were restored after WW2, but on the whole it retains its C19th appearance almost exactly. Along the right bank, on Kaznacheiskaya Street, the author Dostoyevsky rented an apartment after his release from the Siberian Prison Camp. The apartment had five rooms and a kitchen. Here Dostoyevsky laboured on his fictional prison-diary novel “From The House Of The Dead”. Kaznacheiskaya, or Treasury Street as it is today, would have been known as Malaya Meshchanskaya Street in Dostoyevsky’s time. The origins go back to a Decree of Tsar Peter I, ordering the relocation to Petersburg of craftsmen from the heartlands of Russia. The State paid thousands of skilled workers to move to the capital, they were given land and the wherewithal to build homes and workshops. The neighbourhoods all around were soon occupied by tradespeople of every kind – watchmakers, tailors, shoemakers, cabinet-makers, carpenters, upholsterers, seamstresses. They were the “burgher” class – which is what the street name Meshchanskaya.
Demidov Most
50 neberezhnaya kanala Griboyedova
Please take note! If your boat is going along with the current, then to the right you’ll find the right bank, and the left bank to the left. But if you’re going against the flow of the river, then the right bank will on your left – and the left bank on your right. The environs of Haymarket Square – the one on the left bank of the canal, are often called “Dostoyevsky’s St Petersburg”. There’s a lot here connected with both the writer himself and the characters of his books. Life was often sleazy around the market – crowded, dirty, badly-run institutions, taverns and flophouses. The area used to be one of the most notorious in old St Petersburg – it was well-known for brothels and houses of ill-repute. The Demidov Bridge is a single-span bridge on stone piers. It’s fenced by metal railings and decorated with cast-iron lampposts. The lamps and some decorations were restored after WW2, but on the whole it retains its C19th appearance almost exactly. Along the right bank, on Kaznacheiskaya Street, the author Dostoyevsky rented an apartment after his release from the Siberian Prison Camp. The apartment had five rooms and a kitchen. Here Dostoyevsky laboured on his fictional prison-diary novel “From The House Of The Dead”. Kaznacheiskaya, or Treasury Street as it is today, would have been known as Malaya Meshchanskaya Street in Dostoyevsky’s time. The origins go back to a Decree of Tsar Peter I, ordering the relocation to Petersburg of craftsmen from the heartlands of Russia. The State paid thousands of skilled workers to move to the capital, they were given land and the wherewithal to build homes and workshops. The neighbourhoods all around were soon occupied by tradespeople of every kind – watchmakers, tailors, shoemakers, cabinet-makers, carpenters, upholsterers, seamstresses. They were the “burgher” class – which is what the street name Meshchanskaya.
В период с 20 августа 1864 года по 20 января 1867 года Ф.М.Достоевский проживает по адресу Столярный переулок, угол Малой Мещанской улицы, 12/7, кв. 36 (это доходный дом И. М. Алонкина, по современной нумерации - дом №14, квартира №14). В квартире этого дома создавались «Записки из подполья», «Преступление и наказание», и после знакомства со стенографисткой А. Г. Сниткиной диктовался текст романа «Игрок». В июле 1999 года на доме Алонкина в честь писателя установлена мемориальная доска.
Dostoevsky House
1 Kaznacheyskaya Ulitsa
В период с 20 августа 1864 года по 20 января 1867 года Ф.М.Достоевский проживает по адресу Столярный переулок, угол Малой Мещанской улицы, 12/7, кв. 36 (это доходный дом И. М. Алонкина, по современной нумерации - дом №14, квартира №14). В квартире этого дома создавались «Записки из подполья», «Преступление и наказание», и после знакомства со стенографисткой А. Г. Сниткиной диктовался текст романа «Игрок». В июле 1999 года на доме Алонкина в честь писателя установлена мемориальная доска.
56 locals recommend
Berthold Centre
13-15 Grazhdanskaya Ulitsa
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Dom Raskol'nikova
19 Grazhdanskaya Ulitsa
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Dom Sonechki Marmeladovoy
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Dom Gogolya
39 Kazanskaya St
Доходный дом А. Ф. Фридрих - Жилой дом, классицизм Специализированный дом социального назначения 1857-1858 - арх.-художник Никитин Н. А. Доходный дом построен в 1857-1858 гг. - арх.-художник Николай Александрович Никитин (1808-1863). С конца XIX в. и до 1917 г. дом принадлежал немке Анне Федоровне Фридрих. Во дворе дома висит мраморная доска, которая искусно замазана. На ней если внимательно вглядеться, есть надпись о пребывании Ленина. Заночевал вождь пару раз в этом доме, в какой-то из квартир, а затем экспроприировал буржуйский дом. Знала бы бедная хозяйка, чем грозит сдавать квартиры кому попало. В середине 1990-х гг. дом поставили на капитальный ремонт и отдали под социальные нужды. Теперь это - самый первый в Санкт-Петербурге "Специальный дом социального назначения". Окна квартиры выходят во двор этого дома
Grazhdanskaya Ulitsa, 6
6 Grazhdanskaya Ulitsa
Доходный дом А. Ф. Фридрих - Жилой дом, классицизм Специализированный дом социального назначения 1857-1858 - арх.-художник Никитин Н. А. Доходный дом построен в 1857-1858 гг. - арх.-художник Николай Александрович Никитин (1808-1863). С конца XIX в. и до 1917 г. дом принадлежал немке Анне Федоровне Фридрих. Во дворе дома висит мраморная доска, которая искусно замазана. На ней если внимательно вглядеться, есть надпись о пребывании Ленина. Заночевал вождь пару раз в этом доме, в какой-то из квартир, а затем экспроприировал буржуйский дом. Знала бы бедная хозяйка, чем грозит сдавать квартиры кому попало. В середине 1990-х гг. дом поставили на капитальный ремонт и отдали под социальные нужды. Теперь это - самый первый в Санкт-Петербурге "Специальный дом социального назначения". Окна квартиры выходят во двор этого дома
Grazhdanskaya Ulitsa, 27
27 Grazhdanskaya Ulitsa