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Пешеходные туристские путешествия по Санкт-Петербургу
p align="left">2. Описание трассы путешествия - пунктов пребывания, продолжительности пребывания и условия размещения в каждом пункте обслуживания (тип здания, число мест в номере, его санитарно-гигиеническое оборудование).

3. Краткое описание района путешествия (достопримечательности, особенности рельефа местности и т.п.), программы обслуживания в каждом пункте путешествия (в соответствии с технологической картой туристского путешествия).

4. Перечень услуг, предоставляемых за дополнительную плату.

5. Наличие и краткая характеристика спортивных сооружений и площадок, автостоянок, пассажирских канатных дорог, водоемов, пляжей, аттракционов, детских игровых площадок (комнат), библиотек, кинозалов и т.д.

6. Адрес туристского предприятия, в котором начинается туристское путешествие, и проезд до него.

Примерный перечень дополнительной информации

1. Информация о возрастных ограничениях, приеме родителей с детьми, семейных.

2. Специальная информация для туристских путешествий с походом.

3. Прочая информация и рекомендации.

Примечание. Целесообразно отмечать, что "лицам, нуждающимся в лечении и постоянном врачебном наблюдении, путешествовать по туристским маршрутам не рекомендуется".

3.3 Карта маршрута и описание достопримечательностей пешеходной экскурсии (на английском языке)

YOUR INVITATION...

Welcome to St. Petersburg!

One would be hard-pressed to name another city in the world which could be described in such human-like terms. Fiercely independent, (he city has served as the cradle of both uprising and revolution. Countless treasures of art, both inside and outside of the museums, and in all manners of expression, testify to its creative spirit.

On the other hand, St. Petersburg has known anguish. Indeed, no city in the world has suffered in the manner experienced by the city during the 900-day siege by the Nazis during World War ft.

Even the geography of St. Petersburg manifests a certain human flavor to it. Like some great circulatory system, the various canals and channels flowing through the city environs carry the lifeblood from the city"s spiritual heart, the Neva River.

A fair appreciation of the city would require far more time than is afforded most of St. Petersburg's visitors. Regardless of the length of your stay, however, there are certain essential points of interest that should not be missed. We invite you to discover for yourself some of these outstanding features. We've tried to design this self-guided tour so that you'll succeed in visiting many of the outstanding highlights of St. Petersburg within one afternoon. A second optional tour offers you the opportunity to experience even more, You'll capture & feel for the city impossible to match within the constraints of ordinary tours. And perhaps, your experience will help make it easier for you to appreciate the almost spiritual nature of the relationship which exists between the city and its residents.

BACKGROUND HISTORY OF ST. PETERSBURG

During the 17th and 18th centuries, Russia and Sweden were engaged in a series of struggles to gain power over areas inhabited by Finnish and Slavic nationalities from early times. The land upon which the city of St. Petersburg now sits fell to forces under Peter the Great during the Northern War (1700-21), which settled the issue once and tor all. The city dates from May 27, 1703. On that day, Peter the Great ordered the construction of what is now known as the Peter and Paul Fortress near the mouth of the Neva River to protect the newly won region. The city takes its name from its patron, St. Peter, and not from the famous czar.

In 1712 Peter the Great decided to move the capital here from Moscow to facilitate contact with Europe. Hundreds of thousands of peasants, soldiers, and craftsmen were brought here to transform the uninhabited, marshy area to Peter's capital. To speed up construction the czar issued a special decree forbidding stone work anywhere else in the country for several years. He assessed a kind of tax; every barge that went down the Neva and every cart that entered St. Petersburg had to bring a certain number of building stones. Workers used these to lay the foundations of houses and to pave streets. Later, special brick factories were built.

The czar himself supervised the construction. A special office was built where architectural plans were drawn up. Over the years St. Petersburg has retained the harmony which characterizes its layout through adherence to such planning. From this initial activity, a remarkable variety of architectural ensembles, churches, and memorials arose in what is today considered the historic section of St. Petersburg.

Walking tour № 1. The excursion beginning - M. Gorkovskaya

5.The Mosque of the Congregation of Moslems

Arch. N. Vasiliev, S. Krichinskiy, A. Gogen (1909-1920), Kronverkskiy prospekt, 7.

The Saint Petersburg Mosque when opened in 1913, was the largest mosque in Europe, its minarets attaining 49 meters in height and the impressive dome rising 39 meters high. The mosque is situated in downtown St Petersburg, so its azure dome is perfectly visible from the Trinity Bridge across the Neva. It can accommodate up to five thousand worshippers.

The founding stone was laid in 1910 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the reign of Abdul Ahat Khan in Bukhara. By that time, the Muslim community of the Russian capital exceeded 8,000 people. The projected structure was capable of accommodating most of them. The architect Nikolay Vasiliev patterned the mosque after Gur-e Amir, the tomb of Tamerlane in Samarkand. Its construction was completed by 1921.

Worshippers are separated by gender during a worship service; females worship on the first floor, while the males worship on the ground floor. The Mosque was closed to worshippers from 1940 to 1956.

History

In 1882, Selim-Girei Tevkelev who in 1865 was appointed the Mufti of Orenburg turned to and obtained agreement from minister Count Tolstoy with the requirement for a mosque in St. Petersburg. In 1906, the Minister formed a special committee headed by Ahun Ataulla Bayazitov to collect 750 000 rubles within 10 years for the construction of the mosque. They organised collections in towns and providences of Russia and received donations from rich sponsors. In addition the committee input securities in total amount of 142, 000 rubles and also stamps for mosque's project. The biggest donor was Said Abdoul Ahad, Emir of Bochara who undertook all expenses for the building.

The location of the mosque was symbolic, sited opposite the Peter and Paul's Fortress, in the city centre. The permission to purchase the site was given by Emperor Nicholas II in Peterhof on 3 July 1907. That autumn, the committee approved the project by architect Nikolay Vasiliev, the engineer Stepan Krichinskiy, and construction was overseen by academic Alexander von Gogen. The building facade was made by combining both oriental ornaments and turquoise blue mosaic.

On 3 February 1910, the brick laying ceremony was performed by Ahun Bayazitov, attended by government, religious and social figures. Among those who attended was Amir Buharskiy, Harusin, Novikov, the ambassadors of Turkey and Persia, Sultanov the Orenburg's Muftiy, and Tevkelev, the leader of the Muslims party in the Duma.

The walls were made with grey granite and the dome and both minarets (tower) are covered with mosaic ceramics of sky-light-blue colour. Skilled craftsmen from Central Asia took part working on the mosque. The facades are decorated with sayings from Koran using the characteristic Arabian calligraphy. Internal columns are made from green marble. woman pray in on the first floor, above the western part of the hall. The mosque was covered by huge special made carpets woven by the Central Asian craftsmen.

The St. Petersburg Mosque was closed and was made into a warehouse during the Second World War. At the request of the first Indonesian President, Soekarno (whilst visiting the city), the mosque was returned to the Muslim community of the city in 1956, ten days after his visit. A major restoration of a mosque was made in 1980.

6. The Museum of the Political History of Russia (The Mansion of M. Kshesinskaya ballet dancer)-Ulitsa Kuybysheva, 2/4.

How did the appearance of politicians vary in the period from the Imperial Russia till our days? How did social crises and dominating ideology influence clothes of ordinary citizens in the XXth century? What did the first ladies of the country wear? These questions are in the focus of attention of the exhibition «Politics and Fashion».

Fashion as a «range of habits and the tastes dominating in a certain social environment during a certain period of time» reflects brightly and picturesquely different epochs. At all times clothes had a distinct indicative content, showed involvement in various social groups, and sometimes underlined political predilections.

This exhibition shows how, during the Soviet period, fashion which was considered a phenomenon of the bourgeois West, overcame a number of barriers to take a legal place in the life of our society. At the exhibition you can see how the appearance of the population depended on political, social and economic conditions. Certain clothes could tell about observance of social behavior rules or cases of deviation.

The Exhibition consists of 7 sections

Section I. Appearance of the population in the Imperial Russia in the early XXth century.

Section II. The Revolution of 1917 and the Civil War. Attributes of revolutionary fashion.

Section III. Fashion of the NEP period and struggle against it. Searches for the ”Soviet style» in clothes (the 1920s).

Section IV. Influence of the first five-year plans epoch on the Soviet people's appearance. “Prosperity” course in the mid-1930s. Formation of the Soviet elite's fashion and its influence on people's tastes.

Section V. Difficulties of a post-war life. Passion for the western fashion and struggle against «servilities to the West» in the late 1940s - early 1950s.

Section VI. Formation of the consumer society in the 1950 - 1980s and its adaptation to the Soviet conditions. Deficiency and fashion. Arrival of the world fashion in Russia.

Section VII. «The Party fashion».

2. The Grand Ducal Burial Vault (Peter and Paul Fortress)

Arch. D.Grimm (1896-1908).

1. St. Apostles Peter and Paul Cathedral (Peter and Paul Fortress) Arch. D.Trezini (1712-1733)

4.The State Museum of the History of St. Petersburg (Peter and Paul

Fortress)

3. The Boat House (Botnyy Domik) (Peter and Paul Fortress)

Arch. A.Vist(1762-1765), Zayachiy Ostrov

On May 27, 1703 the Sankt-Petersburg fortress was founded on Zayatchy (Hare) island. The island is only 600 meters long and 350 meters wide. However, the fortress was constructed in the strategically important place of the Neva River's estuary. At first, the fortress was called Sankt-Petersburg (Saint-Petersburg) - the city of Holy Peter. Later, the Saints' Peter and Paul Cathedral was built on the territory of the island and the name was changed to the Petropavlovskaya (Peter and Paul) Fortress.

The Peter and Paul Fortress was supposed to be the Russia's key to the European maritime communications - Russian outlet to the Baltic Sea, by Peter the Great. The enterprising emperor designed the plan of its construction himself. The fortress has an elongated form from East to West and the walls repeat the island's outline. Pentagonal bastions at the corners of the fortress constructed under the supervision of Peter the Great and his close associates got their names - His Majesty's, Menshikov,, Zotov,, Trubetskoy,, Golovkin, and Naryishkin,. The bastions are connected with the others by six curtains - Peter's, Catherine's, Neva's, Basil's, Nicholas and Kronverk. A canal was dug through the island to supply the garrison of the Saint-Petersburg fortress with ammunition, hardware and fresh water that was later covered with earth in 1882. The walls of the fortress were mainly made of earth and wooden planks in 1703. Their replacement with solid masonry constructions started in May 1706 and lasted till 1740. The Swiss architect Domenico Tresini designed bastions and curtains of the fortress to 12 meters high and to 20 wide. These military fortifications consist of two parallel walls. The external walls are from 4 to 8 meters thick, while the internal ones are to 2,5 meters. Casemates for soldiers and storage of ammunition were arranged between two walls. The fortress has six gates and the main is the Petrine Gate designed by Domenico Tresini. The gate was rebuilt in stone to the design of the same architect in 1718. The Petrine gate imitates a triumphal gate of the Russian victories over Sweden. The construction of ravelins - additional fortification structures, designed to protect Eastern and Western gates of the Peter and Paul fortress, started in 1731. The Eastern Ioanovsky ravelin is called in honour of Peter I's brother - Ivan, while the Western Alekseevsky ravelin - after his father Aleksey Mikhailovitch.

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