Narychkine-Shuvaloffs' Palace (Saint Petersburg)
Russia /
Sankt Petersburg /
Saint Petersburg /
naberezhnaya reki Fontanki, 21
World
/ Russia
/ Sankt Petersburg
/ Saint Petersburg
, 3 km from center (Санкт-Петербург)
World / Russia / Leningrad
palace, museum, mansion / manor house / villa, interesting place
Private ownership
The details of the construction are unknown, but the Shuvalov Palace was constructed in the late 18th century, possibly to a design by Italian architect Giacomo Quarenghi. The first owners of the palace were the Count and Countess Vorontsov.
In 1799, Countess Maria Naryshkina, a mistress of Emperor Alexander I, purchased the home. Her husband, Nikolai Lvovich Naryshkin, filled the palace with spectacular art and marble sculptures, as well as antiquities including gems, coins, and weapons. The palace became the center of Saint Petersburg society, and its grand ballroom—also known as the Alexandrovsky or White Column Hall—played host to society balls of up to 1,000 people. The most famous ball was held on 29 April [O.S. 17 April] 1834 to celebrate the 16th birthday of the tsesarevich Alexander Nikolaevich, the future Emperor Alexander II.
In 1844, the palace underwent construction for the wedding of Sofia Lvovna Naryshkina, the only daughter of Lev Naryshkin and Olga Potocka, to Count Pyotr Pavlovich Shuvalov. After the 1846 wedding, the house became known as Shuvalov Palace. The construction of Shuvalov Palace would continue until 1859, during which time it was redone in a neo-Renaissance style by the French architect Bernard de Simone and Russian Nikolai Yefimovich Yefimov.
When World War I began in 1914, the last owner of the house, Yelizaveta Vladimirovna Shuvalova, donated the house to be used as a military hospital for wounded soldiers. The great ballroom was used as an officer's ward. After the Russian Revolution in 1917, the Shuvalov Palace was nationalized on 1 August 1918.
Soviet era
After the Revolution, the palace's celebrated artwork and antiquities were strategically hidden in secret hiding spots. The first items were discovered in 1919 when the WWI infirmary was removed. A large pantry was discovered under the fireplace in the "Blue Room," containing paintings, porcelain and Limoges enamel.
From 1919 to 1925, the "Museum of Aristocratic Life" operated in the palace. Following the closing of the museum, the majority of the Shuvalov collections were transferred to the Hermitage Museum and the Russian Museum, while some of the items remained in the museum fund.
The palace then served as a print house followed by a design institute in the 1930s. During the Siege of Leningrad, shelling and bombing heavily damaged the palace. On 14 September 1941, a bomb completely destroyed the courtyard wing. An incendiary bomb caused even greater damage when it went through the roof into the attic above the Alexander Hall, starting a devastating fire that caused the roof to collapse.
Photo report:
www.moya-planeta.ru/reports/view/vse_yajca_v_odnoj_korz...
The details of the construction are unknown, but the Shuvalov Palace was constructed in the late 18th century, possibly to a design by Italian architect Giacomo Quarenghi. The first owners of the palace were the Count and Countess Vorontsov.
In 1799, Countess Maria Naryshkina, a mistress of Emperor Alexander I, purchased the home. Her husband, Nikolai Lvovich Naryshkin, filled the palace with spectacular art and marble sculptures, as well as antiquities including gems, coins, and weapons. The palace became the center of Saint Petersburg society, and its grand ballroom—also known as the Alexandrovsky or White Column Hall—played host to society balls of up to 1,000 people. The most famous ball was held on 29 April [O.S. 17 April] 1834 to celebrate the 16th birthday of the tsesarevich Alexander Nikolaevich, the future Emperor Alexander II.
In 1844, the palace underwent construction for the wedding of Sofia Lvovna Naryshkina, the only daughter of Lev Naryshkin and Olga Potocka, to Count Pyotr Pavlovich Shuvalov. After the 1846 wedding, the house became known as Shuvalov Palace. The construction of Shuvalov Palace would continue until 1859, during which time it was redone in a neo-Renaissance style by the French architect Bernard de Simone and Russian Nikolai Yefimovich Yefimov.
When World War I began in 1914, the last owner of the house, Yelizaveta Vladimirovna Shuvalova, donated the house to be used as a military hospital for wounded soldiers. The great ballroom was used as an officer's ward. After the Russian Revolution in 1917, the Shuvalov Palace was nationalized on 1 August 1918.
Soviet era
After the Revolution, the palace's celebrated artwork and antiquities were strategically hidden in secret hiding spots. The first items were discovered in 1919 when the WWI infirmary was removed. A large pantry was discovered under the fireplace in the "Blue Room," containing paintings, porcelain and Limoges enamel.
From 1919 to 1925, the "Museum of Aristocratic Life" operated in the palace. Following the closing of the museum, the majority of the Shuvalov collections were transferred to the Hermitage Museum and the Russian Museum, while some of the items remained in the museum fund.
The palace then served as a print house followed by a design institute in the 1930s. During the Siege of Leningrad, shelling and bombing heavily damaged the palace. On 14 September 1941, a bomb completely destroyed the courtyard wing. An incendiary bomb caused even greater damage when it went through the roof into the attic above the Alexander Hall, starting a devastating fire that caused the roof to collapse.
Photo report:
www.moya-planeta.ru/reports/view/vse_yajca_v_odnoj_korz...
Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuvalov_Palace
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 59°56'5"N 30°20'33"E
- Winter Palace 1.9 km
- Mariinsky palace 2 km
- Tauride Palace 2.3 km
- Catherine Palace 24 km
- Alexander Palace 24 km
- Palace of Pavel I 28 km
- Grand (Menshikov) Palace 33 km
- Great Gatchina Palace 43 km
- Latvian University of Agriculture Jelgava palace 531 km
- Petroff (Petrovsky) Palace 627 km
- Bolshoy Gostiny Dvor 0.7 km
- Tsentralny District 0.7 km
- Bezymyanny island 0.7 km
- Liteyny Municipal Okrug 0.8 km
- Mikhaylovsky Garden 0.8 km
- Municipal Okrug 78 1 km
- Dvortsovy Municipal Okrug 1.2 km
- Vladimirsky Municipal Okrug 1.2 km
- Spassky Island 1.3 km
- Admiralteysky District 3.2 km
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