- Oranienbaum, Russia
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For the town adjacent to Oranienbaum that formerly shared this name, see Lomonosov, Russia.
Oranienbaum (Russian: Ораниенба́ум) is a Russian royal residence, located on the Gulf of Finland west of St. Petersburg. The Palace ensemble and the city centre are UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
History
In 1707, four years after he founded Saint Petersburg, Peter the Great gave the grounds near the seaside to his right-hand man, Aleksandr Danilovich Menshikov. Menshikov commissioned the architects Giovanni Maria Fontana and Gottfried Schädel, who built his residence, the Grand Menshikov Palace from 1710 to 1727 (not to be confused with Menshikov Palace in Saint Petersburg, built by the same architects around the same time). The central part of the Palace is connected by two galleries with the two domed Japanese and Church Pavilions. The Lower Garden, decorated with fountains and sculptures, and the Upper Garden were laid out at the same time. The Palace is located near the Lower Park, whose composite axis is a channel leading to the sea. This channel is an imitation of one designed by Peter himself at his nearby residence of Peterhof Palace.
Menshikov was deposed shortly after Peter's death, and died in exile, and the palace passed out of his family. In 1743, Oranienbaum became the summer residence of Grand Duke Peter Fedorovitch, the heir of Empress Elizabeth (the future Emperor Peter III). Over the last ten years of Elizabeth's reign, Bartolomeo Francesco Rastrelli reconstructed the Grand Palace, adding beauty to its decor.
From 1756 to 1762, the architect Antonio Rinaldi built the Peterstadt Fortress ensemble on the bank of the Karost River for Grand Duke Peter Fedorovitch. In 1762 Empress Catherine II ordered the construction of the suburb residence called "My Own Countryside House". For that purpose Rinaldi built the Chinese Palace (1762–1768), a mix of Baroque architecture, Classicism and Chinese motifs, the Katalnaya Gorka (roller coaster) Pavilion (1762–1774), a cupola pavilion, and the Gates of Honor with the tower crowned by a spire.
The Upper Park was laid out from 1750 to 1770.
See also
- List of Baroque residences
External links
Media related to Oranienbaum (Russia) at Wikimedia Commons
Russian imperial palaces and residences Imperial residences Alexander Palace · Anichkov Palace · Catherine Palace · Gatchina Palace · Grand Kremlin Palace · Kamenny Island · Oranienbaum · Pavlovsk Palace · Peterhof Palace · Saint Michael's Castle · Winter Palace · Yelagin Palace
Grand ducal residences Alexis Palace · Beloselsky-Belozersky Palace · Constantine Palace · Marble Palace · Marie Palace · Michael Palace · Nicholas Palace · Tauride Palace · Vladimir Palace
Outside the Russian Federation Belweder · Catherinethal · Dulber · Helsingfors Palace · Elisabeth Palace · Likani Palace · Livadia Palace · Massandra Palace · Skierniewice PalaceHistorical Annenhof · Catherinehof · Kolomenskoye Palace · Pella Palace · Ropsha · Babolovo · Summer Garden Palace · Summer Palace of Empress ElisabethCoordinates: 59°54′54″N 29°45′14″E / 59.9149027878°N 29.7539555656°E
Categories:- Palaces in Russia
- Royal residences in Russia
- World Heritage Sites in Russia
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