- Pleven Panorama
Pleven Epopee 1877, more commonly known as Pleven Panorama, is a
panorama located inPleven ,Bulgaria , that depicts the events of the Russian-Turkish War of 1877–78, specifically the five-monthSiege of Pleven (Pleven Epopee) which made the city internationally famous and which contributed to theLiberation of Bulgaria after five centuries of Ottoman rule.The panorama was created by 13
Russia n and Bulgarian artists and was constructed in honor of the 100th anniversary of the Pleven Epopee and was officially unveiled on10 December 1977 . It is the largest panorama in the world. The panorama expanded the already existingSkobelev Park , which is located on the site where three of the four major battles which led to the liberation of Bulgaria took place. In the first three years after its opening, 2.5 million people visited the panorama.Fact|date=September 2007 The monument is one of nearly 200 built by the people of Pleven in tribute to the battle and to the nearly 35,000 lives lost.iege of Pleven
The Pleven Panorama depicts the events of the Siege of Pleven which consisted of four major battles over a five-month period (
20 July –10 December 1877 ). The siege was pivotal in the outcome in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78 which eventually resulted in the liberation of Bulgaria as well asSerbia andRomania from 500 years of Ottoman control.cite web|url=http://www.visittobulgaria.com/visit/dir.asp?d=0-4-Monuments-Pleven_Panorama|title="Pleven Epopee - 1877" Panorama|accessdate=2007-09-07] The Panorama primarily focuses on the events of the third battle, which began on31 August and culminated on11 September 1877 . At the time, Pleven was under Turkish control asField Marshal Osman Pasha had set up fortifications there following his defeat at Nikopol onJuly 16 . Osman was successful at fending off the Russian attacks on his fortifications during the first two battles.cite encyclopedia| title = Plevna| encyclopedia =Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition | volume = 21| pages = 838-840| year = 1911]In the third battle, Russian forces, under the command of
General Mikhail Skobelev , took two Turkishredoubt s and a Romanian division took a third, theGrivitsa redoubt. Osman's troops were able to recapture the two redoubts taken by the Russians, but they were unable to dislodge the Romanians from Grivitsa. The third battle was the bloodiest for the Russian forces, with roughly 20,000 losses, but was also the turning point in the Siege. By24 October , Russian and Romanian forces had surrounded Pleven. Osman requested permission to retreat, but the Ottoman high command would not allow him to do so. On9 December Osman and his troops made a brief stand, losing 5,000 men. The next day, Osman surrendered the city to Romaniancolonel Mihail Cerchez .cite book|author=Kremnitz, Mite|title=Reminiscences of the King of Roumania|publisher= Harper & Bros.|year=1899|pages= 293-294
url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P4YUsVwhHE8C&vid=OCLC00682492&dq=%22Reminiscences+of+the+King+of+Roumania%22&jtp=293] cite book|author=Hozier, Henry Montague|title=The Russo-Turkish War: including an account of the rise and decline of the Ottoman power and history of the Eastern Question|publisher= W. Mackenzie|year=1879|pages=722
url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?vid=ISBN1402165145&id=_cBRaaEpYwIC&pg=RA11-PA722&lpg=RA11-PA722&dq=%22Defence+of+Plevna%22&sig=jeTwfyzUgsGWoR1fzQSaCO16ek8#PRA1-PA722,M1]Construction and unveiling
Most of the historical landmarks in Pleven are related to the Russo-Turkish war, with around 200 monuments commemorating the bloodiest battles of the war. The Pleven Panorama was constructed in honor of the
centennial of the surrender of Turkish forces to Russian and Romanian troops, ending the siege on Pleven. It was conceived and designed by N. Ovetchkin, an author fromMoscow as a counterpart to the Borodin Panorama in Belgorod, Russia.cite web|url=http://www.picturesofbulgaria.com/article/pleven.html|title=Settlements: Pleven|publisher=Pictures of Bulgaria|accessdate=2007-09-12] The panorama is situated in Skobelev Park, named for the general who commanded the Russian forces and led them to victory over the Turks at Pleven, and the site upon which the deciding battle of the five-month siege on the city occurred.cite web|url=http://www.bulgarianproperties.com/Bulgaria/Pleven.html|title=The town of Pleven - Tourist information|accessdate=2007-09-07]Eleven Russian and two Bulgarian artists painted and constructed the panorama which includes a 115×15-
meter main canvas and 12-meter foreground. The goal of Ovetchkin and the artists who created the panorama was to create a feeling of empathy for the battle that was fought on the site as well as a feeling of authenticity of the events that occurred on 11 September 1877. The panorama opened to the public on 10 December 1977, 100 years to the day that Field Marshal Osman Pasha surrendered to Colonel Mihail Cerchez, ending the Pleven Epopee. cite web|url=http://www.bnr.bg/RadioBulgaria/Emission_English/Theme_History_And_Religion/Material/Pleven.htm|title=Pleven Panorama Monumental|date=2005-04-14 |accessdate=2007-09-07]Composition
The architectural unit is composed of four rooms: introductory, panoramic, diorame and finale. The six canvases of the introductory room discover the tragic destiny of the people, their dramatic fight and their compassion to the fellow Russian soldiers.The spectator is in the middle of the battlefield, surrounded by an attacking Russian regiment, smoking shells, a doctor and a nurse, the attack of the Turkish cavalry, burning fires in the city, and the Russian General
Mikhail Skobelev conducting an attack against the Ottoman fortification.External links
* [http://www.pbase.com/ngruev/panorama Pictures of the Panorama building]
* [http://www.panoramapainting.com Website of the International Panorama Council, list with all the panoramas/cycloramas existing of the world]References
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