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MUSEUM OF RUSSIAN POLITICAL HISTORY
Before the Great October Socialist Revolution this
stately mansion was the home of Matilda Kshesinskaya,
the prima-ballerina of the Mariinsky Theater and
lover of Nicholas II in his pre-tsar days. Then for a
long time it was a museum for the very same Great
October Socialist Revolution that was so bad for
Matilda's lover. Now it is a museum of Russian
political history. Also on the premises is an
exhibition of wax figures which constitutes part of
St. Petersburg's Wax Museum (the rest of the museum
is on display at the Beloselsky-Belozersky Palace and
in Petrodvorets).
Take a couple minutes to gawk at the agitprop stained-
glass at the back of the main entry hall. The
revolutionary slogans read, from left to right, "land
to the peasants," "peace to the people," "power to
the soviets," and "bread to the hungry."
One ticket will allow you to see the four exhibitions
of the Museum of Political History. The kassa is
located on the right side of the main entry hall. The
most interesting of the exhibitions is that of
Russian political parties and movements from the late
19th century to the present - from People's Will to
Zhirinovsky as it were. The exhibition, labeled in
Russian, has documents, photos, letters, old
newspapers, death sentences, banners, posters, and
other memorabilia from the most politically turbulent
times in Russia. Amongst the eclectica you can find a
piece of the Berlin Wall, an NKVD (secret police)
uniform from Stalin's time, a "typical suit of an
apparatchik from the 1970s," and a poster from
Zhirinovsky's 1991 presidential campaign - the eighth
point of his platform promises cheap vodka for all.
Ballet aficionados will enjoy the exhibit dedicated
to the life of Matilda Kshesinskaya, with diaries,
letters, personal effects (including a sketch she
made of the future tsar), and photos. The exhibit on
the Russian Duma from 1905 to 1917 will be of
interest only to history buffs, and the exhibit
entitled "Finance, Banking, and Enterprise in the
19th and 20th Centuries" will be of interest only to
boredom buffs.
Ulitsa Kuibysheva 2/4. Metro: Gorkovskaya. History
museum open 10:00-18:00, closed Thursdays. On Tuesday
evenings chamber music and occasionally literary
readings are held here. Tel: 233 7189, 233 7052.
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