|
GATCHINA
Forty-five kilometers southwest of St. Petersburg,
Gatchina was first built by Count Grigory Orlov, one
of Catherine the Great's lovers. After his death it
became an imperial residence and the favorite of Paul
I, who lived most of his life here. Western tourists
were not allowed to visit Gatchina for a long time as
there was an institute for nuclear physics here and
military installations nearby.
The huge park ensemble, originally designed in the
English style, is less formal than Pushkin and
Petrodvorets - meaning you can walk on the grass
without having people yell at you - and is dotted
with little gazebos, pavilions, and other small
structures like the Pushkin park. Much less touristy
than Pushkin and Petrodvorets, the main feature,
Gatchina Palace, somewhat resembles a medieval
British castle and has a more masculine feel than the
frilly feminine Catherine's Palace.
The palace structure and all its furnishings were
thoroughly devastated in World War II; about half of
the Palace is open for viewing. Inside is a special
exhibit (with separate tickets) of firearms and side-
weapons of the 17th to 19th centuries. Behind the
palace, visible from the second-floor windows, is a
garden of vined arbors where the tsars' children
buried their pets. Legend has it that on full moons
the ghosts of borzoi dogs can be seen relieving
themselves on the arbors. The estate is a serious ice
fishing spot during the frozen months.
|