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PAVLOVSK
Named after Paul I, Pavlovsk was the last of the
imperial estates to be built. The grounds were given
to Paul by his mother, Catherine the Great, on the
occasion of the birth of the future Tsar Alexander I
in 1777. Ransacked in World War II, Pavlovsk has been
more or less fully restored. Most people flock here
to stroll around the fifteen hundred hectare (3750
acre) landscaped park, though the Grand Palace
(Bolshoi Dvorets) is worth a quick gander. Tickets
are available at the kassa to the right of the statue
of Paul dressed in Prussian military uniform.
The horseshoe-shaped Grand Palace, built from 1782 to
1786, expanded from 1796 to 1799, and renovated after
a fire in 1803, is, like the other tsarist estate
palaces, supposed to be seen with a group. The tour
starts in the Egyptian vestibule, so named for its
ancient Egyptian decor. From there you go up the main
staircase and wind up in the Italian Hall, decorated
with classical Roman sculpture and whose ceiling is
the palace dome, and the Greek Hall, designed to look
like a Greek patio though it's filled with expensive
French furnishings. To the right is Paul's wing,
containing the War Hall which demonstrates his
fascination with military things, and his study,
filled with family portraits and busts of Roman
Emperors (perhaps Paul, having seen similar busts in
the Hermitage, thought they were family too).
Opposite Paul's wing is his wife Maria Fyodorovna's
wing, consisting of the flowery and placid Peace
Hall, as well as Maria's library, boudoir, bedroom
(containing a sixty-four piece toilette that was a
gift from Marie Antoinette in 1782), and dressing
room. Also on the second floor is an unspectacular
picture gallery, the stately Throne Hall, and the
Knight's Hall, designed for functions of the Knights
of Malta, of whom Paul was Grand Master. On the first
floor are more private rooms, decorated in various
gold and pastel-colored motifs.
The park consists of the kind of things you've come
to expect from parks - trees, grass, lakes, squirrels
trading military watches for nuts - and makes for
some very relaxed sauntering. Just southwest of the
palace you'll find the Pavilion of the Three Graces
(Joy, Flowering, and Brilliance holding up a vase),
resembling an ancient temple, and northeast of the
palace is the Temple of Friendship, a circular
pillared structure sculpted into the landscape and
best viewed from the other side of the stream. Just
off the main road to the west of the palace is the
half-ruined Apollo Colonnade. And if you wander far
enough along the various paths you may stumble upon
the Mausoleum of Paul I, about a kilometer northeast
of the Palace. Built seven years after his
assassination, nobody is actually buried in here;
inside there are sculptured depictions of Paul's
family faking grief over his death.
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