We are off to eat and drink around the world :)....

You will have to tune again to get the rest of the story. Ha-ha.

Which pattern were you looking at in the D&B?


Oh I'm here for the duration, loving your TR :)

There were two very similar, pink with green polka dots and green Minnie faces, and the other black with white polka dots and white Mickey faces. At one point I had them both in my cart but deleted them instead of buying. If they ever come back I'm snatching them up!
 
That church is amazing! Your pics make it come alive.
 
That church is absolutely stunning! I can see how you would have been on sensory overload!

::yes:: plus, my neck and back started to hurt after while because you spend all that time looking up! and my camera is not lightweight!
 

Oh I'm here for the duration, loving your TR :)

There were two very similar, pink with green polka dots and green Minnie faces, and the other black with white polka dots and white Mickey faces. At one point I had them both in my cart but deleted them instead of buying. If they ever come back I'm snatching them up!

I remember the minnie faces bags.... have you looked on ebay, there are a lot of reputable sellers there that are on the DIS also... I think I have seen them out there and the prices are really good on those.
 
Great pictures of the church! keep it coming! :thumbsup2


And I love your D&B!

Thanks! The church was beautiful.... I thought I would have been happy with just the 40th anniversary bag, but.... I keep adding to the collection. they have a new comic strip bag, that I really like. There is also a minnie bows bags, but I am passing on that one!

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On the bus for another short ride over to the Peter and Paul Fortress....

When Peter the Great re-claimed the lands along the Neva River in 1703, he decided to build a fort to protect the area from possible attack by the Swedish army and navy. The fortress was founded on a small island in the Neva delta on May 27, 1703 and that day became the birthday of the city of St Petersburg. The Swedes were defeated before the fortress was even completed. For that reason, from 1721 onwards the fortress housed part of the city's garrison and rather notoriously served as a high security political jail. Among the first inmates was Peter's own rebellious son Alexei. Later, the list of famous residents included Dostoyevsky, Gorkiy, Trotsky and Lenin's older brother, Alexander.

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In the middle of the fortress stands the impressive Peter and Paul Cathedral, the burial place of all the Russian Emperors and Empresses from Peter the Great to Alexander III. The Cathedral was the first church in the city to be built of stone (between 1712-33) and its design is curiously unusual for a Russian Orthodox church.

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The interior is decorated with paintings and precious icons and across the eastern end an Iconostasis, a screen with doors leading to the sanctuary.

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The cathedral houses the remains of almost all the Russian Emperors and Empresses from Peter the Great to Nicholas II and his family who were finally laid to rest in July 1998. Also was Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia for 34 years. (Of the post-Petrine rulers, only Peter II and Ivan VI are not buried here. Peter II is in the Cathedral of Michael the Archangel in the Moscow Kremlin. Ivan VI was executed and buried in the fortress of Shlisselburg or Kholmogory (alleged discovery at Kholmogory in 2010 presently under forensic investigation)). The cathedral has a typical Flemish carillon, a gift of the Flemish city of Mechelen, Flanders.

On September 28, 2006, 78 years after her death, Maria Feodorovna, Empress of Russia, was reinterred in the Cathedral of St Peter and Paul. Wife of Tsar Alexander III, and mother of Nicholas II, (the last Russian Tsar), Maria Feodorovna died on 13 October 1928 in exile in her native Denmark. and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral in Denmark. In 2005, the governments of Denmark and Russia agreed that the Empress's remains should be returned to Saint Petersburg in accordance with her wish to be interred next to her husband.

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The Chapel of St Catherine has been created at the western end of the Cathedral to commemorate the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II and his wife Alexandra and three of their five children. They were brutally murdered in Ekaterinburg in 1917 during the Russian Revolution, along with members of their household and are considered to be martyrs by the Russian people. I had read the book “A Lifelong Passion” by Maylunas & Mironenko, which is the collection of letters exchanged between Nicholas and Alexandra during their lives together. This is a real insight into their lives at the Russian Court and during their internment in St Petersburg and Ekaterinburg. Their remains were interred in 1998, 81 years after they died. The remains of what are believed to be the Grand Duchess Marie and the Tsarevitch Alexei were only found in 2007 and are yet to be interred in the Chapel.

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Two tombs are not made of white marble, those of Tsar Alexander II and his wife Maria Alexandrovna. Their tombs are pink and green Altai jasper and are differentiated from the others as Alexander was assassinated in March, 1881 by a bomb which exploded near his carriage. (pop quiz....which church was built in St Petersburg to commemorate his death?)

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"The Angel" as a Symbol of the City

The weather vane sitting atop the gilded spire of the Peter and Paul Cathedral has over the years become a symbol of the city of St. Petersburg. Locals often refer to it simply as "the Angel". Constituting the highest point in downtown St. Petersburg 404 feet 3 inches the Angel is said to both watch over and protect the Venice of the North.

A careful program of restoration of both the Angel and its mechanism was completed in 1996 and now visitors to the fortress can again see the Angel keeping vigil over Peter the Great's city.

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The Grand Dukes Mausoleum (Velikokniazheskaya Usypalnitsa)

By the turn of the 20th century the interior of the Peter and Paul Cathedral was already filled with tsarist tombs, so a new Mausoleum was constructed between 1896 and 1908 to accommodate any further Imperial graves. However, very few members of the Romanov dynasty were buried there as the Revolution of 1917 ended their rule over Russia.

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I remember the minnie faces bags.... have you looked on ebay, there are a lot of reputable sellers there that are on the DIS also... I think I have seen them out there and the prices are really good on those.

Thanks for reminding me, I just checked and their are a few on there. I'm also going to see if there's one on the cruise that I fall in love with.

Those two tombs made out of jasper are so beautiful!
 
The Peter and Paul Cathedral was amazing and beautiful, but guess what.... There is more. We are headed back to the river and we are going to fast food Russia style for lunch, and a hydrofoil ride.

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These were a a thin pancake, but more than a crepe stuffed with chicken and some kind of sweet mayonnaise. Reminded of the mayo for fries in Amsterdam.

It filled the empty spot, but was NOT worth much more than that...

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This was about a 30 minute ride and everyone just laid back and relaxed, I almost feel asleep, we have been running all morning and this is just lunch time...Whew...

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Now we are here at the lower park, to Peterhof..... Hold to your eyeballs for this next set of pictures... Truly amazing stuff here. More GOLD in one place than I have ever seen.

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To me it builds up to the finished product, you start at the sea and see the beaches there, then you walk through the green area, where trees and grass are growing, then you see this....

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One of St. Petersburg's most famous and popular visitor attractions, the palace and park at Peterhof (also known as Petrodvorets) are often referred to as "the Russian Versaille", although many visitors conclude that the comparison does a disservice to the grandeur and scope of this majestic estate.

Versailles was, however, the inspiration for Peter the Great's desire to build an imperial palace in the suburbs of his new city and, after an aborted attempt at Strelna, Peterhof - which means "Peter's Court" in German - became the site for the Tsar's Monplaisir Palace, and then of the original Grand Palace. The estate was equally popular with Peter's granddaughter, Empress Elizabeth, who ordered the expansion of the Grand Palace and greatly extended the park and the famous system of fountains, including the truly spectacular Grand Cascade.

Improvements to the park continued throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. Catherine the Great, after leaving her own mark on the park, moved the court to Pushkin, but Peterhof once again became the official Imperial Residence in the reign of Nicholas I, who ordered the building of the modest Cottage Palace in 1826.

Like almost all St. Petersburg's suburban estates, Peterhof was ravaged by German troops during the Second World War. It was, however, one of the first to be resurrected and, thanks to the work of military engineers and over 1,000 volunteers, most of the estate's major structures had been fully restored by 1947. The name was also de-Germanicized after the war, becoming Petrodvorets, the name under which the surrounding town is still known. The palace and park are once again known as Peterhof.



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The spectacular parkland at Peterhof is remarkable for the sheer variety of styles encompassed in its layout and features. Representing nearly two centuries of European aristocratic fashion executed to the highest standards, Peterhof is like an encyclopedia of park design through the age of empire. Particularly impressive is the fact that the master landscapers and garden designers who worked on the estate at Peterhof managed to overcome the extremely inclement conditions of the northern climate to create a wonderland of greenery and flowers, sweeping vistas and ornate architectural decorations.

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This fountain, when you step on the wrong rock, all the water sprays up but I missed the shot of the water flowing... :(
 
This is Peter the Great's pet project at Peterhof was this small but charming summer palace, which the Tsar designed by and for himself, although he sought the help of several architects to do so. If you arrive in Peterhof by boat, Monplaisir is one of the first sights to greet you. Sitting in the eastern corner of the Lower Park, right on the shoreline of the Gulf of Finland, Monplaisir vaguely resembles a Dutch Colonial mansion, with its high gabled roof over the central corpus and narrow rectangular windows to keep out the wintry north wind. The facade on the opposite side of the palace is quite different, with long single-storey galleries topped by a balustraded terrace and supported by slender columns. Here, large French windows allow natural light to pour into the rooms, giving the whole building a summery, almost tropical feel.

Monplaisir was completed by 1723, and became Peter's preferred retreat, where he entertained only his closest friends and advisors. The rooms inside are almost entirely paneled in oak, and contain an interesting collection of 17th century art, much of which comes from Peter's own collection. Among the highlights inside is the delightful Lacquered Gallery, the creation of which required Russian icon-painters to spend months studying Chinese lacquering. The result is an extraordinary mixture of black, gold and red panels with a distinctly Russian accent. The Assembly Hall, which was the main reception room, used for riotous banquets in Peter's time, is decorated with latticed panels representing Africa, America, and Asia, and intricate rocaille coving.

Typically for Peter, Monplaisir displays an intriguing mixture of grandeur and homely comfort, with its pretty Dutch-tiled pantry, where Peter's wife Catherine would herself cook for guests, and the cozy Maritime Study, with tiles representing 13 different types of ship. From the windows, the view across the Gulf to Kronshtadt on one side and St. Petersburg on the other is particularly fine.


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The fountains of Peterhof are one of Russia's most famous tourist attractions, drawing millions of visitors every year. Many of the 120 breathtaking gravity-fed fountains were intrinsic to Peter the Great's original plans for Peterhof - it was the impossibility of engineering sufficiently powerful jets of water that prompted him to move his attentions from the Strelna site to Peterhof - and subsequent generations competed with their predecessors to add grander and ever more ingenious water features to the parkland surrounding the Grand Palace.

The most famous ensemble of fountains, the Grand Cascade, which runs from the northern facade of the Grand Palace to the Marine Canal, comprises 64 different fountains, and over 200 bronze statues, bas-reliefs, and other decorations. At the centre stands Rastrelli's spectacular statue of Samson wrestling the jaws of a lion. The vista of the Grand Cascade with the Grand Palace behind it, the first sight to great visitors who arrive in Peterhof by sea, is truly breathtaking. The Grotto behind the Grand Cascade, which was once used for small parties, contains the enormous pipes, originally wooden, that feed the fountains.

The official opening of the fountains at Peterhof, which usually takes place at the end of May, is an all-day festival, with classical music, fireworks and other performances, as each section of the park's fountains is turned on one by one.

The most prominently positioned fountains of Peterhof are 'Adam' and 'Eve'.
They occupy symmetric positions on either side of the Sea Channel, each at the conjunction of eight paths. This is the Adam fountain

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This is the Sun fountain, A water-wheel was concealed in the pedestal, and when the fountain was started up, water shot from the disc, and thus the fountain came to be called the Sun Fountain
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This is another trick fountain, when you walk by it is starts to spray from metal flowers..

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This is also a surprise fountain, when you walk by, these are down around your feet, and they spray when you are there...
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It has been overcast all day, and now the sun is starting to shine... Which makes everything glitter in the sun.

This is called the Roman fountains, they were Destroyed during World War II. Some of them were restored, the rest had to be recreated.
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In this one you can see both of them together.
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This is the Dragon and chessbord cascade. It is located in the eastern section of the lower park. The water cascades over black and white marble arranged as on a chessboard. The ten statues lining the cascade were buried to keep them safe from the German occupation during World War II.

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Next is the Triton & Seamonster (Orangery Fountain) In the center of the Orangery Garden, this fountain depicts Triton fighting a seamonster. The fountain was completed destroyed during World War II and recreated in 1956.

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This is the Orangery, or greenhouse
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This is the Grand Palace at Peterhof
The three story great palace sits on top of the ridge that separates the upper and lower parks. What is seen now is what was seen in Peter the Great's time. In his time there was only a small royal mansion at the site. Only after his death (and over two centuries) was the site expanded, altered, and improved to become what is seen today
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This is the Samson fountain. This depicts Samson opening the jaw of a lion and symbolizes Russia's victory over Sweden in the Great Northern War. The lion is a part of the Swedish coat of arms, and one of the victories during the war was won on St. Samson's Day.

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At the end of the river in the middle, is where we started on the hydrofoil boat...
 
The garden and water features are amazing at Peterhof. I'm guessing that we'll get a tour inside sometime soon.....but thanks for sharing!

I'm going to have to bump Russia up my bucket list.
 
Wow! You weren't kidding when you said about the gold! And I can see why they wouldn't want to downgrade Peterhof, by comparing it with Versailles. It is much more impressive, and that's saying a lot!

Thanks for sharing!
 
The garden and water features are amazing at Peterhof. I'm guessing that we'll get a tour inside sometime soon.....but thanks for sharing!

I'm going to have to bump Russia up my bucket list.

We are not going inside.... It is very plain, they have not restored it yet. Most reviews say to not bother going inside until it is completed. So we passed, we have so much more to see..... This day is not over yet.:lovestruc
 
Absolutely amazing! I'm glad you were able to get a little break at lunch.

At this point, we are so tired, my feet are killing me and we have more to go...

I think we were just excited to see St. Petersburg, that was the only thing keeping us going.
 
Wow! You weren't kidding when you said about the gold! And I can see why they wouldn't want to downgrade Peterhof, by comparing it with Versailles. It is much more impressive, and that's saying a lot!

Thanks for sharing!

Thanks Alison. I thought it was amazing. There was a whole side that we did not see. We came in and walked to the left and went clockwise to the palace. So if we cam in at 6 and walked to 12, we missed everything from 12 to 6 clockwise...

So there was much much more to see, but like I said we were running on fumes. No we get on the bus and ride for a good 20 minutes, most of us feel asleep....:goodvibes
 
We now back on the bus, heading to Tsarskoye Selo. which translate to Tsar's Village.


In the 17th century, the estate belonged to a Swedish noble. Its original Finnish name is usually translated as "a higher ground". Max Vasmer, on the other hand, the Finnish name came to be pronounced by the 18th-century Russians as "Sarskoye Selo", later changed to "Tsarskoye Selo".

In 1708, Peter the Great gave the estate to his wife, the future Empress Catherine I, as a present. She founded the Blagoveschensky church there in 1724, and changed the name of the settlement to Blagoveschenskoye, but this did not stand the test of time and quickly went out of use.

By the end of the 18th century, Tsarskoye Selo became a popular place of summer residence among the nobility. The guards' regiments were stationed to the south of Tsarskoye Selo, where Catherine the Great founded in the 1770s the town of Sophia (her own German name being Sophie).

The town escaped the 19th-century industrialization, although it was between Tsarskoye Selo and St. Petersburg that the first Russian railroad was built in 1837. In 1918, Tsarskoye Selo was renamed by the Bolsheviks into Detskoye Selo (Children's Village) and in 1937 it was renamed again to the town of Pushkin, thus commemorating the centenary of the poet's death.

On September 17, 1941 the Germans occupied the town of Pushkin, destroying and plundering many historical monuments, buildings and other cultural artifacts, including the famous Amber Room. The Red Army liberated the town on January 24, 1944. After the war, reconstruction began on Tsarskoye Selo; many rooms in the Catherine Palace have been restored, but much work on the palatial church and the Alexander Palace is still under way.


Most people fall asleep as soon as we get on the bus, but again I am just reflecting on the day and how much there is to see and do in such a short period of time.

While we are on the bus driving to the palace we see Fyodorovski Sobor, this church was built for His Majesty's Own Life-Guards, and His Majesty's Own Infantry Regiments. The plans for the church were made by M. Pokrovsky, professor of architecture. The foundation stone was laid in the Imperial presence in the summer of 1909.

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The Egyptian (Kuzminski) Gate - built in 1827 - 1830's at the entrance to Tsarskoye Selo. The gates are at the entrance to the town from St. Petersburg . In the decoration used forms and motifs of art of ancient Egypt, typical of the period of romantic egiptomanii .

The basis of the gate are stone guardhouse, which taper upwards. In the upper half, bend iron rods, decorated with images of the solar disk, scarab beetles and snake heads.

On the exterior walls are faced with iron plates, on which there are thirty-relief images of various scenes from Egyptian mythology. On the western and eastern sides of the gate adjacent to the walls of iron herms, Bilateral herms installed inside the gates are pillars for a lattice of rods in the form of lotus stems ending in flowers.
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On the eve of the Great Patriotic War, the gate has undergone renovation. However, during combat operations were severely damaged. The last restoration was carried out in 1980 . At the same time the roadway was moved to the area around the gate.

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Now we are getting to Catherine's Palace.....

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