Таганрог
From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository
|
House of Savitsky in Taganrog. © TaganrogCity.Com |
|||
|
The project of the Saint Trinity fortress and seaport of Taganrog, established by the Austrian engineer Baron Ernst Friedrich von Borgsdorf. © PoZitiv Film Studio |
Medal given by Peter I of Russia to the architect of Taganrog's haven, Matthew Simon in 1709. |
The first Russian atlas (Atlas of Cruys), produced by Admiral Cornelius Cruys and Peter the Great and published in Amsterdam in 1703-1704. |
|
|
The Palace of Alexander I of Russia in Taganrog, where the Russian Emperor died in 1825, as appears on a 19th century postcard. |
The Assumption Cathedral in Taganrog, Russia (1818-1938), where Anton Chekhov was christened on February 10,1860. |
The Peter the Great Monument in the city of Taganrog (sculptor Mark Antokolski) as appears on a 19th century postcard. |
The Peter the Great Monument in the city of Taganrog (sculptor Mark Antokolski) as appears on a 19th century postcard. |
|
Residence of Russian poet and playwright Nestor Kukolnik, later Azov-Don Commercial Bank, today the building is occupied by Taganrog Branch of the Savings Bank of Russia and Taganrog State Archive as appears on a 19-century postcard. |
Taganrog City Theater (1866), founded in 1827 and named after Anton Chekhov in 1944 as appears on a 19-century postcard. |
The Greek Monastery (1809-1814), where the burial service for the Russian Czar Alexandre I of Russia was read in 1825. The Statue of Alexandre I (sculptor Marthos) inaugurated in 1831. |
The Mansion of Ivan Varvatsi (Ioannis Varvakis) in Taganrog on a 19th century postcard. |
|
The Boys Gymnasium in Taganrog (1843), founded in 1809 on a 19-th century postcard. Today - Chekhov Literary Museum. |
Photograph of the Birthhouse of Faina Ranevskaya in the city of Taganrog, Russia. |
||
|
The Achilles Alferaki Palace in Taganrog, Russia (1848). |
|||
|
Peter the Great monument in Taganrog (1903). |

