- Source: Admiralty, Saint Petersburg
The Admiralty building is the former headquarters of the Admiralty Board and the Imperial Russian Navy in Central St. Petersburg, Russia and the current headquarters of the Russian Navy.
The edifice was rebuilt in the nineteenth century to support the tsar's maritime ambitions. The original design was a fortified shipyard which was later surrounded by five bastions and further protected by a moat.
The Empire Style edifice visible today lining the Admiralty Quay was constructed to Andreyan Zakharov's design between 1806 and 1823. Located at the western end of the Nevsky Prospekt, The Admiralty with its gilded spire topped by a golden weather-vane in the shape of a small sail warship (Korablik), is one of the city's most conspicuous landmarks and the focal point of old St. Petersburg's three main streets - Nevsky Prospect, Gorokhovaya Street, and Voznesensky Avenue - underscoring the importance Peter I placed on Russia's Navy.
Until merger and relocation to the town of Pushkin in 1998 the building housed one of the Soviet and Russian naval engineering schools which since 1927 was named after Felix Dzerzhinsky.
Vladimir Nabokov, writer and native of St. Petersburg, wrote a short story in May 1933 entitled "The Admiralty Spire."
See also
Admiralty Embankment with the Lions at the Dvortsovaya pier
References
External links
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Sankt-Peterburg
- Gostiny Dvor (Saint Petersburg Metro)
- Baltic Shipyard
- Prospekt Nevsky
- KRI Irian (201)
- Kapal penjelajah Rusia Aurora
- Kapal tempur Rusia Gangut (1911)
- Kapal selam kelas Amur
- Admiralty, Saint Petersburg
- Admiralty
- Admiralty Shipyards
- Admiralty Board (Russian Empire)
- Saint Petersburg
- Central Saint Petersburg
- List of buildings and structures in Saint Petersburg
- Senate Square (Saint Petersburg)
- Coat of arms of Saint Petersburg
- Lada-class submarine