Bővebb ismertető
Dear reader, We hope that this guide to the environs of Leningrád will pro ve useful to those of you who wish to see more of the beautiful places that encircle the city on the Neva like a necklace ofpearls. Most likely you will have already felt something of the pulsing rhythm of city life in Leningrád itself and had a chance to admire its long avenues and broad squares, its gránité embankments and magnificent palaces and its many mónuments, bridges and cathedrals. Leningrád must certainly rank among the most beautiful cities in the world. It was the first European capital to be built according to a preconceived plan and was subsequently developed according to clearly defined and progressively orientated town-planning principles. The result ofthis has been the creation ofa unique architectural ensemble comprising the central regions of the city and its environs-Peterhof (now Petrodvorets), Tsarskoye Selo (now Pushkin), Pavlovsk and other suburban spots. Their palaces, fountains and parks which were designed by architects of historical fame and built by Russian masterbuilders have been an object ofcontinued admiration and wonderment for more than two and a half centuries. If architecture is music rendered visible and tangible in stone, then the great architects, buildersy stone-masons, carvers and gold-smiths created a veritable symphony on the banks of the Neva. Care and concern for our great cultural heritage is an integrál part ofthe policies ofour socialist state. One ofthe first decrees ofthe new Soviet Republic was a decree on the nationalisation of cultural mónuments and landmarks and making them widely available to the public. "It is absolutely indispensable,,, Lenin saidy "to direct all our efforts to maintaining the pillars ofculture, otherwise the proletariat will not forgive us." In your excursions around Petrodvorets, Pushkin and Pavlovsk you will see astounding works by great Russian and European architects, sculptors and painters who built these beautiful estates in the 18th century as suburban residences for the tsars ofRussia, whose capital was St. Petersburg (Leningrád). But it is not only the object ofthis book to describe the places of cultural and artistic interest that are found in the