headlands school: history visit to russia 2004 heathrow airport
TRANSCRIPT
HeadlanHeadlandsds School School: : HistoryHistory Visit to Russia Visit to Russia
20042004
Heathrow airport
View from window of Hotel in St View from window of Hotel in St Petersburg:Petersburg:
St Petersburg replaced Moscow as the Russian capital in 1712. It was founded by Tsar Peter the Great and averages 30 days of sun a year! The average January temperature is –17. His aim was to make Russia a truly European State and defeated Sweden in the Northern War to gain the land of swamp and trees around the river Neva
St Petersburg
Moscow
St Petersburg: St Petersburg:
The river Neva, into
which Rasputin would be thrown!
View of the Peter and Paul fortress, it was built to protect the city on the order of Peter the Great. It holds the graves of many Tsars including Alexander II “The Tsar Liberator”, Peter the Great, Catherine the Great and Nicholas II. Prisoners at the fortress remarked “t is the only place in St Petersburg that you can see Siberia” (meaning they would end up there!) The prison held Lenin’s brother Alexander (shot) Leon Trotsky and Maxim Gorky.
The spire is 122m high
Peter and Paul Cathedral interior
The Rostral Columns, 32 metres high to commemorate naval victories
Monument to Peter built in 1782
The Winter Palace, home of the Tsars and scene of the 1905 Revolution and 1917 Revolutions
Nicholas II. Last Tsar of Russia
Egyptian Sphinxes on the University Embankment,
brought in 1732
The Astoria Hotel. During the siege of Leningrad (St Petersburg renamed in 1924 following Lenin’s death) in which 1 million Russians starved to death (more than we lost in the whole war) Hitler planned a dinner menu for the day he would capture the city, it only lacked an actual date. The German Operation (Barbarossa) got within 20 miles of the city but no further, by 1944 the Russian Red Army had thrown the Germanys out of the country, Russia remembers the war as the “Great Fatherland War”. The siege lasted for 872 days and temperatures of –30 led to famine, disease, starvation and cannibalism.
Church of the Spilled-Blood: built on the sight where Alexander II (The Tsar Liberator) was murdered by revolutionaries. He was the Tsar who freed the serfs in 1861 but clearly the 63 year old Emperor had not gone far enough!!
St Nicholas Cathedral: built during the reign of Peter the Great became a centre of prayers for sailors lost in the Russo-Japanese War 1904-5. Ironically it is now 100 years since the Russian navy mistakenly fired upon the Hull fishing fleet in the North Sea, killing 2 sailors, and almost starting a war with Britain.
Scene of speech from Lenin demanding
“Peace, bread and land” in 1917
Battleship Aurora, launched in 1903, served in the Russo-Japanese War and played a major role in the Bolshevik Revolution by firing a blank shot over the Winter Palace to signal the start of the Revolution (9.40pm Nov 7th 1917) It was scuttled during the siege of Leningrad to avoid damage from the German bombs, it was relocated 950 days later.
Ambassadors staircase in
Winter Palace.
The Winter Palace and Hermitage Museum
Revolutionary Square
Kerensky
Saint Isaac's Church, commissioned by Alexander I in 1818 and the first sight which can be seen by ships
arriving in St. Petersburg
Coronation Chariot of the Tsars
Hermitage art: statue of communist worker
Statue of Nietzsche
Room where the Provisional Government
was arrested in November 1917. The clock was stopped at
that moment
Edward VI:
Van Gogh:
Tsar’s throne. Cultural show in St Petersburg including Cossack dancers
Walls of the Kremlin
Lenin’s Mausoleum: after his death in 1924 he was embalmed and put on display. This was despite his
wife (Krupskaya) saying “Do not raise monuments to him, or palaces to his name, do not organize
pompous ceremonies in his memory”
Lenin lives!! The background is Red Square Museum of Modern History
St Basil’s Cathedral: built on the orders of Ivan the Terrible. When he saw the church he ordered that something so beautiful should not be repeated elsewhere. He ordered the designer to be blinded.
Burial place of the Communist
leaders including Josef
Stalin and Leonid Breznev
Christ Saviour Cathedral: build to celebrate victory over Napoleon in Byzantium style
Novodevichiy Convent: burial sight of Nikita Khruschev, the first wife of Peter
the Great, Chekov, Eisenstien and Riaisa Gorbachev
Moscow Olympic Stadium
Film set in
Moscow
Memorial Park to Battle of Moscow.
The images to the right are
representing the million Russian
jews killed during the holocaust
Hotel Ukraine: build in the Stalin era
IMAGES OF MOSCOW
Uniform of Alexis, son of
the Tsar.
His haemophilia
brought Rasputin into
the lives of the Tsar and
Tsarina. He was murdered
in 1918 in Ekaterinberg
Memorial to the war hero, Marshal Zhukov, built in 1995 to celebrate 50th anniversary of World War II
Bolshoy Theatre: opened in 1780
Memorial to Karl Marx, founder of communist
ideology
13th century Russian armour
INSIDE THE KREMLIN
Eternal flame to the unknown soldier: unveiled in 1967 with the inscription“Your name is unknown, your deeds
immortal”
The Tsar’s cannon, never fired!
Built in the 1470s by Ivan the Great, it includes the throne of the Tsarina and is
the place where Emperors were christened, Crowned and Buried.
The Lubyanka, home of the dreaded KGB
The Tsar Bell: built for the Church of Assumption, it is the
largest Bell in the world and weighs 200 tonnes. In 1737 a fire in the Kremlin led the people to douse water on the bell causing a 7 tonne section to brake off.