Place Details

Place Details

Rumyantsev Mansion

The mansion was built in the forties of the XVIII century. Initially, the Golitsyns lived here, and in 1802 the house was purchased by Chancellor Nikolai Rumyantsev, an avid collector and collector of antiquities. When he died, he bequeathed to his brother to turn the mansion with all its contents into a museum.

Today, there are four permanent exhibitions here. The main exposition is devoted to the house and its inhabitants — Golitsyn, the Rumyantsev family, Starchevsky, Bogarna and others. The special pride of the museum is a unique one-piece mirror with an area of about 18 square meters. It adorns one of the walls of the state hall. The exhibition “From everyday life to holidays. Sketches from the 30s”. It introduces visitors to the museum about the life of St. Petersburg residents during the first five years. A separate interactive exhibition tells about the NEP era. Its exhibits include books, newspapers, calendars, clothes, kitchen utensils of those years. And perhaps the most difficult exhibition for visitors is Leningrad during the Great Patriotic War. It is here that the famous diary of a small Leningrad resident Tanya Savicheva is kept, whose family did not survive the blockade.

Various classes for children are held at the Rumyantsev Mansion. This includes thematic tours, lectures, theatrical performances. Children talk to piano music about toys, fairy tales, works of outstanding composers. And for high school students and students, the museum staff prepared a number of historical programs about Pushkin, Lermontov, Turgenev.

Adults — 150 RUB

Students and pensioners — 80 rubles.

The mansion was built in the forties of the XVIII century. Initially, the Golitsyns lived here, and in 1802 the house was purchased by Chancellor Nikolai Rumyantsev, an avid collector and collector of antiquities. When he died, he bequeathed to his brother to turn the mansion with all its contents into a museum.

Today, there are four permanent exhibitions here. The main exposition is devoted to the house and its inhabitants — Golitsyn, the Rumyantsev family, Starchevsky, Bogarna and others. The special pride of the museum is a unique one-piece mirror with an area of about 18 square meters. It adorns one of the walls of the state hall. The exhibition “From everyday life to holidays. Sketches from the 30s”. It introduces visitors to the museum about the life of St. Petersburg residents during the first five years. A separate interactive exhibition tells about the NEP era. Its exhibits include books, newspapers, calendars, clothes, kitchen utensils of those years. And perhaps the most difficult exhibition for visitors is Leningrad during the Great Patriotic War. It is here that the famous diary of a small Leningrad resident Tanya Savicheva is kept, whose family did not survive the blockade.

Various classes for children are held at the Rumyantsev Mansion. This includes thematic tours, lectures, theatrical performances. Children talk to piano music about toys, fairy tales, works of outstanding composers. And for high school students and students, the museum staff prepared a number of historical programs about Pushkin, Lermontov, Turgenev.

Adults — 150 RUB

Students and pensioners — 80 rubles.

The mansion was built in the forties of the XVIII century. Initially, the Golitsyns lived here, and in 1802 the house was purchased by Chancellor Nikolai Rumyantsev, an avid collector and collector of antiquities. When he died, he bequeathed to his brother to turn the mansion with all its contents into a museum.

Today, there are four permanent exhibitions here. The main exposition is devoted to the house and its inhabitants — Golitsyn, the Rumyantsev family, Starchevsky, Bogarna and others. The special pride of the museum is a unique one-piece mirror with an area of about 18 square meters. It adorns one of the walls of the state hall. The exhibition “From everyday life to holidays. Sketches from the 30s”. It introduces visitors to the museum about the life of St. Petersburg residents during the first five years. A separate interactive exhibition tells about the NEP era. Its exhibits include books, newspapers, calendars, clothes, kitchen utensils of those years. And perhaps the most difficult exhibition for visitors is Leningrad during the Great Patriotic War. It is here that the famous diary of a small Leningrad resident Tanya Savicheva is kept, whose family did not survive the blockade.

Various classes for children are held at the Rumyantsev Mansion. This includes thematic tours, lectures, theatrical performances. Children talk to piano music about toys, fairy tales, works of outstanding composers. And for high school students and students, the museum staff prepared a number of historical programs about Pushkin, Lermontov, Turgenev.

Adults — 150 RUB

Students and pensioners — 80 rubles.

Address

44, Angliyskaya Embankment

Timetable

Mon, Thu—Sun 11:00 — 18:00, Tue 11:00 — 17:00

Phone

+7 812 571-75-44

Website

http://www.spbmuseum.ru/themuseum/museum_complex/rumyantsev_mansion/

Source

https://kudago.com/spb/place/spbmuseum/

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