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hidden Persons of Tsarskoye Selo -
hidden Monuments of history and culture | Kochubey Viktor Sergeevich, Duke hidden Kochubey V.P. (1768-1834), statesman | KOCHUBEY Viktor Pavlovich (1768-1834), Prince (1831), statesman, Chancellor for Internal Affairs (1834), Honorary Member of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1818). Maternal nephew of Prince A. A. Bezborodko, riding on his coattails ... | | KOCHUBEY Viktor Pavlovich (1768-1834), Prince (1831), statesman, Chancellor for Internal Affairs (1834), Honorary Member of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1818). Maternal nephew of Prince A. A. Bezborodko, riding on his coattails. Studied at universities in Geneva, Upsala and London. Since 1784, he was sent on diplomatic service. In the 1780s, he was a member of the Masonic Lodge of Harpocrat in St Petersburg. In 1792-97, he was Envoy to Constantinople. In 1798-99, he directed as Vice-Chancellor of the Collegium for Foreign Affairs. One of Emperor Alexander I's minions. From 1801, he was Senator; in 1801-02, he again directed the Collegium for Foreign Affairs; in 1802-07, he became a member of the Private Committee, helping work out system-wide reforms and planning for the Russian Empire's public administration; helped initiate the creation of ministries and the abolition of collegiums (1802). In 1802-07, he was Minister of Internal Affairs, extending his protection to M. M. Speransky. From 1810, he was Member of State Assembly. During the Great Patriotic War of 1812, he attended to Emperor Alexander I; in 1813, he became Chairman of the Central Council for the Administration of German Lands. In 1816-19, he headed the Department for Ecclesiastical and Civil Affairs of the State Assembly, initiating the integration of the Ministry of Police and Ministry of Internal Affairs, as well as the creation of the Ministry for Ecclesiastical Affairs and People's Education. In 1819-23, he headed Ministry of Internal Affairs. In 1827, he became Chairman of the State Assembly and an Honorary Member of the Petersburg Ecclesiastical Academy (1814), the Russian Academy (1818), the Free Economic Society (1821), and the St Petersburg University (1821). In 1802-07, he owned a house at 22 Millionnaya Street, then a house at 27-29 Mokhovaya Street; form 1819, he lived in a house at 16 Fontanka River Embankment. Buried in the Descent of the Holy Spirit Church at the Alexander Nevsky Lavra (in 1937 his remains were moved to the Lazarevskaya Burial Vault). References: Чечулин Н. Д. Князь Виктор Павлович Кочубей, 1768-1834: Очерк жизни и деятельности. СПб., 1900. D. N. Shilov.
| | | hidden The estate of M.V. Kochubey (the Reserved Palace, Vladimir Palace) | Alexander I was the author of the original architectural idea and customer of Kochubey’s country-house. The work with the project was begun in 1816 from a draft developed by the emperor himself with the help of the architect P.V ... | | Alexander I was the author of the original architectural idea and customer of Kochubey’s country-house. The work with the project was begun in 1816 from a draft developed by the emperor himself with the help of the architect P.V. Neyelov, the final design was completed by V.P. Stasov. A semicircular terrace with columns and spherical dome, oriented to the “To my dear comrades” Gate in the Catherine Park and developed the architectural motifs of the Alexander Palace and the Concert Hall pavilion designed by G. Quarenghi, was successfully planned by the monarch-architect. The gift certificate was drawn up in April 1817 in the name of Princess M.V. Kochubey. The building was constructed in 1817-1818, the garden planning and building works were completed by 1824. During 1835-1857 it was the Tsarskoye Selo country-house of Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolayevich, who was born in Tsarskoye Selo. By his full age the mansion was rebuilt in 1856-1857 to the design of the architect I.I. Charlemagne, but after the finishing of building the Grand Duke refused the country-house. The project of Charlemagne was high appreciated and the architect became an academician of architecture, but his architect career was interrupted in view of fault-finding of the owner. The spectacular terrace with two stairs and sculptures of the Italian marble lions at the eastern façade of the building remembers about Charlemagne’s work. In 1859 Alexaner II ordered to name the country-house as the Reserved Palace. In 1895 The Reserved Palace was transferred to Grand Duke Vladimir Aleksandrovich. In 1876-1878 the architect A.F. Vidov built three cavalier’s houses for the Grand Duke retinue, wings for servants and later a garage and ice-house was built. In 1882 Alexander III considered necessary to register officially the transferring of the Reserved Palace to Vladimir Aleksandrovich under the ownership in right of primogeniture with especial conditions. Further attempts of the Grand Duke and his heirs to get the unlimited rights of ownership for the palace remained unsuccessful. After the Grand Duke’s dearth, the palace, which came into the ownership of the widow Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna (Senior), was renamed the Vladimirsky Palace (in 1910), according to the Emperor’s order. In troubled 1917 during short-time the Vladimirsky Palace was used by the Soviet of Soldiers’ Deputies and Soviet authorities, a school- colony for juvenile delinquents, then here there was a School of VKP(b) (Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks)) for the Communist Party activists of agricultural establishments. During the Nazi occupation of Pushkin Town in 1941-1943 the palace burned and was highly damaged, so the question about its restoration for placing the dormitory of the School of the Communist Party Education did not solve for a long time. In 1948 Doctor of Architecture, professor V.I. Yakovlev and B.L. Vasilyev, an architect of the State Inspectorate for Monuments Protection, disputed this idea of the palace using and recommended to use the palace for a culture-educational establishment (a theatre, club). Restoration and recovery work was done according to the design of the architect-restorer M.I. Tolstov in 1955-1958 for using the palace as the Palace of Pioneers. At the present time the most luxurious Palace of Wedding is placed here. Cavaliers’ houses and wings are occupied by the Cadet Corps of the Federal Frontier Service. Persons Alexander I, Emperor Alexander II, Emperor Alexander III, Emperor Kochubey Viktor Sergeevich, Duke Nikolay Nikolaevich (Sr.), Grand Prince Quarenghi Giacomo Stasov Vasily Petrovich Tolstov M.I. Vidov Alexander Fomich Vladimir Alexandrovich, Grand Prince Vladimir Alexandrovich, Grand Prince Yakovlev, V.I. Addresses Sadovaya Street/Pushkin, town, house 22
| | | hidden The Mansion of V.P. Kochubey. | In 1911 the Master of Ceremonies V.P. Kochubey bought an old estate in Tsarskoye Selo, with a ramshackle wooden house built by S.I. Cherfolio in 1835 for the first estate owner A. Polovtsev, a collegiate assessor ... | | In 1911 the Master of Ceremonies V.P. Kochubey bought an old estate in Tsarskoye Selo, with a ramshackle wooden house built by S.I. Cherfolio in 1835 for the first estate owner A. Polovtsev, a collegiate assessor. On the place of the old house in 1911-1913 according to the design of A.I. Tamanov (Tamanyan) was built a new stone house with Doric six-column portico, Neoclassicism style facades and luxurious interiors of palace layout. Architects V.I. Yakovlev, N.E. Lansere and V.I. Romanov took part in constructing. Kochubey’s collections of furniture, paintings, manuscripts, books were kept in the Collection Room and in the especial armour-plating room-safe. In 1918 the unique collections were passed to the museum repository of Paley’s Palace. Nationalized palace of Kochubey was firstly occupied by an orphan-asylum, in 1927 the House of the 1905 Revolution veterans was placed in the palace. During the years of World War II and occupation the building was damaged with an air bomb and plundered. In 1947-1948 it was restored and passed to a training school for kolkhoz specialists. From the early 1950s the rest home “Pushkino” for 100 people , the Communist Party workers of the oblast committee of the Communist Party of the USSR, had been placed here. Persons Cherfolio, S.I. Kochubey Viktor Sergeevich, Duke Lansere Nikolay Evgenievich Polovtsev, A. Romanov, V.I. Yakovlev, V.I. Addresses Radischeva Street/Pushkin, town, house 4
| | | hidden | The main house (architect V.P. Stasov) of the country estate of Prince V.P. Kochubey, the Minister of Internal Affairs, was constructed and the family of Kochubey lived in this house until 1835 ... | | | | | |