Tsarskoye Selo (Царское Село in Russian, may be translated as “Tsar’s Village”), a former residence of the royal families and visiting nobility 24 km south of St. Petersburg. It was called Tsarskoye Selo after 1728. In 1918, it was renamed to Detskoye Selo (Children's Village) and in 1937 it was renamed again to the town of Pushkin, commemorating the 100th anniversary since the death of the greatest Russian poet Aleksandr Pushkin.
Peter the Great gave Tsarskoye Selo to his wife — future Empress Catherine I of Russia — as a present in 1708. In the mid 18th century it became a royal country house. In the 18th to early 19th century they built palaces and created parks with different constructions. In the summertime, Tsarskoye Selo was a popular place of residence among the nobility. The guards regiments were also stationed here. There are two imperial palaces in Tsarskoye Selo: the Neoclassical Alexander Palace and the baroque Catherine Palace.
In the beginning of the 1770s, Catherine the Great founded the town of Sophia in the southern part of today’s Pushkin. In 1808, Sophia and Tsarskoye Selo merged and became one town. In 1811, the celebrated Lyceum was opened in Tsarskoye Selo. Aleksandr Pushkin was one of the famous students who attended this college in 1811–1817.
The first Russian railroad was built between Tsarskoye Selo and St. Petersburg in 1837. In the spring of 1917, Emperor Nicholas II was held under arrest in the Alexander Palace in Tsarskoye Selo. Tsarskoye Selo is also famous for its powerful government radio station that was set up here in 1917. On September 17, 1941 the Nazis occupied the town of Pushkin and ruined a lot of historical monuments and buildings. The Soviets liberated the area on January 24, 1944. After the war, Tsarskoye Selo was reconstructed and one can still admire its beauty to this day.
External links
The State Museum of Tsarskoye Selo (http://eng.tzar.ru/)
Unofficial website made by Pallasart (http://www.alexanderpalace.com/)
TsarskoeSelo (Royal Village), located 25 km south of St. Petersburg, first appeared in the 18C as the summer residence of the Russian tsars.
TsarskoeSelo became the place for official receptions of Russian nobility and representatives of foreign states, who were visiting Russia with diplomatic missions.
Here, in TsarskoeSelo, Pushkin’s presence can be felt everywhere: in the beautiful TsarskoeSelo Park where the young poet used to wonder, in the town to which Pushkin dedicated so many of his famous verses, and in the building of the Lyceum itself, which currently houses a memorial museum.
Tsarskoye Selo (Russian: Ца́рское Село́; may be translated as "Tsar’s Village") is a former Russian residence of the imperial family and visiting nobility 24 km south of St. Petersburg.
The literary traditions of Tsarskoye Selo were continued in the 20th century by such notable poets as Anna Akhmatova and Innokenty Annensky.
In 1918, the Tsar's Village was renamed by the Bolsheviks into Detskoye Selo (Children's Village) and in 1937 it was renamed again to the town of Pushkin, thus commemorating the centenary of the poet's death.