Showing posts with label Peter the Great. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter the Great. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2020

Love in the time of corona

Wedding joy amidst the cherry blossoms on Constitution Avenue/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Now this is bliss, amidst the cherry blossoms near the Washington Monument. The white figure in the distance is the bride seen in the photo above/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Could this be love in the cherry blossoms?/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Between the rows of flags at a famous address in Washington, D.C., the Washington Monument stands center/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Guards making rounds on Sunday afternoon at the White House and leaves blowing in the wind at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue were almost the only things moving outside the gates/Photo by Patricia Leslie

On the 15th St. NW side of the White House on Sunday afternoon/Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Department of Justice building, patriot Nathan Hale (1755-1776) stands erect, continuing to serve his country. He was a spy for the Continental Army, captured by the British and executed. "I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country," or a variation of these words were supposedly his last and are carved at the base of the statue./Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Federal Trade Commission building on Constitution Avenue, Gov. Andrew Cuomo  arrives to rein in the rampaging disease /Photo by Patricia Leslie
Parking was easy to find along Constitution Avenue Sunday afternoon, and the sidewalks were almost empty. We went for exercise and biking which is allowable under present rules/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Degas at the Opera will open again, won't it? Before it closes again, this time, scheduled to exit July 5, 2020 at the National Gallery of Art/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Multi-colored red tulips brighten a sad afternoon at the U.S. Botanic Garden. We may not be able to go inside the Botanic Garden building, but we can surely enjoy the scenery outside/Photo by Patricia Leslie
More beauty at the U.S. Botanic Garden/Photo by Patricia Leslie
The U.S. Botanic Garden/Photo by Patricia Leslie
A host of golden baby daffodils, tulips, and hyacinths at the U.S. Botanic Garden. Is there a fragrance any better than hyacinths'?/Photo by Patricia Leslie
One of the loveliest park scenes in all of D.C. when the Bartholdi Fountain is working. Prithee, Architect of the U.S. Capitol, wherefore are thou, water? Shut off for coronavirus?  We cannot enjoy the park's beauty?/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Have the Russians landed in D.C. to join their friend in the White House? What looks like Catherine the Great's gift to her Grandfather-in-Law, Peter the Great (which welcomes visitors at the River Neva in St. Petersburg) is actually General Jose de San Martin (1778-1850) "Liberador" and "Leader of the Argentine Independence," a statue which is found in Triangle Park at Virginia Ave., NW and 20th St., NW. It's a copy of one in Buenos Aires, sculpted by Augustin-Alexandre Dumont who completed the original in 1862.  Argentina gave this duplicate in 1925, and it was rededicated in 1976, according to the Smithsonian Institution Research Information System/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 More about General Jose de San Martin at his statue/Photo by Patricia Leslie
General Jose de San Martin (1778-1850) "Liberador" and "Leader of the Argentine Independence" found in Triangle Park at Virginia Ave., NW and 20th St., NW/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Peter the Great Statue, the Bronze Horseman, a gift to Peter from Catherine the Great dedicated in 1782, St Petersburg, Russia. Note the similarities to Gen. Juan de San Martin's statue, the outstretched right hand, the rearing horse (which strikes a serpent under Peter). The "Thunder Stone" which holds Peter is the largest ever moved by humans (1768)/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Peter the Great Statue, the Bronze Horseman, St Petersburg, Russia/Photo by Patricia Leslie

 
Peter the Great Statue, the Bronze Horseman, St Petersburg, Russia/Photo by Patricia Leslie


Tiptoe through the daffodils and smell their fragrance at the U.S. Botanic Garden/Photo by Patricia Leslie


PatriciaLesli@gmail.com

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

'Peter the Great' welcomes the G20 to St. Petersburg

 
 
 
Peter the Great welcomes visitors to St. Petersburg/Patricia Leslie

I hope President Obama does not cancel his trip to St. Petersburg, Russia for the G20 over the Syria mess for after all, how can you communicate if you don't communicate?

St. Petersburg welcomes the G20/Patricia Leslie
Peter the Great (1672-1725) on his horse on a very big rock stands ready on the banks of the Neva to welcome the G20 members to St. Petersburg, truly one of the world's loveliest cities, an UNESCO World Heritage Site, the "Venice of the North" for its cultural opportunities and beautiful canals, reminiscent of the real Venice.
Peter the Great in St. Petersburg/Patricia Leslie
The inscription in Latin on one side and in Russian on the other side of the stone reads:  Peter the First, Catherine the Second, 1782/Patricia Leslie

The revered (almost as much as Lenin, it seems) Russian poet Aleksandr Pushkin (1799-1837) wrote the poem, The Bronze Horseman, about the statue of Peter who founded St. Petersburg in 1703. (I would include the English text of the poem, however and alas, "This text has been suppressed due to author restrictions," but it is found in Russian at http://www.rvb.ru/pushkin/01text/02poems/01poems/0795.htm?start=0&length=all.)

Orest Adamovich Kiprensky (1782-1836), Aleksandr Pushkin (1827),Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow/Patricia Leslie
From a distance Peter the Great seemed smaller than expected.  Beyond the statue is the Neva River and in the distance is the Menshikov Palace/Patricia Leslie

It is almost criminal to visit St. Petersburg without having read
Peter the Great by Robert K. Massie published in 1981. Indeed, the Fairfax County Public Library has only three copies which are never on the shelves, always checked out and reserved, no doubt partially due to Massie's 2012 Catherine the Great, also required reading to truly enjoy the magnificence and scope of the history of Russia, its tsars, their legacies, and the possessions they left behind. And it was because of these two books, honestly, that I went to Russia. (Reading Massie's Nicholas and Alexandra was a factor, too.  Forced by books. They made me do it. This has happened to me before.)

The Neva River separates Peter the Great and the Menshikov Palace (reddish roof)/Patricia Leslie

Peter the Great on the banks of the Neva River, St. Petersburg, Russia.  The Russian flag flies on top of the government building across the street/Patricia Leslie

Catherine the Great commissioned the statute to honor the 100th anniversary of Peter's coronation. She, always happy to glorify Western Europe as was Peter, hired a French sculptor, Etienne Maurice Falconet (1716-1791) to create the piece. (Russia didn’t have sculptors? Rather like the U.S. which went to China to hire one for the Martin Luther King, Jr. statue.)

Peter the Great on the banks of the Neva River, St. Petersburg, Russia/Patricia Leslie

Peter the Great on the banks of the Neva River, St. Petersburg, Russia with a slain snake with its multiple interpretations/Patricia Leslie
Peter the Great on the banks of the Neva River, St. Petersburg, Russia/Patricia Leslie

The stone on which Peter stands has its own history and is sometimes called the Thunder Stone. It was found 3.7 miles inland from the Gulf of Finland and hauled painstakingly by 400 men who laid and relaid track and worked nine months to carry it to St. Petersburg in what is still known as the largest stone moved by man without animals or machinery. The whole transfer to the statue site took two years.
Hauling of the Thunder Stone for the monument to Peter the Great. Engraving by I.F. Schley of the drawing by Y.M. Felton (Yury Felten), 1770/Wikipedia

Falconet worked on the project for 12 years before his inability to please the madam,  exhaustion and exasperation led him to leave four years before the statue was completed. His absence at the dedication on August 7, 1782 received attention and is noted on the sign at the entrance to the park where the statue stands. Massie provides lots more detail.

About 150 years after the dedication, citizens covered Peter with sandbags and a wooden shelter to hide the statue from 900 days of Nazi attack and bombs.  The monument escaped the siege undamaged.
The camouflage of Peter the Great during World War II/Wikipedia
Having a little knowledge of the statue’s background, I was mysteriously drawn to it every day while I was in St. Petersburg. It lies in close proximity to St. Isaac’s Cathedral, itself a landmark whose gilded dome can be seen for miles around town.
St. Isaac's Cathedral, St. Petersburg, Russia/Patricia Leslie


St. Petersburg, Russia welcomes the G20/Patricia Leslie


patricialesli@gmail.com