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Michael Manege

Michael Manege (Mikhailovsky manezh; Russian: Михайловский манеж) is the Neoclassical building of an early 19th-century riding academy in the historic center of Saint Petersburg, Russia. It was converted into an indoor sporting arena in 1949 and was renamed Zimniy Stadion (Russian: Зимний стадион, lit. "Winter Stadium").

Zimniy Stadion
Mikhailovsky Manege
Михайловский манеж (Зимний стадион)
General information
LocationSaint Petersburg
AddressManezhnaya Square, 6
CountryRussian Federation
Coordinates59°56′11″N 30°20′22″E / 59.93639°N 30.33944°E / 59.93639; 30.33944
Construction started1798
Completed1800
Renovated1824
Technical details
Floor area4,356 square metres (46,890 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Vincenzo Brenna
Renovating team
Architect(s)Carlo Rossi
Other designersV.Demuth-Malinovsky
S.S.Pimenov
Other information
Seating capacity2000
Website
http://www.restec.ru/manezh.ru.html
References
object # 7810640007

Name edit

Similar to the neighboring Mikhailovsky Castle the name "Mikhailovsky" comes from the Archangel Michael, a heavenly patron of the House of Romanov, the ruling dynasty of the Russian Empire in 1613–1917. "Manège" is French for "riding academy", since the area was originally used as a dressage area for horses of the imperial cavalry. The square in which the monument sits is called Manezhnaya Square (Russian: Манежная площадь).

History edit

The history of Manezhnaya Square and the Mikhailovsky Manège dates to the 1730s, when a Persian shah, Nader, who signed a treaty with the Russian Empire in Ganja in March 1735,[1][2] sent an elephant as a gift to the Russian empress, Anna of Russia, the niece of Peter the Great. To keep that gift alive, an "elephant yard"—actually, the first zoo—was built on what is today Manezhnaya Square. Very soon, a "beast yard" (Russian: зверовой двор) for other animals was put nearby, along with a greenhouse to grow plants to feed them.[3]

However, the elephant could not bear loneliness and the heavy northern climate of Petersburg. So in 1741, the Persian shah sent a caravan of 14 elephants. A house for them was built where the Manège is now located. From this "stable", elephants were regularly taken for walks across the current Manezhnaya Square. In 1742, the new empress, Elizabeth of Russia, began construction of a new Summer Palace for herself nearby. The zoo was moved away, and on the place of the stables a labyrinth garden was built with interlocking lanes and clipped shrubs. The wooden Summer Palace stood for half a century until the reign of Paul I of Russia, when it was dismantled, freeing up space for the stables and manège.[3]

Architecture edit

The Mikhailovsky Manège is an elegant, spare structure faced in stucco of cream-yellow and white.[4] It was built in 1798–1800 by Vincenzo Brenna, an Italian architect and painter who was the court architect of Paul I. Brenna is considered a precursor of romantic neoclassicism, when some elements of the late baroque are combined with romanticism and classicism.[5]

A quarter of a century later, tastes changed, and in 1823–1824 architect Carlo Rossi renovated the facades in classic style upon his joint project with two Russian sculptors, Vasily Demuth-Malinovsky and Stepan Pimenov. The facade of the building, which faces the square with its five doorways, and the attic, were decorated with bas-reliefs of military armor and bas-relief shields with swords and oak branches. This design reflects the use of the Manège by the War Ministry as a dressage spot for the horses of imperial cavalry. For the same reason, the building was sometimes called by a Russian name of German origin, "экзерциргауз" (German: Exerzierhaus, lit. "house for exercises").[6]

Exhibition area edit

 
The III All-Russian (International) Exhibition. In the centre: Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich.

In the years of economic expansion following the Emancipation reform of 1861, the Mikhailovsky Manège became one of the city spots for agricultural and industrial exhibitions. The Imperial Gardeners' Society was among the most regular tenants of this hall. In 1893, the First All-Russian Hygiene Exhibition took place here; in 1909, the International Exhibition of the Latest Innovations, at which the All-Russian Aero Club formed the core of the national exhibition stand.[3]

In 1902, the Imperial Russian Automobile Society was created. In 1907 it leased the Manège for the international All-Russian Automobile Exposition for the first time. The second exhibition took place in 1908 in Moscow. In 1910, exhibitors returned to Petersburg, where on 28 [O.S. 15 May] 1910 the III International Automobile Exposition was opened, again in Mikhailovsky Manège. The following day, on 29 [O.S. 16 May] 1910, the international rally "Petersburg—Kiev" for the prize of Nicholas II started. Forty-eight cars set out from Mikhailovsky Manège for the starting line of this rally at Tsarskoye Selo. Russia was represented with national brand Russo-Balt; among the other participating brands were Adler, Mercedes, Delaunay-Belleville, Mors (France), Benz & Cie., Itala, and many others.[7]

Atomexpo was held there in June 2013.[8]

Political events edit

The October Manifesto issued on 30 October [O.S. 17 October] 1905, allowing the formation of political parties in Russia, brought the demand for facilities for public gatherings. In harsh climatic conditions (long winters, flanked on both sides with the long months of bad weather, slush and mud), the need for indoor facilities was especially urgent. Mikhailovsky Manège, located about 200 metres (660 ft) north from Nevsky Prospekt,[9] was selected.

The Union of the Russian People (URP), a close-to-extremist nationalistic movement formed with substantial overt and covert support from the Russian authorities, was among the first to use this government-owned building for their political gathering. Nine days after the Manifest was proclaimed, on 8 November [O.S. 26 October] 1905, the URP announced its founding; and in less than a fortnight, on 21 November [O.S. 8] 1905 the crowd of about 2000 people gathered under the roof of Mikhailovsky Manège. Orchestral music was playing, the church choir sang Praise God and Tzar Divine, and the leaders of URP addressed the mob from a rostrum erected in the centre of the arena.[10]

In 1913, when the 300th anniversary of the House of Romanovs was celebrated throughout Russia, Mikhailovsky Manège was the site for different public venues associated with this occasion, which included several exhibitions.[3]

 
Memorial plaque commemorating the two speeches delivered by Vladimir Lenin in Mikhailovsky Manège.

The most turbulent time in the political life of Petersburg (renamed Petrograd between 1914 and 1924) came after the abdication of Nicholas II in March 1917. Rarely did a day between the February Revolution and the October revolution pass without rallies and meetings, both spontaneous and organized, taking place all over the city.[11] The left-wing political forces intensified their activities in Petrograd in April, when Vladimir Lenin and the other leaders of the Bolshevik section of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party returned to democratic Russia from emigration.[11] On April 15, 1917 Lenin came to the rally at Mikhailovsky Manège and delivered a speech to the soldiers of the Armored Car division. The second and last time that Lenin spoke at the Manège was on January 1, 1918, when he addressed the regiment of soldiers about to set out to the Western Front. A plaque of white marble, mounted on the wall of Manège, commemorates these two events in the political history of the city and country.[4]

That speech[12] of Lenin on the first day of 1918 at Mikhailovsky Manège marked a turn in the policy of the new Soviet government regarding war and peace. The slogan "Peace to the people", under which the October Revolution gained mass support, lost its relevance due to the resumption of German attacks on Russia, so Lenin had to explain to the soldiers why they should resume fighting. A special guest at this rally was Albert Rhys Williams from the United States. As soon as Lenin stepped down from the top of an armored car from which he spoke, Nikolai Podvoisky, a Soviet defence minister and the organizer of the event, gave the floor to an American speaker.[13]

Shortly after this rally, the first attempt was made on Lenin's life. As his car drove away from Mikhailovsky Manège, a group of terrorists— among them the best sharpshooters in the Russian Army[14]—who were hiding in ambush in the next lane began shooting, shattering the windshield. Lenin was sitting in the back seat with Fritz Platten.[15] When the shooting started, "Platten grabbed Lenin by the head and pushed him down. ... Platten’s hand was covered in blood, having been grazed by a bullet as he was shielding Lenin."[16] Lenin was not hurt.[14][17]

Literature edit

  • Shvidkovsky, D. S. (2007). Russian architecture and the West. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10912-2.
  • Alexander Rabinowitch (2004). The Bolsheviks come to power: the Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. Pluto Press. p. 432. ISBN 0-7453-2269-7.
  • Technical data on exhibition capacities — an official portal of the Government of St.Petersburg

References edit

  1. ^ Daniel, Elton L. (2001). The History of Iran. Greenwood Press. p. 94. ISBN 0-313-30731-8. nader.
  2. ^ Lockhart, Lawrence (1938). Nadir Shah: A critical study based mainly upon contemporary sources. Luzac.
  3. ^ a b c d "Манежная пл., 6 (Manezhnaya Square 6)" (in Russian). City Walls. 2011. Retrieved 21 February 2011.
  4. ^ a b The New Yorker. Vol. 79. F-R Publishing Corporation. July 2003. p. 41.
  5. ^ Shvidkovsky, D. S. (2007). Russian architecture and the West. Yale University Press. p. 294. ISBN 978-0-300-10912-2.
  6. ^ Петров А. Н. (1972). Памятники архитектуры Ленинграда [Architectural Monuments of Leningrad]. Стройиздат. p. 121. Caption on page 121 reads: 4. Mikhailovsky Riding House
  7. ^ (in Russian). drive.ru. 2011. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 21 February 2011.
  8. ^ "International Industry Forum ATOMEXPO."
  9. ^ Google maps link to Manezhnaya square.
  10. ^ Rawson, Don C. (March 1995). Russian Rightists and the Revolution of 1905. Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies (No. 95). Cambridge University Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-521-48386-5.
  11. ^ a b Rabinowitch, Alexander (2004). The Bolsheviks Come To Power: The Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. Pluto Press. ISBN 0-7453-2269-7.
  12. ^ Lenin, V. I. (1972). Speech At The Send-Off Of The Socialist Army's First Troop Trains. Lenin’s Collected Works. Vol. 26. Moscow: Progress Publishers. p. 420, a footnote. The send-off took place in Mikhailovsky Manège on January 1 (14), 1918. As Lenin was returning to the Smolny an attempt was made on his life: a bullet went through the windscreen and passed over his head. The Swiss Communist, Fritz Platten, who was with Lenin, was wounded.
  13. ^ "Meetings with Lenin". Foreign Language Study. Иностранные языки в школе. Russian S.F.S.R. Ministry of education. 1983. p. 93.
  14. ^ a b Solomon Volkov, tr. Antonina W. Bouis (1997). St. Petersburg: A Cultural History. Simon and Schuster. p. 207. ISBN 0-7453-2269-7.
  15. ^ Lenin, V. I. (1972). Speech At The Send-Off Of The Socialist Army's First Troop Trains. Lenin’s Collected Works. Vol. 26. Moscow: Progress Publishers. p. 420, footnote. The send-off took place in Mikhailovsky Manège on January 1 (14), 1918. As Lenin was returning to the Smolny an attempt was made on his life: a bullet went through the windscreen and passed over his head. The Swiss Communist, Fritz Platten, who was with Lenin, was wounded.
  16. ^ Volkogonov, Dmitri Lenin: A New Biography, 1994, p. 229.
  17. ^ History of the October Revolution. Progress Publishers. 1966. p. 328.

michael, manege, other, places, with, similar, name, zimni, stadion, mikhailovsky, manezh, russian, Михайловский, манеж, neoclassical, building, early, 19th, century, riding, academy, historic, center, saint, petersburg, russia, converted, into, indoor, sporti. For other places with a similar name see Zimni stadion Michael Manege Mikhailovsky manezh Russian Mihajlovskij manezh is the Neoclassical building of an early 19th century riding academy in the historic center of Saint Petersburg Russia It was converted into an indoor sporting arena in 1949 and was renamed Zimniy Stadion Russian Zimnij stadion lit Winter Stadium Zimniy StadionMikhailovsky ManegeMihajlovskij manezh Zimnij stadion General informationLocationSaint PetersburgAddressManezhnaya Square 6CountryRussian FederationCoordinates59 56 11 N 30 20 22 E 59 93639 N 30 33944 E 59 93639 30 33944Construction started1798Completed1800Renovated1824Technical detailsFloor area4 356 square metres 46 890 sq ft Design and constructionArchitect s Vincenzo BrennaRenovating teamArchitect s Carlo RossiOther designersV Demuth MalinovskyS S PimenovOther informationSeating capacity2000Websitehttp www restec ru manezh ru htmlReferencesobject 7810640007 Contents 1 Name 2 History 3 Architecture 4 Exhibition area 5 Political events 6 Literature 7 ReferencesName editSimilar to the neighboring Mikhailovsky Castle the name Mikhailovsky comes from the Archangel Michael a heavenly patron of the House of Romanov the ruling dynasty of the Russian Empire in 1613 1917 Manege is French for riding academy since the area was originally used as a dressage area for horses of the imperial cavalry The square in which the monument sits is called Manezhnaya Square Russian Manezhnaya ploshad History editThe history of Manezhnaya Square and the Mikhailovsky Manege dates to the 1730s when a Persian shah Nader who signed a treaty with the Russian Empire in Ganja in March 1735 1 2 sent an elephant as a gift to the Russian empress Anna of Russia the niece of Peter the Great To keep that gift alive an elephant yard actually the first zoo was built on what is today Manezhnaya Square Very soon a beast yard Russian zverovoj dvor for other animals was put nearby along with a greenhouse to grow plants to feed them 3 However the elephant could not bear loneliness and the heavy northern climate of Petersburg So in 1741 the Persian shah sent a caravan of 14 elephants A house for them was built where the Manege is now located From this stable elephants were regularly taken for walks across the current Manezhnaya Square In 1742 the new empress Elizabeth of Russia began construction of a new Summer Palace for herself nearby The zoo was moved away and on the place of the stables a labyrinth garden was built with interlocking lanes and clipped shrubs The wooden Summer Palace stood for half a century until the reign of Paul I of Russia when it was dismantled freeing up space for the stables and manege 3 Architecture editThe Mikhailovsky Manege is an elegant spare structure faced in stucco of cream yellow and white 4 It was built in 1798 1800 by Vincenzo Brenna an Italian architect and painter who was the court architect of Paul I Brenna is considered a precursor of romantic neoclassicism when some elements of the late baroque are combined with romanticism and classicism 5 A quarter of a century later tastes changed and in 1823 1824 architect Carlo Rossi renovated the facades in classic style upon his joint project with two Russian sculptors Vasily Demuth Malinovsky and Stepan Pimenov The facade of the building which faces the square with its five doorways and the attic were decorated with bas reliefs of military armor and bas relief shields with swords and oak branches This design reflects the use of the Manege by the War Ministry as a dressage spot for the horses of imperial cavalry For the same reason the building was sometimes called by a Russian name of German origin ekzercirgauz German Exerzierhaus lit house for exercises 6 Exhibition area edit nbsp The III All Russian International Exhibition In the centre Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich In the years of economic expansion following the Emancipation reform of 1861 the Mikhailovsky Manege became one of the city spots for agricultural and industrial exhibitions The Imperial Gardeners Society was among the most regular tenants of this hall In 1893 the First All Russian Hygiene Exhibition took place here in 1909 the International Exhibition of the Latest Innovations at which the All Russian Aero Club formed the core of the national exhibition stand 3 In 1902 the Imperial Russian Automobile Society was created In 1907 it leased the Manege for the international All Russian Automobile Exposition for the first time The second exhibition took place in 1908 in Moscow In 1910 exhibitors returned to Petersburg where on 28 O S 15 May 1910 the III International Automobile Exposition was opened again in Mikhailovsky Manege The following day on 29 O S 16 May 1910 the international rally Petersburg Kiev for the prize of Nicholas II started Forty eight cars set out from Mikhailovsky Manege for the starting line of this rally at Tsarskoye Selo Russia was represented with national brand Russo Balt among the other participating brands were Adler Mercedes Delaunay Belleville Mors France Benz amp Cie Itala and many others 7 Atomexpo was held there in June 2013 8 Political events editThe October Manifesto issued on 30 October O S 17 October 1905 allowing the formation of political parties in Russia brought the demand for facilities for public gatherings In harsh climatic conditions long winters flanked on both sides with the long months of bad weather slush and mud the need for indoor facilities was especially urgent Mikhailovsky Manege located about 200 metres 660 ft north from Nevsky Prospekt 9 was selected The Union of the Russian People URP a close to extremist nationalistic movement formed with substantial overt and covert support from the Russian authorities was among the first to use this government owned building for their political gathering Nine days after the Manifest was proclaimed on 8 November O S 26 October 1905 the URP announced its founding and in less than a fortnight on 21 November O S 8 1905 the crowd of about 2000 people gathered under the roof of Mikhailovsky Manege Orchestral music was playing the church choir sang Praise God and Tzar Divine and the leaders of URP addressed the mob from a rostrum erected in the centre of the arena 10 In 1913 when the 300th anniversary of the House of Romanovs was celebrated throughout Russia Mikhailovsky Manege was the site for different public venues associated with this occasion which included several exhibitions 3 nbsp Memorial plaque commemorating the two speeches delivered by Vladimir Lenin in Mikhailovsky Manege The most turbulent time in the political life of Petersburg renamed Petrograd between 1914 and 1924 came after the abdication of Nicholas II in March 1917 Rarely did a day between the February Revolution and the October revolution pass without rallies and meetings both spontaneous and organized taking place all over the city 11 The left wing political forces intensified their activities in Petrograd in April when Vladimir Lenin and the other leaders of the Bolshevik section of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party returned to democratic Russia from emigration 11 On April 15 1917 Lenin came to the rally at Mikhailovsky Manege and delivered a speech to the soldiers of the Armored Car division The second and last time that Lenin spoke at the Manege was on January 1 1918 when he addressed the regiment of soldiers about to set out to the Western Front A plaque of white marble mounted on the wall of Manege commemorates these two events in the political history of the city and country 4 That speech 12 of Lenin on the first day of 1918 at Mikhailovsky Manege marked a turn in the policy of the new Soviet government regarding war and peace The slogan Peace to the people under which the October Revolution gained mass support lost its relevance due to the resumption of German attacks on Russia so Lenin had to explain to the soldiers why they should resume fighting A special guest at this rally was Albert Rhys Williams from the United States As soon as Lenin stepped down from the top of an armored car from which he spoke Nikolai Podvoisky a Soviet defence minister and the organizer of the event gave the floor to an American speaker 13 Shortly after this rally the first attempt was made on Lenin s life As his car drove away from Mikhailovsky Manege a group of terrorists among them the best sharpshooters in the Russian Army 14 who were hiding in ambush in the next lane began shooting shattering the windshield Lenin was sitting in the back seat with Fritz Platten 15 When the shooting started Platten grabbed Lenin by the head and pushed him down Platten s hand was covered in blood having been grazed by a bullet as he was shielding Lenin 16 Lenin was not hurt 14 17 Literature editShvidkovsky D S 2007 Russian architecture and the West Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10912 2 Alexander Rabinowitch 2004 The Bolsheviks come to power the Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd Pluto Press p 432 ISBN 0 7453 2269 7 Technical data on exhibition capacities an official portal of the Government of St PetersburgReferences edit Daniel Elton L 2001 The History of Iran Greenwood Press p 94 ISBN 0 313 30731 8 nader Lockhart Lawrence 1938 Nadir Shah A critical study based mainly upon contemporary sources Luzac a b c d Manezhnaya pl 6 Manezhnaya Square 6 in Russian City Walls 2011 Retrieved 21 February 2011 a b The New Yorker Vol 79 F R Publishing Corporation July 2003 p 41 Shvidkovsky D S 2007 Russian architecture and the West Yale University Press p 294 ISBN 978 0 300 10912 2 Petrov A N 1972 Pamyatniki arhitektury Leningrada Architectural Monuments of Leningrad Strojizdat p 121 Caption on page 121 reads 4 Mikhailovsky Riding House Sankt Peterburg Kiev Mezhdunarodnyj avtoprobeg in Russian drive ru 2011 Archived from the original on 20 March 2012 Retrieved 21 February 2011 International Industry Forum ATOMEXPO Google maps link to Manezhnaya square Rawson Don C March 1995 Russian Rightists and the Revolution of 1905 Cambridge Russian Soviet and Post Soviet Studies No 95 Cambridge University Press p 59 ISBN 978 0 521 48386 5 a b Rabinowitch Alexander 2004 The Bolsheviks Come To Power The Revolution of 1917 in Petrograd Pluto Press ISBN 0 7453 2269 7 Lenin V I 1972 Speech At The Send Off Of The Socialist Army s First Troop Trains Lenin s Collected Works Vol 26 Moscow Progress Publishers p 420 a footnote The send off took place in Mikhailovsky Manege on January 1 14 1918 As Lenin was returning to the Smolny an attempt was made on his life a bullet went through the windscreen and passed over his head The Swiss Communist Fritz Platten who was with Lenin was wounded Meetings with Lenin Foreign Language Study Inostrannye yazyki v shkole Russian S F S R Ministry of education 1983 p 93 a b Solomon Volkov tr Antonina W Bouis 1997 St Petersburg A Cultural History Simon and Schuster p 207 ISBN 0 7453 2269 7 Lenin V I 1972 Speech At The Send Off Of The Socialist Army s First Troop Trains Lenin s Collected Works Vol 26 Moscow Progress Publishers p 420 footnote The send off took place in Mikhailovsky Manege on January 1 14 1918 As Lenin was returning to the Smolny an attempt was made on his life a bullet went through the windscreen and passed over his head The Swiss Communist Fritz Platten who was with Lenin was wounded Volkogonov Dmitri Lenin A New Biography 1994 p 229 History of the October Revolution Progress Publishers 1966 p 328 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Manege amp oldid 1122964089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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