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THE TAURIDE GARDENS AND PALACE
This palace belonged to Count Grigory Potemkin of
Tauria (the old name for the Crimea), another of
Catherine the Great's lovers and one of the richest
men in the country. After both Potemkin and Catherine
died, Paul I (who detested everything associated with
his mother) turned the sumptious palace into a
cavalry barracks and horse stables.
Following the October Manifesto in 1905, the palace
was used for Duma sessions until the 1917 February
Revolution when it was taken over by the Socialist
Coalition of the Provisional Government. In 1918 the
Constituent Assembly met here before being dissolved
by armed Bolsheviks. The building was used during the
soviet period by the Communist Party as the Higher
Party School and occasionally for weddings by
renegade mayors. Watch your step in the garden as it
is where people take their doggies for walkies.
Metro: Chernyshevskaya and a five minute stroll to
the east.
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