[pic]Portrait. Peter I in armour
J. M. Notier type,
1720-th. |The Collection of the Central Naval Museum began with ships'
models collection of Tzar Peter the Great and Model Chamber of Saint
Petersburg Admiralty, which is mentioned for the first time in Peter's
letter of 24 January 1709. The main goal of the Model Chamber creation was
to keep transport ships and warships draughts and models, constructed at the Admiralty shipyards for the Baltic Fleet. |[pic]Admiralty Dockyard in
St. Petersburg.
Engraver A. Rostovtsev, 1717 | |Historical valuable materials and
shipbuilding information were preserved in the Model Chamber. Its building
was rather small for such a big collection and in 1805 a Maritime Museum
was founded. Some years later engravings and pictures on marine themes in
addition to draughts and ships models appeared in the Museum. But in spite
of this in 1827 the Museum was closed because of the lack of room. And only in 1867 the Russian government opened the Museum again, yielded to
public opinion and efforts of naval officers. Its collection was enriched
by many valuable objects. Among them were personal things of emperor Peter
I, the founder of Russian Navy, famous admirals and officers; paintings and
engravings, specimens of cold steel and fire-arms. The main collection of
warships and transport ships models was increased too. The restored
Maritime Museum was located in the west wing of the Admiralty building. It
was very popular among visitors. In 1909 it was renamed as Emperor Peter
the Great's Maritime Museum.
The Revolution of 1917 and the Civil war in Russia 1918 - 1920 have
brought essential correctives the Museum's exhibition. The main goal for it
became to demonstrate the leading role of the Communist Party in
restoration and development of the Navy. The collection enriched with
materials concerning the work of seamen-communists, Fleet's Party and
Comsomol organizations. The Museum has received items from the museums,
closed to that time, for example, museums of Guards Naval Depot and Naval
Cadet Corps. The subjects of a naval life, paintings wellknown marine
painters as I. K. Aivazovskiy and A. N. Bogoliuboff, naval uniform, Russian
awards and marks were obtained on auctions and the private persons. But at
the same time, in 1920-30th the large number of subjects of the Romanov
emperor's family, nobiliary surnames were annihilated in the Museum under
the pressure of new circumstances. This loss has become irreplaceable. And
only due to the true devotees of Museum it became possible to preserve the
less, that makes the pride of its collection today.
In 1939-1940 the Museum was renamed as the Central Naval Museum and was
transferred from its historical place - Admiralty - to a building of former
Stock exchange at the spite of the Vasilyevskiy island. This building was
constructed in 1805-1810 under the project of a known architect Jean
Francoise Toma de Tomon. Since that times the Central Naval Museum has
become one of the most favourite and attended museums of the city.
During the World War II a part of the collection was evacuated to
Ulyanovsk city. But a number of the employees had being worked in blocaded
Leningrad, collecting the unique materials concerning the defenders of
Leningrad. Excursion&lecturer work was going on the ships and in units of
Red Banner Baltic Fleet, at the enterprises and in hospitals of the
besieged city The mobile exhibitions worked.
The post-war period is characterized by active museum exhibition
activity. The employees of the Museum repeatedly left with mobile
exhibitions on all Fleets, carrying out large educational&cultural
activity. In the beginning of 50-th the professional Studio of marine
artists was created under the decision of the Navy's Govering body and
initiative of the Museums' employees. It aimed to update the Museum's
collection by a materials illuminating those pages of a history, which have
not found sufficient representation in an exhibition. Today the talented
artists are working in Studio, among them the Deserved artist of Russian
Federation V. A. Pechatin, Z. G. Abashvili, M. A. Kuznetsov, S. V. Pen,
V. P. Yarkin and others. The scientific employees of the Museum work under
the creation of the new museum catalogues. That has allowed to include
earlier unknown documents and materials in scientific use .
The changes in Russia of the end 1980-th - beginning of 90-th have
allowed the Museum to turn to the Museum's reserved collections and to show
to public the subjects, documents and materials revealling pre-
revolutionary history of the Russian Navy. The Museum has developed wide
exhibition activity as in Russia and abroad. Peoples of the cities
Nakhodka, Kaliningrad, Moscow, Archangelsk, Pskov, Yalta, Tyumen, Vyborg,
Severodvinsk have got acquainted with its collections. Museum's assembly
have received a high estimation in Denmark, France, Germany, Great Britain,
Holland, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Spain, USA. The scientific and creative
connections with museums of Russia and foreign countries have extended. The
increasing of CNM's popularity and scientific authority has stirred up the
first wave emigrants and their descendants. We were gifted the interesting
materials from France, Holland, Japan, Tunis, USA. Citizens of Russian
Federation do not leave us without attention too. Сollection of the Museum
totals about 700'000 items today.
The Central Naval Museum repeatedly participated in joint exhibitions
with State Hermitage, State Tretyakov Gallery, State Russian Museum, State
museums-reserves «Moscow Kremlin», «Petershoff», «Tsarskoye Selo»,
«Pavlovsk», «Gatchina», State Museum of history of St. Petersburg, State
Museum of Religions history, Museum of anthropology and ethnography
("Cabinet of curiosities"), A. A. Popov Central Museum of communications,
State Memorial Museum of A. V. Suvorov, Central Museum of the Armed Forces
of Russian Federation, Military Historical Museum of Artillery, Engineering
and Intercommunicational corps, Military Medicine Museum and others.
For last years authority of the Museum has considerably grown. It has
become the member of the International Council of Museums (ICOM)
International Association of Military Museums & Military History (IAMAM),
International Congress of Maritime Museums (ICMM), Union of the creative
museum workers of St. Petersburg and region.
Large popularity and authority the CNM is obliged for those museum's
patriots who works in it for many years. The proud of the Museum are:
L. I. Bereznitskaya, A. K. Belik, K. P. Krasnopol'skiy, A. L. Larionov,
V. B. Morozova, L. S. Petrova, L. G. Shuster, I. P. Sukhanov,
T. N. Topornina, A. A Tron'.
Recently the Museum has celebrated its 290th anniversary. Its scientific
employees have the large creative plans. Highly professional collective,
its knowledge and purposefulness is the pledge, that the Museum will keep
traditions of the oldest scientific-educational institution and perfectly
will be the pride of Russian Navy and the treasury of maritime glory of
Russia.
Museum's main building in Saint Petersburg
Photo, 1996
|Kinds from a roof of a building of the Central Naval Museum |
|Photo 2001 |
| |
| | |
| | |
| |[p|
| |ic|
| |] |
Shalimova Jane
9 “G”
The Museum of Tbilisi's History, a treasury of material and spiritual
values of Georgian people was founded in 1910. That time it was named
"Municipal Museum", because it was established by the Municipality.
During 90 years more than 50 thousand items have been collected. This
collection was enabling the Museum to expose the complete hi story of the
town. The life and culture beginning from the IV millennium B.C., since the
first inhabitants were settled here. This enabled the museum to present the
incessant course of urban development through its important stages. Up to
the XIX century Tbilisi was a typical oriental town with its Caravanserais
and bazaars, houses with verandahs and balconies, with narrow lanes. The
contact with Russian and European cultures gave European imprint to the
life fashion of Tbilisi and to its external appearance. In the XIX century
in the old part of the town, in the vicinity of Sioni Cathedral, where
there were remnants of a Caravanserai built by the King Rostom in XVII
century, a new Caravanserai was built. In 1912 the facade of the building
was decorated. After restoration of 1980 this historical building became
the residence for The Museum of Tbilisi's History.
Unique archaeological, ethnographical, documentary material, many
masterpieces of folk and applied arts (carpets, kilims, etc.) are kept
here. The Museum holds the richest photograph-collection which perfectly
shows the views of the town, its life and its inhabitants. The Museum keeps
many paintings, printings and graphical works of Georgian and foreign
artists, depicting Tbilisi and its citizens in their rather colorful
spectra. Alongside with the material depicting the past, The Museum of
Tbilisi's History represents modern art too.
The modern Art department was founded in 1986 and is on the third floor of
the building. The modern Art department of Tbilisi history museum exhibits
the state of modern Georgian Art. Back in the former soviet time rather
bold, nowadays Historical exhibitions were arranged, namely Georgian
Neoexpressionism, Transavangard, Free Figuration, Installation, Video-Art,
Performance and other trends and directions.
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM
|[pic] |
|[pic] |
|[pic] |
|[pic] |
|[pic] |
|[pic] |
|[pic] |
|[pic] |
The Museum of the Armenian Genocide opened in 1995 in time to commemorate
the eightieth anniversary of the Genocide. The Museum structure is of
unique and original design. (architects: S. Kalashian and L. Mkrtchian).
This two-story building is located at and in the side of a hill so as not
to detract from the imposing presence of the Genocide Monument nearby. The
roof of the building is flat and covered by concrete tiles. It serves as a
scenic view point overlooking the Ararat valley and Mount Ararat.
The first floor of the Museum is below grade and houses administrative,
engineering and technical maintenance offices and spaces, a 170-seat hall
(Komitas Hall), storage rooms for museum and scientific objects, a library
and a reading hall. The Museum exhibit is mounted in the second floor in a
space which is over 1000 square meters. It occupies three indoor halls and
one outdoor hall and its hallway. An eight meters long and three meters
wide basalt stone lies on the floor of the outdoor hall and the hallway.
The outdoor hall symbolizes the eternal memory of the victims of the 1915
Genocide and the unity of the Armenian people spread throughout the world.
It also expresses the struggle between good and evil, light and darkness.
The western wall of the Museum's first exhibit hall has a map engraved in
stone which shows the historical Armenian Plateau and neighboring
countries. It is bounded by the Black Sea in the north, the Caspian Sea in
the east, the Iranian Plateau in the south, and the Mediterranean Sea to
the southwest. The map shows the Armenian settlements on the territory of
Western Armenia and Ottoman Turkey which existed until the massacres of the
Armenians and the massive death marches which began in 1915. The map is
nine meters wide and five meters high.
The Introductory Hall exhibits photographs and ethnographic tables with
information about the Armenian settlements and Armenian population figures
in 1914 in Ottoman Turkey. They also contain information on the number of
Armenian churches and schools which were functioning in the region at that
time. A composite of the tables there and in the third hall provide a
visitor with the following data, including the population figures in 1914
before the Genocide (See the following charts).
|Name of Armenian|Number of |Number of |Number of |1914 |
|Region and |Armenian |Armenian |Armenian |Populatio|
|settlement |settlements |Churches |Schools |n |
|(1914) |(1914) |(1914) |(1914) | |
|Erzerum |425 |482 |322 |215,000 |
|Van |450 |537 |192 |197,000 |
|Diarbekir |249 |158 |122 |124,000 |
|Kharput |279 |307 |204 |204,000 |
|Bitlis |618 |671 |207 |220,000 |
|Sivas |241 |219 |204 |225,000 |
|Trebizond |118 |109 |190 |73,390 |
|Western Anatolia|237 |281 |300 |371,800 |
|Cilicia & |187 |537 |176 |309,000 |
|Northern Syria | | | | |
|European Turkey |58 |67 |79 |194,000 |
|TOTAL |2,925 |3,368 |1,996 |2,133,190|
The second exhibit hall (700 square meters) presents eyewitness reports and
documents about the massacres and atrocities perpetrated against the
Armenians. The exhibit has many large photographs taken during 1915-1917,
archival documents, portraits of prominent Armenians, victims of the
atrocities, friends of the Armenian people, and documentary films.
A special part of the exhibit is reserved for the original documents issued
by international organizations and parliaments of foreign countries
condemning the Genocide.
Numerous different publications about the Armenian genocide written in many
languages are also exhibited.
This hall also shows tables with data on the number of Armenians living in
different countries of Europe, Asia, Africa, America and Australia after
the Genocide. In the same hall a granite pedestal supports crystal vases
which hold earth from historic Armenian regions: Erzerum, Van, Baghesh
(Bitlis), Sebastia (Sivas), Kharpert, and Tigranakert (Diarbekir). It also
holds the skull and bones of a young Armenian killed in the Der Zor desert.
In the same hall, a granite tree with spreading branches symbolizes the
eternity and rebirth of the Armenian people.
TOP The tables displayed in the third hall show the Armenian population figures in 1914 and 1922 (See chart below).
|Name of the |Population in |Deported or |Population |
|Region |1914 |Killed |in 1922 |
|Erzerum |215,000 |213,500 |1,500 |
|Van |197,000 |196,000 |500 |
|Diarbekir |124,000 |121,000 |3,000 |
|Kharput |204,000 |169,000 |35,000 |
|Bitlis |220,000 |164,000 |56,000 |
|Sivas |225,000 |208,200 |16,800 |
|Trebizond |73,390 |58,390 |5,000 |
|Western |371,800 |344,800 |27,000 |
|Anatolia | | | |
|Cilicia & |309,000 |239,000 |70,000 |
|Northern Syria | | | |
|European Turkey|194,000 |31,000 |163,000 |
|TOTAL |2,133,190 |1,745,390 |387,800 |
The last hall of the Museum is essentially an outdoor patio, a traditional
feature in old Armenian structures. A semicircular basalt wall is divided
into twelve equal segments. Each of the segments contains a sentence
condemning the Armenian Genocide by prominent foreign politicians,
diplomats, scientists, and writers of that period. The hall looks like a
courtroom where eyewitnesses present their condemning evidence. The last
word belongs to the visitor, who can make a judgement based on the
materials presented.