Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. 22 de ago. de 2010 · All the portraits were painted at the request of Catherine the Great, who founded the Smolny Institute for Noble Maidens in 1764. According to the empress’s decree, the objective was to raise ...

  2. Previously head of the Moscow Nikolaev Orphan Institute, and the Elizbethan Institute, she was appointed principal of the Smolny Institute on 5 January 1895. She raised hygeine and curriculum standards, as well as affording the pupils more freedoms, and encouraging physical activities. In 1909, electricity was installed.

  3. Smolny Institute in Saint-Petersburg. At the beginning of 19 century, the Smolny Palace was built near the Smolny Convent. Originally, the palace was designed as an educational institution for girls from noble families. He was named the Smolny Institute for Noble Maidens. Catherine II decided to establish the Institute for Noble Maidens in 1764.

  4. 12 de jun. de 2014 · The Smolny Institute for Noble Maidens was the first women's educational institution in Russia and paved the way for women’s education in the country. The institute was founded at the urging of ...

  5. 26 de fev. de 2022 · The article uses data from monographs and collections of memoirs "The Imperial Educational Society for Noble Maidens" by N.P. Tcherepnin (1915), “Institutes”, “Institute for Noble Maidens”, “Historical Dictionary of French Fashion in Russia” by N.I. Epishkin, "The Dress of the Empress" by Xenia Borderiou, as well as materials from the Arzamas project.

  6. Lenin Museum at Smolny Institute. Smolny Institute for Noble Maidens was established by Catherine II in 1764. It was a closed privileged school for daughters of the nobility. Originally, the Institute was housed at the Smolny convent, which explains its name. But soon afterwards, in the very beginning of the 19 th century, architect Giacomo ...

  7. Dmitry Levitsky’s Smolny Girls were portraits of the Imperial Educational Society for Noble Girls (Smolny Institute).Founded on the initiative of Ivan Betskoi by Catherine the Great in 1764, the institute was housed at the Smolny Novodevichy Convent of the Resurrection in St Petersburg.