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Embassy of Germany in Saint Petersburg : ウィキペディア英語版 | Embassy of Germany, Saint Petersburg
The German Imperial Embassy in Saint Petersburg is considered the earliest and most influential example of Stripped Classicism. It was built to house the diplomatic mission of the German Empire in Saint Petersburg, the capital of the Russian Empire. After the relocation by the Bolsheviks of the Soviet capital from Petrograd (as Saint Petersburg was then known) to Moscow, it served as a consulate of the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany. Located at 11/41 Saint Isaac's Square ((ロシア語:Исаакиевская площадь, дом 11/41)) in the Tsentralny District of Saint Petersburg, the building now houses the offices of two Russian government agencies. == History of the site ==
In the 1740s a two-storey building was erected by Nikita Shestakov on the site which is today at 11/41 Saint Isaac's Square. In 1743 Shestakov sold the building to merchant Fedot Stepanov and from the 1760s to 1812 it was owned by a jeweller to the court of the Russian Empire.〔〔 From 1815-1820, renowned Russian architect Vasily Stasov redesigned the house in the Empire style common in Russia during this period. In 1832 General-Adjutant Pavel Konstantinovich Aleksandrov, the illegitimate son of Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich, purchased the building and lived there with his wife Anna Alexandrovna. The couple regularly held balls in the residence, with frequent visitors including Alexander Pushkin. The house was passed onto their daughter Princess Alexandra Pavlovna Lvova, wife of Prince Dmitry Aleksandrovich Lvov, and between 1870-1871 the facade of the building was designed in Eclecticism style by Ferdinand Müller.〔
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