Apartment № 1.15
The "Nikita" is a comfortable three-storied
building. It was built in the modern style. The hotel is located in the
historical centre of Sevastopol (150 m. to sea). At the same time it is a
quite and a cozy corner, nothing disturbs your rest.
The
apartments of the hotel meet European standards. One can admire the
wonderful panorama of the central part of the city and the Black Sea. All
the apartments have their own entrances.
To your service, 3 meals
a day (order in your room), a rent of the business class car, parking, a
laundry, a sauna with a swimming- pool.
- view on the Sevastopol bay;
- private entrance;
- total area 100sq.m;
- new furniture (Italy, Belgium);
- mini-bar;
- safe;
- shower-cabin;
- domestic equipment: an air condition, a TV set, fridge, telephone, kettle, drier;
- all modern conveniences, daily water, electricity, heating, balcony.
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Nice
to know: "Anna Leopoldovna"
Born
Dec. 7 [Dec. 18, New Style], 1718, Rostock, Mecklenburg [Germany] Died
March 7 [March 18], 1746, Kholmogory, Russia in full Anna Leopoldovna
regent of Russia (November 1740-November 1741) for her son, the emperor
Ivan VI. A niece of Empress Anna (reigned 1730-40), Anna Leopoldovna
married a nephew of the Holy Roman emperor Charles VI in 1739 and gave
birth to a son, Ivan (Aug. 2 [Aug. 13], 1740), who was named heir to the
Russian throne by Empress Anna in 1740, shortly before she died. A few
weeks later, however, the empress's appointed regent, Ernst Johann
Byron, was arrested by certain members of the ruling German clique in
Russia, led by Burckhardt Munich and Andrei Oysterman. Munich and
Oysterman appointed Anna Leopoldovna regent and assumed dominant
positions in her government. But they were unpopular among the Russians,
and, when they weakened the administration by quarrelling with each
other, Anna's major rival, Elizabeth, the daughter of Peter I the Great
(reigned 1682-1725), staged a palace revolution (Nov. 25 [Dec. 6],
1741). Elizabeth imprisoned Anna and her family in 1742 and in 1744
exiled them to Kholmogory, where Anna died.
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