
Apartment № 2.16
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 cosy 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.
- view on the Sevastopol bay;
- private entrance;
- total area 100 sq.m;
- new furniture (Italy, Belgium);
- mini-bar;
- safe;
- shower-cabin;
- Jacuzzi;
- Domestic equipment: 2 air conditions, 2 TV sets, fridge, telephone, kettle, drier;
- All modern conveniences, daily water, electricity, heating.
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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. |
Nice to know: "Anna Ioannovna"
(1693-1740) Romanov, Anna I Ivanovna, EMPRESS OF RUSSIA Birth: 7 Feb
1693 Moscow Death: 28 Oct 1740 Winter Palace, Sankt-Petersburg Interred:
St. Peter & St.Paul Cathedral, Sankt-Petersburg Father: Ivan V
Alexeevich, TSAR OF RUSSIA (b. 1666) Mother: Praskovia Fedorovna
Saltykova (b. 1664) Spouse: Friedrich Wilhelm, Duke of Kurland (b.
19.7.1692) Married: 11 Nov 1710, Sankt-Petersburg Anna Ioannovna (Anna
I), a daughter of Ivan V and a niece of Peter the Great, ruled Russia
from 1730 to 1740. She was the most autocratic of Peter's successors.
Her ascendancy to the Russian throne was supported by the Russian
aristocracy. She was 37 years old at the time, a widow of a German duke
and childless. The Privy Council members chose Anna over Elizabeth, a
teenage daughter of Peter the Great, who was another contender to the
throne. They imposed on Anna a constitution modelled after Sweden's,
which restored some of their previously lost privileges and freed them
from compulsory service. She agreed not to marry again, gave up the
royal right to declare war and to levy taxes, and allowed the Privy
Council to name her successor. After coming to power, Anna enlisted
support of opponents of the court aristocracy and rescinded all prior
concessions. Under Tsarina Anna power of the government shifted from the
Privy Council to the ministers she brought from Kurland, the so-called
German party, dominated by Baron Oysterman, an excellent administrator,
Munich, the builder of the Ladoga Canal, and Anna's favourite, Ernst
Johann Biron. The German party was strongly disliked by the Russians,
especially Byron, who used his position for personal aggrandizement.
Opposition to the ruling government, however, was punished with torture,
death and exile. Tsarina Anna rejuvenated the Russian army and
established the cadet corps. She intervened in the War of the Polish
Succession and, in alliance with Austria, warred against the Turks
(1736-39). She also supported Russia's emerging interest in ballet. The
first public performance of the Russian ballet took place in 1735 and
was staged for Tsarina Anna by Jean-Baptist Lander, the dance master of
the Military Academy. Noting the Russians' love and talent for dance,
Landed founded three years later, "Her Majesty's Dancing School" with
twelve children of palace servants as students. Soon after, ballet
presentations became fashionable. Opera was also introduced to Russia
during Anna's reign, when an Italian composer Francesco Araja was
invited to come to St. Petersburg to be director of the new opera
company.
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