Apartment 2.18

  • 4 Star apartment in Sevastopol Ukraine.
  • Situated near one of the shopping centers at the west side of Sevastopol. (Zum - Chersonese) Beaches at walking distance (10 min).
  • 2 Until 4 persons accommodation.
  • 1st Floor
  • 2 Room apartment.
  • 1 Bedroom with double bed. (2007) at the moment bed/sofa.
  • Living room with sleeping sofa, color TV set , national and int.,  local telephone, central heating.
  • Kitchen with standard necessary materials, freezer/refrigerator, oven.
  • 1 Bathroom with Jacuzzi and separate massage shower, toilet.
  • Clean warm water supply 24/7.
Price per night for 1-2 people from:

$40

Price depending on:

Season, duration of stay and exchange rate of the Hrifna.

   
Ask us the availability and total amount, during the period of your choice!!

 

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Nice to know: "Catherine I"

Birth: 15 Apr 1689 Death: 17 May 1727 Sankt-Petersburg Interred: St. Peter & St. Paul Cathedral, Sankt-Petersburg Father: Samuil Skawronski Spouse: Peter I The Great, EMPEROR OF RUSSIA (b. 9.6.1672) Married: 8 Nov 1707, Warszawa (publicly 1 Mar 1712) Catherine I, real name MARTA SKAVRONSKAYA (1682-1727), empress of Russia (1725-27). Of peasant origin, she was born in Jakobstadt (now Jekabpils, Latvia) but was orphaned early in life and reared by a pastor in Marienburg (now Malbork, Poland). When the Russians captured Marienburg in 1702, she was taken prisoner by the Russian commander, who sold her to Prince Aleksandr Menshikov, a close adviser of Peter the Great. She soon became Peter's mistress and most influential counsellor. Peter, who had divorced his first wife in 1699, married Catherine in 1712. After his son Alexis died, Peter issued an ukaz ("imperial order") declaring his right to name his own successor; he died in 1725 without doing so. Catherine, however, had been crowned empress-consort in 1724, and on Peter's death she was proclaimed his successor; the claims of Alexis's son (later Peter III) were bypassed. Shrewd and courageous, Catherine defended Peter's advisers against his rages, and in her own reign she established, and concentrated power in, the supreme privy council. Two of her eight children by Peter survived, Anna (mother of Peter III) and Elizabeth Petrovna (empress 1741-62).