Kadriorg

Kadriorg (Estonian for "Catherine's Valley") is a subdistrict (Estonian: asum) in the district of Kesklinn (Midtown), Tallinn, the capital of Estonia. It has a population of 4,561 (As of 1 January 2015).[1] The subdistrict name derives from the Catherinethal, a Baroque palace of Catherine I of Russia. It is one of the wealthiest regions in Estonia. [2]

Kadriorg
Subdistrict of Tallinn
Russalka Memorial seen from the Kadriorg park
Kadriorg within the district of Kesklinn (Midtown).
CountryEstonia
CountyHarju County
CityTallinn
DistrictKesklinn
Population
 (01.01.2015[1])
  Total4,561

Kadriorg is known for the Kadriorg palace and the surrounding park, commissioned by the Russian Czar Peter the Great. Nowadays the park is a location of several museums including the Kadriorg art Museum (in Kadriorg palace), KUMU, Mikkel, Peter the Great and Eduard Vilde museums. Nearby is the Russalka Memorial which commemorates the loss of a Russian warship in 1893.

The official Presidential Palace of the President of Estonia is situated next to Kadriorg Palace in the park.

gollark: Also because I could get a "UPS" for that pretty cheaply, i.e. a decently high-powered battery pack.
gollark: I kind of want to migrate my server stuff to a Raspberry Pi 4 and 256GB or so SSD, because flash memory > spinny disks.
gollark: It... might be... it just says "HP" on all the info I can dredge up quickly.
gollark: It also claims to have read only 10TB and written 5TB, sooo...
gollark: ```Manufactured in week 18 of year 2012Specified cycle count over device lifetime: 10000Accumulated start-stop cycles: 1967Specified load-unload count over device lifetime: 300000Accumulated load-unload cycles: 1967Elements in grown defect list: 4```

References

  1. "Statistical Yearbook of Tallinn 2015". Tallinn City Government. p. 38. Archived from the original on 19 November 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  2. http://arileht.delfi.ee/news/uudised/millist-piirkonda-eelistavad-rikkad-inimesed.d?id=48214527


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.