(Redirected from Chinese Village)
Cross (Krestovy) Bridge in the 19th century.
The 'Chinese Village' in the Alexander Park of
Tsarskoe Selo,
Russia was
Catherine the Great's attempt to follow the 18th-century fashion for the
Chinoiserie.
Probably inspired by a similar project in
Drottningholm, Catherine ordered
Antonio Rinaldi and
Charles Cameron to model the village after a contemporary Chinese engraving from her personal collection. The village was to consist of 18 stylized Chinese houses (only ten were completed), dominated by an octagonal domed observatory (never completed at all). After Catherine failed in her ambition to procure a genuine Chinese architect, the Russian ambassador in
London was instructed to obtain for Tsarskoe Selo a replica of
William Chambers' pagoda in the
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew - a central structure of the Chinoiserie architecture.

Chinese village
Catherine's death in 1796 led to the works being suspended. It was not until
1818 that
Alexander I of Russia asked
Vasily Stasov to overhaul the village in order to provide accommodation for his guests (
picture). Although much of the original orientalizing decor was lost as a result, the renovated village provided habitation for such eminent visitors as
Nikolai Karamzin who worked on his ''History of the Russian State'' in one of the houses between 1822 and 1825.

Chinese Theatre in Tsarskoe Selo, ca. 1900.
The Chinese Opera Theatre was constructed not far from the village in 1779. It was there that an Italian composer
Giovanni Paisiello would present his new operas to the Russian empress. The premiere of
Leo Tolstoy's ''The Fruits of Enlightenment'' was also produced there. The theatre was burnt to the ground on
15 September,
1941 and has never been rebuilt.
Three remarkable bridges lead to the village. The
Dragon Bridge, so named after four zink figures of winged dragons, and the
Large Chinese Bridge, noted for pink granite vases and imitation coral branches, were completed in
1785. The
Cross-Shaped Bridge had been constructed by the Neyelov Brothers six years earlier (''illustrated, to the right'').
The village was renovated under the direction of
Ippolit Monighetti in 1859-61. The cottages sustained serious damage during the
Nazi occupation but were restored in the
1990s to provide lodgings for VIP guests (
picture).
See also
★
Creaking Pagoda
★
Chinese Palace