| Sight | |
| Davidovich House | |
|---|---|
| A country | |
| Location | Taganrog , st. Greek , 34 |
| Build Date | The second half of the XIX century |
External Images
Taganrog. Davidovich House Davidovich's House is an old mansion in Taganrog (34 Grecheskaya St. ).
Content
- 1 History of the house
- 2 Architectural Features
- 3 Literature
- 4 notes
- 5 Links
House History
One-storey house on Grecheskaya street, 34 in the city of Taganrog, Rostov region, was built in the second half of the XIX century.
The owners and residents of the house are known. A one-story brick house with a porch and half columns was built according to the project of 1897 at the expense of a scientist, candidate of physical and mathematical faculty of St. Petersburg University David-Sheil Abram Davidovich [1] . In 1897, a son named Simeon was born in their family (spouse Alexandra Davidovna).
Next to this building in 1910 a light brick building was built, estimated at 80 thousand rubles - more expensive than the Alferaki Palace. Currently, it houses the Central City Post Office. Its owner, banker Alexander Abramovich, died of a broken heart at the age of 49, in August 1911, before his bank office was moved into the constructed building.
Until 1925, the house on 34 Grecheskaya Street was owned by Alexandra Davidovna, Maria Semenovna and Ananii Davidovich Davidovich.
A month after the death of her husband, the widow Davidovich began to manage the affairs of the bank. An unpleasant incident occurred in her management at the bank. One day, the son of the well-known tradesman in the city, Alexei Porfirievich Tovel, Vladimir, who served in the Davidovich office, found one thousand rubles missing before handing the money to the bank. Mrs. Davidovich told the father of Vladimir that she suspects the theft of his son, despite the fact that this has not been proven. Unable to bear such an insult, Aleksey Porfirevich left the office, and, having arrived home, shot himself.
During the years of Soviet power, the building was nationalized. The building is currently vacated by the owners and is for sale.
Architectural Features
The house on 34 Grecheskaya Street has a U-shape and six windows from the facade. The house is brick, asymmetric construction, has a four-pitched roof, the side walls are plastered, without windows. The basement of the building and the facade are rusticated. The house is painted in yellow, the base is in dark gray, small architectural elements are highlighted in white. The building has an interfloor cornice, a crowning cornice with cloves, pilasters, half-columns decorate its windows. Castle windows are made over the windows. The main entrance with pilasters is on the left side of the building. A triangular pediment and attic stand out above the right windows. The facade of the building and its side walls are plastered.
Figured sandriks are also made above the main entrance. Entrance to the courtyard is made from two sides through a metal gate [2] .
Literature
Gavryushkin O. P. According to the old Greek ... (Chronicle of philistine life). - Taganrog: Lukomorye, 2003 .-- 514 p. - ISBN 5-901565-15-0 .
Notes
- ↑ Collection of facades of His Imperial Majesty, the highest approved for private buildings in the cities of the Russian Empire. Part 1-4. St. Petersburg, 1809-1812.
- ↑ Glazychev V.L. Architecture. Encyclopedia. - M .: Design. Information. Cartography; Astrel; AST, 2002 .-- 672 p. - ISBN 5-17-005418-1 .
Links