Vice Admiral Zhukov Lane is a street in the historic district of Odessa, from Deribasovskaya to Bunin Street .
| Lane Vice Admiral Zhukov | |
|---|---|
| general information | |
| A country | |
| City | and |
| Former names | Well |
| Name in honor | |
Content
- 1 History
- 2 Attractions
- 3 notes
- 4 References
History
Named in honor of the Soviet naval leader, Vice Admiral Gavriil Vasilyevich Zhukov (1899-1957)
It was laid at the turn of the XVIII-XIX centuries. The first name was Well, according to the so-called Greek Fountain (well), located on Greek Square in 1830. Already in 1836, the well changed its location and was located between the houses of Toricheli and Olkhovsky in the alley. Until 1804, the Greek Square was not built up at all, but houses were erected on the even side.
In 1847, the lane was named Kramarevsky in honor of the Odessa merchant of the 1st guild Kramarev Mikhail Antonovich, who owned two houses on Deribasovskaya street, in particular, house number 3 and number 27 (does not correspond to modern numbering). The latter was opposite the City Garden, on the site of the modern Passage .
On October 29, 1852, the lane was renamed in honor of another homeowner - Shiryaev Dmitry Vasilyevich, who owned a house in this lane. First, the lane was named Shiryaevsky, and later, from 1860 - Shiryaev. On February 15, 1869, the name of the alley was changed to Deribasovskaya, in honor of Jose de Ribas, along the street from which the lane originates. in 1875 the lane was returned to its original name - Well.
After the Great Patriotic War, the lane was named after Vice Admiral Zhukov Gavrila Vasilievich, who lived in a house at the intersection with Greek Street . When renaming, March 29, 1957, a mistake was made, and the lane was originally named Rear Admiral Zhukov, but already in January 1958 the mistake was corrected.
Attractions
The attraction is the building of the Russian Drama Theater , located at the intersection with Grecheskaya Street.
d.9 - Anatri's house