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  1. The Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum was opened on 19 October 1811. The first graduates included Alexander Pushkin and Alexander Gorchakov. In January 1844, the Lyceum was moved to St Petersburg. In May 1918, the Lyceum was closed following order by the Council of People's Commissars.

  2. Tsarskoye Selo (Russian: Ца́рское Село́, IPA: [ˈtsarskəje sʲɪˈlo] ⓘ, lit. ' Tsar's Village ' ) was the town containing a former residence of the Russian imperial family and visiting nobility, located 24 kilometers (15 mi) south from the center of Saint Petersburg . [1]

  3. La Villa de los Zares (en ruso: Ца́рское Село́, Tsárskoye Seló) fue residencia de la familia imperial rusa cerca de San Petersburgo y centro de recibimiento de la realeza y la nobleza exterior. El conjunto de palacios y parques, hoy en la ciudad de Pushkin, así como su centro histórico forman parte, con el código 540-006, del ...

  4. Tsarskoe Selo is a cluster of very fine examples of Baroque and Classical architecture and it was also the first place in the Russian capital where interiors decorated in the Moderne (Art Nouveau) style appeared. The compositional centre of the ensemble is the Great Tsarskoe Selo or Catherine Palace – a splendid example of Russian Baroque.

  5. In 1811, the Imperial Lyceum of Tsarskoye Selo was opened in a wing of the Catherine Palace, and it became one of the empire’s most prestigious educational institutions.

  6. The display of the Catherine Palace (known until 1910 as the Great Palace of Tsarskoe Selo) covers the 300-year history of this outstanding edifice and presents the work of architects involved in its construction and decoration in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and also with the achievements of the restorers who returned the palace to ...

  7. Tsarskoe Selo is a cluster of very fine examples of Baroque and Classical architecture and it was also the first place in the Russian capital where interiors decorated in the Moderne (Art Nouveau) style appeared.