Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Handball. Football Club Zenit (Russian: Футбольный клуб «Зенит» [fʊdˈbolʲnɨj ˈkɫup zʲɪˈnʲit] ), also known as Zenit Saint Petersburg or simply Zenit, is a Russian professional football club based in Saint Petersburg. Founded in 1925 (or in 1914, according to some Russian sources), the club plays in the Russian ...

  2. Portal de San Petersburgo. San Petersburgo (en ruso: Санкт-Петербург, Sankt Peterburg) es la segunda ciudad en importancia de Rusia, con 4.577.751 habitantes ( 2007) y un área metropolitana de 5,85 millones. Está enclavada en la Región de Leningrado, nombre que compartía con la ciudad durante la época soviética (1924–1991).

  3. Sankt Petersborg bys areal er 605,8 km², mens arealet for den føderale enhed, der indeholder Sankt Petersborg by er 1.439 km². Byen er delt i 81 kommunale okrugs, ni kommunale byer og 21 kommunale bosættelser. De kommunale byer er Kolpino, Krasnoje Selo, Kronstadt, Lomonosov, Pavlovsk, Petergof, Pusjkin, Sestroretsk og Zelenogorsk .

  4. For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation. St. Isaac's Cathedral and Senate Square Senate Square ( Russian : Сенатская площадь ), formerly known as Decembrists' Square (Площадь Декабристов) from the 1920s to 2008, and (formally) as Peter's Square (Петровская площадь), from 1782 to 1925, is a city square in Saint Petersburg , Russia .

  5. Lloc del patrimoni cultural de Rússia. El centre històric de Sant Petersburg i conjunts monumentals annexos és el nom utilitzat per la Unesco quan van ser designats els edificis de l'antiga ciutat russa de Sant Petersburg, així com els conjunts situats a la rodalia de la zona, com a Patrimoni de la Humanitat el 1991.

  6. 1718 – Saint Petersburg Police established. 1719 – Summer Garden laid out. 1720. Hermitage Bridge opens. New Holland Island created. 1721 – Ligovsky Canal constructed. 1724. Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences founded. Saint Petersburg Mint founded.

  7. v. t. e. The history of the Jews in Saint Petersburg (formerly known as Petrograd and then Leningrad) dates back to the 18th century and there is still a Jewish community in the city today. In the late 18th century, the annexation of eastern Poland meant millions more Jews were now subjects of the Russian Empire, many of whom flocked to the city.