Yalta's air – an invigorating blend of sea and pine forest sprinkled with mountain chill – has always been its main asset. Back in the 19th century, doctors in St Petersburg had one remedy for poor-lunged aristocrats: Yalta.
 That's
 how the Russian royal family and other dignitaries, such as playwright 
 Anton Chekhov, ended up here.Old parts of Yalta are still full of 
modest and  not-so-modest former dachas (holiday homes) of the tsarist-era  intelligentsia,
 while the coast around the city is dotted with the  luxurious palaces 
of the aristocracy. But back in 1913 a Russian travel guide  remarked 
that Yalta was a long way from the Riviera in terms of comforts and  
civilization.
That's
 how the Russian royal family and other dignitaries, such as playwright 
 Anton Chekhov, ended up here.Old parts of Yalta are still full of 
modest and  not-so-modest former dachas (holiday homes) of the tsarist-era  intelligentsia,
 while the coast around the city is dotted with the  luxurious palaces 
of the aristocracy. But back in 1913 a Russian travel guide  remarked 
that Yalta was a long way from the Riviera in terms of comforts and  
civilization.
Show in Lonely Planet






















Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий