"Zhernovka" or the "Bezobrazov Estate"?
This estate has been known by various names over the past three centuries: Buturlin’s Dacha, Zhernovka, Gavrilovka, Ekaterininskoye, and the Bezobrazov Dacha... This array of names is due to frequent changes in ownership and the tradition of naming a property after its owner.
In the early 18th century, the lands on the left bank of the Ohta River, between the Malinovka and Zhernovka rivers (which were filled in at the end of the 1970s), were known as Buturlin’s Dacha. According to available information, they belonged to Ivan Ivanovich Buturlin, a companion of Peter the Great.
Later, under the chamberlain Alexei Grigorievich Zherebtsov, the estate came to be known as Zhernovka, named after the river flowing nearby.
The estate was renamed Gavrilovka at the end of the 18th century when it was owned by Gavriil Gerasimovich Donaurov, who was a state councilor of the 1st class from 1798.
The name “Ekaterininskoye” reflects the time when the estate was owned by Ekaterina Alexandrovna Sukhozanet, née Princess Beloselskaya-Belozerskaya.
In the 1860s, the estate was acquired by the Bezobrazov couple – Anna Ivanovna (née Sukhozanet) and Nikolai Alexandrovich, a chamberlain. The estate was named Bezobrazov Dacha after this couple.
Today, the estate with its rich history is more commonly referred to as Zhernovka. However, on Google Maps, it is listed as “Bezobrazov Dacha,” unlike on Yandex Maps.
Did Alexander Pushkin Visit Zhernovka?
Before 1838, the estate now commonly known as Zhernovka belonged to the Narva merchant of the 1st guild and member of the Free Economic Society, Sebastian (Sevastyan) Venediktovich Kramer. Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin was acquainted with one of his children, Mikhail.
There is no information confirming that the poet visited Zhernovka. However, it is well-documented that in 1828, Pushkin frequently visited the Priyutino estate of the Olenins, as he was in love with their youngest daughter, Anna Alexeyevna. The road to Priyutino passed through the Porokhovye area. It is possible that Alexander Sergeyevich might have stopped by Zhernovka on his way to visit the Kramers.
History of the Location
1718
Ivan Buturlin, a companion of Peter the Great, received the lands between the rivers Okhta and Zhernovka and owned them throughout the 1720s. At that time the estate was called Buturlin's Dacha.
1739
After the death of the owners, the estate passed to Fyodor Ivanovich Soimonov, Chief Procurator of the Senate.
1747
The estate is acquired by Alexei Grigorievich Zherebtsov, an active Privy Councillor. Under him it was named after the river on which it is located - Zhernovka. At the same time, a village of 10 yards with the same name appeared on the land belonging to the estate.
The Zhernovka Estate
The grand mansion at Zhernovka, designed by the distinguished architect Giacomo Quarenghi, was constructed on the left bank of the Ohta River by 1796. The building is positioned almost perpendicular to the river's flow, designed so that its rooms offer a beautiful view of the river, the bridge, and the now-lost gates with towers (which were located to the northeast of the house at the crossroads leading to the villages of Malinovka and Zhernovka).
The mansion’s other facade faced an English landscape park, created concurrently with the house. During the late 18th century, such romantic, sprawling parks, characterized by seemingly "accidentally" placed (but actually deliberately planted by gardeners) tall trees, winding paths, and picturesque ponds, became fashionable in Russia. The Zhernovka mansion is almost situated on one of these man-made ponds, reflecting itself in the water with its most grandiose facade, featuring enormous "Venetian" semicircular windows that span two stories.
English parks were an integral part of estates of that time, almost as important as the house itself. Today, the banks of the pond and the artificial island are densely overgrown with shrubs and birch trees. However, once, a path led from the house’s portico to an ancient oak tree, and around the park, alongside a deep moat with a stream, there was an avenue of birches and linden trees. Another avenue stretched along the steep bank of the Ohta River and led to a stone quay that served as a park pavilion. This quay was named "Bellevue" or "Milovzor" due to its splendid view of the river. The park’s lawn was scattered with picturesque groups of ancient trees, and beneath them stood cast-iron benches.
The 18th-century mansion consists of three parts: a central section and two wings that are set lower than the main volume. The symmetrical, compact volume of the building refers to the so-called Palladian architecture (named after the great Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio), which was particularly fashionable in England during the classical era. The main facade of the building is adorned with a pediment supported by four Corinthian columns. In the 1820s, under the ownership of the Narva merchant of the 1st guild Kramer, extended galleries were added to the mansion on both sides, ending in towers once decorated with ceramic vases and sculptures.
The central (and oldest) part of the house was entirely allocated for a suite of ceremonial rooms arranged on a single axis, allowing one richly decorated room to flow into another without passing through corridors or "service" rooms. The center of the building features a grand hall with a two-story height, decorated with huge Venetian windows and ceiling painting, which seems to be contemporary with the house. This painting imitates stucco work (in reality, all the ceilings throughout the building are flat) and is done in the style of the prevailing classicism of the time.
Adjacent to the main hall, which could host ceremonial dinners and concerts, were a drawing room and dining room on one side, and a billiard room and bedroom on the other. One wall of the drawing room still retained (albeit in poor condition) a painting depicting the Gatchina Palace in the 1920s. This painting’s subject led Nikolai Yevgenyevich Lansere, who visited Zhernovka in 1924, to suggest that it was created no earlier than the year of the palace’s construction and no later than the year of its renovation. This room featured gilded cornices with very fine carving, decorated with medallions of Mercury heads. The corners of the drawing room were adorned with tiled stoves. Behind the drawing room was the dining room – a high square room once separated from the drawing room by a glazed arch on two wooden Ionic columns painted to resemble marble. The ceiling here, like in other ceremonial rooms, was painted: decorated with a plafond in the form of a flat dome with radiating caissons, putti figures, and other elements imitating bas-reliefs and sculptural decoration in the popular grisaille technique.
In the billiard room, located on the other side of the grand hall, the ceiling also featured a painted plafond depicting the goddess Venus with Cupids and doves. The last ceremonial room in the suite was the bedroom, with walls painted in the "Pompeian style." The ceiling’s design is complex: it features two intersecting caisson vaults, with their center covered by a blue peplum with a golden border. In the corners of the ceiling are bronze female figures, an imitation of small sculpture commonly found in Empire interiors, such as in candelabras or bronze furniture decoration. The blend of these motifs – Empire and Pompeian painting, decorative vases and niches with shells, Greek ornaments, and painted imitations of bronze – is very characteristic of late 18th-century murals.
Behind the ceremonial rooms were an entrance hall and four rooms. From one of these rooms, a steep wooden staircase leads to a low upper floor, containing only three rooms that comprised the "master’s study." In the glazed galleries added to the main building in the 1820s, were located kitchens, laundry rooms, and greenhouses.
For its time, Zhernovka was a typical pleasure dacha. The main mansion, consisting entirely of ceremonial rooms, could never be considered comfortable for living, and its heating system only allowed for warmth in the high-ceilinged rooms with large windows during the mild autumn and late spring. The owners visited Zhernovka for short-term stays to enjoy outdoor amusements.
The estate’s lands served some owners as a source of vegetables and dairy products for their table in St. Petersburg, while others, in later times, profited by selling products through managers and agents.
After its peak at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries, Zhernovka began to lose its former appeal as a place of recreation from the second half of the 19th century. It completely lost this appeal after the construction of the Irinovskaya railway (in close proximity to the estate) between 1890 and 1892.
More about the estate’s owners and key dates can be found in the "History of the Place" section.