The Bronze Horseman

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A photograph of the statue
A photograph of the statue
Alexandre Benois's illustration to the poem (1904).
Alexandre Benois's illustration to the poem (1904).

"The Bronze Horseman" (Russian, Медный всадник, literally "The Copper Horseman") is an equestrian statue of Peter the Great by Etienne Maurice Falconet in Saint Petersburg. It is also the name of a poem written by Aleksandr Pushkin in 1833, widely considered to be one of the most significant works of Russian literature. The statue became know as the Bronze Horseman due to the great influence of the poem.

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[edit] Statue

The statue's construction was ordered by Catherine the Great. She had it inscribed with the Latin phrase "Petro Primo Catharina Secunda MDCCLXXXII", meaning "Catherine the Second to Peter the First, 1782", in order to lend herself legitimacy by connecting herself with the "Founder of Modern Russia."

[edit] The largest stone ever transported by man?

The stone pedestal of the statue is thought to be the largest stone ever moved by humans, even to this day. Catherine ordered it moved, intact, to its current location on the banks of the Neva from its original site, 6km away. The stone was originally half underground, and radical new means had to be devised to transport it. Its total size was 7x14x9m, for a total mass of 1500 tonnes. Due to sculpting the pedestal for aesthetics, the stone is now roughly half its former size.

[edit] Poem

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Pushkin describes the fate of the poor young Yevgeny and his loved ones during a flood in which the Neva overflowed its banks. Tsar Peter the Great founded the new capital of Saint Petersburg to bring trade and prosperity to Russia, to open a "window on Europe," and to expand his military power westward. This strategic move, however, cost the lives of many thousands of common people who succumbed to diseases, floods, and hard conditions in draining the swamps and building the new city. Pushkin uses the flood of 1824 to show the conflict between the large interests of the state, represented by the Tsar's statue with its gaze fixed ahead and its arm reaching out towards the future, and the immediate needs of a simple person for life and safety. Although Yevgeny survives the flood, the home of his fiancee on one of the city's islands is completely washed away and all of its inhabitants drowned with it. The poor man is driven into despair and madness, and blaming Peter for his misery, eventually curses the Tsar's statue. At that, the bronze horseman appears to break free from its pedestal and begins to chase Yevgeny. After this misadventure, Yevgeny always treats the statue with great respect whenever he comes across it. But soon afterwards he is dead, his body having been washed up on a bleak little island and deposited on the threshold of a ruined little house. He is buried out of charity.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] External links

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