Peter De Grote Monument image

Peter De Grote Monument

Tourist attraction Historical landmark Monument Sculpture

👍👍 Great place. So quiet and homely place in the downtown of the so great city as Antwerpen! Should be visited everyone who interested in the history of Russia. Many thanks to Belgians for this exceptional monument! People often mention Russian, monument, Russia,


Address

Kloosterstraat 143/147, 2000 Antwerpen, Belgium

Contact

+32 3 221 13 33

Rating on Google Maps

4.30 (231 reviews)

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Working Hours

  • Saturday: Open 24 hours
  • Sunday: Open 24 hours
  • Monday: Open 24 hours
  • Tuesday: Open 24 hours
  • Wednesday: Open 24 hours
  • Thursday: Open 24 hours
  • Friday: Open 24 hours

Featured Reviews


Frequently mentioned in reviews: Russian (10) monument (9) Russia (6)
Reviews are sorted by relevance, prioritizing the most helpful and insightful feedback at the top for easier reference.
  • 5/5 Андрей �. 1 year ago on Google
    Great place. So quiet and homely place in the downtown of the so great city as Antwerpen! Should be visited everyone who interested in the history of Russia. Many thanks to Belgians for this exceptional monument!
    3 people found this review helpful 👍

  • 5/5 The C. 5 years ago on Google
    Peter the Great (Пётр I Алексеевич, прозванный Великий, 1672 - 1725), the last King of Russia (from 1682) and the first Emperor of Russia (from 1721) ruled the Russian kingdom, and then the Russian Empire from May 7, 1682 until his death in 1725, ruling until 1696, together with his elder stepbrother Ivan V. Through a number of successful wars, he extended the kingdom to a much larger empire, which became a major European power, and laid the foundations for the Russian fleet after seizure of ports in the Azov and the Baltic Sea. He led a cultural revolution that replaced some traditional and medieval socio-political systems with modern, scientific, western, and based on the Enlightenment. Peter's reforms had a lasting impact on Russia, and many institutions of the Russian government are descended from his rule. It is also known for the founding and development of the city of St. Petersburg, which remained the capital of Russia until 1917.
    1 person found this review helpful 👍

  • 1/5 Žygintas B. 1 year ago on Google
    An Anachronistic Ode to Russian Imperial Colonialism. Shouldn't have ever been built. For zero achievement. An exchange of soft power for petty money. Erecting statues of foreign state leaders in the 21st century is just a very very very bad taste. Coming Up Next: Monument to Donald Trump in Brussels, to "strenghten" "cultural ties" with the US.
    1 person found this review helpful 👍

  • 5/5 Ekaterina A. 1 year ago on Google
    When I miss home, I go there to drink coffee near this monument.
    1 person found this review helpful 👍

  • 1/5 Mariia B. 11 months ago on Google
    I find it unethical and disappointing keeping a monument for russian first successful coloniser. It represents disrespect for all people that have suffered repressions, manmade famine and all different torture that russian empire has endured on its colonies. And still enduring. Finding it personally hurtful passing every time, with my small daughter that I was forced to evacuate and live in a foreign country BECAUSE of russian imperialistic and genocidal ambitions that Peter “the great” has founded. It’s not the best time to celebrate such personality or any representation of russian culture, especially when your country has given shelter to lots of victims of russian aggression. in generations. I’m sure Belgium has great minds to celebrate and give this spot to people that didn’t start the centuries of bloodshed.
    1 person found this review helpful 👍

  • 3/5 Griffin C. 3 years ago on Google
    Ok

  • 5/5 Laila M. 4 years ago on Google
    Pietros the Big, last Russian king.

  • 4/5 macandlucie 4 years ago on Google
    Nice little square

  • 5/5 Julles 4 years ago on Google
    One monument in the hall town from 1998

  • 4/5 Irina B. 4 years ago on Google
    Sculpture of Russian emperor

  • 5/5 Robbe W. 5 years ago on Google
    Wow

  • 4/5 Маринела �. 2 years ago on Google
    (Translated by Google) It is located on a small square .. (Original) Намира се на малък площад..

  • 5/5 Pavel K. 7 months ago on Google
    A bronze full-size sculpture of the Tsar is standing on a low, ship-shaped pedestal. The monumental figure of the Tsar “grows out” of the wind rose engraved on the uneven surface of the “deck”. The monument is decorated with two angels and two coats of arms — the emblems of Antwerp and Russia. The monument is 2.5 meters tall. The monument stands opposite the St. Michael’s Abbey in Kloosterstraat where the Russian Tsar stayed in April 1717. The sculpture is very well located in a small public garden in a busy street (which features second-hand booksellers, antique stores and a semi-pedestrian area). The pedestal has inscriptions in both Dutch and Russian reading: “Hier zette in 1717 de Russische tsaar Peter de Grote voet aan wal” and “На это место ступил Пётр Великий в 1717” (Peter the Great set his foot here in 1717). On the rear of the sculpture, there is the sculptor’s signature in the form of a monogram of the letters “F” and “G” and the year “1998”. The monument was created by sculptor Georgy Frangulyan (born in 1945) coming from Tbilisi. The work was financed by Russian banks on the initiative of the Antwerp-based firm Art Group International and Belgian Slavicist Emmanuel Waegemans. The monument was officially inaugurated on October 7, 1998.

  • 5/5 Genadi S. 9 months ago on Google
    Amazing!

  • 5/5 Maricel Lita C. 10 months ago on Google
    Happy Holiday😉💪🙏


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