Livadia Palace

E510

Livadia Palace is a former summer residence of the Russian imperial family in Crimea, best known as the site of the 1945 Yalta Conference where Allied leaders planned the post–World War II order.


Statements (49)
Predicate Object
instanceOf historic building
museum
palace
architect Nikolay Krasnov
architecturalStyle Neo-Renaissance
attendedBy Franklin D. Roosevelt
Joseph Stalin
Winston Churchill
builtFor Russian imperial family
constructionCompleted 1911
country Russia (de facto control)
Ukraine (internationally recognized)
eventDate Yalta Conference 1945
eventHosted Yalta Conference
floorCount 2
governedBy local Crimean authorities
hasExhibition Romanov family memorabilia
Yalta Conference exhibits
hasFunction conference venue
museum
residence
hasGarden Italian-style terraces
hasPart Arabic courtyard
Italian courtyard
Tsar’s private apartments
White Hall
palace park
hasView Black Sea coast
heritageStatus cultural heritage monument of regional significance in Crimea
knownFor residence of the last Russian tsar
site of the 1945 Yalta Conference
locatedIn Crimea
Livadia
Yalta region
locatedOn Crimean Peninsula
material white Crimean limestone
near city of Yalta
openToPublic yes
overlooks Black Sea
predecessorBuilding original Livadia estate palace
predecessorDestroyed demolished in early 20th century
rebuiltFor Nicholas II of Russia
surroundedBy Livadia Park
touristAttraction yes
usedAs sanatorium during Soviet period
summer residence of the Russian imperial family
usedBy Empress Alexandra Feodorovna
House of Romanov
Tsar Nicholas II of Russia


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