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ROYAL COMPOUND OPEN FOR THE 2010 SEASON FROM
TODAY
Belgrade, 6 April 2010 – The Royal Compound
opened today the 2010 season tours following the winter recess.
Their Royal Highnesses Crown Prince Alexander II and Crown Princess
Katherine are pleased to inform all interested citizens should they
wish to visit the Royal Compound. The organization of regular tours
continues in cooperation with the Tourist Organization of Belgrade
every weekend from 6 April through 31 October.
The first official tour for 2010 was organized
for representatives of the media 6 April at 11 am.
Visiting the Royal and White Palaces is organized
that visitors with professional tour guides will get acquainted with
the history, art and culture in a nice two-hour walk through the
Royal Compound. The tour includes the magnificent Royal and White
Palaces and the Royal Chapel dedicated to the patron Saint of the
Royal Family - St. Andrew the First Called.
Every Saturday and Sunday from 6 April through 31
October in two regular times 11 am and 2 pm, the Royal Compound will
be open to the public. The entry ticket includes a round trip
transfer tourist bus starting from Nikola Pasic Square in Belgrade;
the Royal Compound is only a few minutes from the city centre. There
is also the possibility to organize group tours during work days by
previous appointment. For all information and reservations, visitors
must visit the Tourist Information Centre, Knez Mihailova 6, 11000
Beograd
Tel: 011 328 -18 -59; Fax: 011 262 92 53
Contact person: Andjelka Vukovic
E-mail:
dvorski_kompleks@yahoo.com Website:
www.tob.co.rs
The limit per group is 50 people.
Schools, students and pensioner associations
interested in visiting the Royal Compound should call the Office of
HRH Crown Prince Alexander directly at 011/306-4014 and 011/306-4038
or email: kancelarija@dvor.rs
The Royal Palace
The Royal Palace was built between 1924 and 1929
with the private funds of His Majesty King Alexander I (the
grandfather of HRH Crown Prince Alexander). The architects were
Zivojin Nikolic and Nikolay Krassnoff of the Royal Academy. The
palace is made of white stone in the Serbian-Byzantine style.
Attached to The Royal Palace there is a Royal Chapel dedicated to
Saint Apostle Andrew The First-Called, the Patron Saint of The Royal
Family. The Royal Palace was the home of King Alexander I and King
Peter. Today The Royal Palace is the home of Crown Prince Alexander
II and his family.
The White Palace
The White Palace is located within the same
complex as The Royal Palace and it was commissioned by command of
His Majesty King Alexander I as the residence for his three sons HRH
Crown Prince Peter (the future King Peter II), Prince Tomislav and
Prince Andrej. King Alexander I envisaged that his three sons would
require their own private accommodation when they became of age, but
his assassination in Marseille caused the destiny of his sons to
take a different turn.
The young King Peter II became the new master of
the Dedinje Complex and the completion of The White Palace was
supervised by King Peter II great uncle HRH Prince Regent Paul. It
was built from 1934 until 1936, as the project of the architect
Alexander Djordjevic. When completed it became the official
residence on loan to HRH Prince Regent Paul and his family, until
King Peter II came of age.
The ground floor of this classicistic palace
houses a large hall and a number of drawing rooms furnished in the
style of Louis XV and Louis XVI with large Venetian chandeliers.
There is also a library which had more than 35 000 books and a
formal Chippendale dining room.
The Royal Chapel of Saint Andrew the First
Called
The Palace Church is attached to the south side
of The Royal Palace and linked to the main building by a colonnade
of stone pillars. The Church is dedicated to St. Andrew the First
Called (the Royal Family’s Patron Saint). The Church is based on the
model of the monastery Church of Saint Andrew on the River Treska in
Macedonia, which was built by Andrew the son of the Serbian medieval
King Vukasin. The Church was designed and built at the same time as
The Royal Palace.
The interior of the Church is covered with
frescoes painted by a team of artists from the Belgrade Artist
Association. Following King Alexander I instructions this group
visited most of the Serbian medieval monasteries in order to copy
their frescos. The group was led by academician Nikolai Kasnoff.
After preparing the walls and cataloguing the drawings the final
decision to go ahead was made by King Alexander I. The Russian
painters Boris Obrascov, Nikolai Maiendorf, Vladimir Bickovski,
Viktor Sevcov, and Reitlinger and Evgeny Varnu-Secret were chosen to
paint the Church. All painters were requested to produce records of
their previous work in medieval monasteries. The whole project for
the completion of the Church took about 36 months.
This is only a brief introduction for all
interested citizens, who we invite to visit this extraordinary
cultural and historical place that tens of thousands domestic and
foreign tourists and guests visited during the last year. |