Anyone who is interested in the history of literary creativity of A.S. Pushkin, I recommend visiting the museum! You will find a lot of interesting things here! Immerse yourself in the aura of the last century! Feel the spirit of another era! I advise you to bring children to introduce them to the beautiful! How did the great poet and writer begin his life? What were you looking for? Who did you love or hate? What obstacles did fate put in his way and how did he overcome them? Maybe your children will awaken a talent that will lead to success?
In 2006, Kazakhstan celebrated the year of the poet A.S. Pushkin, it was on this date that the opening of the A.S. Pushkin Literary Museum in the city of Uralsk was timed. The museum was opened in the historical part of the city in the so-called “ataman's house”, it was here that the great poet stayed in 1833, when he lived and worked in Uralsk for three days. The house was built around 1830, just a few years before the poet's arrival, according to the design of the Italian architect Dilmedino. During the Soviet period, a hospital for law enforcement officers was located here for many years. Before the opening of the museum, a complete reconstruction and restoration was carried out in it, the facade and part of the interior interiors were recreated. This building, which is an architectural monument, may well become a symbol of Russian literature in Kazakhstan, because in addition to A.S. Pushkin, I. Krylov, V. Dahl, V.Zhukovsky, T. Shevchenko, A. Pleshcheyev, M. Sholokhov and many others visited here in different years. The museum staff tried to preserve the color of the hall's furnishings in accordance with the era. On the walls of the museum there are paintings reflecting Pushkin's arrival in Uralsk. According to the linocuts of the artists, one can imagine the places of residence of the great poet "Assumption Church", "Church of Peter and Paul", "Mikhailo-Arkhangelsk Cathedral", "House of M.Tolkachev". Also on the pedestals are copies and originals of the materials of writers who visited Uralsk in the 19th century and photocopies of Pushkin's manuscripts. The museum's exposition presents old editions of the books "The Captain's Daughter" and "The History of the Pugachev Rebellion", a copy of the poet's manuscripts, photos and documentary materials about poets and writers who stayed in the Urals, reliable information about eyewitnesses of A. Pushkin's visit to Uralsk... I recommend you to visit...
The museum is located in a building that is difficult to pass by simply, it is historical, restored, but beautiful, preserved. It is very pleasing, located in the old city center, where even the smell, if you listen closely, especially in the early morning, is special historical. The museum has a guide who will tell and show the story, we are waiting for the museum to become world famous.
I liked everything very much, the wonderful atmosphere and a very interesting tour. From beginning to end, both adults and children listened with interest. I have wonderful memories. Thank you very much 👍
This part of the old town of Uralsk is built up with houses of the 19th century. The Pushkin Museum is one room in the house where Pushkin lived for three days during his stay in Uralsk to collect information about the uprising of Yemelyan Pugachev. The room exhibits objects, portraits and paintings from the 19th century. Stories and quotes from writers and famous people of Russia of that era, who were or were associated with the Urals.
in 2023: 500 tenge adult ticket, 150 tenge for children. There is only one room in which there is a draft of Pushkin, pieces of furniture, an interactive whiteboard. You can safely skip this museum and go to the local history museum.
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Максим Владимирович Осмоловский
Level 19 Local Expert
July 28, 2024
It is necessary to go to this museum with an excursion. Everything related to Pushkin's three-day stay in Uralsk is collected in one large room.
A very good and informative museum. Went with the kids
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И
Илья
Level 5 Local Expert
May 24, 2022
Unfortunately, the museum is disappointing. The city of Uralsk is famous for its interesting and controversial history, in which many dramatic events are intertwined. It is not for nothing that one of the greatest poets of mankind personally came here to understand the tragic story of the people's revolt led by the impostor tsar Yemelyan Pugachev. To be honest, the old streets of Uralsk with well-preserved historical buildings in combination with Wikipedia will tell you a hundred times more than the local "museums". There is only one name from the museums. Inside the Pushkin Museum, you will find one tiny room in which, through modern wallpaper and furniture from the Expensive-Rich department, a pathetic attempt was made to recreate the entourage of the 19th century. There's almost nothing to look at. Of the original exhibits that caught Pushkin's visit, only the wall clock. There are a couple of tables and cabinets from either the 19th or 20th century, an original portrait of the chieftain, a harpsichord, writing materials of unknown origin and copies taken from Pushkin's manuscripts. There is a plasma TV on the wall behind some kind of blackboard, framed with a cheap gold frame. The attitude towards historical and cultural heritage is disgustingly amateurish. The work of the "guide" was appropriate. When we came and paid for the tour at the entrance, the guide expressed some displeasure in Kazakh because of the need to conduct the tour. Apparently, she thought we wouldn't understand her. In the end, she still condescended to us and gave us a "tour": in three minutes she rattled off a memorized paragraph a la "came-lived-left", not even letting us linger and look at the exhibits. When we were delayed at any of them, the girl literally urged us on with the words "Let's go here, please." After rattling off an uninteresting and unintelligible gibberish of a bunch of dates, surnames and a dry squeeze of some historical events, she left us to contemplate the furniture and ran off to do her important business, from which we had the audacity to distract Her Ladyship. The "tour" lasted no more than three to four minutes.
Boring. Look at these curtains. Pushkin may have seen these curtains, but not a single exhibit is directly related to Pushkin. He was in Kazakhstan for only three days
The museum was established in 2006 in honor of Pushkin's 3-day stay in Uralsk, which he visited in order to collect information. As a result, 2 works appeared from the pen: "The Captain's Daughter" and "The Story of Pugachev" (the story of the Pugachev uprising)