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From
Royal Central:
Cats
also helped to guard the cavernous Winter Palace in St. Petersburg and
were valued for keeping down its resident rodent population, in a
parallel with how cats were officially employed (from 1868) by the
British Post Office for this same purpose. The tradition of keeping cats
dates from the reign of Empress Elisabeth Petrovna, who was offered
five cats by the city of Kazan in answer to her 1745 edict of appeal
regarding the rat problem at the Winter Palace. Her
successor, Catherine II ‘the Great’ is said to have admired the feline
breed of ‘Russian blues’ inside the palace, whilst continuing the
tradition established by Empress Elisabeth regarding ‘working cats’ at
the Winter Palace. These
palace cats, known popularly as the ‘Hermitage Cats’ – were so valued
in Imperial Russia, that even had their own servants until the October
Revolution, with their food paid for every month by the Treasury. The
imperial palace was gradually absorbed into the vast Hermitage museum,
in a transformation which began in 1918 and lasted until about 1939.
The
Hermitage’s stalwart, feline guardians all died during the brutal
blockade known as the 872-day long ‘Siege of Leningrad’ (1941-1944),
when the heroic city of Leningrad, as St. Petersburg had become known
from Petrograd in 1924, became starving, yet remained boldly resilient.
Following the end of the Second World War, two wagon-loads of new cats
arrived in the city to fulfill the purpose that Empress Elisabeth
intended for them. The Hermitage now has its own ‘Cattery’, today
located in the vast Museum’s basement, as reached by a stone staircase.
The ‘Hermitage Cats’ may be found in the galleries themselves or outside
the Hermitage, even on the embankments of the river Neva. (Read more.)
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