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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 04:58 PM
The Guards of the Russian Crown Jewelry

The most famous museum in Russia, the State Hermitage in the heart of Saint Petersburg, is guarded by 70 cats. Visitors don't usually see these "employees" in the exhibition halls of the magnificent buildings of the Hermitage. They work in the labyrinths of the basement, where the maintenance network is located, hunting rats and mice. For the last 200 years, these cats have been an inextricable part of Russia's greatest museum.

Entering the museum I come across a big ginger cat, who is not in a hurry, rubbing his side against the pillar in front of the main staircase. "Look, he's one of our guards. Persik keeps order here," supervisor Tatyana Nikolayevna Danilova tells me, smiling. "He used to be a very obedient cat, but now he has become a hooligan, a real menace to the cleaners," Tatyana jokes.

Persik first appeared half a year ago when he was brought to the museum by one of the employees. He was in a very weak condition, having been a victim of animal cruelty in a market place in Saint Petersburg. The Hermitage staff looked after the cat by feeding him and letting him rest. Persik eventually regained his strength and now every morning he leaves the Hermitage courtyard for a walk along the embankment of the river Neva, in front of the grand Winter Palace. He returns to wait for the museum staff to arrive, with the hope of receiving a few tidbits. After having his snack, Persik walks calmly into the museum, through the main entrance with the foreign tourists. However, the supervisors don't allow the Hermitage cats into the exhibition rooms. If they find any uninvited guests, they escort them to a corridor, where only personnel are allowed.

In the old Winter Palace the first cats appeared during the reign of Empress Elizabeth, who was very annoyed by the number of mice and rats in the residence. As a present she received five selected rat hunters from the town of Kazan in Tatarstan. Until the October revolution in 1917 the Hermitage cats were looked after by special servants, because it was considered the Tsar's will and they were granted a monthly allowance for food from the empire's treasury.
In Soviet times state finances changed and suddenly there weren't any more resources available for the loyal guards of Hermitage. The cats had to be fed and taken care of by volunteers.
During the siege of Leningrad in World War II all of the Hermitage cats died. When the war was finally over in 1945, two railway wagons of new cats arrived in Leningrad. In the late 1960's a new threat endangered the guards of the Hermitage: overpopulation. The employees of the museum had to catch the majority of the cats and transport them to the surrounding country side.

In the last few years the number of cats has risen dramatically, mainly because many homeless animals have been brought in to seek asylum in the premises of Hermitage. The staff has launched a campaign to find new homes for the additional guards and after interviewing potential hosts, 15 cats have been sent to good homes. The employees of the Hermitage now collect money to help take care of their four-legged friends.

Van Dyck

The most popular gathering place for employees and cats is the wooden bench under a wide window, from which there is a view of one of the Hermitage's courtyards. In the past, when there was no cattery in the museum, the cats used to give birth there. A cat named Vaska, who often sleeps on the bench, is the favorite son of the museum employees. "Vaska is our grand old man. He's already 14, a very affectionate and noble cat. He just loves art. If you've lost sight of him, you can bet that you'll find him in the exhibition hall, though we usually catch him before he makes it to the labyrinthine rooms," laughs Tatyana Danilova.
However, it's very difficult to totally deny access for the cats to the exhibition premises. Many times the Hermitage supervisors have found runaway guards strolling amongst the visitors. Last autumn, an alarm bell called Danilova to an exhibition room where the art and culture of ancient Egypt is presented. Entering the room she heard someone yelling terribly. A cat named Chipa was stuck between a showcase and a plinth. Tatyana immediately called the local fire department. Chipa was finally set free from the trap by two strong firemen, who lifted the metallic plinth with the help of a crowbar.

Tatyana also remembers a case when one curious cat climbed from the basement through a ventilation tube up to the second floor of the New Hermitage, where the exhibition room of the famous Dutch artist Anthony Van Dyck is located. The exhibition supervisors tried to lure the cat with the help of food, but all efforts were useless. Finally, the hungry animal surrendered to the staff after spending two exhausting weeks in the museum's ventilation system. From that day on the cat was called Van Dyck.

The Hermitage Cattery

This is a part of the State Hermitage Museum that is not mentioned in any guide books and where no tours are arranged. Life behind the scenes is familiar only to the staff and their relatives.
A lot of things happen here in the labyrinths of the basement. There are endless corridors, spiral staircases and steel doors. Each steel door has a hole in it, giving the cats easy access to the courtyards outside.
In the Hermitage there are eight places for feeding cats, but most of them live in the cattery. Here the staff recognizes them not only by their looks, but also by their characteristics and habits.
"This is our happy couple Kuzya and Chita. They have been together ever since they met", Tatjana Danilova tells me while pointing to a harmonious looking couple lying next to each other in a ventilation tube.
"Mashenka, where have you been? I thought that you were missing", she happily asks the cat who is walking towards us.
Suddenly we see a black and white cat leaning out of a cardboard box, he starts stretching lazily in front of us. Handicapped Timur is the only non-castrated cat in the Hermitage. He came to the museum with an open fracture in his front paw. Despite the operation, he still limps lightly. Tatyana thinks that it is not be possible to castrate him, since he would gain weight after the operation, with serious consequences for his once injured leg.
We walk down to the basement via a stone staircase. We enter a little room and have to bend down to avoid hitting our heads on the half round ceiling. Cats are sitting like exhibition items on the ventilation tubes. Tatyana starts rustling food packages in her hands, and they immediately gather around her to wait for their meal.

The cattery of the Hermitage is simultaneously a kitchen, a clinic and a room for having a rest. Here you can find stove, refrigerator, freezers, storage for food and sleeping baskets. Every morning the museum employees boil buckwheat and rice and add fish or meat to the cat's porridge. "Sometimes we also buy chicken and pork liver or tripe to add to the porridge. The cats also love grated carrots with sour cream or fermented milk. In the afternoon we feed them dry cat food", Tatyana Danilova explains.

At the exit of the museum I encounter one of the cats, who is comfortably having a rest on the head of a statue. The sun nicely warms the metal of the monument and the cat is enjoying his life, neglecting the conventions of ordinary beings. There is something special, something extraordinary about the Hermitage cats.

Anna and Jyrki Liukko

www.russianlife.net

Neilikka
09-29-2008, 04:59 PM
http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/10/dimas1964.28/0_68f5_8790705f_XL

Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:00 PM
http://foto.cats-online.ru/data/media/10/IMGP8744.jpg

Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:00 PM
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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:01 PM
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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:02 PM
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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:02 PM
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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:03 PM
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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:04 PM
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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:04 PM
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Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:06 PM
On 28 March 2008, the Hermitage State Museum will hold its traditional the Day of the March Cat – a special project developed by the museum and dedicated to the cats that live there. “Cats have become a very important part of our life here at the Hermitage and a significant tradition for us”, says Hermitage director Mikhail Piotrovsky.

The story of the little Tommies begins in the early 18th century, when Peter the Great brought a cat from Holland and let it live in the Winter Palace. Following Empress Elisabeth’s order later that century, “cats particularly good at mousing” were delivered from Kazan to the city along the Neva. The Hermitage file archives still include a document titled Order to Send Cats to the Court. Elisabeth’s instruction was to find the best and biggest cats in Kazan, ones that would be useful to catch mice. “Should anyone have such virile cats,” the order read, “they shall be announced and sent to the provincial office as soon as possible”. Catherine the Great, who founded the Hermitage Museum, declared that cats would be the guardians of the picture galleries.

This year, the Day of the March Cat, which has become a wonderful and heartwarming tradition over the recent years, will be held on 28 March under the slogan “About Cats and for Cats”. Students from the Art Studio, as well as those taking classes in the art departments of the Hermitage’s Youth Centre Student Club, will present their works alongside professional artists in the basement of the Winter Palace.

Cats and Kittens is these young artists’ sixth exhibition and the School Centre Art Studio’s eleventh art event this year. It brings together children’s works from temporary drawing-storages assembled between 1991 and 2007. These youths were given a week to get to know an aspect of the Hermitage Museum that’s generally hidden from museum visitors, during which they created photos and videos which were later united under the single theme of cats. They had the unique opportunity to wander across courtyards and basements in the Hermitage complex with their cameras. This resulted in a video-work titled The Hermitage – Cats, and a photo installation, which all Hermitage Museum visitors who come on the day of celebration will see under the arch at the entrance to the Great Courtyard of the Winter Palace.

Also to be held on the Day of the March Cat is the presentation of Alexei Bobrinsky’s book, Hermits – A Petersburg Fairytale, with illustrations by painters Olga Popugaeva and Dmitry Nepomnyaschy. Graphics and models of characters from the book will also be exhibited in the museum’s basement.

The book is a co-project of the Hermit Park Company, the Worldwide Club of Petersburgers, and Vita Nova Publishers. The purpose of the project is to publish a fascinating book for families and also to contribute to developing interest among young Petersburgers in the history, architecture, and cultural heritage of their native city.
Petersburg is present on every page of the book, where well-known parts of the city centre turn into fairytale scenery while retaining their realistic features. The fairytale includes animated city statues, talking cats from the Hermitage, the discovery of secrets in old buildings, and of the building’s guardians. These are the Hermits – descendants of European fairies who became related to the local house spirits and have a number of magic abilities. The illustrations reflect the emotions and content of each chapter, and the magic of Petersburg is not only used as the background for the adventure story but also appears as a living creature, ever-changing but still unchanged.

As the project managers put it, "The tradition to hold the Day of the March Cat at the Hermitage, uniting people of different ages - such as schoolchildren and students, members of the Hermitage, inhabitants and visitors of Petersburg, all of them caring for our little friends - will always continue. Originated several years ago, the Day of the March Cat will be held on 28 March and will remind us, once again, about cats that are not just friends but are a beautiful help to the country’s largest museum."

Hermitage News

Neilikka
09-29-2008, 05:08 PM
The first who told us about The Hermitage cats was turkuaz in her yesterday's topic in Russian.
Thank her very much!

Lucker
09-29-2008, 09:38 PM
The last one was General Tubby's .
I see Moddy removed the shot on grounds of decency .

Neilikka
09-30-2008, 02:00 AM
Ramon, it would be so much interesting to read something written by you about The British Museum Cats. Are you aware of their existence?
How is your King Kong cat?:)

Lucker
09-30-2008, 06:53 AM
I know nothing about any cats in the British Museum .
However , if I tell you about that bastard Ginger animal called Garfield you will accuse me of making things up .
I was "in loco parentis "until last Friday morning -- total of 12 days.
On Thursday night he disappeared and has never been seen since !!!!!!!!!!!
Logically he must have got out of the front door when I left but how I did not feel or see him is beyond my comprehension .
Since then life has been hell --- walking the streets , walking the four and a half acres of communal gardens we have , putting up notices and photos in every street , phoning rescue shelters and checking the web on Lost Cats Brighton --- yes , it exists .
I could write a small book about that psycho loner and the dampening effect he has had on me and my previously vibrant personality .
Privately I dislike him and I have never felt that way about a cat before . Allegedly he has been sighted on at least three occasions . He should be starving by now and today , for the first time since his break out , it is nasty weather with rain .
Perhaps we will find the bedraggled little monster at dusk tonight .

alenika
09-30-2008, 08:01 AM
but how I did not feel or see him is beyond my comprehension. It doesn't amuse me :becky:

Lucker
09-30-2008, 08:35 AM
What has amusement got to do with it ?

alenika
09-30-2008, 12:01 PM
What has amusement got to do with it ? ok, surprise fits better - it doesn't surprise me that you didn't see something :becky:

Lucker
09-30-2008, 12:25 PM
Well I hope you are not surprised when you don't notice me pulling up behind you with a big whip in my hand !!
Can you fly to Tiblisi and then get into Grozny ? Is there any travel yet into Chechnya for Tourists ?

Neilikka
09-30-2008, 01:06 PM
Ramon, why should Alenika fly to Tbilisi? She lives there.
Your stories about that Garfield Cat is the best written by you so far. I think, you should give up politics, let it! Your hilarious stories about Ginger Cat are fascinating and may become bestsellers. I am not joking! I have never realized what a tender heart can have such a tough person like you. Keep us informed about King Kong Cat, please.

statajack
09-30-2008, 01:08 PM
Well I hope you are not surprised when you don't notice me pulling up behind you with a big whip in my hand !!
Can you fly to Tiblisi and then get into Grozny ? Is there any travel yet into Chechnya for Tourists ?

That whip was confiscated by matron three weeks ago. How did you get it back again? :horn:

Neilikka
09-30-2008, 01:16 PM
We have our own weapon against whips. Any household utensils will do!