F. M. Dostoevsky at the Stackenschneider Salon (How and Thanks to Whom the St. Petersburg Relics Ended Up in Omsk) Cover Image

Ф. М. Достоевский в салоне Штакеншнейдеров (как и благодаря кому петербургские реликвии оказались в Омске)
F. M. Dostoevsky at the Stackenschneider Salon (How and Thanks to Whom the St. Petersburg Relics Ended Up in Omsk)

Author(s): Yulia P. Zarodova
Subject(s): Cultural history, Museology & Heritage Studies, Family and social welfare
Published by: Петрозаводский государственный университет
Keywords: F. M. Dostoevsky; E. A. Shtakenshneider; M. A. Shtakenshneider; M. V. DolininoIvanskaya; V. V. Dolinino-Ivansky; E. V. Dolinino-Ivansky; A. F. Palashenkov; Shtakenshneider Literary Salon;

Summary/Abstract: Based on archival sources, the article examines and introduces into scientific circulation the biographic facts about the family members of the famous St. Petersburg architect A. I. Shtakenshneider — M. V. Dolinino-Ivanskaya and her closest relatives who lived in St. Petersburg, Omsk and Riga. Dolinino-Ivanskaya became the last keeper of family heirlooms associated with F. M. Dostoevsky, who was a frequent guest in the house of her ancestors. Her mother Maria Andreevna (married name Popova) was the seventh child in the family of Shtakenshneider, and she preserved some of the furniture from the famous literary salon owned by her sister Elena Andreevna. Currently, the pieces of furniture from the salon living room are in the permanent exhibition of the Omsk Literary Museum named after F. M. Dostoevsky. Another part of the collection, which comprises an album of E. A. Shtakenshneider, a death mask of A. S. Pushkin and a table lamp, is kept in the funds of the Omsk Museum of Local History. M. V. Dolinino-Ivanskaya’s letters to A. F. Palashenkov, which traces the history of the donation of these objects to the Omsk Museum of Local History, and as well as provides information about their existence are published and commented on for the first time in the appendix to the article.

  • Issue Year: 9/2022
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 116-135
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: Russian