
Facade of the Livadia Palace

An Italian courtyard of the Livadia Palace.
'Livadia Palace' (, , ) was a summer retreat of the last Russian tsar,
Nicholas II, and his family in
Livadiya,
Crimea in southern
Ukraine. The
Yalta Conference was held there in
1945, when the palace housed the apartments of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and other members of the American delegation.
Today the palace houses a museum, but it is sometimes used by the Ukrainian authorities for international summits.
Construction history
Formerly a possession of the
Potocki family, Livadia became a summer residence of the Russian imperial family in the
1860s, when architect
Ippolito Monighetti built a large palace, a small palace, and a church there. The residence was frequented by
Alexander II of Russia, while his successor
Alexander III died in the smaller palace. It was perhaps disagreeable associations with the latter circumstance that induced his son Nicholas to have both palaces torn down and replaced with a larger structure.
In
1909, Nicholas and his wife travelled to
Italy, where they were captivated by
Renaissance palaces shown to them by
Victor Emmanuel III. Upon their return, they engaged
Nikolay Krasnov,
Yalta's most fashionable architect, responsible for the grand ducal residences in
Koreiz, to prepare plans for a brand new imperial palace. The tsar's diary testifies that the design was much discussed in the imperial family; it was decided that all four facades of the palace should look different. Construction works lasted for seventeen months; the new palace was inaugurated on
11 September,
1911.
Architecture

The Grand Livadia Palace, east facade with a Florentine tower, October 2006
The Livadia Palace is built of white Crimean
granite in the
Neo-Renaissance style. The edifice features an arched portico of
Carrara marble, a spatious Arabic
patio, an Italian
patio, a Florentine tower, ornate
Bramantesque windows, a "balcony-belvedere", and multiple bays with jasper vases. A gallery connects the palace with a neo-Byzantine church of the Exaltation of the Cross, built by Monighetti in 1866.
The palace contains 116 rooms, with interiors furnished in different styles. There are a
Pompeian vestibule, an English billiard-room, a
Neo-baroque dining room, and a
Jacob-style study of maple wood, which elicited particular admiration of Nicholas II.
Online references
★
Livadia Palace photo album
★
History and architecture
★
History and views of the palace