Ciniselli Circus

Coordinates: 59°56′19″N 30°20′28″E / 59.938569°N 30.34117°E / 59.938569; 30.34117
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Circus Ciniselli, 2012

Circus Ciniselli (Russian: Цирк Чинизелли) was the first brick-built circus in Russia; it is situated beside the Fontanka in Saint Petersburg.

The building, which still stands, was opened on 26 December 1877, with a large stage (13 meters in diameter) and stables (housing 150 horses). The architect was Vasily Kenel.

The Italian circus performer Gaetano Ciniselli (1815-1881) first visited Saint Petersburg in 1845, as part of the troupe of Alessandro Guerra. He returned to Russia in 1869, this time working with Carl-Magnus Hinne, his brother-in-law, in his circuses in Moscow and Saint Petersbrug. Ciniselli settled in Russia, and inherited Hinne's circuses in 1875.[1]

The Ciniselli family managed the circus until 1919, when they emigrated. They would often lease the building to stage high-profile entertainment events, such as the World Wrestling Championship in 1898 and

Maria Andreyeva and Feodor Chaliapin
.

Two halls in the building house the first circus museum in the world, opened in 1928 and boasting more than 80,000 exhibits as of 2002.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Gaetano Ciniselli, founder of the St. Petersburg circus".

External links

59°56′19″N 30°20′28″E / 59.938569°N 30.34117°E / 59.938569; 30.34117