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Entries
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Russian Bank for Foreign Trade
Russian Bank for Foreign Trade
Categories /
Economy/Finances and Credit
RUSSIAN BANK FOR FOREIGN TRADE, a private joint-stock bank. Founded in 1871, the bank shared the 3d and 4th places with Azovsko-Donskoy Bank before World War I of 1914-18. It had 76 branches. The major activities of the bank included financing domestic and foreign trade. The bank also had a significant influence in the sugar industry and financed other industries as a junior member of various bank groups. The bank cooperated closely with the St. Petersburg International Bank from 1881. It had close links to German capital. The bank had its own building at 32 Bolshaya Morskaya Street constructed by architect V. A. Schreter. It was nationalized after October 1917. References: Бовыкин В. И., Петров Ю. А. Коммерческие банки Российской империи. М., 1994. С. 142-147; Петербург: История банков / Б. В. Ананьич и др. СПб., 2001. С. 146, 200, 238-239. V. S. Solomko.
Persons
Schreter Viktor Alexandrovich
Addresses
Bolshaya Morskaya St./Saint Petersburg, city, house 32
Bibliographies
Петров Ю. А., Бовыкин В. И. Коммерческие банки Российской империи. М., 1994
Петербург: История банков / Б. В. Ананьич, С. Г. Беляев, З. В. Дмитриева и др. СПб., 2001
The subject Index
Azovsko-Donskoy Commercial Bank
St. Petersburg International Commercial Bank
Chronograph
1871
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Art Bureau of N. E. Dobychina
ART BUREAU OF N. E. DOBYCHINA, agency negotiating between artists and the public for the purpose of sales and hire. Opened in the fall of 1911 by N. E. Dobychina (1884-1950)
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Bank Buildings (entry)
BANK BUILDINGS, public buildings designed for housing finance and credit institutions. The first special bank buildings were the Assignation Bank building at Sadovaya Street (1783-90, architect G
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Banks (entry)
BANKS, credit system institutions. St. Petersburg has been the central element of the system from the time it came into being through 1917. The first banks in Russia were founded on the initiative of the state and financed from the treasury
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Eliseev Family, merchants and bankers
ELISEEV FAMILY, merchants, entrepreneurs, public figures. Progenitor Peter Eliseevich Eliseev (1775-1825, St. Petersburg), a peasant from Yaroslavl Province, opened a greengrocery in St. Petersburg in 1813
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Morskaya Bolshaya Street
MORSKAYA BOLSHAYA STREET (in 1920-93 - Herzen Street, after A.I. Herzen), located from the General Staff Arch to Kryukov Canal. It was constructed in the early 18th century, in Morskaya settlement (hence the name)
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Natural stone
NATURAL STONE. Since the early 18th century, Putilovo slab limestone has been used in construction (quarried by Putilovskaya Mountain near the mouth of the Volkhov River)
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Schreter V. A. , (1839-1901), architect
SCHRETER Viktor Alexandrovich (1839-1901), architect, lecturer, representative of the transitional rationalistic style from Eclecticism to Art Nouveau. In 1856-58, studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in the class of L.L
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St. Petersburg International Commercial Bank
ST. PETERSBURG INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK, a joint-stock commercial bank, opened in 1869. The volume of transactions was high enough for the bank to rank 2nd among Russian joint-stock banks by 1914
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State University of Technology and Design, St. Petersburg
STATE UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY AND DESIGN, St. Petersburg (SUTD) (18 Bolshaya Morskaya Street) was founded in 1930 as the Institute of Textile and Light Industry (in 1935 it was named after S.M. Kirov). It received its present day name in 1992
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Timiryazev V.I. (1849-1919), entrepreneur, statesman
TIMIRYAZEV Vladimir Ivanovich (1849-1919), statesman and entrepreneur, Full Privy Counsellor (1909), Chief Staff Master (1909). Graduated from the Faculty of Mathematics at Petersburg University in 1873
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