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Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens

Coordinates: 59°56′55″N 30°23′42″E / 59.9486°N 30.395°E / 59.9486; 30.395
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Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens
The Smolny Institute in 1823, by Stepan Galaktionov
Location
Map
Coordinates59°56′55″N 30°23′42″E / 59.9486°N 30.395°E / 59.9486; 30.395
Information
Former nameImperial Educational Society of Noble Maidens
Established5 May 1764 (Julian calendar)
Closed1919 (Russia)
1932 (exile in Serbia)

The Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens of Saint Petersburg (Russian: Смольный институт благородных девиц Санкт-Петербурга) was the first women's educational institution in Russia that laid the foundation for women's education in the country. It was Europe's first public educational institution for girls.[1][2]

History

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Institute under Catherine the Second

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It was originally called the Imperial Educational Society of Noble Maidens. It was founded on the initiative of Ivan Betskoy and in accordance with a decree signed by Catherine the Great on May 16, 1764. This society, as stated in the decree, was created in order to "give the state educated women, good mothers, useful members of the family and society". The name Smolny comes from the Smolny Palace, built in 1729 by Peter the Great near the village of Smolny, in which there was a tar factory.

Picture by Alexey Venetsianov "The Intercession of the Mother of God for the Pupils of the Smolny Institute". Between 1832 and 1835

Catherine, an admirer of the progressive ideas of Montaigne, Locke, and Fénelon, wanted to establish an educational institution similar to the Saint–Cyr Institute near Paris. According to its charter, girls were supposed to enter an institution no older than six years of age and stay there for twelve years, and a receipt was taken from their parents that they would not demand them back under any pretext before the expiration of this period. The Empress hoped, by removing children for a long time from an ignorant environment and returning an already developed and ennobled girl there, to help soften morals and create a "new breed of people". The Senate was ordered to print and send the charter of this institution to all the provinces, provinces and cities, "so that each of the nobles could, if he so wishes, entrust his daughters with this established upbringing". The decree provided for the education of two hundred noble maidens in the newly built Novodevichy Convent.

The institute was originally established as a closed privileged educational institution for the daughters of the nobility. A year later, in 1765, a department was opened for "bourgeois" maidens (meaning non-noble, but not serfs). The building for the Meshchansky school was erected by the architect Yury Felten.

Further history

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In 1796, the institute entered the Office of the Institutions of Empress Maria. In 1806, the Smolny Institute was built for the school. This accepted daughters of the hereditary Russian nobility and also of persons no lower in rank than a colonel or a Real State Adviser to the treasury bill. For an annual fee, it prepared them for court and social life.

In 1848, a two-year pedagogical class was opened at the institute for the training of schoolteachers, and the "philistine" department was transformed into the St. Petersburg Alexander School, which in 1891 became the Alexander Institute.

From 1859 to 1862, the class inspector of the institute was Konstantin Ushinsky, who carried out a number of progressive reforms, establishing a new seven-year curriculum with a large number of hours devoted to Russian language and literature, geography, history, natural sciences, etc.. After Ushinsky's forced departure from the institute, all of his major reforms were reversed.

After 1917

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In October 1917, as a result of the October Revolution, the institute, then headed by Princess Vera Golitsyna, moved to Novocherkassk, the centre of the Don Army counter-revolution.[3]

The last Russian release took place in February 1919 in Novocherkassk. In the summer of 1919, with the Russian Civil War intensifying, the institute left Russia and was re-established in Serbia, where it would continue to teach the daughters of white emigres until 1932.[4]

The vacated building of the Smolny Institute was taken up by Lenin as the headquarters of the victorious Bolshevik Party, and as such featured prominently in annals of the October Revolution.

Study at the institute

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Cipher for the best graduates of the Smolny Institute

Initially, the pupils were divided into four ages: from 6 to 9 years, from 9 to 12 years, from 12 to 15 years, from 15 to 18 years. The institution sewed special uniform dresses of a certain color for all the pupils of the institute: at a young age – coffee, in the second – dark blue, in the third – blue and at an older age – white. Brown color symbolized proximity to the earth and was practical, especially for younger children. Lighter colors symbolized increasing education and accuracy. Parents or relatives who assigned the girl to the institute should have given "a written commitment that they, prior to the expiration of the period set for education, will not demand her back under any circumstances".[5]

Pupils of the Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens at a dance lesson (1889)

During the training, special attention was paid to the Law of God and languages (domestic and foreign). The program also included teaching Russian literature, geography, arithmetic, history, music, dancing, drawing, secular manners, various types of economics. The main attention was paid to moral education.

Later, the training period was reduced to 9 years; Empress Maria Fyodorovna believed that "children, for such a long time, are weaned from their parents so that, at the end of the course, they return home with disgust" and in 1797 the youngest age was eliminated; now the pupils were divided into three ages: "blue", "gray" and "white" (senior); in the "philistine branch" began to accept from 10 years.

At the final public exam of students of Smolny, the emperor and his family were usually present. The first graduation from the Institute of Noble Maidens, as well as the philistine school, took place on May 11, 1776. At the end of the institute, the best graduates received a "code" – a gold monogram in the form of the initial of Empress Catherine II, worn on a white bow with gold stripes; in the first issue, the "cipher" was received by the eight best pupils: Alymova, Molchanova (pictured), Rubanovskaya, Levshina, Borshchova, Eropkina, von Valshtein and Nelidova.[6] Subsequently, the cipher was received by 6 to 10 of the best pupils.[7]

According to the head of the scientific and exposition department of the Smolny State Museum, Olga Fedorova, the institutes were happy to break free, of which they had long dreamed;[clarification needed] one of the institutes in her recordings on the album recalled, "how they and Zina "fried" on the piano four hands".[8]

Some students of the institute became maids of honor of the court.

The training course of the institute was equated to the course of girls' high schools.

Notable alumni

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Ekaterina Ivanovna Molchanova, wearing the cipher she was awarded and sitting next to an early vacuum pump, then an extremely expensive piece of advanced scientific equipment. She became a maid of honour to Catherine the Great.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Barbara Alpern Engel (2004). Women in Russia, 1700–2000. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521003186. Archived from the original on 2018-04-01.
  2. ^ Max (2006). "If These Walls... Smolny's Repeated Roles in History". Russian Life. Pages 19–24
  3. ^ An Article in the Encyclopedia Saint Petersburg
  4. ^ "Барышни, Смольный: каким на самом деле был институт благородных девиц". BBC News Русская Служба.
  5. ^ The Historical Outline of the Centennial Life of the Educational Society of Noble Maidens and the Saint Petersburg Alexander School, p. 2.
  6. ^ The Historical Outline of the Centennial Life of the Educational Society of Noble Maidens and the Saint Petersburg Alexander School, p. 14.
  7. ^ The Historical Outline of the Centennial Life of the Educational Society of Noble Maidens and the Saint Petersburg Alexander School, pp. 101–111.
  8. ^ "О чем мечтали институтки? Двадцать два пожелания в альбом благородной девицы". spbvedomosti.ru. Retrieved Jul 27, 2022.

Sources

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