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==External link==
==External link==
*[http://www.sablino.ru/oblast/starov1.php Ivan Starov: life and works] (in Russian)
*[http://www.sablino.ru/oblast/starov1.php Ivan Starov: life and works] (in Russian)

[[ru:Старов, Иван Егорович]]
{{commons|Ivan Starov}}

[[Category:Russian architects|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]
[[Category:Russian architects|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]
[[Category:Neoclassical architects|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]
[[Category:Neoclassical architects|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]
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[[Category:1745 births|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]
[[Category:1745 births|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]
[[Category:1808 deaths|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]
[[Category:1808 deaths|Starov, Ivan Yegorovich]]

[[ru:Старов, Иван Егорович]]

Revision as of 09:42, 9 March 2007

Portait by Stepan Shchukin

Ivan Yegorovich Starov (Russian: Ива́н Его́рович Ста́ров) (17451808) was a Russian architect from St. Petersburg who devised the master plans for Yaroslavl, Voronezh, Pskov, Dnipropetrovsk, Mykolaiv, and many other towns in Russia and Ukraine. His radial urban master plan for Yaroslavl, cleverly highlighting dozens historic churches and towers, is recognized as one of the World Heritage Sites.

Starov was one of the first graduates of the Moscow University College (17551758) and of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1758–1762). He continued his education in Paris (1762–1767) and Rome (1767–1768), becoming apprenticed to Charles De Wailly and other fashionable architects of his day. Back in Russia, he delivered lectures in the Academy of Arts, which nominated him academician (1769) and professor (1785). Starov held the post of the principal architect of St. Petersburg between 1772 and 1774. After that, he worked extensively for Prince Potemkin, helping him to found the major cities of New Russia.

Works

Apart from urban planning, Starov was a leading representative of the early neoclassical architecture in Russia. His major projects chronicle the transition of national architecture from the late Rinaldiesque baroque of the 1760s to the magnificent Neoclassical palaces of the 1780s:

File:Taitsy.jpg
Demidov chateau in Taitsy near Gatchina, 1770s, is part of the World Heritage Site Saint Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments.
File:Yarplan.jpg
Radial urban master plan for the town of Kostroma (1781).