Palace of Wonders. Child friendly Hermitage Tour
The price includes
-
guide work
-
entrance tickets
-
souvenirs for children
The price doesn’t include
-
transportation
Attractions
About tour
The child-oriented tour of the Hermitage Museum Palace of Wonders was prepared for five-to-nine-year olds. Tours for adults can’t work for kids of this age group – they just make them bored. Some special approach is needed here. That’s exactly the reason why we will get the kids see not a museum but a real palace where real princes and princesses lived a while ago. Five-and-six-year olds will get a class of dos and don’ts of polite manners at court. Girls will practice hand-fan language while boys will get to see the famous Hall of Knights. Needless to say, we will see a real-life Tsar’s throne chair which wasn’t used only by the monarch but also by those residents of the palace who guarded it from mice. Those will be a separate topic. Older kids will get to know how a real German princess started an arts collection of her own and what the outcome was. We will also show them the most prominent pieces of that collection. And also kids who get the Palace of Wonders tour will see the magical Peacock Clock, visit a room which has 332 portraits on the walls, none of them being a female portrait, get to know what famous tables at the Pavilion Hall are made of, will see the Hanging Garden, which is the eighth wonder of the world, and get a small remembrance of the tour. Excursion to the Hermitage for parents with children. If your child is 10+ years old, you are welcome to book an adult tour of the Hermitage Museum but please make sure you state it in the Comments that the tour needs to be adjusted to teenager’s interests. Ten years is a borderline age, and it’s up to you to decide whether you book an adult tour of the Hermitage or the kid-oriented tour Palace of Wonders for your child.
Calculate the cost
Number of people
Number of people
Russian Ballet
The price includes
-
Guide services
-
Transport (4 hours)
-
Entrance tickets
-
Port fee
-
Lunch
-
Visa service
The price doesn’t include
-
Umbrella
-
Blanket
-
Drinks
Russian ballet is primarily a classical ballet that preserves the traditions of the 19th century. This does not mean that we do not have a modern ballet, we have one, and it is a very good modern ballet (for example, the Boris Eifman troupe). But it is classical ballet that is truly unique, because nowhere else in the world is it raised to such a high level.