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In the very heart of St. Petersburg stands a magnificently proportioned, medium-sized palace, designed in the mid-eighteenth century by the Italian architect Bartolomeo Rastrelli. The fine old palace was given by the Emperor Paul to the exiled Order of the Hospitalers of Saint John of Jerusalem (the Knights of Malta) in 1796. In 1810, Alexander I gave this palace to the Corps of Pages as the headquarters. It was a gift with great symbolic meaning. The Knights left the Palace with a Catholic chapel in the garden and Maltese Crosses everywhere. The crosses and the chapel remained and the young Pages took very seriously the thought that they were the heirs of the Order, adopting many of its traditions as their own and the white Maltese Cross as their insignia.



Imperial Corps of Pages Building : St. Petersburg
ca. 1858

Code of Conduct : St. Petersburg
1900

Code of Conduct : St. Petersburg
1900

Page and Page of Chamber : St. Petersburg
Ca. 1802-1807




Pages in Uniforms : St. Petersburg
1896

General Nikolai Alekseevich Epanchin : St. Petersburg
1902

N. A. Epanchin. Typescript memoirs : Paris
1930

N. A. Epanchin. Typescript memoirs : Paris
1930

N. A. Epanchin. Na sluzhbe triokh imperatorov. : Nashe Nasledie: Moscow
1996

List of Imperial Corps of Pages Graduates, 1810-1914 : Polushkin: New York
1923

List of Imperial Corps of Pages Graduates, 1810-1914 : Polushkin: New York
1923

Emblem of the Imperial Corps of Pages : St. Petersburg
1915

Artillery Department of the Imperial Corps of Pages : St. Petersburg
1881



Infantry Department of the Imperial Corps of Pages : St. Petersburg
1887

Cavalry Department of the Imperial Corps of Pages : St. Petersburg
1886
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