
thumb|right |upright=1.15|Kuskovo Church and Bell Tower thumb|right|upright=1.15 |Tapestry Room of Kuskovo Palace thumb|right |upright=1.15|Everyday bedchamber of Kuskovo Palace thumb|right|upright=1.15 |Dining Room of Kuskovo Palace thumb|right|upright=0.85 |Hermitage in English landscape garden of Kuskovo thumb|right|upright=1.15|Garden à la Française and grotto at Kuskovo thumb|right|upright=1.15 |Service of Sèvres porcelain given by Napoleon to Czar Alexander I in 1807, on display in the Dancing Hall.
via Wikipedia infobox
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thumb|right |upright=1.15|Kuskovo Church and Bell Tower thumb|right|upright=1.15 |Tapestry Room of Kuskovo Palace thumb|right |upright=1.15|Everyday bedchamber of Kuskovo Palace thumb|right|upright=1.15 |Dining Room of Kuskovo Palace thumb|right|upright=0.85 |Hermitage in English landscape garden of Kuskovo thumb|right|upright=1.15|Garden à la Française and grotto at Kuskovo thumb|right|upright=1.15 |Service of Sèvres porcelain given by Napoleon to Czar Alexander I in 1807, on display in the Dancing Hall.
Kuskovo () was the summer country house and estate of the Sheremetev family. Built in the mid-18th century, it was originally situated several miles to the east of Moscow but now is part of the East District of the city. It was one of the first great summer country estates of the Russian nobility, and one of the few near Moscow still preserved. Today the estate is the home of the Russian State Museum of Ceramics, and the park is a favourite place of recreation for Muscovites.
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via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).