Informatsionnyy Stend Pamyatnik Partizanskomu Dvizheniyu
About Informatsionnyy Stend Pamyatnik Partizanskomu Dvizheniyu
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Updated June 11, 2025
Памятник партизанскому движению – bibliopskov.ru
## Informatsionnyy Stend “Pamyatnik Partizanskomu Dvizheniyu” (Memorial “Pamyat”) — what it is, and why it matters
Informatsionnyy stend means an information stand—typically a board placed at or near a memorial to explain what you’re looking at and what it commemorates. In this case, it refers to the interpretive signage for the Memorial “Pamyat” (“Memory”) dedicated to the partisan movement in the Pskov region.
This memorial is in Pskov, a city in northwestern Russia, about 20 km east of the Estonian border, on the Velikaya River.
Your coordinates (57.8089616, 28.3397457) place the point in Pskov (Pskov Oblast), and your dataset labels it as a hiking area—which makes sense in the practical “walkable green-space” sense, because the memorial is described as being at/near a garden/park setting in local itineraries and visitor descriptions.
## Where it sits in the city
Multiple visitor-facing descriptions place the memorial at the start of Pskov’s Botanical Garden / Summer Garden area, reached when leaving Victory Square (ploshchad Pobedy) and entering the garden territory.
A separate local write-up describes the memorial as being near the intersection of the Okolny Gorod (Outer City) wall line and Sovetskaya Street, on the outer side of the wall.
Taken together, these descriptions are consistent with a memorial placed in a historic-city-edge green corridor, where a walk naturally includes both landscaped paths and remnants of the old fortifications.
## What you’ll actually see on site
Visitor descriptions and photographs consistently describe a composition of several large boulders/fieldstones, arranged as a sculptural group rather than a figurative statue.
One detailed visitor description states:
– The memorial is called “Pamyat” and commemorates the partisan movement in the Pskov region.
– It was created in 1985, designed to a project by V. P. Smirnov, and timed to the 40th anniversary of Victory (a phrasing commonly used for the end of WWII in the Soviet context).
– A commemorative plaque mounted on a boulder includes specific figures about partisan units and participants in the region during the 1941–1944 occupation period: 29 partisan brigades and more than 57,000 people.
That’s the core “factual payload” the information stand is there to anchor: what happened here (regionally), who is being remembered, and why this spot carries weight.
## How to experience it well (without adding mythology)
Because this is an information-stand-plus-memorial setup, you don’t need a long “route” to make the visit meaningful—what you need is context and attention:
– Start with the stand: interpretive signage is meant to prevent the memorial from becoming anonymous stonework. Even when the text is brief, it usually names the memorial, dates it, and states the commemorated group.
– Read the plaque details: the memorial’s plaque is described as carrying the key quantitative statement about partisan brigades and personnel in the region. Those numbers are part of the memorial’s intended message.
– Notice the setting: the memorial is repeatedly described as positioned at the start of a garden area (Botanical/Summer Garden), which changes how you move through it: you’re not “arriving at a building,” you’re passing through a threshold between square/city fabric and green space.
## Practical visit notes for travelers (facts + what to verify)
### Timing and access
Sources accessible here describe the memorial in relation to public outdoor space (Victory Square → garden territory), which implies it is outdoors and publicly accessible as part of a walking area.
What to verify locally: seasonal path maintenance, lighting, and any temporary restrictions in the garden area (these can change and aren’t reliably captured in static write-ups).
### What to bring
Nothing specialized is required beyond what you’d take for an urban walk. The memorial is discussed in the context of strolling through a garden/summer garden area.
### Respectful behavior
This is a WWII-related memorial site. Standard memorial etiquette applies (quiet voices, no climbing on stones, no posed “comedy” photos on/with the memorial). The site exists explicitly to commemorate wartime resistance and loss.
## Two contextual internal link opportunities (if your site has them)
(These are link ideas, not claims about existing pages.)
– Link to a broader city guide: “Pskov Travel Guide: Old Town Walks, River Views, and Key Memorial Sites” (slug idea: /pskov/)
– Link to a thematic roundup: “WWII Memory Sites in Northwestern Russia: How to Visit Respectfully and What You’ll Learn” (slug idea: /world-war-ii-memorials-northwestern-russia/)
## Outdated-data flags (what’s stable vs what’s not)
– Likely stable: the memorial’s name (“Pamyat”), its date (1985), its attribution to V. P. Smirnov, and the plaque’s quoted figures are presented as fixed interpretive elements.
– Potentially outdated: visitor-platform excerpts and older itinerary pages can lag behind on-the-ground reality (paths rerouted, signage updated, landscaping changed). Treat experiential details from reviews as time-bound snapshots.
If you want, paste any text you have from the on-site stand (even a partial transcription), and I’ll rewrite it into a tight, reader-friendly “What you’re looking at” section—staying strictly within what the stand actually says.
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