Explore near Fire Pot Monument: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Fire Pot Monument Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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37 Reviews
Margaret W
Quaint
Built to honour a successful tea merchant this sculpture of a large samovar with a teapot on top and cups and saucers by the tap is a tribute to the former glory of this trading town.
Interesting facts about the samwar and tea were learned from this monument. One of them is that still in the USSR, the yellow boxes with the elephant and the inscription "Indian tea" fascinated in Kungur. And what is now in ...
To cook a delicious tea, it turns out, it is necessary to cook!
Original Text
At the end of the 18th century, the production of copper self-producing self-producing by Ivan Kozhevnikov begins in Kungur. In the 19th century, the self-producing family of Kozhevnikov was known far beyond the Kungur. They were supplied ...
Historical fact - in the tsarist Russia over 60% of all tea trade was controlled by merchants from Kungur, at those times Kungur was considered the tea capital of the Perm province. Today, about the tea past of the city on ...
Quaint
Built to honour a successful tea merchant this sculpture of a large samovar with a teapot on top and cups and saucers by the tap is a tribute to the former glory of this trading town.
Tea anyone?
This is just a "sculpture/monument" in a park in the heart of Kungur. But I loved it. Just a quant photo opportunity.
Tea Grybushin.
Interesting facts about the samwar and tea were learned from this monument. One of them is that still in the USSR, the yellow boxes with the elephant and the inscription "Indian tea" fascinated in Kungur. And what is now in ...
To cook a delicious tea, it turns out, it is necessary to cook!
At the end of the 18th century, the production of copper self-producing self-producing by Ivan Kozhevnikov begins in Kungur. In the 19th century, the self-producing family of Kozhevnikov was known far beyond the Kungur. They were supplied ...
I liked it.
Historical fact - in the tsarist Russia over 60% of all tea trade was controlled by merchants from Kungur, at those times Kungur was considered the tea capital of the Perm province. Today, about the tea past of the city on ...