In 1742, the land around the village of Mikhaylovskoye was granted to
Abram Petrovich Gannibal by empress
Elizabeth. Pushkin's mother, Nadezhda Osipovna Pushkina (Gannibal), was a granddaughter of Abram Gannibal. Pushkin visited the estate on a regular basis, and was also exiled there between 1824 and 1826. He was
killed in a duel in January 1837 in Saint Petersburg, and buried in
Svyatogorsky Monastery in what is now Pushkinskiye Gory. The estate remained in the family until 1899, when the state bought it from the poet's son Grigory Pushkin. An unsuccessful attempt to open a small-scale museum was made in 1911, and subsequently during the
October Revolution in 1917 the estate was burnt down. On March 17, 1922 Mikhaylovskoye,
Trigorskoye, and the tomb of Pushkin in Svyatogorsky Monastery were declared a state monument and opened as a museum (the Pushkin Museum Reserve). In 1936, the whole Svyatogorsky Monastery was added, as well as the estate of
Petrovskoye, which formerly belonged to Pushkin's uncle, and adjacent areas. The museum was looted and badly damaged during
World War II; after the war, extensive restoration work was undertaken. In 1992, the monastery was transferred to the property of
Russian Orthodox Church, and in 1995, the museum was expanded, and renamed Mikhaylovskoye Museum Reserve. ==Collections==