Free (small donations encouraged/expected)
Hours: Monday-Thursday 11:00-16:00
Twelve Collegia Building, Mendeleevskaya Liniya on Vasilievskiy Island
Must call in advance to organize a visit +7 (812) 328-9744
www.eng.spbu.ru/university/culture/museums/mendeleev
Dimitri Mendeleev, best known as the creator of the Periodic Table of Elements, is a Russian national hero and one of the foremost thinkers of the 20th century. His memory and the legacy of his work is well preserved in his Memorial Apartment Museum at St. Petersburg State University (SPbSU). The apartment where the museum is housed was the home of Mendeleev and his family from 1866-1890 while he was a professor at SPbSU. The museum contains several exhibits that reveal to patrons details of Mendeleev’s life from childhood to his death including his two marriages and most famous achievement – the creation of the Periodic Table of Elements.

It is sometimes said that the organizational pattern came to him in a dream, but the museum staff believes the more likely story that the vision spontaneously came upon him while reading a letter from one of his family’s properties – a cheese factory – and as proof the museum enshrines a copy of the cheese factory letter on which the very first sketches of his periodic table were made. The highlight of the museum is Mendeleev’s study, which has been meticulously restored through photographic evidence to the exact state in which he used it. The study is home to a large library with not only scientific texts and research journals, but the entire works of adventure novelist Alexandre Dumas (in the original French) that Mendeleev would read when he needed a mental rest!

The museum staff is cheerful and energetic. Our guide spoke English well and was excited to tell us the little known facts of the great scientist’s life. The standard guided tour lasts about 40 minutes. Although small, the details of the museum could occupy your time for the better part of 2 hours if you choose to admire every exhibit.
The Memorial Apartment Museum of Dimitri Mendeleev is definitely worth a visit if you are interested in science, Russian history of the late 19th century, or just want a short, stimulating break from the hustle of the Hermitage! The museum is small, so groups of 10 or less are best, but ask about size when you call and make your reservation.




