Giidindus Final Test kordamine
in Tallinn. A two-aisled church.
St Olaf - St. Olaf's 124m spire is a Tallinn landmark, and was the tallest building in Europe
between 1549 and 1625. An old legend claims that the church was built to attract more merchant
ships to the town by a mysterious craftsman who promised to work for free if the townspeople
discovered his name (Olev). In reality, the church took its name from the canonised Norwegian
king, Olav Havaldsson. The first mention of the church dates to 1267
Kadriorg Palace
Kadriorg Palace /1718 25 juuli ka kadrioru päev jäta meelde!) (Estonian: Kadrioru loss, German:
Catherinethal) is a Petrine Baroquepalace built for Catherine I of Russia by Peter the Great in Tallinn, Estonia. Both
the Estonian and the German name for the palace means "Catherine's valley". It was built after the Great Northern
War to Nicola Michetti's designs by Gaetano Chiaveri andMikhail Zemtsov