Each city has its own history and places thatit is stored. Often, passing through the streets of your beloved city, you can see that every detail has its value, is tied to something and is its integral part. Sightseeing with which the tourist gets acquainted and appreciated by the resident is a kind of visiting card of the settlement, which allows to say about those stages that were passed in the process of its formation, turning points and memorable events. Among them there are monuments - a way of reverence and exaltation of those whose activities and merits as before a certain city, and before the country are immortalized in the hearts and minds of people. Monuments of Lugansk and their history is a separate world that preserves the memory of the past.
Monuments of Lugansk represent a variety ofpeople and time periods. Among them there is a monument to the author of The Lay of Igor's Host. The name of this person is unknown, but for his great services to the Slavic people his image was immortalized near the building of the regional universal scientific library named after M. Gorky.
In 1981, the monuments of Lugansk were replenishedone that reminds residents of the city of the activities and origins of one of the most outstanding Russian writers and ethnographers Vladimir Ivanovich Dale. The author of "Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language" was born in Lugansk, which was the reason for erecting a monument for him on the 180th anniversary of his birth. It is located on English street, which now bears his name.
Many are impressed by the variety of styles andgenres, which possess the monuments of Lugansk. Among them stands a monument to the great commander, public figure of the Soviet era Kliment Efremovich Voroshilov. Its history is part of the history of Lugansk, because not so long ago this city was called Voroshilovgrad. Starting from work at the locomotive plant, Kliment Efremovich became the recognized leader of the proletariat, commanded the army during the Civil War and made the transition to the Don steppes to protect Tsaritsyn.
Karl Gascoigne is a man who, though not bornin Lugansk, and was not attached to him mentally, but whose activities became the reason that his image was included in the monuments of Lugansk. In 1794, this Scottish engineer and industrial reformer in Russia then gave a small city the impetus for development, as his merits are attributed to the creation of a state-owned iron foundry.