Concepts
Civilizations/Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes
Governors
Historic Moments

Introduction

Wonders

Alhambra

Amundsen-Scott Research Station

Angkor Wat

Apadana

Big Ben

Biosphère

Bolshoi Theatre

Broadway

Casa de Contratación

Chichen Itza

Colosseum

Colossus

Cristo Redentor

Eiffel Tower

Estádio do Maracanã

Etemenanki

Forbidden City

Golden Gate Bridge

Great Bath

Great Library

Great Lighthouse

Great Zimbabwe

Hagia Sophia

Hanging Gardens

Hermitage

Huey Teocalli

Jebel Barkal

Kilwa Kisiwani

Kotoku-in

Machu Picchu

Mahabodhi Temple

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Meenakshi Temple

Mont St. Michel

Oracle

Országház

Oxford University

Panama Canal

Petra

Potala Palace

Pyramids

Ruhr Valley

St. Basil's Cathedral

Statue of Liberty

Statue of Zeus

Stonehenge

Sydney Opera House

Taj Mahal

Temple of Artemis

Terracotta Army

Torre de Belém

University of Sankore

Venetian Arsenal

Projects

Hermitage
Description
Must be built along a River.
Historical Context
The core of what is today the famed Hermitage in St. Petersburg encompasses the monumental Winter Palace, residence of the Tsars since 1764 AD when Catherine the Great completed the palace on a scale to reflect the might and power of Imperial Russia. Catherine declared it her “treasure,” and proceeded to fill it with treasures – Renaissance paintings, jeweled and gilded crafts (the likes of Fabergé eggs, for instance), the crown jewels, and other trinkets. After adding several extensions to the palace and some reorganizing, in 1852 Nicholas I opened it to the public. And the Tsars kept adding to the collection. With the February Revolution of 1917, the building briefly housed the Provisional Government, until the Bolsheviks seized power in October and declared it a gift to the proletariat. Now spread across five buildings, the Hermitage is one of the largest museums in the world, with over three million art and historical items in its collection, including the largest gathering of paintings in the world.
PortraitSquare
icon_building_hermitage
“Museums are on the front lines of the fight for culture, of good with evil – in any case, of the fight against platitudes and primitiveness.”
– Mikhail Piotrovsky, Director of the State Hermitage

Traits

Removed if game started after
Atomic Era
+3 Great Artist points per turn.
+4 Great Works of Art slots
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Civic
icon_civic_natural_history
Natural History
Production Cost
Base Cost: 1450 Production
PortraitSquare
icon_building_hermitage
Description
Must be built along a River.
Historical Context
The core of what is today the famed Hermitage in St. Petersburg encompasses the monumental Winter Palace, residence of the Tsars since 1764 AD when Catherine the Great completed the palace on a scale to reflect the might and power of Imperial Russia. Catherine declared it her “treasure,” and proceeded to fill it with treasures – Renaissance paintings, jeweled and gilded crafts (the likes of Fabergé eggs, for instance), the crown jewels, and other trinkets. After adding several extensions to the palace and some reorganizing, in 1852 Nicholas I opened it to the public. And the Tsars kept adding to the collection. With the February Revolution of 1917, the building briefly housed the Provisional Government, until the Bolsheviks seized power in October and declared it a gift to the proletariat. Now spread across five buildings, the Hermitage is one of the largest museums in the world, with over three million art and historical items in its collection, including the largest gathering of paintings in the world.
“Museums are on the front lines of the fight for culture, of good with evil – in any case, of the fight against platitudes and primitiveness.”
– Mikhail Piotrovsky, Director of the State Hermitage

Traits

Removed if game started after
Atomic Era
+3 Great Artist points per turn.
+4 Great Works of Art slots
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Civic
icon_civic_natural_history
Natural History
Production Cost
Base Cost: 1450 Production
Language
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