Gully of Petrushino (Russian: Петрушинская балка), or Gully of Death (Балка смерти from German: Todesschlucht), is a site on the outskirts of Taganrog, Russia, at which 7,000 Soviet civilians, mostly Jews, were massacred between 1941 and 1943 by the German army, with the assistance of non-German divisions, during their occupation of Taganrog.
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2.2 km
The Old Byzantium bay is an ice-free bay of elongated arc-shaped form on the northern shore of Taganrog Bay in Azov Sea. It is located within the territories of Taganrog city and Petrushino town. The bay extends to the mainland at 1.25 km, the width of bay's entrance is 5.8 km. On its northern coast there is a city beach, which occupies 2.4 km of coastline.
3.2 km
Angel-Warrior Monument is a monument dedicated to Czechs and Slovaks, who were taken prisoner during World War I and Russian Civil War. It is situated in the city of Taganrog, Rostov Oblast, Russia at Taganrog Old Cemetery.
3.3 km
The Monument of Cathopoul, is a monument, in the form of an angel with a cross, on the crypt of an Italian merchant of Greek origin, Philip Katopul, in the old city cemetery of Taganrog, Rostov Oblast, Russia.
3.3 km
The Chapel of Saint Pavel of Taganrog is a place of worship, which is located at Street Lagerny, 2, in Taganrog, Rostov Region. The chapel was first erected in 1905 at the burial place of Pavel Pavlovich Stozhkov. The religious denomination of the chapel is orthodox.
3.5 km
The House of Diligence is a building at 114 Gogolevsky Lane in Taganrog that was built at the end of the 19th century. The house remained until the 21st century, but has now been converted into a domestic residence.