Foto de Sérgio Veludo

Busca hoteles en Óblast de Vólogda
- No te preocupes si cambias de ideaReserva hoteles con cancelación gratuita.
- Escoge lo que tú quierasBusca entre más de un millón de alojamientos de todo el mundo.
Principales ciudades de Óblast de Vólogda

Vólogda
Consulta los precios para estas fechas
Esta noche
Mañana
Este fin de semana
Próximo fin de semana
Inicia sesión y ahorra una media de un 15 % en miles de hoteles
Mejores comentarios sobre hoteles en Óblast de Vólogda
Te acercamos a un mundo de viajes
Otras ciudades en Óblast de Vólogda
- Hoteles de Vólogda
- Hoteles de Ulomskoe
- Hoteles de Sizemskoe
- Hoteles de Nikol'Skoe
- Hoteles de Veliki Ústiug
- Hoteles de Mayskoe
- Hoteles de Kubenskoe
- Hoteles de Vohtozhskoe
- Hoteles de Suhonskoe
- Hoteles de Aleshinskoe
- Hoteles de Noginskoe
- Hoteles de Makino
- Hoteles de Semizer'E
- Hoteles de Pyatovskoe
- Hoteles de Min'Kovskoe
Últimas tendencias en Expedia
General
- Visita Óblast de Sarátov
- Visita Óblast de Leningrado
- Visita Krai de Primorie
- Visita Óblast de Omsk
- Visita Distrito autónomo de Chukotka
- Visita República de Altái
- Visita Óblast de Pskov
- Visita República de Tartaristán
- Visita Óblast de Magadán
- Visita Óblast de Nizhny Novgorod
- Visita Repúbica de Sajá
- Visita República de Baskortostán
- Visita República de Udmurtia
- Visita República de Carelia
- Visita República de Daguestán
- Visita Distrito autónomo de Yamalia-Nenetsia
- Visita República de Buriatia
- Visita República de Tuvá
- Visita Óblast de Oremburgo
- Visita Óblast de Tver
- Visita Óblast de Moscú
- Visita Óblast de Arcángel
- Visita Krai de Kamchatka
- Visita República de Osetia del Norte - Alania
- Visita Óblast de Murmansk
- Visita Óblast de Volgogrado
- Visita Óblast de Kursk
- Visita República de Kabardino-Balkaria

![Totma’s founding date is considered to be the year 1137, on the basis of a letter from the Novgorod Prince Svyatoslav Olgovich.
From the 15th century until the 18th century, Totma remained one of the largest salt cities and at one time was also called Posad Salt Totemskaya or Totemskaya Salt. The 17th century becomes the heyday for Totma, as well as for other cities on the North Dvina waterway. Virtually all foreign trade of the Russian state, due to the lack of access to the Baltic Sea, was carried out through Vologda, Totma, Veliky Ustyug and Arkhangelsk, which contributed to the appearance in Totm of courtyards and representative offices of foreign merchants and trade missions. In just one year, from 500 to 1000 ships passed through the city [6]. The trade value of the city, which was strengthened due to the further development of salt mines, allowed Totme to be one of the richest and most important cities of the Russian kingdom. In the second half of the 18th century, a total of expeditions to the east — to Siberia, to the Far East, and to the shores of the Americas — were carried out by the Totmichians — Kholodilovs, Panovs, Cherepanovs, and a number of others. Companies totem merchants outfitted about 20 expeditions into the Pacific. During these expeditions geographical discoveries were recorded, recorded by science in 1755, maps of a number of islands were made. These expeditions exported 1/5 of all fur produced in the Americas for half a century - a record figure among Russian cities [6]. Fur trade brought tangible profits; so, with the money raised in Siberia, the Totem merchants and sailors had the opportunity to build richly decorated and large enough temples for such a small town: Entrance to Jerusalem, Trinity, Rozhdestvensky. In 1785, Empress Catherine II adopted a decree on giving Totme a coat of arms with a black fox on a golden field: “as a sign of the fact that the inhabitants of this city catch these animals in fishing” [6]. Totmichi proved to be active participants of the Russian-American company, mastered the expanses of the Pacific Ocean, discovered a number of Aleutian and Commander Islands [6]. Totmich Ivan Kuskov on the coast of Northern California near Bodega Bay Bay in 1812, Fort Ross Fortress was founded, which became the most southerly point of Russian America.](https://images.trvl-media.com/place/553248635949090602/11903565-18d7-4e74-8aec-f1a4d13d683d.jpg?impolicy=fcrop&w=384&h=216&q=medium)
