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Kazan Kremlin

Kazan Kremlin

FieldValue
nameKazan Kremlin
native_nameКазанский кремль
native_languageRussian
imageКазанский кремль. Панорама с колеса обозрения.jpg
captionKazan Kremlin
locationKazan, Russia
built10th–16th centuries
designation1WHS
designation1_offnameHistoric and Architectural Complex of the Kazan Kremlin
designation1_date2000 (24th session)
designation1_number[980](https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/980)
designation1_criteriaii, iii, iv
designation1_typeCultural
designation1_free1nameRegion
designation1_free1valueEurope and North America
locmapinEuropean Russia#Europe
coordinates

The Kazan Kremlin (; ) is the chief historic citadel of Kazan, a city in Russia. It was built at the behest of Ivan the Terrible on the ruins of the former castle of Kazan khans. It was declared a World Heritage Site in 2000.

History and monuments

Kazan Kreml' in 1630
Kazan Kreml' in 1839
Saviour-Transfiguration monastery in 19th century
Kazan Kreml' in 1911
Kremlin from bird's view
Main entrance with Spasskaya Tower in early 20th century

The Kazan Kremlin includes many old buildings, the oldest of which is the Annunciation Cathedral (1554–1562), the only 16th-century Russian church to have six piers and five apses. Like many of Kazan's buildings of the period, it is constructed of local pale sandstone rather than of brick. The renowned Pskov architects Postnik Yakovlev and Ivan Shirjay (called Barma) were invited by the Tsar to rebuild the Kazan Kremlin in stone. The cathedral bell tower was erected in five tiers at the urging of Ivan the Terrible and was scored to resemble the Ivan the Great Belltower in Moscow, but was pulled down by the Soviets in 1930.

The most conspicuous landmark of the Kazan Kremlin is the leaning Söyembikä Tower, which probably goes back to the reign of Peter the Great. A well-known legend connects the tower with the last queen of the Khanate of Kazan. Another recognizable architectural feature is the Spasskaya Tower, which anchors the southern end of the Kremlin and serves as the main entrance to the Kremlin.

The Spasskaya Tower is named after the Spassky Monastery, which used to be located nearby. Among the monastery's buildings were the Church of St. Nicholas (1560s, four piers) and the Cathedral of the Saviour's Transfiguration (1590s, six piers). They were destroyed by the Communists during Joseph Stalin's rule.

Also of interest are snow-white towers and walls, erected in the 16th and 17th centuries but later renovated; the Kul Sharif Mosque, recently rebuilt inside the citadel; and the Governor's House (1843–1853), designed by Konstantin Thon, now the Palace of the President of the Republic of Tatarstan. The Palace is believed to be located on the site of a former Khan's palace. Tucked between Presidential Palace and Söyembikä Tower is the palace church built on the foundation of a medieval mosque.

The Northern wall of the Kremlin contains another gated tower, Secret Tower, so named because it used to house a secret water supply well. This tower allows pedestrian access to the Kremlin, but vehicle access is restricted to emergencies only. Image:Blagovesh.jpg Image:Nikola Kiprian.jpg Image:Kreml Ivanovskiy.jpg

Recent events

Monument to Tatar and Russian builders

The opening of one of the biggest mosques in Europe, the Kul Sharif, was held in Kazan on June 24, 2005. Roughly 17,000 people gathered for the celebration. Delegations from forty countries attended the event. The facility was reconstructed on the site where the Kazan Khanate's principal mosque had presumably been standing before 1552. Speaking at the ceremony, Tatarstan President Mintimer Shaeymiev said "the Qolşärif mosque is a new symbol of Kazan and Tatarstan... a bridge connecting... our past and future."

The decree on restoring the Kul Sharif mosque (1995) also ordered the restoration of the Annunciation Cathedral in the Kazan Kremlin which had been taken away from Orthodox Christians after the Russian Revolution. On July 21, 2005, the feast day of the holy icon "Theotokos of Kazan", in the presence of the crowd of 10,000 pilgrims, Patriarch Alexius II and Mintimer Shaeymiev placed at the newly restored Annunciation Cathedral the holiest copy of the long-lost icon, which had been returned to Russia in 2004 by Pope John Paul II shortly before his death.

In 2005 the first stage of the Kazan Metro also included a station named Kremlyovskaya, whose exits are right next to the Kremlin.

Buildings

File:Kazan Kremlin Qolsharif Mosque 08-2016 img2.jpg|Kul Sharif Mosque File:Kazan Kremlin Soyembika Tower 08-2016 img2.jpg|The Söyembikä Tower File:Kazan Kremlin Annunciation Cathedral 08-2016.jpg|Annunciation Cathedral File:Kazan Kremlin House church.jpg|House church File:Transfiguration_tower.jpg|The Transfiguration tower File:Kazan Kremlin Taynitskaya Tower 08-2016.jpg|The Taynitskaya tower File:Консисторская башня Казанского кремля.jpg|The Consistory tower File:South-Western Tower of Kazan Kremlin.JPG|The South-Western tower File:Soth-Eastern Tower of Kazan Kremlin.JPG|The South-Eastern tower File:Kazan Kremlin Spasskaya Tower 08-2016 img1.jpg|Spasskaya Tower File:Kazan Kremlin Presidential Palace 08-2016.jpg|The Governor's palace File:Северный корпус Пушечного двора (Казань).jpg|Consistory Palace (the northern housing of the Artillery Court) File:Татарстан. Казань. Кремль. Пушечный двор.jpg|The main housing of the Artillery Court File:Kazan Kremlin Bezymyannaya Tower and Cannon Yard 08-2016.jpg|The southern housing of the Artillery Court File:The_eastern_wall_of_the_Kazan_Kremlin.jpg|The eastern wall of the Kazan Kremlin File:Могилы казанских ханов в Кремле; 2009.jpg|Ruins of Khan's mausoleum

References

References

  1. Sergey, Sokolov. (2011). "Казань. Портрет в стиле импрессионизма".
  2. (2000). "The Kremlin of Kazan Through the Ages". Taylor & Francis.
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