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Suzdal

Town in Vladimir Oblast, Russia

Suzdal

Town in Vladimir Oblast, Russia

FieldValue
en_nameSuzdal
ru_nameСуздаль
image_skylineSuzdalPanoramaC 9345.jpg
coordinates
image_coaCoat of Arms of Suzdal.png
image_flagFlag of Suzdal (Vladimir oblast).png
holiday2nd Saturday of August
holiday_ref
federal_subjectVladimir Oblast
federal_subject_ref
adm_district_jurSuzdalsky District
adm_district_jur_ref
adm_ctr_ofSuzdalsky District
adm_ctr_of_ref
inhabloc_catTown
inhabloc_cat_ref
mun_district_jurSuzdalsky Municipal District
mun_district_jur_ref
urban_settlement_jurSuzdal Urban Settlement
urban_settlement_jur_ref
mun_admctr_of1Suzdalsky Municipal District
mun_admctr_of1_ref
mun_admctr_of2Suzdal Urban Settlement
mun_admctr_of2_ref
leader_titleHead of Town
leader_title_ref
leader_nameLarisa Majorova
leader_name_ref
area_km215
area_km2_ref
pop_2010census10535
pop_2010census_ref
pop_latest9978
pop_latest_date2015
pop_latest_ref
established_date1024
established_date_ref
postal_codes601291, 601293
dialing_codes49231
dialing_codes_ref
websitehttp://www.gorodsuzdal.ru
Christmas in Suzdal

Suzdal (, ) is a town that serves as the administrative center of Suzdalsky District in Vladimir Oblast, Russia, which is located along the Kamenka tributary of the Nerl River, 26 km north of the city of Vladimir. As of the 2021 Census, its population was 9,286.

In the 12th century, Suzdal became the capital of the principality. Currently, Suzdal is the smallest of the Russian Golden Ring towns. It has several sites listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites.{{cite web |access-date = 2019-11-30 |access-date = 2019-11-30

History

Suzdal in 1912

The town's history dates back to 999 and 1024. In 1125 Yury Dolgoruky made Suzdal the capital of the Rostov-Suzdal principality. In 1157, Andrei Bogolyubsky moved the capital from Suzdal to Vladimir, from which time the principality was known as Vladimir-Suzdal. Suzdal was burned and plundered in 1237 during the Mongol-led invasions; however, it remained a trade center afterward due to its location in a fertile wheat-growing area. In 1341, it united with Nizhny Novgorod until both were annexed by Moscow in 1392.

Plan of Suzdal, 1788
Plan of Suzdal, 1788

After a decline in political significance, the town regained prominence as a religious center, with development projects funded by Vasily III and Ivan the Terrible in the 16th century. In the late 17th and 18th centuries, wealthy merchants funded the construction of 30 churches, many of which still stand today.

In 1864, local merchants failed to convince the government to build the Trans-Siberian Railway through their town. Instead, it went through Vladimir, 35 km away. In 1967, Suzdal earned a federally protected status, which officially limited development in the area.

In 1943, high-ranking Nazi officers captured at the Battle of Stalingrad were imprisoned within Suzdal's monastery.{{cite AV media | access-date = 2020-04-05

Today, the town serves as a tourist center, containing many examples of old Russian architecture. Much of its rural infrastructure and partially unpaved streets have been preserved.

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, Suzdal serves as the administrative center of Suzdalsky District, to which it is directly subordinated. As a municipal division, the town of Suzdal is incorporated within Suzdalsky Municipal District as Suzdal Urban Settlement.

Tourism

The primary industry of Suzdal is tourism. Suzdal avoided the industrialization of the Soviet era and thus 13th-19th architecture remained preserved. There are 305 monuments and listed buildings in Suzdal, including 30 churches, 14 bell towers, and 5 monasteries and convents. 79 of them are federally protected buildings and 167 are regionally protected.

In 1982, Suzdal became the first Russian town to receive La Pomme d'Or (Golden Apple) - a prize for excellence in the tourism industry, awarded annually by the World Federation of Travel Journalists and Writers (FIJET).

In 1992, two of the monuments (Saviour Monastery of St Euthymius and Kremlin with Nativity of the Virgin Cathedral) were included in the UNESCO World Heritage List, together with six other White Monuments in the region.

The Cathedral of Nativity

Notable buildings

  • The Kremlin is the oldest part of Suzdal, dating from the 10th century. It is a predecessor of the Moscow Kremlin. In the 12th century, it was the base of Prince Yury Dolgoruky, who ruled the northeastern part of Kievan Rus' and founded an outpost, which is now Moscow. A posad (settlement) to the east became home to the secular population, such as shopkeepers and craftsmen, while the Kremlin (fortress) proper was the home of the prince, the archbishop, and the high clergy. Within the Kremlin, the Archbishop’s Chambers house the Suzdal History Exhibition, which includes a visit to the 18th-century Cross Hall, which was used for receptions. More exhibits are provided in the 1635 Kremlin bell tower (Russian: Звонница) in the yard.
  • The 1.4 km earth rampart of the Kremlin encloses a number of houses and churches, including the Nativity of the Virgin Cathedral. The cathedral, characterized with gold and blue domes, was constructed in 1222–1225 by Yury II on the site of an earlier church built around 1102 by Vladimir Monomakh. It was built of light tufa with limestones for details. In 1445 the cathedral collapsed and was rebuilt in 1528–1530 with the upper structure and drums being constructed of new brick. The original 13th-century door from the cathedral is now on exhibition in the Archbishop's Chambers.
  • Saviour Monastery of St Euthymius, was founded in 1352 to the north of the town centre on the high bank of the Kamenka river. It was built under the order of the Suzdal-Nizhniy Novgorod prince Konstantin. The monastery was planned as a fortress and was originally enclosed by a wooden wall, later destroyed by the Poles. Today's reddish brick walls of the Suzdal monastery were erected over four years, from 1640 to 1644. The fortifications have 12 towers constructed to house artillery power. Later in 1766, with Catherine the Great's orders, the monastery became a prison, which had a reputation for severe punishment of prisoners. In 1905 the prison closed; however, it later served as a prison again during the Soviet Era.
Wooden Church of St. Nicholas (Souzdal)
  • The Wooden Church of St. Nicholas, originally built in Glotovo in 1766 and made entirely of wood, was moved to Suzdal in 1960 to become part of the Museum of Wooden Architecture and Peasant Life. The church is elevated off the ground about a story high from when it was moved across the country.
  • St John the Baptist Church, built in 1720, at the same time as the Wooden Church of St. Nicholas. It was constructed with white plastered walls and wooden supports.
  • St Alexander Convent, built in 1240 by an unknown architect. The princesses of Suzdal, Mariya and Agrippina, were buried here in the 14th century.
  • , founded in 1364. In its centre stands the Cathedral of the Intercession, an add-on built in 1518, financed by Moscow's King Vasili III. The interior of the cathedral is plain white stone, with no paintings nor stained glass. The church houses the burial vaults of 20 nuns of noble birth. An art museum containing works created in the 16th and 17th centuries is connected to the cathedral.

Festivals

  • Open Russian Festival of Animated Film, held annually in March since 2002, with the support of the Russian Ministry of Culture.
  • Cucumber Day Festival with folk music performances is celebrated by locals on the second Saturday of July, every year since 2001.

Film

More than 60 movies were filmed in Suzdal and the vicinity. Among them are:

  • Andrei Rublev (USSR, 1966)
  • Bratya Karamazovy (USSR, 1969)
  • Finist, the brave Falcon (USSR, 1976)
  • The Shooting Party (USSR, 1978)
  • Tema (USSR, 1979)
  • Yunost Petra (USSR, 1980)
  • Charodei (USSR, 1982)
  • Dead Souls (USSR, 1984)
  • Peter the Great (USA, 1986)
  • Tsar (Russia, 2009)

Twin towns

Suzdal is twinned with:

  • GER Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Germany, since 1988
  • ITA Cles, Italy, since 1991
  • USA Oberlin, United States, since 1991
  • USA Windham, United States, since 1992
  • POR Évora, Portugal, since 2006
  • FRA Loches, France, since 2011
  • PRC Shangrao, China, since 2012

Notable people

  • Solomonia Saburova (1490–1542), the first wife of Grand prince Vasili III of Muscovy, canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church as St Sofia of Suzdal
  • Dmitry Pozharsky (1577–1642), national hero, granted the title Saviour of the Motherland for routing the Polish invasion
  • Eudoxia Lopukhina (1669–1698), Tsarina, the first wife of Peter the Great, banished to the Intercession Convent of Suzdal
  • Dmitry Vinogradov (1720–1758), chemist, the founder of the Imperial Porcelain Factory, Saint Petersburg
  • Aleksei Gastev (1882–1939), revolutionary, trade-union activist and a pioneer of scientific management in Russia
  • Sergei Shirokogorov (1887–1939), founder of Russian anthropology
  • Vasily Blokhin (1895–1955), chief executioner of the NKVD (Soviet Secret Police) during the Great Purge and World War II
  • Yuri Modin (1922–2007), KGB controller for the "Cambridge Five"

References

Sources

  • Brumfield, William (2009). Suzdal: Architectural Heritage in Photographs. Moscow: Tri Kvadrata. .

References

  1. link
  2. link
  3. link
  4. link
  5. link. Official website of the [[Russian Federal State Statistics Service]]
  6. {{ru-pop-ref. 2010Census
  7. {{ru-pop-ref. 2002Census
  8. {{ru-pop-ref. 1989Census
  9. {{ru-pop-ref. 1979Census
  10. {{ru-pop-ref. 2021Census
  11. Ragozin, Leonid. (Mar 2015). "Suzdal". [[Lonely Planet]].
  12. "History of Suzdal {{!}} Rusmania".
  13. [https://www.suzdalonline.ru/history/varganov/chapter3/ Suzdal during the Tatar-Mongol yoke]
  14. Vorhees, Mara. (2006). "Suzdal". [[Lonely Planet]].
  15. Luxmoore, Matthew. (2012-07-01). "Suzdal". [[The Moscow Times]].
  16. {{OKATO reference. 17 254
  17. Resolution #433
  18. Law #190-OZ
  19. "Golden Apple Award".
  20. "White Monuments of Vladimir and Suzdal". [[UNESCO]]/[[World Heritage Committee.
  21. (October 1992). "World Heritage List No.633 Vladimir/Suzdal. ICOMOS Evaluation". [[UNESCO]]/[[World Heritage Committee.
  22. Brumfield, William Craft. (1997). "Landmarks of Russian Architect: A Photographic Survey". [[Routledge]].
  23. "The Vladimir and Suzdal Museum".
  24. "Monastery of St. Alexander « Historic buildings « Suzdal « Old Russian Towns « Город Владимир / Виртуальный Владимир - полная информация по городу Владимир и Владимирской области".
  25. "Intercession (Pokrovsky) Monastery".
  26. link. (February 27, 2024)
  27. (2015-07-16). "'Cucumber Day' Celebrated in Russia".
  28. Belov. Yury. (2006). Algoritm
  29. link. (1988-04-24)
  30. link. (October 1991)
  31. "Oberlin's Connections Around the World".
  32. "Sister City - Suzdal, Russia".
  33. link. (2006-08-12)
  34. (2011-12-15). "Protocole d'accord de cooperation entre les municipalités de Souzdal et Loches".
  35. link. (2012-09-10)
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