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List of Moscow Kremlin towers

The following is a list of towers of the Moscow Kremlin. The Kremlin Wall is a defensive wall that surrounds the Moscow Kremlin, recognizable by the characteristic notches and its towers. The original walls were likely a simple wooden fence with guard towers built in 1156. The Kremlin is flanked by 19 towers with a 20th, the Kutafya Tower, not part of its walls.

Kremlin towers in the 19th century

Borovitskaya

 
Borovitskaya Tower

The Borovitskaya Tower (Russian: Боровицкая башня) is a corner tower with a through-passage on the west side of the Kremlin. It is named after Borovitsky Hill, one of the seven hills Moscow is standing on. The tower was constructed in 1490 on the spot of an old Kremlin gate by Swiss-Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari (Petr Fryazin, from fryaz or fryag as Italians were called at that time) by order of Vasili III of Russia. In 1658 by orders of tzar Aleksey I of Russia the tower was renamed to Predtechenskaya (from the Russian word предтеча, the forerunner) after the Church of John the Forerunner, which was later destroyed during the construction of the Kremlin Armoury (Oruzheynaya Palata). The new name, however, never became popular. In 1812, the tower was damaged by an explosion staged by the retreating French army. In 1817-19, the tower was restored by architect Osip Bove. In 1935, the Soviets installed a red star on top of the tower. Following the closure of the Spassky Gate in Red Square to all traffic at the end of the 1990s, the Borovitsky Gate became the main vehicle passageway. Together with the star, its height is 54.05 metres (177.3 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′56″N 37°36′45″E / 55.748909°N 37.612520°E / 55.748909; 37.612520 (Borovitskaya Tower).

Vodovzvodnaya

 
Vodovzvodnaya Tower

The Vodovzvodnaya Tower (Russian: Водовзводная башня) is a corner tower on the southwestern side of Kremlin, overlooking the Moskva River. It was built in 1488 by a Swiss-Italian architect Antonio Gilardi (also known as Anton Fryazin). Initially, the tower was called the Sviblova Tower (Свиблова башня) after the Sviblov boyar family, who had lived in a house adjacent to the tower from the Kremlin's side. The tower was renamed to Vodovzvodnaya in 1633 after the installation of a water-supplying machine inside the tower ("vodovzvodnaya" may be translated as "water-lifting"). In 1805, the Vodovzvodnaya Tower was dismantled due to its dilapidation and built once again. In 1812, the retreating French army blew it up. The tower was restored in 1817-1819 by architect Osip Bove. Its height is 61.85 metres (202.9 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′53″N 37°36′49″E / 55.748106°N 37.613647°E / 55.748106; 37.613647 (Vodovzvodnaya Tower).

Blagoveschenskaya

The Blagoveschenskaya Tower (Russian: Благовещенская башня), known in English as the Annunciation Tower, was erected in 1487-1488. At its foundation are slabs of white limestone that have survived since the time of the white stone Kremlin of the 14th century. During the reign of Ivan the Terrible, the tower was used as a prison. The name of the tower comes from the miracle-working Icon of the Annunciation, which was once kept here, and is also associated with the Cathedral of the Annunciation added to the tower in the early 18th century and demolished in 1932. In the 17th century, the Portomoyniye Gates were built nearby so that palace laundresses could go to the Portomoiny raft on the Moscow River to rinse porty, or underclothes. These gates were bricked up in 1813.

The height of the tower is 30.7 metres (101 ft) (32.45 metres (106.5 ft) together with the weather vane that replaced the original cross in 1932).

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′55″N 37°36′55″E / 55.748722°N 37.615192°E / 55.748722; 37.615192 (Blagoveschenskaya Tower).

Taynitskaya

The Taynitskaya Tower (Russian: Тайницкая башня; it was also called Водяная башня, or the Water Tower) is a middle tower on the south side of the Moscow Kremlin. It was built in 1485 by Antonio Gilardi on the spot of the gates to Dmitry Donskoy's whitestone Kremlin. The Taynitskaya Tower had a secret well and a tunnel leading to the Moscow River (hence, the name "Taynitskaya", or "secret"). In 1770, the tower was dismantled due to the construction of the Kremlin Palace by Vasili Bazhenov. It was rebuilt in the 1770s. In 1930-1933, the Soviets bricked up the gateway and filled up the well. The Taynitskaya Tower is 38.4 metres (126 ft) in height.

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′58″N 37°37′04″E / 55.749374°N 37.617863°E / 55.749374; 37.617863 (Taynitskaya Tower).

First Unnamed

The First Unnamed Tower (Russian: Первая Безымянная башня) was built next to the Taynitskaya Tower in the 1480s. It performed strictly defensive functions. In 1547, the tower was destroyed by fire after the gunpowder stored there exploded, and was rebuilt in the 17th century. In 1770, the tower was taken apart to clear the site for the Kremlin Palace. After the construction of the palace ended, the tower was rebuilt in 1783, closer to the Taynitskaya Tower. In 1812, the tower was blown up by Napoleon’s retreating troops, but it was soon restored to its original form by architect Osip Beauvais. Its height is 34.15 metres (112.0 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′58″N 37°37′08″E / 55.749495°N 37.618968°E / 55.749495; 37.618968 (First Unnamed Tower).

Second Unnamed

The Second Unnamed Tower (Russian: Вторая Безымянная башня) was built in the middle of the 15th century. It had purely defensive functions. In 1680, a quadrangular structure and a tall pyramidal tent roof with a watchtower were added to the top of the tower. It is crowned with an eight-sided hipped cupola with a weather vane.

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′59″N 37°37′13″E / 55.749615°N 37.620363°E / 55.749615; 37.620363 (Second Unnamed Tower).

Petrovskaya

The Petrovskaya Tower (Russian: Петровская башня) is named after the Church of Metropolitan Peter, which was part of the mission of the Ugreshi Monastery located near the tower in the Kremlin. The Petrovskaya Tower was destroyed by cannon fire during the Polish invasion in 1612 and then restored. In 1771, it was pulled down to construct the Kremlin Palace, but was rebuilt in 1783. In 1812, the tower was blown up by Napoleon’s retreating troops. In 1818, it was rebuilt by the architect Osip Bove. The Petrovskaya Tower was used as a service building by the Kremlin's gardeners. Its height is 27.15 metres (89.1 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′59″N 37°37′19″E / 55.749700°N 37.622015°E / 55.749700; 37.622015 (Petrovskaya Tower).

Beklemishevskaya

The Beklemishevskaya Tower (Russian: Беклемишевская башня, also known as Москворецкая башня, or Moskvoretskaya Tower) is a corner tower on the southeastern side of the Moscow Kremlin on the Moscow River. The tower was built in 1487-1488 by an Italian architect Marco Ruffo (known as Mark Fryazin in Russia). It was named after a boyar Ivan Bersen-Beklemishev, whose house had been adjacent to the tower from the Kremlin side. The Beklemishevskaya Tower was constructed for protecting the ford and the crossing over the Moscow River. There was the so-called "listening" vault underneath the tower, which was used for preventing the enemy from tunneling his way to the Kremlin. The Beklemishevskaya Tower is 46.2 metres (152 ft) in height. During the October Revolution of 1917, the top of the tower was damaged by a shell. It was restored a year later by an architect I.V. Rylsky.

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′59″N 37°37′24″E / 55.749742°N 37.623239°E / 55.749742; 37.623239 (Beklemishevskaya Tower).

Konstantino-Eleninskaya

 
Konstantino-Eleninskaya Tower

The Konstantino-Eleninskaya Tower (Russian: Константино-Еленинская башня) is a tower on the eastern wall of the Kremlin, overlooking the so-called Basil Descent (Васильевский спуск), which begins at the Red Square and ends at the Moscow River. The tower was built in 1490 by an Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari on the spot of gates to the whitestone Kremlin. It was named after the Church of Constantine and Helene in the Kremlin (second half of the 17th century), which would be demolished by the Soviets in 1928. The Konstantino-Eleninskaya Tower had its own gates and a lift bridge, protected by guards at all times. In the late 18th century - early 19th century the gates were bricked up and the bridge was dismantled. The tower's height is 36.8 metres (121 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′04″N 37°37′20″E / 55.751179°N 37.622359°E / 55.751179; 37.622359 (Konstantino-Eleninskaya Tower).

Nabatnaya

The Nabatnaya Tower (Russian: Набатная башня) is a tower in the southeastern section of the Kremlin wall, built in 1495. It is 38 metres (125 ft) in height. Traditionally, there has always been a bell on top of the Nabatnaya Tower, used for notifying citizens of fires and other misfortunes in the Kremlin or on the Red Square (hence, the name Nabatnaya, which derives from the old Russian word набат - nabat, meaning "alarm" or "tocsin"). In 1680, a bellmaker Feodor Dmitriev cast the so-called Nabatny bell (alarm bell) weighing 150 poods (2.45 metric tons) and installed it on the tower. The bell subsequently broke and was re-cast by Ivan Motorin on 30 July 1714. The sound from this bell served as a signal for the spontaneous uprising of the Muscovites during the plague outbreak in 1771, which would later be called the Plague Riot (Чумной бунт). By the order of Catherine the Great, the tongue of the bell was removed after this incident. The tongueless bell remained on top of the tower for 30 more years. In the early 19th century, it was removed and transferred to the Arsenal. In 1821, the bell was moved to the Armoury, where it remains to this day in the vestibule.

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′07″N 37°37′19″E / 55.751843°N 37.621908°E / 55.751843; 37.621908 (Nabatnaya Tower).

Tsarskaya

The Tsarskaya Tower (Russian: Царская башня, translated as "Tsar's tower") is the youngest and smallest tower of all, built in 1680. It is not a tower per se, it is rather a stone terem, a tent-shaped chamber placed directly on top of the wall. Previously, there was a small wooden turret, from which, according to legend, tsar Ivan IV liked to observe what was happening on the Red Square. Hence the name, the Tsar's Tower. The white stone bands around the posts, tall corner pyramids with gilt flags and tent roof topped with an elegant gilt weather vane make the tower look like some structure from a fairy tale.

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′08″N 37°37′18″E / 55.752284°N 37.621608°E / 55.752284; 37.621608 (Tsarskaya Tower).

Spasskaya

 
Clock of the Spasskaya Tower

The Spasskaya Tower was built in 1491 by the Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari. Initially, it was named the Frolovskaya Tower after the Church of Frol and Lavr in the Kremlin, which is no longer there.[1] The tower's modern name comes from the icon of 'Spas Nerukotvorny' (Russian: Спас Нерукотворный) translated as 'The Saviour Not Made by Hands', which was placed above the gates on the inside wall in 1658 and removed in 1917. The tower is also named for the wall-painted icon of 'Spas Smolensky' (Russian: Спас Смоленский) translated as 'Smolensky Saviour', which was created in the 16th century on the outside wall of tower, plastered over in 1937, but reopened and restored in 2010.

The Spasskaya Tower was the first tower of the many Moscow Kremlin Towers to be crowned with the hipped roof in 1624–1625 by architects Bazhen Ogurtsov and Christopher Galloway (a Scottish architect and clock maker).[2] According to a number of historical accounts, the clock on the Spasskaya Tower appeared between 1491 and 1585. It is usually referred to as the Kremlin chimes (Кремлёвские куранты) and designates official Moscow Time. The clock face has a diameter of 6 metres (20 ft).[3] The gate of Spasskaya Tower was used to greet foreign dignitaries, and was used during formal ceremonies or processions held on Red Square.

Senatskaya

The Senatskaya Tower (Russian: Сенатская башня) was built in 1491 by an architect Pietro Antonio Solari and was purely defensive in nature: it guarded the Kremlin on the Red Square side. For a long time it remained nameless. It was only in 1787, after architect Matvei Kazakov constructed the Kremlin Senate on the Kremlin’s territory, that it was given its present name. The dome of the Senate can be seen from Red Square. Inside the central part of the tower there are three tiers of vaulted chambers. In 1860, the flat tower was topped with a stone tent roof crowned, in turn, with a gilt weather vane. The tower contains a through-passage that allows VIPs to travel from the kremlin to Red Square. Its height is 34.3 metres (113 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′12″N 37°37′10″E / 55.753449°N 37.619548°E / 55.753449; 37.619548 (Senatskaya Tower).

Nikolskaya

The Nikolskaya Tower (Russian: Никольская башня) is a tower with a through-passage on the eastern wall of the Moscow Kremlin, which overlooks the Red Square not far from the State Historical Museum.

The Nikolskaya Tower was built in 1491 by an Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari. It was named after Nikolaevsky (Nikolsky) Greek Monastery, which is no longer there. In 1806, the tower was rebuilt in the neo-Gothic style by an architect Luigi Rusca. In 1812, the top of the tower was blown up by the retreating French army. It was restored in 1816 by an architect Osip Bove. The Nikolskaya Tower was once again severely damaged by the artillery fire in October 1917 and was later restored by an architect Nikolai Markovnikov. In 1935, the Soviets installed a red star on top of the tower. Its current height with the star is 70.4 metres (231 ft). The original icon of Saint Nicholas of Mozhaysk, placed above the entrance on Red Square had been plastered over by Soviet authorities and was uncovered and restored in 2010 - similar to what took place on the Spasskaya Tower.[4][5]

Geographical coordinates:55°45′16″N 37°37′04″E / 55.754421°N 37.617713°E / 55.754421; 37.617713 (Nikolskaya Tower.)

Corner Arsenalnaya

The Corner Arsenalnaya Tower (Russian: Арсенальная Угловая башня, i.e. "Corner Arsenal tower") is a tower of the Moscow Kremlin. It was built in 1492 by an Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari. The construction of this tower completed the Kremlin's line of defence from the side of the Red Square. It was called the Sobakin Tower until the early 18th century (named so after a boyar Sobakin, whose house had been adjacent to the tower from the Kremlin side). The Corner Arsenalnaya Tower received its current name after the construction of the Arsenal. The tower still has a secret well. In 1707, due to a threat of Swedish invasion, the gun slots of the Corner Arsenalnaya Tower were enlarged to fit heavy cannons. In 1812, the tower was damaged by an explosion, set up by the retreating French army. It was restored in 1816-1819 by architect Osip Bove.

The tower's current height is over 60 metres (200 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′18″N 37°36′59″E / 55.755110°N 37.616469°E / 55.755110; 37.616469 (Corner Arsenalnaya Tower).

Middle Arsenalnaya

The Middle Arsenalnaya Tower (Russian: Средняя Арсенальная башня, i.e. "Middle Arsenal tower") is a Kremlin tower, built in 1495. It is located on the northwestern side of the Kremlin wall and overlooks the Alexander Garden. It is situated on the spot of a corner tower dating from the reign of Dmitry Donskoi. It was given its present name, the Middle Arsenal Tower, after the Arsenal was completed in the mid-18th century. Originally, it was called the Faceted Tower because of the shape of its façade. In 1680, an open lookout with a small pyramid-shaped top was added to the tower. In 1821, when the Alexander Garden was laid out, an ancient-style grotto was built at the foot of the tower, designed by Osip Bove.

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′13″N 37°36′56″E / 55.753667°N 37.615525°E / 55.753667; 37.615525 (Middle Arsenalnaya Tower).

Troitskaya

The Troitskaya Tower was built in 1495–1499 by an Italian architect Aloisio da Milano (known in Russia as Aleviz Fryazin Milanets). The tower has borne several names, including Rizopolozhenskaya, Znamenskaya, and Karetnaya. It received its current name in 1658 from the Troitskaya Coaching Inn (Троицкое подворье) in the Kremlin. The two-story basement of the tower housed a prison in the 16th–17th centuries. There is the Troitsky Bridge, which is protected by the Kutafia Tower and leads to the gates of the Troitskaya Tower. There was also a clock on top of the tower between 1585 and 1812. In 1707, due to a threat of Swedish invasion, the gun slots of the Troitskaya Tower were enlarged to fit heavy cannons. In 1935, the Soviets installed a red star on top of the Troitskaya Tower. Prior to Soviet rule the tower had an icon of the Holy Trinity atop its outward face. Because this tower was the formal entrance for huge Communist Party Congresses the icon was totally removed rather than just plastered over as were those on the Spasskaya and Nikolskaya Towers.

Komendantskaya

The Komendantskaya Tower (Russian: Комендантская башня) was completed in 1495. It used to be called Kolymazhnaya after the Kremlin’s coach yard, where carriages and coaches had been kept. It was given its present name, the Commandant’s Tower, in the 19th century when the commandant of Moscow took up residence in the Kremlin’s Poteshny – or Amusement – Palace. Like all Kremlin towers, it was supplemented with a tent roof and watchtower in 1676-1686. The height of the tower on the side of the Alexander Garden is 41.25 metres (135.3 ft).

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′02″N 37°36′49″E / 55.750575°N 37.613518°E / 55.750575; 37.613518 (Komendantskaya Tower).

Oruzheynaya

 
Oruzheynaya Tower

The Oruzheynaya Tower (Russian: Оружейная башня, translated as Armory Tower) was built in 1495. It was given its present name in the 19th century after the construction of the Armory. Before then, it was known as the Konyushennaya Tower, a reference to the royal stables that stood behind it.

Geographical coordinates: 55°44′58″N 37°36′46″E / 55.749428°N 37.612714°E / 55.749428; 37.612714 (Oruzheynaya Tower).

Kutafya

The Kutafya Tower (Russian: Кутафья башня formerly Predmostnaya tower) is an outlying barbican tower of the Moscow Kremlin. Built in 1516 under the leadership of the Milanese architect Aloisio da Milano, in order to protect one end of the Neglinnaya River bridge that comes out of the West side of the Kremlin wall under the Troitskaya Tower. Initially, the Kutafya was surrounded by a moat and was the only access to the city through its lift bridge, nowadays the moat around the bridge has transformed into Alexander Garden. Kutafya is one of the lower height Kremlin towers which had two combat tiers and no spire, with the open-top upper landing equipped with arrowslits and machicolations, which made it a formidable obstacle to the besieging of the Kremlin fortress.

Marking today the main public entrance to the Kremlin, the Kutafya tower was modified several times through the centuries:

  • in the 16th and 17th centuries, a system of dikes was built to raise the water level of the Neglinnaya river and create a moat that surrounded the tower from all sides, making its drawbridge the only entry point from the city;
  • In 1668 a causeway leading through the tower to the Troitskaya Bridge was built;
  • a delicate ornamental crown in the Muscovite baroque style was built in 1685;
  • the divider between the two tiers was destroyed in 1780;
  • in 1867, a through-passage to the Manezhnaya Street was built as well as the arched apertures on the sides and a guard house on the south side;
  • the guard house was dismantled during the restoration works of carried out in 1974-77.

The Kutafya Tower is currently 13.5 m high; it used to be 18 m but the lower part of the tower was "submerged" by successive constructions that heightened the street-level ground.

Geographical coordinates: 55°45′09″N 37°36′46″E / 55.752514°N 37.612649°E / 55.752514; 37.612649 (Kutafya Tower).

References

  1. ^ Zubacheva, K. (2019-12-30). "6 facts about Spasskaya - the Kremlin's main tower". Russia Beyond the Headlines. Retrieved 2020-01-29.
  2. ^ Shvidkovsky 2007, p. 151-156.
  3. ^ "Bigger Bens". go.galegroup.com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu. Spectator. p. 14. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  4. ^ Chistykova-Yaroslavova, N.B. . Archived from the original on 2013-12-03.
  5. ^ "ПРЕДСТОЯТЕЛЬ РУССКОЙ ЦЕРКВИ ОСВЯТИЛ ОТРЕСТАВРИРОВАННУЮ НАДВРАТНУЮ ИКОНУ НИКОЛЫ МОЖАЙСКОГО НА НИКОЛЬСКОЙ БАШНЕ МОСКОВСКОГО КРЕМЛЯ".

External links

  • kremlin.ru

list, moscow, kremlin, towers, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jst. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources List of Moscow Kremlin towers news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The following is a list of towers of the Moscow Kremlin The Kremlin Wall is a defensive wall that surrounds the Moscow Kremlin recognizable by the characteristic notches and its towers The original walls were likely a simple wooden fence with guard towers built in 1156 The Kremlin is flanked by 19 towers with a 20th the Kutafya Tower not part of its walls Kremlin towers in the 19th century Contents 1 Borovitskaya 2 Vodovzvodnaya 3 Blagoveschenskaya 4 Taynitskaya 5 First Unnamed 6 Second Unnamed 7 Petrovskaya 8 Beklemishevskaya 9 Konstantino Eleninskaya 10 Nabatnaya 11 Tsarskaya 12 Spasskaya 13 Senatskaya 14 Nikolskaya 15 Corner Arsenalnaya 16 Middle Arsenalnaya 17 Troitskaya 18 Komendantskaya 19 Oruzheynaya 20 Kutafya 21 References 22 External linksBorovitskaya Edit Borovitskaya Tower The Borovitskaya Tower Russian Borovickaya bashnya is a corner tower with a through passage on the west side of the Kremlin It is named after Borovitsky Hill one of the seven hills Moscow is standing on The tower was constructed in 1490 on the spot of an old Kremlin gate by Swiss Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari Petr Fryazin from fryaz or fryag as Italians were called at that time by order of Vasili III of Russia In 1658 by orders of tzar Aleksey I of Russia the tower was renamed to Predtechenskaya from the Russian word predtecha the forerunner after the Church of John the Forerunner which was later destroyed during the construction of the Kremlin Armoury Oruzheynaya Palata The new name however never became popular In 1812 the tower was damaged by an explosion staged by the retreating French army In 1817 19 the tower was restored by architect Osip Bove In 1935 the Soviets installed a red star on top of the tower Following the closure of the Spassky Gate in Red Square to all traffic at the end of the 1990s the Borovitsky Gate became the main vehicle passageway Together with the star its height is 54 05 metres 177 3 ft Geographical coordinates 55 44 56 N 37 36 45 E 55 748909 N 37 612520 E 55 748909 37 612520 Borovitskaya Tower Vodovzvodnaya Edit Vodovzvodnaya Tower The Vodovzvodnaya Tower Russian Vodovzvodnaya bashnya is a corner tower on the southwestern side of Kremlin overlooking the Moskva River It was built in 1488 by a Swiss Italian architect Antonio Gilardi also known as Anton Fryazin Initially the tower was called the Sviblova Tower Sviblova bashnya after the Sviblov boyar family who had lived in a house adjacent to the tower from the Kremlin s side The tower was renamed to Vodovzvodnaya in 1633 after the installation of a water supplying machine inside the tower vodovzvodnaya may be translated as water lifting In 1805 the Vodovzvodnaya Tower was dismantled due to its dilapidation and built once again In 1812 the retreating French army blew it up The tower was restored in 1817 1819 by architect Osip Bove Its height is 61 85 metres 202 9 ft Geographical coordinates 55 44 53 N 37 36 49 E 55 748106 N 37 613647 E 55 748106 37 613647 Vodovzvodnaya Tower Blagoveschenskaya EditThe Blagoveschenskaya Tower Russian Blagoveshenskaya bashnya known in English as the Annunciation Tower was erected in 1487 1488 At its foundation are slabs of white limestone that have survived since the time of the white stone Kremlin of the 14th century During the reign of Ivan the Terrible the tower was used as a prison The name of the tower comes from the miracle working Icon of the Annunciation which was once kept here and is also associated with the Cathedral of the Annunciation added to the tower in the early 18th century and demolished in 1932 In the 17th century the Portomoyniye Gates were built nearby so that palace laundresses could go to the Portomoiny raft on the Moscow River to rinse porty or underclothes These gates were bricked up in 1813 The height of the tower is 30 7 metres 101 ft 32 45 metres 106 5 ft together with the weather vane that replaced the original cross in 1932 Geographical coordinates 55 44 55 N 37 36 55 E 55 748722 N 37 615192 E 55 748722 37 615192 Blagoveschenskaya Tower Taynitskaya EditThe Taynitskaya Tower Russian Tajnickaya bashnya it was also called Vodyanaya bashnya or the Water Tower is a middle tower on the south side of the Moscow Kremlin It was built in 1485 by Antonio Gilardi on the spot of the gates to Dmitry Donskoy s whitestone Kremlin The Taynitskaya Tower had a secret well and a tunnel leading to the Moscow River hence the name Taynitskaya or secret In 1770 the tower was dismantled due to the construction of the Kremlin Palace by Vasili Bazhenov It was rebuilt in the 1770s In 1930 1933 the Soviets bricked up the gateway and filled up the well The Taynitskaya Tower is 38 4 metres 126 ft in height Geographical coordinates 55 44 58 N 37 37 04 E 55 749374 N 37 617863 E 55 749374 37 617863 Taynitskaya Tower First Unnamed EditThe First Unnamed Tower Russian Pervaya Bezymyannaya bashnya was built next to the Taynitskaya Tower in the 1480s It performed strictly defensive functions In 1547 the tower was destroyed by fire after the gunpowder stored there exploded and was rebuilt in the 17th century In 1770 the tower was taken apart to clear the site for the Kremlin Palace After the construction of the palace ended the tower was rebuilt in 1783 closer to the Taynitskaya Tower In 1812 the tower was blown up by Napoleon s retreating troops but it was soon restored to its original form by architect Osip Beauvais Its height is 34 15 metres 112 0 ft Geographical coordinates 55 44 58 N 37 37 08 E 55 749495 N 37 618968 E 55 749495 37 618968 First Unnamed Tower Second Unnamed EditThe Second Unnamed Tower Russian Vtoraya Bezymyannaya bashnya was built in the middle of the 15th century It had purely defensive functions In 1680 a quadrangular structure and a tall pyramidal tent roof with a watchtower were added to the top of the tower It is crowned with an eight sided hipped cupola with a weather vane Geographical coordinates 55 44 59 N 37 37 13 E 55 749615 N 37 620363 E 55 749615 37 620363 Second Unnamed Tower Petrovskaya EditThe Petrovskaya Tower Russian Petrovskaya bashnya is named after the Church of Metropolitan Peter which was part of the mission of the Ugreshi Monastery located near the tower in the Kremlin The Petrovskaya Tower was destroyed by cannon fire during the Polish invasion in 1612 and then restored In 1771 it was pulled down to construct the Kremlin Palace but was rebuilt in 1783 In 1812 the tower was blown up by Napoleon s retreating troops In 1818 it was rebuilt by the architect Osip Bove The Petrovskaya Tower was used as a service building by the Kremlin s gardeners Its height is 27 15 metres 89 1 ft Geographical coordinates 55 44 59 N 37 37 19 E 55 749700 N 37 622015 E 55 749700 37 622015 Petrovskaya Tower Beklemishevskaya EditMain article Beklemishevskaya Tower The Beklemishevskaya Tower Russian Beklemishevskaya bashnya also known as Moskvoreckaya bashnya or Moskvoretskaya Tower is a corner tower on the southeastern side of the Moscow Kremlin on the Moscow River The tower was built in 1487 1488 by an Italian architect Marco Ruffo known as Mark Fryazin in Russia It was named after a boyar Ivan Bersen Beklemishev whose house had been adjacent to the tower from the Kremlin side The Beklemishevskaya Tower was constructed for protecting the ford and the crossing over the Moscow River There was the so called listening vault underneath the tower which was used for preventing the enemy from tunneling his way to the Kremlin The Beklemishevskaya Tower is 46 2 metres 152 ft in height During the October Revolution of 1917 the top of the tower was damaged by a shell It was restored a year later by an architect I V Rylsky Geographical coordinates 55 44 59 N 37 37 24 E 55 749742 N 37 623239 E 55 749742 37 623239 Beklemishevskaya Tower Konstantino Eleninskaya Edit Konstantino Eleninskaya Tower The Konstantino Eleninskaya Tower Russian Konstantino Eleninskaya bashnya is a tower on the eastern wall of the Kremlin overlooking the so called Basil Descent Vasilevskij spusk which begins at the Red Square and ends at the Moscow River The tower was built in 1490 by an Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari on the spot of gates to the whitestone Kremlin It was named after the Church of Constantine and Helene in the Kremlin second half of the 17th century which would be demolished by the Soviets in 1928 The Konstantino Eleninskaya Tower had its own gates and a lift bridge protected by guards at all times In the late 18th century early 19th century the gates were bricked up and the bridge was dismantled The tower s height is 36 8 metres 121 ft Geographical coordinates 55 45 04 N 37 37 20 E 55 751179 N 37 622359 E 55 751179 37 622359 Konstantino Eleninskaya Tower Nabatnaya EditThe Nabatnaya Tower Russian Nabatnaya bashnya is a tower in the southeastern section of the Kremlin wall built in 1495 It is 38 metres 125 ft in height Traditionally there has always been a bell on top of the Nabatnaya Tower used for notifying citizens of fires and other misfortunes in the Kremlin or on the Red Square hence the name Nabatnaya which derives from the old Russian word nabat nabat meaning alarm or tocsin In 1680 a bellmaker Feodor Dmitriev cast the so called Nabatny bell alarm bell weighing 150 poods 2 45 metric tons and installed it on the tower The bell subsequently broke and was re cast by Ivan Motorin on 30 July 1714 The sound from this bell served as a signal for the spontaneous uprising of the Muscovites during the plague outbreak in 1771 which would later be called the Plague Riot Chumnoj bunt By the order of Catherine the Great the tongue of the bell was removed after this incident The tongueless bell remained on top of the tower for 30 more years In the early 19th century it was removed and transferred to the Arsenal In 1821 the bell was moved to the Armoury where it remains to this day in the vestibule Geographical coordinates 55 45 07 N 37 37 19 E 55 751843 N 37 621908 E 55 751843 37 621908 Nabatnaya Tower Tsarskaya EditThe Tsarskaya Tower Russian Carskaya bashnya translated as Tsar s tower is the youngest and smallest tower of all built in 1680 It is not a tower per se it is rather a stone terem a tent shaped chamber placed directly on top of the wall Previously there was a small wooden turret from which according to legend tsar Ivan IV liked to observe what was happening on the Red Square Hence the name the Tsar s Tower The white stone bands around the posts tall corner pyramids with gilt flags and tent roof topped with an elegant gilt weather vane make the tower look like some structure from a fairy tale Geographical coordinates 55 45 08 N 37 37 18 E 55 752284 N 37 621608 E 55 752284 37 621608 Tsarskaya Tower Spasskaya Edit Clock of the Spasskaya Tower Main article Spasskaya Tower The Spasskaya Tower was built in 1491 by the Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari Initially it was named the Frolovskaya Tower after the Church of Frol and Lavr in the Kremlin which is no longer there 1 The tower s modern name comes from the icon of Spas Nerukotvorny Russian Spas Nerukotvornyj translated as The Saviour Not Made by Hands which was placed above the gates on the inside wall in 1658 and removed in 1917 The tower is also named for the wall painted icon of Spas Smolensky Russian Spas Smolenskij translated as Smolensky Saviour which was created in the 16th century on the outside wall of tower plastered over in 1937 but reopened and restored in 2010 The Spasskaya Tower was the first tower of the many Moscow Kremlin Towers to be crowned with the hipped roof in 1624 1625 by architects Bazhen Ogurtsov and Christopher Galloway a Scottish architect and clock maker 2 According to a number of historical accounts the clock on the Spasskaya Tower appeared between 1491 and 1585 It is usually referred to as the Kremlin chimes Kremlyovskie kuranty and designates official Moscow Time The clock face has a diameter of 6 metres 20 ft 3 The gate of Spasskaya Tower was used to greet foreign dignitaries and was used during formal ceremonies or processions held on Red Square Senatskaya EditThe Senatskaya Tower Russian Senatskaya bashnya was built in 1491 by an architect Pietro Antonio Solari and was purely defensive in nature it guarded the Kremlin on the Red Square side For a long time it remained nameless It was only in 1787 after architect Matvei Kazakov constructed the Kremlin Senate on the Kremlin s territory that it was given its present name The dome of the Senate can be seen from Red Square Inside the central part of the tower there are three tiers of vaulted chambers In 1860 the flat tower was topped with a stone tent roof crowned in turn with a gilt weather vane The tower contains a through passage that allows VIPs to travel from the kremlin to Red Square Its height is 34 3 metres 113 ft Geographical coordinates 55 45 12 N 37 37 10 E 55 753449 N 37 619548 E 55 753449 37 619548 Senatskaya Tower Nikolskaya EditThe Nikolskaya Tower Russian Nikolskaya bashnya is a tower with a through passage on the eastern wall of the Moscow Kremlin which overlooks the Red Square not far from the State Historical Museum The Nikolskaya Tower was built in 1491 by an Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari It was named after Nikolaevsky Nikolsky Greek Monastery which is no longer there In 1806 the tower was rebuilt in the neo Gothic style by an architect Luigi Rusca In 1812 the top of the tower was blown up by the retreating French army It was restored in 1816 by an architect Osip Bove The Nikolskaya Tower was once again severely damaged by the artillery fire in October 1917 and was later restored by an architect Nikolai Markovnikov In 1935 the Soviets installed a red star on top of the tower Its current height with the star is 70 4 metres 231 ft The original icon of Saint Nicholas of Mozhaysk placed above the entrance on Red Square had been plastered over by Soviet authorities and was uncovered and restored in 2010 similar to what took place on the Spasskaya Tower 4 5 Geographical coordinates 55 45 16 N 37 37 04 E 55 754421 N 37 617713 E 55 754421 37 617713 Nikolskaya Tower Corner Arsenalnaya EditThe Corner Arsenalnaya Tower Russian Arsenalnaya Uglovaya bashnya i e Corner Arsenal tower is a tower of the Moscow Kremlin It was built in 1492 by an Italian architect Pietro Antonio Solari The construction of this tower completed the Kremlin s line of defence from the side of the Red Square It was called the Sobakin Tower until the early 18th century named so after a boyar Sobakin whose house had been adjacent to the tower from the Kremlin side The Corner Arsenalnaya Tower received its current name after the construction of the Arsenal The tower still has a secret well In 1707 due to a threat of Swedish invasion the gun slots of the Corner Arsenalnaya Tower were enlarged to fit heavy cannons In 1812 the tower was damaged by an explosion set up by the retreating French army It was restored in 1816 1819 by architect Osip Bove The tower s current height is over 60 metres 200 ft Geographical coordinates 55 45 18 N 37 36 59 E 55 755110 N 37 616469 E 55 755110 37 616469 Corner Arsenalnaya Tower Middle Arsenalnaya EditThe Middle Arsenalnaya Tower Russian Srednyaya Arsenalnaya bashnya i e Middle Arsenal tower is a Kremlin tower built in 1495 It is located on the northwestern side of the Kremlin wall and overlooks the Alexander Garden It is situated on the spot of a corner tower dating from the reign of Dmitry Donskoi It was given its present name the Middle Arsenal Tower after the Arsenal was completed in the mid 18th century Originally it was called the Faceted Tower because of the shape of its facade In 1680 an open lookout with a small pyramid shaped top was added to the tower In 1821 when the Alexander Garden was laid out an ancient style grotto was built at the foot of the tower designed by Osip Bove Geographical coordinates 55 45 13 N 37 36 56 E 55 753667 N 37 615525 E 55 753667 37 615525 Middle Arsenalnaya Tower Troitskaya EditMain article Troitskaya TowerThe Troitskaya Tower was built in 1495 1499 by an Italian architect Aloisio da Milano known in Russia as Aleviz Fryazin Milanets The tower has borne several names including Rizopolozhenskaya Znamenskaya and Karetnaya It received its current name in 1658 from the Troitskaya Coaching Inn Troickoe podvore in the Kremlin The two story basement of the tower housed a prison in the 16th 17th centuries There is the Troitsky Bridge which is protected by the Kutafia Tower and leads to the gates of the Troitskaya Tower There was also a clock on top of the tower between 1585 and 1812 In 1707 due to a threat of Swedish invasion the gun slots of the Troitskaya Tower were enlarged to fit heavy cannons In 1935 the Soviets installed a red star on top of the Troitskaya Tower Prior to Soviet rule the tower had an icon of the Holy Trinity atop its outward face Because this tower was the formal entrance for huge Communist Party Congresses the icon was totally removed rather than just plastered over as were those on the Spasskaya and Nikolskaya Towers Komendantskaya EditThe Komendantskaya Tower Russian Komendantskaya bashnya was completed in 1495 It used to be called Kolymazhnaya after the Kremlin s coach yard where carriages and coaches had been kept It was given its present name the Commandant s Tower in the 19th century when the commandant of Moscow took up residence in the Kremlin s Poteshny or Amusement Palace Like all Kremlin towers it was supplemented with a tent roof and watchtower in 1676 1686 The height of the tower on the side of the Alexander Garden is 41 25 metres 135 3 ft Geographical coordinates 55 45 02 N 37 36 49 E 55 750575 N 37 613518 E 55 750575 37 613518 Komendantskaya Tower Oruzheynaya Edit Oruzheynaya Tower The Oruzheynaya Tower Russian Oruzhejnaya bashnya translated as Armory Tower was built in 1495 It was given its present name in the 19th century after the construction of the Armory Before then it was known as the Konyushennaya Tower a reference to the royal stables that stood behind it Geographical coordinates 55 44 58 N 37 36 46 E 55 749428 N 37 612714 E 55 749428 37 612714 Oruzheynaya Tower Kutafya EditThe Kutafya Tower Russian Kutafya bashnya formerly Predmostnaya tower is an outlying barbican tower of the Moscow Kremlin Built in 1516 under the leadership of the Milanese architect Aloisio da Milano in order to protect one end of the Neglinnaya River bridge that comes out of the West side of the Kremlin wall under the Troitskaya Tower Initially the Kutafya was surrounded by a moat and was the only access to the city through its lift bridge nowadays the moat around the bridge has transformed into Alexander Garden Kutafya is one of the lower height Kremlin towers which had two combat tiers and no spire with the open top upper landing equipped with arrowslits and machicolations which made it a formidable obstacle to the besieging of the Kremlin fortress Marking today the main public entrance to the Kremlin the Kutafya tower was modified several times through the centuries in the 16th and 17th centuries a system of dikes was built to raise the water level of the Neglinnaya river and create a moat that surrounded the tower from all sides making its drawbridge the only entry point from the city In 1668 a causeway leading through the tower to the Troitskaya Bridge was built a delicate ornamental crown in the Muscovite baroque style was built in 1685 the divider between the two tiers was destroyed in 1780 in 1867 a through passage to the Manezhnaya Street was built as well as the arched apertures on the sides and a guard house on the south side the guard house was dismantled during the restoration works of carried out in 1974 77 The Kutafya Tower is currently 13 5 m high it used to be 18 m but the lower part of the tower was submerged by successive constructions that heightened the street level ground Geographical coordinates 55 45 09 N 37 36 46 E 55 752514 N 37 612649 E 55 752514 37 612649 Kutafya Tower References Edit Zubacheva K 2019 12 30 6 facts about Spasskaya the Kremlin s main tower Russia Beyond the Headlines Retrieved 2020 01 29 Shvidkovsky 2007 p 151 156 sfn error no target CITEREFShvidkovsky2007 help Bigger Bens go galegroup com ezproxy1 lib asu edu Spectator p 14 Retrieved 7 November 2017 Chistykova Yaroslavova N B Kak MY vozvrashali Ikonu Nikoly Mozhajskogo i simvoly svyashennoj dinastii v Kreml Archived from the original on 2013 12 03 PREDSTOYaTEL RUSSKOJ CERKVI OSVYaTIL OTRESTAVRIROVANNUYu NADVRATNUYu IKONU NIKOLY MOZhAJSKOGO NA NIKOLSKOJ BAShNE MOSKOVSKOGO KREMLYa External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moscow Kremlin Towers kremlin ru Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Moscow Kremlin towers amp oldid 1128762188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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