More Moscow History
Our
Moscow hotel, situated on the
western bank of the Moscow River, is one of Stalin’s seven famous
gothic skyscrapers. Built in the 1950s they demonstrated the prowess
and glory of the Soviet regime.
Stalin’s Gothic buildings, are
referred to as wedding cakes or
seven sisters. Across
the river sat
the Russian Government’s White
House. The
hotel was
not far from the bustling Novy Arbat Street and a ten-minute walk to
a Metro station. With
a population of ten million, the city has two and a half million
people arriving or departing every day!
The city runs 25 miles north to south and 19 miles east to west.
Russia has 93,000 miles of railroad. Like Rome, Moscow is built on
seven hills
The
old red flag of the USSR with the sickle and hammer is gone. Today’s
flag now goes back to the days of
Peter the Great who was quite taken
with the Netherlands, so
the flag
reflects the colors and style of their flag. The flag of the Russian
Federation has three equal stripes, one of white,
blue and red in that order from top to bottom
Russia,
the largest state of the former Soviet Union, spans two continents,
Europe and Asia, and is the largest country in the world. On the west
it is bordered by Norway, Finland, Estonia, Belarus, Ukraine, and the
Black Sea. On the south lies Georgia, Azerbaijan, the Caspian Sea,
Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and China. The Northern Pacific Ocean is on the
east, and the Arctic Ocean borders the north.
Moscow,
Russia’s largest city, is the country’s current capitol. In 1147
the prince decided the area had the makings of a future metropolis,
and in 1156 when a wooden fortress was built the city of Moscow was
born. Today the 850-year-old city exists in the midst of rapidly
changing political and economic conditions. The city presents a
dizzying array of the old and new, the alienating and quaint, the
shabby and sparkling. The city is
full of mammoth buildings, many spanning an entire block. Moscow
has several ring roads around the city. They are wide with six lanes
going in each direction.
Mongols
burned the city in 1382. In the 15th
century Ivan the Great declared Moscow the capitol of Russian lands.
Italian architects were summoned to rebuild the old wooden Kremlin in
stone. By 1495 the walls and towers were completed. New cathedrals
were commissioned, squares laid, decorative gardens planted and
Moscow became known as the ‘beautiful big village’.
Ivan
the Terrible was born at the Kremlin, and crowned himself czar at age
16. He married seven times and killed his own son in a fit of rage.
He claimed the entire Volga region for Russia, and he also
commissioned beautiful St. Basil’s Cathedral.
Between
1610-1612 Polish forces occupied Moscow during the peak of the Time
of Troubles. Moscow’s fall from grace began during the rule of
Peter the Great, 1696-1725. He believed Russia would be better
westernized from the Gulf of Finland, and started building St.
Petersburg as his new capitol. In 1712 Peter’s “Window on the
West” wrestled the governing powers from Moscow and moved them to
St. Petersburg.
Napoleon
went after Moscow in 1812, but found himself and his troops in a
basically abandoned city to brave the cold winter on their own. When
leaving he burned most of the city, but failed to topple the mighty
Kremlin itself.
A
year later a large-scale industrial expansion created smoke-belching
factories, and shabby suburbs sprang up around the city to house the
influx of workers to Moscow.
In
October 1917 the Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, overcame savage street
fighting to capture the Kremlin. Six months later Lenin brought the
capitol back to Moscow. When Lenin died in 1924, Josef Stalin took
over Russian leadership. Stalin along with other irresponsible
leaders virtually raped the city by blowing up thousands of
historical and architectural monuments, including the Church of
Christ the Savior. (It was totally rebuilt in 1997) Streets were
straightened and widened, neighborhoods demolished and seven ‘Stalin
Gothic’ skyscrapers appeared on the landscape. Fully one-half of
Moscow’s monuments had been turned to dust by the time Stalin died
in 1953.
During
Khrushchev’s years, 1957-64, hastily built concrete block
residential projects appeared in Moscow’s outskirts. Except for a
brief period in 1880 when Moscow prepared for the Olympics,
Brezhnev’s years were marked by stagnation.
Privatization
sparked by Mikhail Gorbachev’s perestroika
resulted in renovation of world class hotels and the appearance of
up-scale restaurants, clubs and casinos. In the 21st
century Moscow resembles a bustling Eurasian metropolis as kiosks
and street traders enter Russia’s furious fledgling capitalism.
There
are 17 convents
in the city, 18 monasteries, and 450
churches, which is about half the number of
churches before Stalin set about
blowing up and demolishing them, and
most are Russian Orthodox.
You
may want to check Posts 3-27-13, 12-5-10, 8-21-10, 11-20-10, 2-26-12, 7-8-12, 7-22-12, 2-10-13, 2-17-13, 2-13-13, 7-3-13, 10-30-13, 7-10-13, 10-10-13, or 3-17-13
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