Eastern and Central Europe (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(Ben Green) #1
MOSCOW 127

The Cathedral of the Annunciation,
crowned by golden onion domes

Tiers of frescoes on the central cupola of the Cathedral of the Archangel

Cathedral of the


Archangel^4


Архангельский собор
Arkhangelskiy sobor


The Kremlin. Map D3. &


This was the last of the great
cathedrals to be built in the
Kremlin. Commissioned by
Ivan III and designed by
Aleviz Novy in 1505, it is a
combination of early-Russian
and Renaissance architecture.
This site was the burial
place for Moscow’s princes
and tsars from 1340. The
tombs of the tsars, white
stone sarcophagi with
bronze covers inscribed
in Old Slavonic, are in the
nave. The tsars, with the
exception of Peter II, who
died in 1730, were no longer
buried here after the capital
was moved to St Petersburg
in 1712. The walls, pillars
and domes of the cathedral
are covered with spectac-
ular frescoes painted by
a team of artists led by
Semen Ushakov, the head
of the icon workshop in
the State Armoury.
There are more than 60
full-length portraits of Russian
rulers and a few striking
images of the Archangel
Michael, the protector of the
rulers of early Moscow. The
cathedral’s four-tiered
iconostasis was constructed
between 1680 and 1681, but
the Icon of the Archangel
Michael on the lowest tier
dates from the 14th century.


Cathedral of the
Annunciation^5
Благовещенский собор
Blagoveshchenskiy sobor

The Kremlin. Map D3. &

Unlike the other cathedrals
in the Kremlin, which were
created by Italian architects,
the Cathedral of the
Annunciation is a wholly
Russian affair. Commissioned
by Ivan III in 1484 as a royal

State Armoury^6
Oружейная палата
Oruzheinaya palata

The Kremlin. Map D3. &

The collection of the State
Armoury represents the
wealth accumulated by
Russian princes and tsars
over many centuries. The first
written mention of a state
armoury occurs in 1508, but
there were forges in the
Kremlin as early as the 13th
century. Later, gold- and silver-
smiths, workshops producing
icons and embroidery, and
the Office of the Royal Stables
all moved into the Kremlin.
The original armoury was
demolished in 1960 to make
way for the State Kremlin
Palace. The current State
Armoury was built as a
museum by Tsar Nicholas I
(r. 1825–55). It was designed
by Konstantin Ton in 1844 and
completed in 1851. It is home
to the State Diamond Fund.

upwards to the cupola and its
awe-inspiring painting of
Christ Pantocrator. Three of
the greatest masters of icon
painting in Russia contributed
to the iconostasis. Theophanes
the Greek painted the images
of Christ, the Virgin and the
Archangel Gabriel in the
Deesis Tier, while the Icon of
the Archangel Michael on this
tier is attributed to Andrey
Rublev. Several of the icons in
the Festival Tier were also
painted by Rublev. Most of the
other icons in this tier are the
work of Prokhor Gorodetskiy.

chapel, it stands beside the
Faceted Palace, which is all
that remains of a large palace
built for Ivan III. The cathedral,
built by archi tects from Pskov,
had three domes and open
gal ler ies on all sides but, after
a fire in 1547, the corner
chapels were added and the
galleries enclosed. On the
south façade is the
Groznenskiy Porch, added by
Ivan the Terrible (see p120)
when he contrave ned church
law by marrying for the fourth
time in 1572. Barred from
attending reli gious services,
he could only watch through
a grille in the porch.
The interior of the cathedral
is painted with frescoes. The
artwork around the iconosta-
sis was painted in 1508 by the
monk Feodosius, son of the
icon painter Dionysius. The
warm colours of the frescoes
create an atmosphere of inti-
macy and the vertical thrust
of the pillars draws the eye

Peter by the famous 15th-
century artist, Dionysius,
painted on the southern
wall of the cathedral.

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