Saturday, August 8, 2015

Moscow Tour - No Motorcycles Today - August 7, 2015


Today we toured Moscow with a local guide and a big tour bus. 
The bus met us in front of our hotel, the Petr I.



Main Victory Monument - more info here:

Lee-Ann at Moscow University



Second Stop: Novodevichy Convent


Novodevichy Cemetery is next to the southern wall of the 16th-century Novodevichy Convent

The remains of many famous Russians buried in other abbeys were disintered and reburied at the Novodevichy. The cemetery holds the tombs of Russian authors, musicians, playwrights, and poets, as well as famous actors, political leaders, and scientists, with 27,000 buried there.


Nikita Khrushchev gravesite


Boris Yeltsin is under this big rock - his head stone is in the color of the Russian Flag

Vladimir Mayakovsky, Russian poet, playwright, actor, was not able to publish his work after Lenin came to power, despite supporting and fighting for the revolution, so he commited suicide at age 37.  

Anton Chekhov

Mrs. Mikhail Gorbachev (Raisa) - Gorbachev is not very popular in Russia since it was under his administration that the Soviet Union dissolved.  He now lives in Moscow and part time in San Francisco and runs several foundations.

Yuri Nikulin, famous Russian clown


Graves of a famous (at least for the Russians we didn't catch the names) ballerina and actress.

Below are some other tombstones that caught our eye - a very eclectic mix.






This guy looks like he's on a cell phone - calling God, maybe?






David's favorite, as a model collector - check out the tank at the base.


We've heard a lot about the interior decor of the Moscow subway stations, so we asked our guide, Katya, to take us underground for a ride on the metro.

Entering the Metro

Long ride down to metro

Buying metro tickets

Mary Jane makes a Mormon friend who suggests a subway conversion

The newest Metro station, opened 2008

Metro art - mural depicting victory over Napoleon

The next stop was just as interesting.


Statue at a metro station - every corner of every arch in this station had a statue.  I wish we had time to really study them.

And our final stop near Red Square was totally different from the others, but equally as artistic.



If you look really closely, there's a scaffold on the right side near an arch.  Above the scaffold you can see an artist's hand and paintbrush working on restoring one of the murals.

Katya explains the Moscow subway system to us.

Group photo - at least some of us - Dave, Marilyn, Jeff, Randy, Boz, Mary Jane & Steve


The art we saw in the stations was good but there are many more eloborate stations - the Russians really invest in their infrastructure - check this out:


Katya ended our tour of the metro at the Red Square station.  As we exited the subway we made our way past the GUM department store,



Gum Department Store from the Red Square - it's huge.

...and to a cafe in front of the Gum for delicious lunch.  I had blueberry linguini with chanterelles mushrooms.  According to Katya, it's been a very good year for the mushrooms.  Unusual, but tasty.

Then on to a walking tour of the Kremlin.

State History Museum on Red Square

Tomb of the unknown Soldier by the Kremlin Wall


Monument to a WWII General

Gate to Red Square - Mary Jane Sheldon and Lee-Ann

Senatkaya Tower


Spasskaya Tower


Tsarskaya Tower

Part of the Kremlin Wall



Layout of the Kremlin

Grand Kremlin Palace where the president, Putin, works once or twice a week.


Leonid Brezhnev's contribution to the Kremlin - it is the only modern building and the only one where there was no attempt to make it blend into the surrounding structures.


The Communist Congress used to meet in this building, but now it is used for concerts and the annual Christmas Tree Party for the children of Russia


The double headed eagle adorns the building, symbolizing how Russia looks both east and west.


Ceremonial Cannon - Kremlin

Cathedral of the Assumption is the oldest church in the Kremlin.  It is where all the Tsars were coronated.





Interior of Cathedral of the Assumption


Cathedral Square in the Kremlin



Cathedral of the Archangel is where the stars and grand princes of Russia were buried until the 17th century. 


There are 54 tombs.  The southern wall is where the Grand Dukes and their close relatives were buried. The northern wall holds the bodies of dukes who were sentenced to death for misconduct. The vaults of the Romanovs are located in the central part of the Cathedral - they include Tsar Michael Fyodorovich, Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, Tsar Fyodor Alexeyevich and Tsar Ivan Alexeyevich. In 1903, the tombs were covered with glass and copper cases for protection

One of greatest treasures of the cathedral is the burial vault of Ivan the Terrible. Ivan was the first to take the title of Tsar and therefore merited a special burial chamber, the construction of which he oversaw himself. Nearby are the tombs of Ivan's sons, Ivan Ivanovich (killed by his father) and Fyodor Ivanovich (who succeeded his father.)

Interior of the Cathedral of the Archangel


Alex, Ida, Marilyn, Boz, Randy, Lee-Ann and Dave

Kremlin Gate Guard


St. Basil's Catherdral

The spires of St. Basil's Cathedral


Tomorrow we will be back on the motorcycles to head further south and east.  It will be a late start at 10:00 AM, as we were advised that early Saturday traffic is terrible due to dacha-bound weekenders.

No comments:

Post a Comment