KOLOMENSKOYE ESTATE
Old
village of Kolomenskoye situated in the southern part of Moscow is a
unique place where the relics of Russian history were created and kept
for centuries. Close to Kolomenskoye there is the oldest on the territory
of Moscow settlement - known as Dyakovo Gorodishche - that is 2,5 thousand
years old.
Kolomenskoye was first mentioned in chronicles of
Prince Ivan Kalita in 1339. Since the 14th century Kolomenskoye had
been the summer residence of Great Moscow Princes, and then - Russian
tsars. In 1606 Kolomenskoye was the place of dislocation of the rebellious
troop headed by I. Bolotnikov. Peter the Great spent his childhood in
Kolomenskoye. After capturing Azov in 1696 and Poltava victory in 1709
Peter the Great spent some time in Kolomenskoye, before his solemn entrance
to Moscow.
In the 19th century the constructions of Kolomenskoye
became dilapidated. In 1860-1880s, after partial restoration, Kolomenskoye
became the place for folk festivals and even bear fights.
Kolomenskoye became the department of the museum "Pokrovsky
Cathedral" in 1925. Since 1928 the estate was turned into the part
of the State Historical Museum. In 1930-1959 the museum of architecture
under the open air was created in Kolomenskoye. The examples of Russian
wooden architecture of the 17th century were brought here from all over
the country. Among them was the brewery from Preobrajenskoe village,
the gate tower from Nikolo-Karelsky monastery, the tower of Bratsk prison
from Siberia, Peter the Great log-cabin from Archangelsk, and so on.
These architectural monuments were preserved by the efforts of Kolomenskoye
Museum director, P. Baranovsky.
The architectural ensemble of Kolomenskoye Estate
is valuable from both historical and artistic points of view. The complex
of Kolomenskoye includes the Ascension Church, John the Baptist Decapitation
Church in Diakovskoye, St. George temple with belfry, Our Lady of Kazan
Church, the water tower and two stone entrance gates built in times
of Tsar Aleksey Mikhailovitch.
The
gem of the architectural ensemble is the Ascension Church that was one
of the first hipped stone temples in Russia. The church was put up in
1532 to commemorate the long-awaited birth of Great Prince Vasili III's
son. He was the one who inherited Russian throne and became known as
Ivan the Terrible. It is possible that the church was constructed by
Italian architecture Petrok Maly (Peter Fryazin), the one who put up
the walls of Kitai-Gorod. The well-proportioned temple with arrow-shaped
windows and high octahedral hipped roof was intended only for the members
of tsar's family.
The wooden palace built in 1667-1671 for Tsar Aleksey
Mikhailovitch did not survive until nowadays. The contemporaries' called
the palace "the eighth wonder of the world". It consisted
of the high picturesque wooden houses connected with each other by means
of covered passages and halls. The palace was decorated with carvings
and paintings. In 1681 it was rebuilt, but it did not help preserving
the palace. In 1768 the ramshackle building was demolished. In summer
1996 the archeologists were lucky to discover the foundation of the
palace.
In
1971 Kolomenskoye was announced the state museum-preserve. Nowadays
it is the State Historical, Architectural, Nature and Landscape Museum-Preserve
Kolomenskoye. The collections of the museum are unique, since they include
the Late Stone Age findings, rare print issues, including the first
Russian print book "Moscow Apostle" edited on March 1, 1564
by Ivan Fyodorov and Peter Mstislavets, and so on. The unique collection
of white stone carvings includes the parts of decor of the destroyed
temples and architectural monuments of Moscow. Kolomenskoye also features
one of the best in Russia collections of architectural and oven ceramics
of the 10th-beginning of the 20th centuries, including Moscow glazed
tiles.
Nowadays Kolomenskoye Museum-Preserve is one of the
most picturesque and popular places in Moscow. In autumn, 2002 the government
approved the program of the museum development. On the territory of
Kolomenskoye it is planned to create the Ethnographic complex. The city
government is responsible for restoration of some Kolomenskoye architectural
monuments, including the Ascension Church, Our Lady of Kazan Church,
the railing of Gosudarev Yard, Sytni yard, water tower, and St. George
temple with belfry.


