Kiev Fortress
Київська фортеця | |
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Location |
24a Hospitalna Street |
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Public transit access |
Klovska station, Palats Sportu station ( |
The Kiev Fortress (Ukrainian: Київська фортеця; Kyivs'ka fortetsia; Russian: Киевская крепость; Kievskaya krepost') is a complex of Russian fortifications in Kiev, Ukraine built over the span of the 17th through 19th centuries, soon after the 1654 Council in Pereyaslav, based on already existing fortified monastery of Kiev Pechersk Lavra.
Kiev Fortress once belonged to the extensive system of western Russian fortresses that existed in the Russian Empire. The Kiev Fortress complex features many separate fortifications in Pechersk, Old Kiev, Podil, and Zvirynets located in various city districts of Kiev. Currently most of the remaining structures turned into a historic reserve. The main fortification associated with the Kiev Fortress (where located the Historic and Architectural Museum) is the Hospital fortification.
Overview
Background
Having lost their military importance in the 20th century, the buildings continued to be used as barracks, storage and incarceration facilities. Some of them played independent historical roles. The Kosyi Caponier ("Skew Caponier") became a prison for the political inmates in the 1900s–1920s and was later turned into a Soviet museum. Now it is the center of the modern museum. A small fortress built in 1872 on the legendary Lysa Hora ("Bald Mountain") in 1906 became a place of executions for convicted political inmates. It is now a landscape reserve and part of the museum complex.
Composition
- Old Pechersk fortresses (1655-1803)
- New Pechersk Fortress (1831-?)
- Citadel (Askold's Grave, 1706-)
- Hosptital fortifications (Cherepanova Hora, 1836-)
- Northern Semi-tower
- Vasylkiv fortifications (1831-)
- separately built fortifications: 3 towers, 3 barracks, other fortifications
- Zvirynets fortifications (Vydubychi, 1810-1918)
- Lysohirsky Fort (Lysa Hora, 1874-?)
Description
The fortress complex consisted of about four main areas, the western side which had the hospital fortification and the Vasylkiv fortification, the northern (city) side had the Kiev Arsenal area including government buildings and gendarme barracks, the southern side included the Kiev-Pechersk citadel with Lavra which on its southern side was reinforced with four lunettes and further to the south with Zvirynets fortification, on Trukhaniv island across Dnieper was located a brick factory.
There were seven round or semi-round fortified buildings conditionally called towers. Three of those towers were part of the Vasylkiv fortification. One semi-tower was part of the hospital fortification.
Notable individuals who served at the fortress
- Constantine Ypsilantis - served as a commandant of the Pechersk Fortress between 1807 and 1816.
Kiev Fortress Museum
Within the Kiev Fortress is the Kyiv Fortress Museum,or Kyivska Fortetsya. It is semi-underground. The museum is housed in a 19th-century building,which was formerly a wing of the fortress.[1]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kiev Fortress. |
Gallery
- Main gate to the Hospital fort
- View from the Main gate of the Hospital fort
- Cannons on the wall of the Hospital fort
- The Main gate and the wall to the Hospital fort (view from the East)
- The Main gate and the wall to the Hospital fort (view from the West)
- Skew Caponier
- Tower No.1 (reduit, Vasylkiv fort)
- Round tower No.2 (Vasylkiv fort)
- Prozorivska tower No.3 (Vasylkiv fort)
See also
References
- ↑ "Kiev Fortress Museum - Unique Semi-Underground Museum". NewMedia Holdings, Inc. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
External links
- Official website (National Historic and Architectural Museum "Kiev Fortress")