Moscow: St Basil’s Cathedral

Moscow: St Basil’s Cathedral.

“The Cathedral of Vasily the Blessed (commonly known as Saint Basil’s Cathedral), is a former church in Red Square. The building, now a museum, is officially known as the Cathedral of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin on the Moat or Pokrovsky Cathedral. It was built from 1555–61 on orders from Ivan the Terrible and commemorates the capture of Kazan and Astrakhan. It has been the hub of the city’s growth since the 14th century and was the city’s tallest building until the completion of the Ivan the Great Bell Tower in 1600.

“The building is shaped as a flame of a bonfire rising into the sky, a design that has no analogues in Russian architecture. Dmitry Shvidkovsky, in his book ‘Russian Architecture and the West’, states that ‘it is like no other Russian building. Nothing similar can be found in the entire millennium of Byzantine tradition from the fifth to fifteenth century … a strangeness that astonishes by its unexpectedness, complexity and dazzling interleaving of the manifold details of its design’.”

2 thoughts on “Moscow: St Basil’s Cathedral”

  1. I had no idea that building was unique in all of Russian and Byzantine architecture. It’s so famous, I thought it represented an entire genre of architecture.

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