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St. Basil's is composed of 9 separate domes, mostly onion shaped, each housing a separate chapel. Ivan the Terrible had it built in the mid 1500s to commemorate his victory over the Tatar Khan. The 9th dome was added in 1581 by his son to house the tomb of St. Basil, the Holy Fool. The original plan was to have 7 onion domes clustered around a central chapel. Each onion dome represented the saint on whose day he had won a battle.
St. Basil's tomb was in the main chapel, the one used for church services. The chapel was in the process of being restored; many of the original layer could still be seen although the frescoes had been updated many times.
Each chapel was decorated differently with both different icons and different styles.
To get upstairs, we climbed a some narrow but steep curved staircase. Apparently at least twice Stalin had considered knocking down St. Basil's. On one occasion the architect told Stalin that he would slit his own throat before he would authorize the tearing down of St. Basil's. He spent five years in jail, but the cathedral wasn't knocked down. This cathedral wasn't as fancy as many of the others; it was cozier and more intimate. It's my favorite.


2 comments:
9th pic down is from zagorsk...it's actually the altar from that cave monostary. O.o...the one you're not supposed to see coz it's too holy for anyone but the priests to look at.
Hi: you gave me your blog when you visited my garage sale in Aug. I finally have had time to look at the blog. I enjoyed reading and looking at the pictures very much! Thanks for all the information. Hopefully one day i will be able to visit this strange and very historical place. Thanks
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