The 'Cathedral of Intercession of the Virgin on the Moat' ( or simply ''Pokrovskiy Cathedral'', better known as the 'Cathedral of Saint Basil the Blessed' or ''Saint Basil's Cathedral'' - ) is a multi-
tented church on the
Red Square in
Moscow that also features distinctive
onion domes. The cathedral is traditionally perceived as symbolic of the unique position of
Russia between
Europe and
Asia.
The cathedral was commissioned by
Ivan IV (also known as ''Ivan the Terrible'') and built between
1555 and
1561 in
Moscow to commemorate
the capture of the
Khanate of Kazan. In
1588 Tsar Fedor Ivanovich had a chapel added on the eastern side above the grave of
Basil Fool for Christ (''
yurodivy Vassily Blazhenny''), a
Russian Orthodox saint after whom the cathedral was popularly named.
Saint Basil's is located at the southeast end of
Red Square, just across from the
Spasskaya Tower of
the Kremlin. Not particularly large, it consists of nine chapels built on a single foundation. The cathedral's design follows that of contemporary
tented churches, notably those of Ascension in
Kolomenskoye (1530) and of St John the Baptist's Decapitation in Dyakovo (1547).
In a garden at the front of the cathedral
stands a bronze statue commemorating
Dmitry Pozharsky and
Kuzma Minin, who rallied Russia's volunteer army against the Polish invaders during the
Time of Troubles in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The statue was originally constructed in the center of Red Square, but the Soviet government felt it obstructed parades and moved the statue in front of the cathedral in
1936.
The initial concept was to build a cluster of chapels, one dedicated to each of the saints on whose feast day the
tsar had won a battle, but the construction of a single central tower unifies these spaces into a single cathedral. A popular but untrue legend says that Ivan had the
architect,
Postnik Yakovlev,
blinded to prevent him from building a more magnificent building for anyone else.
It has been recently speculated that certain elements of Timurid monuments in
Samarkand or of
Kazan Qolsharif mosque were pictured in this cathedral, because this mosque was the main symbol of
Khanate of Kazan. The original look of the mosque is unknown, however.
Saint Basil's Cathedral should not be confused with the
Moscow Kremlin, which is situated right next to it on Red Square. It is not at all a part of the Moscow Kremlin. However, many publications do make the mistake of calling this structure the Kremlin. The misconception has inadvertently been reinforced by Western television journalists, who have often stood in front of St. Basil's during their reports.
More pictures
External links
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Satellite photo of St Basil's Cathedral
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St. Basil's Cathedral
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St. Basil's Cathedral Travel Article