Ryazan リャザン Kremlin Assumption Cathedral At Night in Summer
Someone shot this great video, thanks guys for such a beauty!
Assumption Cathedral. Ryazan Kremlin.Panoramic video 360
Assumption Cathedral (XVI-XVII centuries.) - The Cathedral of the Ryazan Metropolitanate of the ROC and the city of Ryazan. It is located on the site of the green (powder) chambers and the Prikaznaya hut. It was built by architect Yakov Bukhvostov at the site of the collapsed white-stone Uspensky Cathedral, built by his predecessors. Today it houses the highest iconostasis in Russia.
Good afternoon. My name is Burmakov Yuri. I'm doing panoramas and virtual tours. As this looks it is possible to look on a site Virtual round it is an excellent possibility to show an exclusive interior of your institution from within, to involve even more visitors.
Best Attractions & Things to do in Ryazan , Russia
In this video our travel specialists have listed some of the best things to do in Ryazan . We have tried to do some extensive research before giving the listing of Things To Do in Ryazan.
If you want Things to do List in some other area, feel free to ask us in comment box, we will try to make the video of that region also.
Don't forget to Subscribe our channel to view more travel videos. Click on Bell ICON to get the notification of updates Immediately.
List of Best Things to do in Ryazan
Assumption Cathedral
Ryazan Kremlin
Monument Mashrooms With Eyes
Academician I. Pavlov's Memorial Museum Estate
Bar-Museum of Wines and Beverages of Russia Sikera
Monument to Evpatiy Kolovrat
Museum of the History of Ryazan Lollipop
Sergey Yesenin Monument
History of Airborne Troops Museum
Church of The Transfiguration of Our Saviour On Yar
#Ryazan
#Ryazanattractions
#Ryazantravel
#Ryazannightlife
#Ryazanshopping
Ryazan Kremlin Exposition «From Old Rus' to Russia» HD
Ryazan Kremlin Exhibition «Human and nature» HD
Ryazan Kremlin exposition «History of Russian Army» HD
Ryazan' Kremlin photos part 1
Rostov Kremlin / Best in Heritage
Creation Of The New Cultural Product As A Mean To Revive The Intangible Cultural Heritage, presentation of the ICOM Russia 2014 Award laureate State Museum Preserve “Rostov Kremlin”, by the Director Natalia Karovskaya
The Life And Death Of Vsevolod the Big Nest
Vsevolod III Yuryevich, or Vsevolod the Big Nest (Russian: Все́волод III Ю́рьевич Большо́е Гнездо́) (1154–1212), was the Grand Prince of Vladimir during whose long reign (1177–1212) the city reached the zenith of its glory.
Vsevolod was the tenth or eleventh son of Yuri Dolgoruky (c. 1099 – 1157), who founded the town Dmitrov to commemorate the site of Vsevolod's birth. Nikolai Karamzin (1766 - 1826) initiated the speculation identifying Vsevolod's mother Helene as a Greek princess, because after her husband's death she took Vsevolod with her to Constantinople.
Vsevolod spent his youth at the chivalric court of the Komnenoi. On his return from the Byzantine Empire to Rus' in 1170, Vsevolod supposedly visited Tbilisi, as a local chronicle records that that year the Georgian king entertained his nephew from Constantinople and married him to his relative, an Ossetian princess.
Reign
In 1173 two Smolensk princes captured Kiev, captured Vsevolod and briefly installed him on the throne. Ransomed a year later, Vsevolod took his brother Mikhalko's side in his struggle against the powerful boyars of Rostov and Suzdal. Upon Mikhalko's death in 1176, Vsevolod succeeded him in Vladimir. He promptly subjugated the boyars and systematically raided the Volga peoples, notably Volga Bulgaria. He installed puppet rulers on the throne of Novgorod and married his daughters to princes of Chernigov and Kiev.
Vsevolod showed little mercy to those who disobeyed his commands. In 1180 and 1187 he punished the princes of Ryazan by ousting them from their lands. In 1207 he burnt to the ground both Ryazan and Belgorod. His military fame spread quickly. The Tale of Igor's Campaign, thought to be written during Vsevolod's reign, addresses him thus: Great prince Vsevolod! Don't you think of flying here from afar to safeguard the paternal golden throne of Kiev? For you can with your oars scatter in drops the Volga, and with your helmets scoop dry the Don.
But Kievan matters concerned Vsevolod little in the latter part of his reign. He concentrated on building up his own capital, Vladimir. His Ossetian wife, Maria Shvarnovna, who devoted herself to works of piety and founded several convents, was glorified by the Russian church as a saint. By her Vsevolod had no fewer than fourteen children, thus earning for himself the sobriquet Big Nest. Four of them—Konstantin, George, Yaroslav and Sviatoslav—succeeded him as Grand Dukes of Vladimir. He died on April 12, 1212 and was buried at the Assumption Cathedral in Vladimir.
Marriage and children
Vsevolod married first Maria, whose origins are disputed. She has been variously identified as Ossetian, Alan and Moravian. They had at least fourteen children:
Sbyslava (Pelaghea) Vsevolodovna (born 26 October 1178).
Vseslava Vsevolodovna. Married Rostislav Yaroslavich, Prince of Snov. He was a son of Yaroslav II Vsevolodovich, Prince of Chernigov. His paternal grandfather was Vsevolod II of Kiev.
Verchoslava Vsevolodovna. Married Rostislav II of Kiev.
Konstantin of Rostov (18 May 1186 – 2 February 1218).
Boris Vsevolodovich. (c. 1187–1238).
Gleb Vsevolodovich (d. 29 September 1189).
Yuri II of Vladimir (1189 – 4 March 1238).
Yaroslav II of Vladimir (8 February 1191 – 30 September 1246).
Helena Vsevolodovna (d. 1204).
Vladimir Vsevolodovich, Prince of Yuryev-Polsky (25 October 1192 – 6 January 1227).
Sviatoslav III of Vladimir (27 March 1196 – 3 February 1252).
Ivan Vsevolodovich, Prince of Starodub (28 November 1197 – after 1247).
Anna Vsevolodovna. Married Vladimir, Prince of Belgorod (d. 1239).
Maria died in 1205 or 1206. Vsevolod married Liubov Vasilkovna in 1209. She was a daughter of Vasilko Bryacheslavich, Prince of Vitebsk. They had no known children.
Рыбное встречает 2020 год
#Рязань2020 #НовогодняяСтолица #Рязань #Рыбное
Съёмка с рук. Так что...извиняйте. Шёл мелкий дождь, брать гимбл не решился....
SONY a7III+Tamron 17-28, f2.8 F1/50, iso1250-1600. PP-Cine2
The Life And Death Of Ivan I of Moscow
Ivan I Daniilovich Kalita (Ива́н I Дании́лович Калита́ in Russian; 1288 – 31 March 1341 was Prince of Moscow from 1325 and Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1328
Ivan was the son of Prince of Moscow Daniil Aleksandrovich.
After the death of his elder brother Yuri III, Ivan inherited the Principality of Moscow. Ivan participated in the struggle to get the title of Grand Prince of Vladimir which could be obtained with the approval of a khan of the Golden Horde. The main rivals of the princes of Moscow in this struggle were the princes of Tver – Mikhail, Dmitry the Terrible Eyes, and Alexander II, all of whom obtained the title of Grand prince of Vladimir and were deprived of it. All of them were murdered in the Golden Horde. In 1328 Ivan Kalita received the approval of khan Muhammad Ozbeg to become the Grand Prince of Vladimir with the right to collect taxes from all Russian lands.
According to the Russian historian Kluchevsky, the rise of Moscow under Ivan I Kalita was determined by three factors. The first one was that the Moscow principality was situated in the middle of other Russian principalities; thus, it was protected from any invasions from the East and from the West. Compared to its neighbors, Ryazan principality and Tver principality, Moscow was less often devastated. The relative safety of the Moscow region resulted in the second factor of the rise of Moscow – an influx of working and tax-paying people who were tired of constant raids and who actively relocated to Moscow from other Russian regions. The third factor was a trade route from Novgorod to the Volga river.
Ivan Kalita intentionally pursued the policy of relocation of people to his principality by an invitation of people from other places and by purchase of Russian people captured by Mongols during their raids. He managed to eliminate all the thieves in his lands, thus insuring the safety of traveling merchants. Internal peace and order together with the absence of Mongolian raids to the Moscow principality was mentioned in Russian chronicles as “great peace, silence, and relief of Russian land.
Ivan made Moscow very wealthy by maintaining his loyalty to the Horde (hence, the nickname Kalita, or moneybag). He used this wealth to give loans to neighbouring Russian principalities. These cities gradually fell deeper and deeper into debt, a condition that would allow Ivan's successors to annex them. The people called Ivan the ‘gatherer of the Russian lands’. He bought lands around Moscow, and very often the poor owners sold their lands willingly. Some of them kept the right to rule in their lands on behalf of Ivan Kalita. In one way or another a number of cities and villages joined the Moscow principality – Uglich in 1323, the principality of Belozero in 1328–1338, the principality of Galich in 1340. Ivan's greatest success, however, was convincing the Khan in Sarai that his son, Simeon The Proud, should succeed him as the Grand Prince of Vladimir; from then on, the important position almost always belonged to the ruling house of Moscow. The Head of the Russian Church – Metropolitan Peter, whose authority was extremely high, moved from Vladimir to Moscow to Prince Ivan Kalita.
Following a Lithuanian raid on the town of Torzhok in 1335 (as part of the Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars), Ivan retaliated by burning the towns of Osechen and Riasna.
Ivan died in Moscow, 31 March 1341. He was buried 1 April in the Church of the Archangel Michael.
Legacy
Under Ivan Kalita, Moscow was actively growing, and his residence on the Borovitsky hill became the main part of the city. Erection of either wooden or white-stone constructions was started in the Kremlin. A number of churches were built: in 1326–1327 the Assumption Cathedral, in 1329 the Church of Ivan of the Ladder (John Climacus), in 1330 the Cathedral of the Saviour on the Bor (Forest), and in 1333 the Cathedral of Archangel Michael, where Ivan Kalita and his descendants were buried. Between 1339 and 1340, Ivan Kalita erected a new, bigger oaken fortress on the Borovitsky hill.
In Ivan’s will “the golden captain” was mentioned for the first time; this cap is identified with the well-known Monomakh’s crown, the main crown's of Russian sovereigns.
УСПЕНСКИЙ СОБОР МОСКОВСКОГО КРЕМЛЯ / Assumption Cathedral, Moscow Kremlin
УСПЕНСКИЙ СОБОР МОСКОВСКОГО КРЕМЛЯ, Московский Кремль, в Успенском соборе, Митрополит Филипп, Митрополит Петр икона XV века, Мономахов трон, Иван Данилович Калита, Аполлинарий Михайлович Васнецов (1856–1933) картина Московский Кремль Соборы 1894, Вид на Кремль со стороны реки
Assumption Cathedral, Moscow Kremlin, in the Assumption Cathedral, Metropolitan Philip, Metropolitan Peter icon of the XV century, Monomakh's throne, Ivan Kalita, Apollinaris Vasnetsov (1856-1933) picture Moscow Kremlin Cathedrals 1894 Kremlin view from the river
Omsk City Russia Омск Россия
Schumann, Carnaval-Papillons
Sad moment ...Leaving Ryazan forever :(
Ryazan Kremlin Exposition «According to forefathers custom» HD
Ryazan 04.02.2013
E.S.I Production 2013
God With Us
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
God With Us · Ludmila Arshavskaya · Cantus Sacred Music Ensemble · Archdeacon of the Church of Boris and Gleb in Ryazan
Christmas - Highlights of the Christmas Service
℗ 2001 Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga Musica
Released on: 2001-11-30
Music Publisher: JSC Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga Musica
Auto-generated by YouTube.