DAY 3. July 29,
2012 , Sunday
Our plan for this Sunday had been to go to Sergiev
Posad—some 70 km north east of Moscow
as the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius is said to be one of the loveliest in Russia .
Suburban Trains (electrichki) leave every 30 minutes from
Yaroslavsky station and it’s 1 ½ hour trip. We had printed out the schedule of
the 8.24 and the express 8.58 so that we can monitor which station we were
passing—Semhoz is the penultimate station before Sergiev Posad.
But since we had missed visiting the Armoury the previous
day, we decided to postpone Sergiev Posad trip to the afternoon and were on the
metro to Kremlin in the morning.
I had read some reviews saying that they may not allow ladies
wearing trousers in the Lavra, so was wearing a long skirt and a blouse with
sleeves (I had a scarf as well to cover the head). Some one stepped on my skirt
when I was on the escalator in the metro station and I moved quite close to the
right edge… bad move…when I stepped off the escalator, my skirt got caught and
I was being pulled back….. I screamed and thankfully grabbed a metal barrier.
Tried to use one hand to free my skirt but I was being pulled with force and
needed both hands to hold on…A gentleman behind me tried tugging to no avail…
my son who was off the escalator turned to see me in distress and ran to the
booth… there was a lady in control (who had not been aware of the problem
probably due to the general crowds and noise at a busy time) and at my son’s
request, she turned off the escalator. It took a few vigorous tugs to tear my
skirt from the grinding machinery!! I felt several kind pats on my shoulder
from fellow commuters and we thanked our lucky stars that I had not got hurt!!
Here’s a painting at the metro station...
(after a couple of days I witnessed a similar accident
in St Petersburg –my son was taking a video of the escalator ride as
it looks pretty awesome to see the people looking tilted as they go down the
deee…p descent— some stations are 100 feet deep and somebody had timed the
escalator ride almost 2 minutes--- we heard screams and a girl was bent down
right in the middle on the opposite side … I yelled at my son to put off his
stupid camera and turn the right way and watch his step… the blood curdling
screams continued and I just kept my head down and sent out a prayer… felt so
helpless… the poor girl was being dragged for a while with lots of people near
her trying to help … sincerely hope she was not hurt—we did not know the
outcome as the station was teeming with crowds! Ladies… mind your skirts when
you are on these escalators!!)
I pinned the torn part of my skirt with the paper clips in
our bag ...and took a pic to record the skirt with a black clip and tell tale grease stains at the hem.
We got out of Revolutski Ploshchad exit and reached the ticket counter by 8.30.
Sat around till it opened at 9.30 and bought tickets for Armoury (700 rubles—the lady did not give student discount for son this time as she could not read the bar code—the previous day the very same lady had given the discount—any way we paid up ).
We got out of Revolutski Ploshchad exit and reached the ticket counter by 8.30.
Sat around till it opened at 9.30 and bought tickets for Armoury (700 rubles—the lady did not give student discount for son this time as she could not read the bar code—the previous day the very same lady had given the discount—any way we paid up ).
Armoury:
Were the first to enter the Armoury at 10AM and went straight up the stairs instead of doing the
ground floor first. We bought tickets for the diamond fund timed at 12. Then we
enjoyed the beautiful icons, gem studded gospels, and other silver craft pieces
in the several rooms on the 1st floor. The Faberge eggs were of course the pick
of the lot …no pics allowed (Houston museum has an exhibition of Faberge
currently on for 6 months and we were allowed photography without flash… took
videos to our heart’s content of the lovely master pieces but the best Faberge
eggs we saw at the Armoury have not of course made their way to Houston; I'll make a separate post of Houston museum exhibits/treasures later).
Here are some pics from the official site...
We then came to the ground floor and saw the royal carriages
and the thrones and imperial ceremonial and coronation robes, gowns… again no
pics… but we can kind of still see them in our mind’s eye. The carriages at
Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace
do pale in comparison--- but photography/ videos allowed there… anyways, it’s
beside the point .. we loved the armoury—such an awesome collection. The
official website: http://kreml.ru/en/museums/armoury/ has these pics
Here are some pics from the official site...
Diamond Fund:
At 12, went to the diamond fund and enjoyed the sight of all
the precious stones in the 2 rooms with the help of the brochure they had
given. Showcase 7 has the imperial crown, scepter and orb totally worthy of all
the hype…
There are quite a few rubies, emeralds, diamonds originally from our
home country India here as well as in the Winter palace diamond room at St Petersburg
and we are familiar with the stories behind them.
We were particularly fascinated by the Orlov diamond which
is in the scepter—it is the eye of our prime deity Lord Sri Rangaraja at the
renowned Hindu Temple
in Sri Rangam.
The story goes that a French soldier ingratiated himself to the temple authorities for 5 years before gaining access to the sanctum santorum on a rainy dark night to remove the diamonds. He could only manage to pluck out one eye before a huge peal of thunder and lightning frightened him out of the temple… the 190 carat diamond passed hands before being bought by Count Orlov who presented it to Catherine the great (Orlov had been romantically involved with the Empress Consort of Russia when she was married to Peter III . Orlov led the way in Peter’s dethronement and the elevation of Catherine to power. Catherine eventually forsook Count Orlov --Count Orlov sought to rekindle their romance by offering her the diamond. While he failed to regain her affections, Catherine did bestow many gifts upon Count Orlov; these gifts included a marble palace inSt. Petersburg . Catherine
also named the diamond after the Count, and had her jeweller design a sceptre
incorporating the Orlov.) We were awestruck at the sight of the pupil of the
eye cut out in the Orlov diamond and could imagine its glory as our God’s eye
in the 17th century... . as devout Hindus it was a heart wrenching sight to see
it in a scepter!
The story goes that a French soldier ingratiated himself to the temple authorities for 5 years before gaining access to the sanctum santorum on a rainy dark night to remove the diamonds. He could only manage to pluck out one eye before a huge peal of thunder and lightning frightened him out of the temple… the 190 carat diamond passed hands before being bought by Count Orlov who presented it to Catherine the great (Orlov had been romantically involved with the Empress Consort of Russia when she was married to Peter III . Orlov led the way in Peter’s dethronement and the elevation of Catherine to power. Catherine eventually forsook Count Orlov --Count Orlov sought to rekindle their romance by offering her the diamond. While he failed to regain her affections, Catherine did bestow many gifts upon Count Orlov; these gifts included a marble palace in
The diamond fund is a guided tour but we chose to see it on
our own with the help of the pamphlet they gave us with the ticket—we lingered
on a little after our group has exited –the gold, platinum nuggets and the
other loose diamonds and gems and tiaras had been fabulous. In the Armoury
nobody hurries you on… we had assumed time slots will be observed, but we could
pretty much stay on as long as we liked. We had other agenda for the day, so
left reluctantly.
No camera allowed in the Armoury and Diamond Fund.. so had
to be satisfied with no record of our tour.. the mental picture of all those gold
and silver pieces studded with precious gems, the Faberege eggs, the ceremonial
and coronation robes, and thrones and carriages will remain fresh in our mind's
eye... as also the several beautiful diamonds we saw in the diamond room..Here are some pics from the official site.
We emerged into daylight and had our picnic lunch. Looked at the time… wondered if it was prudent to rush to the Yaroslavsky station now and take a 1 ½ hour trip to Sergiev Posad. We had planned to be part of a Sunday morning crowd, it was a little intimidating to go in the afternoon without being too sure about the timings of the church… with great sadness we decided to skip it and visit the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. We could have easily walked there from the Kremlin square but took the metro to Kropotinskaya.
It took a while to
figure out where the entrance was … we went round and round trying out various
doors which were locked before finally arriving at the main entrance ironically
right near the metro exit.
Cathedral of Christ the Saviour (Храм Христа Спасителя; Khram Khrista Spasitela):
This lovely church had been commissioned in 1812 after the
defeat of Napoleon. Designed by St. Petersburg
architect Konstantin Ton, who was also responsible for the Grand
Kremlin Palace
and the Kremlin Armoury and whose church designs pioneered the
Byzantine-revival style, the cathedral was erected on the embankment only a few
minutes' walk from the Kremlin. Sadly, this entailed the destruction of the
medieval Alekseevskiy Convent.
In 1931, it was blown
to pieces by Stalin to make way for a proposed Palace
of Soviets —the Second World War
brought an abrupt end to that project. The site became an open-air swimming
pool, the largest in the world, which was kept at a temperature of 27°C all
year round. The result was a thick covering of fog that shrouded a number of
gruesome deaths (and murders) among the swimmers—the pool had to be closed.
Orthodox Church resurrected the cathedral in a US $360-million reconstruction
project. It was completed in 2000. The interior was beautiful and we loved it.. Pic from the net here...
By the time we came out it was almost 5 pm.... we were taking
the Sapsan to St Petersburg at 6.45 AM the next morning and we wanted to do a
recce of which platform we should take. We reached Leningradskiy Rail Terminal
by taking the red line from Kropotinskaya to Komsomolskaya. After a little
confusion, we managed to find out the platform where Sapsan was leaving. We
were glad that we were set for the morning trip. We took the circular line
metro back to our hotel and had an early night as we had to check out by 5.30 AM the next day.
Our hotel room here...
Our hotel room here...
View from our room window...
PECTOPAH in Cyrrilic is read as Restoran... restaurant
Quite a bit of disappointment that we could not make it to
Sergiev Posad—may be there will be another trip!!
The next post covers our ride on the superfast train Sapsan to the lovely St Petersburg and our visit to the awesome St Isaac's Cathedral:
http://adventuretrav.blogspot.com/2016/12/russia-trip-report-day-4-sapsan-train.html
The next post covers our ride on the superfast train Sapsan to the lovely St Petersburg and our visit to the awesome St Isaac's Cathedral:
http://adventuretrav.blogspot.com/2016/12/russia-trip-report-day-4-sapsan-train.html
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