Okhotny Ryad
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Okhotny Ryad Street
Moscow
Modern view of Okhotny Ryad from the side of the Theater Square General information Country Russia
The city of Moscow
CAO District
Tverskoy District
Length 0.25 km
The nearest metro stations are Okhotny Ryad, Teatralnaya
Postal code 103265 (№ 1), 127159 (№ 2), 109012 (№ 4/1)
Phone numbers +7(495) XXX----
on OpenStreetMap on Yandex.
On maps Okhotny Ryad Street on Wikimedia Commons
Coordinates: 55°45 '28" s.
w.
37°36'59" v. d. / 55.75778° s.
w.
37.61639° v. d. / 55.75778; 37.61639 (G) (O)
(I) Show a geographical map
Okhotny Ryad Street (formerly.
Okhotny Ryad Square, Okhotnoryadskaya Square, 1933-1955 Okhotny Ryad Square, 1961-1990 part of Marx Avenue) is a street in the Central Administrative District of Moscow.
It runs from Manezhnaya Square to Teatralnaya Square, lies between Georgievsky Lane and Nikolskaya Street parallel to them.
The numbering of houses is carried out from Manezhnaya Square.
Content
[remove]
1 Origin of the name 2 History 3 Notable Buildings 4 Street in fiction and Art 4.1 In the bard's song 4.2 In urban folklore
5 Notes 6 Literature 7 References
Origin of the name[edit / edit wiki text]
The name of the XVII century, given by one of the Moscow shopping malls, in which it was allowed to sell game brought by hunters from the Moscow region.
History[edit / edit wiki text]
The building of the Noble Assembly in Okhotny Ryad.
1840s
The Church of Paraskeva Friday in Okhotny Ryad.
The beginning of the XX century.
Okhotny Ryad in 2011
Okhotny Ryad occupied a very modest place in the established and traditional structure of the great Moscow auction that had become traditional by the XVII century.
There was a trade in "game and live poultry, domestic and singing" In the XVII century, Okhotny Ryad was located on the site of the current building of the Historical Museum.
In the middle of the XVIII century, all the food rows (Tavern, Gluttonous, Okhotny) were transferred beyond Neglinka from the modern Manezhnaya Square to the Theater Square, next to the Paraskeva Pyatnitsa Church.
After the fire of 1812, stone one story retail premises with dozens of poultry slaughterhouses were built on the site of burned wooden shops.
The premises of the Okhotny Ryad proper were located opposite the Noble Assembly, but over time the entire Zaneglinensky auction began to be called Okhotny Ryad.
In the second half of the XIX — early XX century, Okhotny Ryad began to symbolize the abundance, hospitality and satiety of Moscow, entering the Russian proverbs.
However, thanks to the participation of shopkeepers in attacks on intellectuals and Jews, the image of the Okhotnoryadets as a reactionary and pogromist was formed.
In 1883, a cast iron chapel of St. Alexander Nevsky was built on Okhotny Ryad Square in memory of those who fell in the Russian Turkish war of 1877-1878.
Demolished in early November 1922, the chapel became the first Moscow church destroyed by the Soviet government.
In the 1920s, shops began to be demolished in Okhotny Ryad, in the 1930s, trade was transferred to Tsvetnoy Boulevard, which marked the beginning of the Central Market.
In 1928, the church of Paraskeva Pyatnitsa was demolished, and a little later, the Golitsyn chambers standing next to it were demolished.
In 1935, after the completion of the construction of the Moscow Hotel and the building of the Council of People's Commissars and the formation of Okhotnoryadskaya Street, Okhotny Ryad Square was renamed Okhotny Ryad Street.
Also, the first metro line in the Soviet Union passed under it and the station of the same name appeared.
In 1961, Okhotny Ryad Street, Mokhovaya Street and Theater Passage were merged into Marx Avenue.
In 1990, the street was returned to its historical name.
This section lacks links to information sources.
The information must be verifiable, otherwise it may be questioned and deleted.
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This mark was set on November 27, 2013.
Notable buildings[edit / edit wiki text]
On the odd side:
No. 1 — the building of the Council of Labor and Defense (STO) (then — SNK of the USSR Council of Ministers of the USSR, USSR state planning Committee, currently, the State Duma of the Russian Federation) (1932-1935, architect A. J. Langman)[1].
No. 3/1 — Building of the Noble Assembly (House of trade Unions) (Prim. gender.
XVIII century; 1784-1787, architect M. F. Kazakov; 1814, architect A. N. Bakarev, add and edit facades — 1903, architect A. F. Meisner)[1].
No. 5/2 Ground pavilion of the Okhotny Ryad metro station (1935, architect D. N. Chechulin; rebuilt from a house that previously stood on this site)[1].
On the even side:
No. 2 - Hotel " Moscow " (1st stage: 1932-1936, architects A.V. Shchusev, L. I. Savelyev, O. A. Stapran; 2nd stage: 1976, architects A. B. Boretsky, A. A. Dzerzhkovich, I. E. Rozhin, D. S. Solopov, V. A. Shchelkanovtseva[1].
It was demolished in 2004.
Rebuilt with a change in the composition and details of the design according to the project of V. V. Kolosnitsyn).
The Museum of Moscow.
The Bolshoi Theater Museum.
Street in fiction and art[edit / edit wiki text]
In the Bard's Song[edit / edit wiki text]
Yuri Vizbor wrote the song "Okhotny Ryad".
It was also performed by Bulat Okudzhava.
In urban folklore[edit / edit wiki text]
The anthem of the Psychology Faculty of Moscow State University is written to the tune of the above song.
"Okhotny Ryad" in music for folk instruments.
Composer I. Tamarin.
Soloist Dmitry Belinsky (balalaika) and the accordion orchestra of Daugavpils (Latvia).
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
Перейти Go to: 1 2 3 4 Moscow: Architectural guide / I. L. Buseva Davydova, M. V. Nashchokina, M. I. Astafyeva Dlugach.
- Moscow: Stroyizdat, 1997.
- pp.
54, 68-69 — - 512 p.
— ISBN 5-274-01624-3.
Literature[edit / edit wiki text]
Muravyov V. B. Moscow streets.
Secrets of renaming.
- M.: Algorithm, Eksmo, 2006 — - 336 p.
— (People's Guide).
— ISBN 5-699-17008-1.
Gilyarovsky V. A. Moscow and Muscovites.
- Moscow: Azbuka klastika, 2009.
ISBN 978-5-9985-0246-0
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
There is a page on the topic in Wikicitatnik
Okhotny Ryad
Yandex.
Maps ul.
Okhotny Ryad Google Maps ul.
Okhotny Ryad is a chapter from the book by V. A. Gilyarovsky "Moscow and Muscovites"
[show]
Streets of Moscow: CAO, Tverskoy district Main highways:
Mokhovaya / Okhotny Ryad / Teatralny Proezd • Lubyansky Proezd • Boulevard Ring : Tverskaya Boulevard / Strastnoy Boulevard / Petrovsky Boulevard • Garden Ring : Bolshaya Sadovaya / Sadovaya Triumfalnaya / Sadovaya Karetnaya / Sadovaya Samotechnaya • Third transport Ring : Sushchevsky Val • Tverskaya / 1st Tverskaya Yamskaya • Petrovka / Karetny Ryad / Krasnoproletarskaya • Bolshaya Dmitrovka ~ Malaya Dmitrovka / Dolgorukovskaya / Novoslobodskaya • Butyrsky Val • Lesnaya • Samotechnaya • Seleznevskaya • Tsvetnoy Boulevard
Squares:
Krasnaya * Birzhevaya • Borovitskaya • Wrestling • Barbarian Gate • Vasilievsky Descent • Pop Stars • Ilyinsky Gate • Lubyanskaya * Manezhnaya • Miusskaya • Novaya * Petrovsky Gate • Pushkinskaya * Revolutions • Samotechnaya • Slavyanskaya • Staraya * Suvorovskaya • Tverskaya * Tverskaya Zastava • Teatralnaya • Triumfalnaya • Trubnaya
China City:
Bogoyavlensky lane • Varvarka • Vetoshny lane • passage of the Resurrection Gate • Ilyinka • Ipatievsky lane • Kitaygorodsky passage • Kremlin passage • Kremlin Embankment / Moskvoretskaya Embankment • Moskvoretskaya * Nikitnikov Lane • Nikolskaya • Nikolsky Lane • Rybny Lane • Staropansky lane • Tretyakov Passage • Crystal Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Cherkassky Lane
Streets inside
Boulevard Ring:
Bryusov Lane • Voznesensky pereulok • Gazetny Pereulok • Georgievsky Pereulok • Glinishchevsky Pereulok • Maly / Bolshoy Gnezdnikovsky Pereulok • Dmitrovsky Pereulok • Kamergersky Pereulok • Kozitsky lane • Kopyevsky lane • Krapivensky lane • Kuznetsky Bridge • Leontievsky Lane • Manezhnaya • Neglinnaya • Nikitsky Lane • Petrovsky Lines • Petrovsky Lane • Polytechnic Passage • Rakhmanovsky Lane • Stoleshnikov lane • Tverskaya proezd
from the boulevard
to Sadovoye:
Blagoveshchensky Lane • Bolshaya Bronnaya • Vorotnikovsky Lane • Degtyarny Lane • Maly / Sredny / Bolshoy Karetny Lane • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Kolobovsky Lane • Likhov Lane • Mamonovsky Lane • Naryshkinsky Passage • Nastasinsky Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Palashevsky Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Putinkovsky Lane • Staropimenovsky lane • Sytinsky Lane • Trekhprudny Lane • Uspensky Lane
from Sadovoye
up to the 3rd transport:
Alexander Nevsky * Alexander Nevsky Lane • 1st / 2nd Brestskaya • Vadkovsky Lane • Vasilevskaya • Veskovsky Lane • Veskovsky dead End * 1st / 2nd Volkonsky Lane • Gasheka • Gorlov dead end • Bolshaya Gruzinskaya • Delegatskaya * Dostoevsky * Dostoevsky Lane • Zastavny Lane • Karelin passage • Kosoy Lane • 1st / 2nd / 3rd / 4th Lesnoy Lane • 1st / 2nd Miusskaya • Miussky lane • Nikonovsky Lane • Novovorotnikovsky lane • Novolesnaya • Novolesnoy Lane • Novosushchevskaya • Armory Lane • Palikha • Perunovsky Lane • Pimenovsky dead end • Ordinal Lane • Priyutsky Lane • Pykhov Church Passage • 1st / 2nd / 3rd / 4th Samotechny Lane • Seminary dead end • Sushchevskaya • Sushchevsky dead end • 2nd / 3rd
/ 4th Tverskaya Yamskaya • 1st / 2nd Tverskaya Yamskaya Lane • Tikhvinskaya • Tikhvinsky Lane • 1st Tikhvinsky dead end • Corner Lane • Fadeeva • Chayanova • Chernyshevsky Lane • 1st / 2nd Shchemilovsky Lane • Julius Fuchik
Streets by districts of the Central Administrative District: Arbat | Basmanny | Zamoskvorechye | Krasnoselsky | Meshchansky | Presnensky | Tagansky | Tverskoy | Khamovniki | Yakimanka
<img src="//ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:CentralAutoLogin/start?type=1x1" alt="" title="" width="1" height="1" style="border: none; position: absolute;" />
Source — "https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Okhotny Ryad&oldid=74915019"
Categories: Streets alphabetically Streets of Moscow Tverskaya district One way streets
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