Prechistenka
[edit / edit wiki text] Material from Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
(redirected from "Prechistenka Street")
Go to: navigation, Search
This term has other meanings, see Prechistenka (meanings).
Prechistenka Street
Moscow
The estate of the Khrushchevs Seleznevs on Prechistenka Street General information Country Russia
The city of Moscow
CAO District
Khamovniki District
Length 1,125 km
The nearest metro stations are Kropotkinskaya, Park Kultury
Postal code 119019 (№ 2/3), 119021 (№ 39/22), 119034 (other houses and institutions)
Phone numbers +7(495) XXX----
on OpenStreetMap on Yandex.
Prechistenka Street on Wikimedia Commons
Coordinates: 55°44'33" s.
w.
37°35'44" v. d. / 55.7425° s.
w.
37.5956° v. d. / 55.7425; 37.5956 (G) (O)
(I) Show a geographical map
Prechistenka Street (before 1658 — Chertolskaya, Pokrovskaya, then Prechistenskaya, Prechistenka, in 1921-1990 Kropotkinskaya[1]) is a street in the Central Administrative District of the city of Moscow.
It runs from Prechistensky Gate Square to Zubovskaya Square, located between Ostozhenka and Arbat streets.
The numbering of houses is carried out from the Prechistensky Gate Square.
Content
[remove]
1 Origin of the name 2 History 3 Notable buildings and structures 3.1 On the odd side 3.2 On the even side
4 Monuments and Sculptures 5 Transport 6 Street in Works of Literature and Art 7 Notes 8 Literature 9 References
Origin of the name[edit / edit wiki text]
The name was given in 1658 after the icon of the Most Pure Mother of God of Smolensk, kept in the Novodevichy Monastery, where the street led[1].
In the XVI century, the road from the Kremlin to the Novodevichy Monastery, founded in 1524 by Grand Duke Vasily III in memory of the liberation of Smolensk from Polish rule, passed along the route of the street.
Urban development along the street began to take shape in the last third of the XVI century, after the establishment of the oprichnina, in which, by the order of Ivan the Terrible, Chertolskaya Street was included "with the Semchinsky village and up to the vspolya..." [2].
The new street became a continuation of the previously existing Chertolskaya Street, from which it borrowed its original name.
It was also called Pokrovskaya, after the gate church of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos in the Novodevichy Monastery[1].
In its modern limits, the street took shape at the end of the XVI century, having received the beginning at the Chertol gate of the White City, and the end at the gate of the same name Skorodom (Wooden City).
In the XVII century, most of the right side of the suburban part of Chertolskaya Street was occupied by the courtyards of the Stable Settlement, behind which, since the middle of the century, the settlement of the Streletsky order of the head of Afanasy Ivanovich Levshin was located.
According to his surname, modern Levshinsky lanes got their names.
On the opposite side of the street, near the fortifications of the Earthen City, there was a settlement of another Streletsky order, founded in 1633.
Its first commander was Ivan Alferyevich Begichev.
In the 1650s and 1670s, the order was commanded by the father and son of Zubov Dmitry Ivanovich and Ivan Dmitrievich, whose last name formed the name of the area - "Zubovo", which in turn later gave names to the nearby Zubovsky Boulevard and the square.
The last commander of the regiment was Stolnik Tikhon Khristoforovich Gundertmark.
Under him, the Zubovsky Streltsy took part in the Azov campaigns of Peter I, and then in the famous Streltsy riot of 1698.
After its suppression, most of the local Streltsy were executed during the mass Streltsy executions.
Their neighbors the former Levshinsky Streltsy under the new commander Mikhail Fedorovich Sukharev, after the end of the Azov campaigns were determined to "live forever" in Kiev.
The settlements of both Streletsky regiments were abolished by royal decree in 1699[3].
Since the end of the XVII century, Prechistenka began to gradually turn into one of the most popular streets among the Moscow nobility.
The surnames of its famous homeowners have been preserved in the names of the lanes Vsevolozhsky, Lopukhinsky, Eropkinsky, etc.
Until the 1930s, the vast estates of Khrushchev and Stepanov, laid out under Catherine II, were preserved on Prechistenka..
however, in the second half of the XIX century, the land passed into merchant hands, and the Morozovs and Konshins appeared in the list of homeowners.
In 1921, Prechistenka Street was renamed Kropotkinskaya in honor of the Russian revolutionary anarchist P. A. Kropotkin, who was born in one of the Prechistensky Lanes — in the Regular (since 1921 — Kropotkinsky).
The historical name of the street was returned in 1994.
Notable buildings and structures[edit / edit wiki text]
White chambers on Prechistenka Street
City estate (house No. 5)
On the odd side[edit / edit wiki text]
No. 1/2 chambers of the XVII century ("White Chambers") — the main house of the estate of Prince B. I. Prozorovsky, an object of cultural heritage of federal significance[4].
It was rebuilt in two stages in 1685.
It was renovated in 1995.[5][6]
In January 2009, lawyer Stanislav Markelov and journalist Anastasia Baburova were killed on the sidewalk in front of the building.
No. 5 p. 1 the house of Princess Saltykova Golovkina (1st third of the XVIII century; 2nd half of the XIX century) [7].
No. 7 the city estate of V. A. Vsevolzhsky (the end of the XVIII century; 1810-1820; 1844; 1867 alteration of facades)[7].
In the 1870s, the building housed the Polytechnic Museum; in the 1920s the editorial office of the newspaper "Red Warrior".
Vsevolozhsky Lane facing Prechistenka is named after the homeowner[8].
L. N. Tolstoy Museum on Prechistenka
No. 9 apartment house of E. A. Kostyakova (1910, architect N. I. Zherikhov)[7].
The pianist and composer A. B. Goldenweiser lived in the house[9].
No. 11, architectural monument (federal) — the main house of the city estate of the Lopukhin Stanitskys (1817-1822, architect A. G. Grigoriev[7]; rebuilt in 1895 by S. U. Solovyov), since 1920 — the State Museum of L. N. Tolstoy[8].
In the courtyard there is a monument to L. N. Tolstoy (1926, sculptor S. D. Merkurov, granite), moved in 1972 from the Devichy Pole Square[4].
In the telephone directory of 1908, the phone number of F. P. Ryabushinsky was indicated at this address.
Until 1917, the industrialist and Moscow mayor M. V. Chelnokov lived in the house[10].
No. 13/7, p. 1, Central Federal District apartment house of Ya.
A. Rekka (1911-1913, architect G. A. Gelrich)[4][7].
It was reconstructed in 2011 according to the project of the architectural bureau Project Z (architect Alexander Zelikin).
There is a panoramic elevator in the building, and a two level parking lot in the underground part.
No. 15 residential building (Tver branch of the Ladies ' Guardianship of the Poor) (1st third of the XVIII century; 2nd half of the XIX century)[7].
No. 17/9 apartment house (1874, architect A. L. Ober), based on the chambers of the XVIII century.
No. 17, 17/10 — the Bibikov Davydov estate, belonged to the police chief N. P. Arkharov, who rebuilt the chambers of the early XVIII century in the style of early classicism in the 1770s.
Then the estate was owned by General Bibikov and the poet D. V. Davydov.
After the change of several owners and a series of alterations, the female gymnasium of S. A. Arsenyeva was located in the estate.
Prechistenka, 22, 19
No. 19/11, p. 1 - the house of Prince A. N. Dolgorukov (1780s, architect M. F. Kazakov (presumably); 1847; 1869[7]), an object of cultural heritage of regional significance[4].
Built in the 1780s, the house burned in 1812 and was rebuilt until 1847.
In 1869, the Alexander Mariinsky Educational Institution for noble Maidens, which belonged to the general's wife Chertova, appeared here.
At the end of 1921, a part of the Red Army Military Academy moved here.
From 1992 to 1997, the Central Television and Radio Broadcasting Studio of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation was located.
Now here is the museum and exhibition complex of the Russian Academy of Arts "Zurab Tsereteli Art Gallery".
Morozov's House
No. 21/12, an architectural monument (federal) — the house of Count S. P. Potemkin, later A. I. Morozov (XVIII the beginning of the XIX century; it was rebuilt several times: in 1871 — by the architect P. S. Campioni; in 1872 — by A. S. Kaminsky; in the 1890s — by M. I. Nikiforov; in 1904-1906 — by L. N. Kekushev[7]).
In 1918-1948, the Museum of New Western Art was located here[4].
Since 1948, the buildings of the estate have housed the Presidium of the Russian Academy of Arts (RAH), the Institute of Theory and History of Fine Arts of the RAH and the exhibition halls of the RAH.
In the late 1990s, a complete restoration of the main building of the estate was carried out.
No. 23/16/15, p .
1, architectural monument (newly identified object) — the main house of the city estate of A. I. Tatishchev — A. F. Lopukhin (before 1802; 1813-1822; 1860; 1900-1906)[4].
No. 25 apartment house N. A. Ulikh (1911-1912, architect V. A. Rudanovsky)[7] No. 27 apartment house of A. P. Polovinkin (1910-1911, architect V. K. Kildishev)[7] No. 29 apartment house (1910, architect A. A. Ostrogradsky) No. 31/16 residential house of police officers (1935-1937, architect Z. M. Rosenfeld)[7][8][11].
Until 1933, the Church of the Life Giving Trinity in Zubov stood on this site[12].
No. 33/19, p. 1 — apartment house (1905, architect S. F. resurrection) No. 33/19, p. 2, the monument (regional) — house P. I. Golokhvastov with cellars (1782-1785; 1786; the XIX century)[4].
No. 35, monument (Federal) estate of P. A. Samsonov (1813-1817, 1865)[4][7].
No. 37 the mansion of M. N. Maksheev Moshonov (1901, architect A. O. Gunst).
No. 39 the Likhutin apartment house (1st stage (along Prechistenka Street) - 1892, architect A. A. Ostrogradsky; 2nd stage (along Zubovsky Boulevard) - 1913, architect I. S. Kuznetsov).
The poet and artist Polixena Solovyova lived in the house[13].
In 1899-1900, M. A. Vrubel rented an apartment in this house, here he worked on his famous paintings "Pan" and "The Swan Princess".
The composer N. A. Rimsky Korsakov, who came from St. Petersburg, visited the artist.
The philosopher V. S. Solovyov also visited this house in 1881-1897.
On the even side[edit / edit wiki text]
I. P. Isakov's apartment house (No. 28)
Polivanovskaya Gymnasium (No. 32)
No. 4 - the house of S. I. Volkonskaya (late XVIII early XIX centuries; 1817) [7] No. 6, an architectural monument (a newly identified object) - the pharmacy of A. Forbriher[7] ("Prechistenskaya Pharmacy") (1780s; XVIII XIX centuries).
The pharmacy has been located in the building since the 80s of the XVIII century[4].
The architect S. V. Barkov lived in the house[14].
No. 8 — the house of the XVIII century, based on the chambers of the XVII century.
No. 10/2, p. 1 the main house of the city estate of A. T. Rzhevsky Likhachev M. Philip (V. A. Obrezkova) (mid XVIII 1st half of the XIX century; rebuilt in 1890 by architect N. G. Lazarev; 1907[7]), an object of cultural heritage of regional significance[4].
In 1839-1842, the owner of the estate was the Decembrist M. F. Orlov.
The landscape artist I. I. Levitan lived here in 1885, and the poet B. L. Pasternak lived here in 1915.
At the end of the XIX century, the house belonged to V. A. Morozova; in 1897-1908, Prechistensky working courses were located here[15].
In 1942-1948, the Jewish Anti Fascist Committee worked in the building[16].
No. 12/2/1 the estate of the Khrushchevs Seleznevs (1814-1816, architect A. G. Grigoriev[7]; the winter garden was added in 1881 by architect N. A. Artemovsky), an object of cultural heritage of federal significance[4].
A monument to the pupils of the Moscow special artillery schools who showed courage and heroism in the Great Patriotic War.
In the main house on the corner of Khrushchevsky Lane is the Pushkin Museum.
No. 12/2/1, p. 8 school building (1930s, architects M. O. Barsch, G. A. Zundblat)[17].
No. 14 — a house of the XIX century based on the chambers of the XVII century.
No. 16/2, p .
1, architectural monument (federal) - the house of A. I. Konshina (1st floor of the XVIII century; perestroika: 1908-1910, architect A. O. Gunst; the new part (right) - 1932, architects the Vesnin brothers[7]) [4].
On this place, before the fire of 1812, there was the house of I. P. Arkharov; the ashes were bought in 1818 by Ivan Alexandrovich Naryshkin, who built a new building; then Musin Pushkin became the owner; later the house passed to Princess Gagarina, then to the princes Trubetskoy, finally, in 1865, the Trubetskoy estate was purchased in the name of his wife Alexandra Ivanovna Konshina (nee Ignatova, 1838-1914), millionaire manufacturer Ivan Nikolaevich Konshin (in 1867, the estate was rebuilt for the first time).
Before the October Revolution, the entrepreneur A. I. Putilov owned the mansion.
Since 1922, the House of Scientists has been located here.
No. 20 V. D. Konshin's mansion (1st half of the XIX century; 1873 alteration of facades, architect A. S. Kaminsky)[7].
A. P. Ermolov, the hero of the Patriotic War of 1812, lived in this house and died in 1861; until 1884, the owner was V. D. Konshin, then V. I. Firsanova, and since 1900 — the millionaire entrepreneur A. K. Ushkov[18]; in 1921-1922, the choreographic studio A. Duncan was located in the building; in the same years, the poet S. A. Yesenin lived and worked here.
An object of cultural heritage of federal significance.
No. 22, architectural monument (federal) — the main building of the Prechistenskaya fire station (Moscow Fire Station), based on the residential house of N. I. Rtishchev, A. P. Ermolov (1764; 1800; 1817-1820; 1835-1836, architect M. F. Kazakov (presumably); 1915)[4][7].
Here, in 1834, A. I. Herzen was under arrest.
No. 24 the apartment house of S. F. Kulagin (1904, architect S. F. Kulagin) — "Kalabukhov House", the house of Professor Preobrazhensky in the story of M. A. Bulgakov "The Heart of a Dog" No. 28, an architectural monument (federal) — the apartment house of I. P. Isakov (Moscow Trade and Construction Joint Stock Company) (1904-1906, architect L. N. Kekushev[19])[4].
No. 32 Okhotnikov House, XVIII XIX centuries, was built anew shortly after the fire of 1812; the building was rebuilt many times.
In 1915-1917, under the owner V. I. Firsanova, the main house was rebuilt according to the project of architect A. I. Tamanyan[7].
In 1868-1917, the private men's gymnasium of L. I. Polivanov was located here.
Here he studied Vladimir Solovyev, V. Y. Bryusov (excluded for the atheistic ideas of school Kramena), Andrew White, M. A. Voloshin, Vadim Shershenevich, Sergey Shervinsky, Sergei Efron, Nicholas Poznyakov chess champion Alexander Alekhine, sons of F. M. Dostoyevsky, L. N. Tolstoy, A. N. Pleshcheeva, A. N. Ostrovsky, etc.
No. 32, in the courtyard the Stepanovs 'city estate" with a circus umference"[20], XIX century.
No. 36, p .
2, an architectural monument (a newly identified object) — the Naumov Volkonsky residential house (1833; 1897).
Since 1926, the building has housed the N. K. Krupskaya library[4].
Since the late 1960s, the building housed the workshop of the restorer Savva Yamshchikov[21].
No. 40/2 apartment house of L. M. Matveevsky (change of facades, 1913, architect A. O. Gunst).
Monuments and sculptures[edit / edit wiki text]
Monument to V. I. Surikov (2003, sculptor M. V. Pereyaslavets, architect A. P. Semenov) [22].
Installed in front of house No. 30/2.
Transport[edit / edit wiki text]
Kropotkinskaya metro station; trolleybus 15; bus 05, 015.
Street in works of literature and art[edit / edit wiki text]
Prechistenka is mentioned in the works of A. S. Pushkin, B. L. Pasternak, M. A. Bulgakov.
When Potemkin in the dark
I'll find it on Prechistenka,
Then let it be with Bulgarin in the descendants
I will be put alongside
- A. S. Pushkin
"Let it be: once there is a social revolution — there is no need to drown.
But I ask: why, when this whole story began, did everyone start walking up the marble stairs in dirty galoshes and felt boots?
Why do galoshes still need to be locked up?
And even put a soldier to them so that someone does not steal them?
Why was the carpet removed from the main staircase?
Does Karl Marx forbid keeping carpets on the stairs?
Does Karl Marx say somewhere that the 2nd entrance of the Kalabukhov house on Prechistenka should be boarded up and walk around through the black courtyard?
Who needs it?
Why canot a proletarian leave his galoshes down there, and dirty the marble?"
- M. A. Bulgakov, The heart of a Dog
The world of Prechistenka and Arbat…
- Boris Pasternak
Near the house number 14, according to the film "Guest from the Future", a trolleybus hit Alice Selezneva, who was running across Kropotkinskaya Street in pursuit of space pirates.
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ Show compactly
Перейти Go to: 1 2 3 Moscow: all streets, squares, boulevards, alleys / Vostryshev M. I.-M.: Algorithm, Eksmo, 2010.
- pp.
457-458 — - ISBN 978-5-699-33874-0.
Учреждение The establishment of the Oprichnina in 1565 — The Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles.
St. Petersburg, 1906.
Vol. XIII.
pp.
391-396.
Source: a reader on the history of the USSR.
T. I / Sost.
V. Lebedev, and others.
M., 1940 ↑ http://www.hramznameniya.ru/images/data/2.pdf ↑ Go to: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 The city register of the immovable cultural heritage of the city of Moscow.
The official website of the Committee on Cultural Heritage of the City of Moscow.
Verified on September 12, 2012.
Archived from the original source on October 18, 2012.
↑.
"White Chambers" on Prechistenka photo ↑ Repin, L. Built a fortress.
// Komsomolskaya pravda.
— October 18, 2010.
— S. 27. ↑ Jump to: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Moscow: an Architectural guide / I. L. Buseva Davydova, M. V. nashchokina M. I. Astafieva Dlugach.
— M.: Stroyizdat, 1997.
— P. 281-287.
— 512 p.
— ISBN 5-274-01624-3.
↑ Go to: 1 2 3 Moscow: Encyclopedia, 1997, p. 662 ↑ Goldenweiser Alexander Borisovich.
Faces of Moscow.
Moscow Encyclopedia.
Checked on March 22, 2015.
↑ Dlugach V. L., Portugalov P. A. Inspection of Moscow.
Travel guide.
- 2 E. -M.: Moskovsky rabochy, 1938.
- p. 170 — - 267 p. Гейд Heydor T., Kazus I. Styles of Moscow architecture.
- Moscow: Art XXI century, 2014.
- p. 390 — - 616 p.
— ISBN 978-5-98051-113-5.
↑ Architectural monuments of Moscow.
Architecture of Moscow 1933-1941 / Author comp.
N. N. Bronovitskaya.
- M.: Art XXI century, 2015.
- p. 102.
- 320 p. - 250 copies.
— ISBN 978-5-98051-121-0.
Solovyova Poliksen Sergeevna.
Faces of Moscow.
Moscow Encyclopedia.
Verified on March 14, 2015.
Вся All of Moscow: an address and reference book for 1916.
- Moscow: A. S. Suvorin's Partnership "Novoe Vremya", 1915 — - p. 843 .
Пре Prechistensky courses.
Turgenev library reading room.
Verified on December 2, 2013 .
Лев Levin E.
A tragedy that has become inevitable.
booknik.ru (August 10, 2007).
Checked on July 20, 2013.
Archived from the original source on July 27, 2013.
Рог Rogachev, A.V.
The great buildings of socialism.
- Moscow: Tsentrpoligraf, 2014.
- p. 72 — - 480 p.
— ISBN 978-5-227-05106-6.
↑ Museums of Russia: Prechistenka and its inhabitants.
The Russian network of cultural heritage.
Verified on November 29, 2013.
На Nashchokina M. V. Moscow Modern.
- 2nd ed. - Moscow: Giraffe, 2005.
- p. 442 — - 560 p. - 2500 copies.
— ISBN 5-89832-042-3.
Низкий A low building with an arc shaped plan, adjacent to the main house of a manor or palace complex (Dictionary of architectural terms).
Ям Savva Vasilyevich Yamshchikov.
Faces of Moscow.
Moscow Encyclopedia.
Verified on March 9, 2015.
Vostryshev M. I., Shokarev S. Yu.
Moscow.
All cultural and historical monuments.
- M.: Algorithm, Eksmo, 2009.
- p. 413 — - 512 p.
— (Moscow encyclopedias).
— ISBN 978-5-699-31434-8.
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.
A. L. Batalov, L. A. Belyaev.
The sacred space of medieval Moscow.
- M.: Feoria, Design.
Information.
Cartography, 2010.
- 400 p.
— ISBN 978-5-4284-0001-4.
"From Prechistensky to the Arbat Gate" / A. Krupchansky.
Preface by M. Fry.
- M: Moscow, which does not exist : guidebook, 2010 — - 319 p — - 2000 copies.
— ISBN 978-5-903116-98-0.
Moscow: Encyclopedia / Glav.
ed .
S. O. Schmidt; Comp.: M. I. Andreev, V. M. Karev; Hood.
design A.V. Akimov, V. I. Shedko.
- M.: Great Russian Encyclopedia, 1997.
- pp.
661-662 — - 976 p — - (Library "History of Moscow from ancient times to the present day").
- 100,000 copies.
— ISBN 5-85270-277-3.
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
The portal "Moscow" Prechistenka on Wikimedia Commons?
Diploma.
<url> about Prechistenka Virtual walk through Prechistenka List of protected cultural Monuments (Moscow Heritage) [1], [2]
[show]
Streets of Moscow: CAO, Khamovniki Main highways:
Boulevard Ring : Soymonovsky Proezd / Gogolevsky Boulevard * Garden Ring : Zubovsky Boulevard / Smolensky Boulevard • Kamer Kollezhsky Val : Khamovnichesky Val • Znamenka • Volkhonka / Prechistenka / Zubovskaya / Bolshaya Pirogovskaya • Ostozhenka / Komsomolsky Prospekt • Smolenskaya * Embankments : Prechistenskaya / Frunzenskaya / Luzhnetskaya • Novodevichya / Savvinskaya / Rostov
Squares:
Borovitskaya • Zubovskaya • Krymskaya • of the Novodevichy Monastery • Prechistensky Gate • Smolenskaya Sennaya
Streets inside
Boulevard Ring:
Vsekhsvyatsky passage • Maly / Bolshoy Znamensky Lane • Kolymazhny Lane • Lebyazhy Lane • Lenivka
from the boulevard
to Sadovoye:
Bolshoy Afanasyevsky Lane • Barykovsky Lane • Butikovsky Lane • Vsevolozhsky Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Vlasyevsky Lane • Gagarinsky Lane • Glazovsky Lane • Money Lane • Eropkinsky Lane • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Zachatievsky Lane • Korobeynikov Lane • Kropotkinsky lane • Kursovoy Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Levshinsky Lane • Lopukhinsky Lane • Mansurovsky Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Mogiltsevsky Lane • Molochny Lane • Nashchokinsky Lane • Novokrymsky passage • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Obydensky lane • Plotnikov Lane • Pozharsky lane • Pomerantsev Lane • Prechistensky Lane • Sechenovsky Lane • Sivtsev Vrazhek Lane • Starokonyushenny Lane • Turchaninov Lane • Khilkov Lane • Khrushchevsky Lane • Chertolsky Lane • Chisty Lane
from the Garden to the Third
transport:
10th anniversary of October • Abrikosovsky Lane • 1st Archive Lane • Maly Bozheninsky Lane • Burdenko • 1st / 2nd Vrazhsky Lane • Dashkov Lane • Devichy Pole Passage • Dovator • Elansky • Efremova • Agricultural lane • Zubovsky passage • Cooperative • Krymsky proezd • Kseninsky Lane • Luzhnetsky Passage • Lev Vygotsky • Lev Tolstoy • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Nepalimovsky Lane • Nesvizh Lane • Novodevichy passage • Novokonyushenny Lane • Obolensky Lane • Olsufevsky Lane • Malaya Pirogovskaya • Pogodinskaya • Plushykha • Pugovishnikov Lane • Rossolimo • 2nd / 4th / 6th / 7th Rostov Lane • Ruzheyny Lane • Maly / Bolshoy Savvinsky Lane • Savelyeva • Serpov Lane • Timura Frunze • Trubetskaya • 1st / 2nd / 3rd lane of Workers • Usacheva • Usachevsky lane • Uchebny Lane • 1st / 2nd / 3rd Frunzenskaya • Kholzunov Lane • Bolshoy Chudov Lane • 1st Shibaevsky Lane • Yazykovsky Lane
for the Third
transport:
Luzhniki • Novoluzhnetskiy proezd
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=Prechistenka&oldid=76544580"
Categories: Streets alphabetically Streets of Moscow Khamovniki
Hidden category: Wikipedia:Articles with redefinition of the value from Wikidata
Navigation
Personal Tools
You did not introduce yourself to the system Discussion Contribution Create an account Log in
Namespaces
Article Discussion
Variants
Views
Read Edit Edit wiki text History
More
Search
Navigation
Title Page Heading Index A Z Selected articles Random article Current Events
Participation
Report a bug Community Portal Forum Recent edits New pages Help Donate
Tools
Links here Related edits Special Pages Permalink Information about the Wikida Element page donot quote the page
Print/Export
Create a book Download as PDF Printable version
In other projects
Wikimedia Commons Wikidata
Languages
Add links
Last modified on this page: 17: 32, February 19, 2016.
The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike license; in some cases, additional conditions may apply.
For more information, see Terms of use.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the non profit organization Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Contact us
Privacy Policy Wikipedia Description Disclaimer Developers Cookie Agreement Mobile Version
