The golden domes of the Cathedral of the Annunciation.
Completed in 1489,it is one of six churches inside the Kremlin walls. |
Blog Note: My purpose in reposting this series of blogs about our travels in Eastern Europe in 1990, shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Soviet Union, is to show the joy of the Eastern
European peoples as they emerged from the Marxist system into freedom.
My hope is that at least a few Americans will be warned as our present
government seeks to lead us into that darkness.
March 21, 1990 began with an
overcast sky. After breakfast we went to the GUM, which turned out to be closed,
so we signed up for the Kremlin tour, which included a walk around the grounds
and into two of the six ancient Russian Orthodox cathedrals inside the
formidable walls of the fort which is the seat of the Russian government.
That government, by the way, was officially atheist; nevertheless, the churches and cathedrals are magnificently preserved as museums of Russian art and history. As part of our tour we were able to enter the Cathedral of the Assumption, completed in 1479, and the Cathedral of Michael the Archangel, completed in 1508. Both were filled with priceless works of religious art. Unfortunately, we were not allowed to photograph inside the churches.
That government, by the way, was officially atheist; nevertheless, the churches and cathedrals are magnificently preserved as museums of Russian art and history. As part of our tour we were able to enter the Cathedral of the Assumption, completed in 1479, and the Cathedral of Michael the Archangel, completed in 1508. Both were filled with priceless works of religious art. Unfortunately, we were not allowed to photograph inside the churches.
After the tour we went across Red Square to the GUM, where a line of people wound around the building. Louise had been hoping to buy a Russian fur hat, so she got in line while I photographed my way back to the hotel. Unfortunately, she got there before I did -- she had been kicked out of the line at the door because she did not have the proper pass.
She never did get that hat.
By
this time, it was 2:30 and the
sky had cleared a bit. Louise decided to take a nap, so I took off on
foot for
the Arpatskaya, which I walked both ways looking for faces and
interactions. The street was thronged with people enjoying the
uncharacteristically fine March afternoon.
People enjoying a warm Mid-March
afternoon in the Arpatskaya.
|
The young woman on the left was watching a street
artist create a pencil portrait of the woman seated
on the right. When she saw me, she smiled and signed
that I should pay her for making her picture!
|
Photographs made with Olympus OM cameras and lenses. I
used the Tamron 100-300mm f4 zoom lens on an Olympus OM2s camera for the portraits. Fujichrome 100D and
400D films. Photographs and text copyright 2021, David B.Jenkins
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday each week.
Soli Gloria Deo
For the glory of God alone
Tags: photography, Dave Jenkins, David B. Jenkins Eastern Europe, Communism, Moscow, the Kremlin, Red Square, Russian Orthodox Church, The Cathedral of the Annunciation, the Cathedral of Michael the Archangel, Soviet Russia, the Arpatskaya, GUM, Olympus OM2s camera, Tamron lenses, Fujichrome film, film cameras
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