Blagoveshenskaya (Annunciation) Tower (Moscow)

Russia / Moscow / Moscow / Kremlyovskaya naberezhnaya
 tower, listed building / architectural heritage, 15th century construction

This squat four-sided tower – known in English as the Annunciation Tower – was erected in 1487-1488. At its foundation are slabs of white limestone that have survived since the time of the white stone Kremlin of the 14th century. During the reign of Ivan the Terrible, the tower was used as a prison.
The name of the tower comes from the miracle-working Icon of the Annunciation, which was once kept here, and is also associated with the Church of the Annunciation added to the tower in the early 18th century and demolished in 1932.
In the 17th century, the Portomoynye Gates were built nearby so that palace laundresses could go to the Portomoiny raft on the Moscow River to rinse porty, or underclothes. These gates were bricked up in 1813.
The height of the tower is 30.7 meters (32.45 meters together with the weather vane that replaced the original cross in 1932).
Nearby cities:
Coordinates:   55°44'55"N   37°36'55"E
This article was last modified 13 years ago