The Armory Museum and Red Square
Executive summary by darmansjah
Amory Museum is one of the oldest museums of Moscow, established in 1808
and located in the Moscow Kremlin (map).
The Kremlin Armoury originated as the royal arsenal in 1508.
Until the transfer of the court to St Petersburg, the Armoury was in charge of
producing, purchasing and storing weapons, jewelry and various household
articles of the tsars. The finest Muscovite gunsmiths (the Vyatkin brothers),
jewelers (Gavrila Ovdokimov), and painters (Simon Ushakov) used to work there.
In 1640 and 1683, they opened the iconography and pictorial studios, where the
lessons on painting and handicrafts could be given. In 1700, the Armoury was
enriched with the treasures of the Golden and Silver chambers of the Russian
tsars.
In 1711, Peter the Great had the majority of masters
transferred to his new capital, St.Petersburg. 15 years later, the Armoury was
merged with the Fiscal Yard (the oldest depository of the royal treasures),
Stables Treasury (in charge of storing harnesses and carriages) and the Master
Chamber (in charge of sewing clothes and bedclothes for the tsars). After that,
the Armoury was renamed into the Arms and Master Chamber. Alexander I of Russia
nominated the Armoury as the first public museum in Moscow in 1806, but the
collections were not opened to the public until seven years later. The current
Armoury building was erected in 1844-1851 by the imperial architect Konstantin
Ton. The director of the museum from 1852 to 1870 was the writer Alexander
Veltman.
After the Bolshevik Revolution, the Armoury collection was
enriched with treasures taken from the Patriarch sacristy, Kremlin cathedrals,
monasteries and private collections. Some of these were sold abroad on behest
of Joseph Stalin in the 1930s. In 1960, the Armoury became the official museum
of the Kremlin. Two years later, the Patriarch chambers and the Cathedral of
the Twelve Apostles were assigned to the Armoury in order to house the Applied
Arts Museum.
The Kremlin Armoury is currently home to the Russian Diamond
Fund. It boasts unique collections of the Russian, Western European and Eastern
applied arts spanning the period from the 5th to the 20th centuries. Some of
the highlights include the Imperial Crown of Russia by jeweller Jérémie Pauzié,
Monomakh's Cap, the ivory throne of Ivan the Terrible, and other regal thrones
and regalia; the Orloff Diamond; the helmet of Yaroslav II; the sabres of Kuzma
Minin and Dmitri Pozharski; the 12th-century necklaces from Ryazan; golden and
silver tableware; articles, decorated with enamel, niello and engravings;
embroidery with gold and pearls; imperial carriages, weapons, armour, and the
Memory of Azov, Bouquet of Lilies Clock, Trans-Siberian Railway, Clover Leaf,
Moscow Kremlin, Alexander Palace, Standart Yacht, Alexander III Equestrian,
Romanov Tercentenary, Steel Military Fabergé eggs. The ten Fabergé eggs in the
Armoury collection (all Imperial eggs) are the most Imperial eggs, and the
second-most overall Fabergé eggs, owned by a single owner.
Redsquare is a city square in Moscow, Russia. The square
separates the Kremlin, the former royal citadel and currently the official
residence of the President of Russia, from a historic merchant quarter known as
Kitai-gorod. Red Square is often considered the central square of Moscow,
because Moscow's major streets—which connect to Russia's major
highways—originate from the square.
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