|
|
||||||
|
||||||
| Back to Home Page | ||||||
| Sightseeing in Moscow |
Viewing Lenin's Body in Moscow
The tomb is open every day except Mondays and Fridays from 10:00 to 13:00. It's located on Red Square. Lenin's Mausoleum serves as the current resting place of Vladimir Lenin.
It’s located in Red Square. His embalm In 1929, it was established that it would be possible to preserve Lenin’s body for a much longer period of time. Therefore, it was decided to exchange the wooden mausoleum with the one made of stone (architects Aleksey Shchusev, I.A. Frantsuz, and G.K. Yakovlev). They used marble, porphyry, granite, labradorite, and other construction materials. In October 1930, the construction of the stone tomb was finished. In 1973, sculptor Nikolai Tomsky designed a new sarcophagus. On January 26, 1924 the Head of the Moscow Garrison issued an order to place the Guard of Honour at the mausoleum. Russians call it the "Number One Sentry". After the events of the Russian constitutional crisis of 1993, the Guard of Honor was disbanded. In 1997 the "Number One Sentry" was restored at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Alexander Garden. More than 10 million people visited Lenin's tomb between 1924 and 1972. Though supposedly "rejuvenated" annually by Russian undertakers, Lenin's body currently gives off a waxed appearance, prompting many to wonder if it is still. Neither the former Soviet government nor the current Russian authorities would comment on the topic of the body's authenticity. The family of Lenin's embalmers states that the corpse is real and requires daily work to moisturize the features and inject preservatives under the clothes. On a regular basis the corpse is removed from view to be undressed and treated. The body was removed in October 1941 and evacuated to Tyumen, in Siberia, when it appeared that Moscow might be in imminent danger of falling to invading Nazi troops. After the war, it was returned and the tomb reopened. Joseph Stalin's embalmed body shared a spot next to Vladimir Lenin, from the time of his death in 1953 until October 31, 1961, when Stalin was removed as part of de-Stalinization and Khrushchev's Thaw, and buried outside the walls of the Kremlin. Boris Yeltsin, with the support of the Russian Orthodox Church, intended to close the tomb and bury Lenin, but did not achieve this while he was in power. The tomb is open every day except Mondays and Fridays from 10:00 to 13:00. There is normally a long line to see Lenin. No photos or video are allowed.
|
|||||
|
Map of Moscow (from 2008) Map of Moscow (from 1653) Excursions / Private Guides Moscow Boat Tours on the Moscow River Viewing Lenin's body in Moscow Secret Soviet Military Bunkers Detailed map of Kremlin with key Walking Tours of Moscow Guide to Historical metro stations
|
||||||
|
Night Time Moscow |
||||||
|
Russian Restaurant guide Moscow Quaint home-style Russian cuisine
|
||||||
|
Practical Moscow |
||||||
|
Budget accommodation in Moscow Transportation Communications Using a Mobile phone in Moscow Exhibition centers and how to find Emergency telephones in Moscow Pharmacies / Drug Stores in Moscow Dating and introductions Moscow Student travel services in Moscow
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
© 2008 SmartMoscow.Com All rights reserved. contact us |
||||||