Staritsa

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Coordinates: 56°31′″N, 34°54′″E

Assumption Monastery, 2002.
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Assumption Monastery, 2002.

Staritsa (Russian: Старица) is a town in Tver Oblast, Russia, administrative center of Staritsky District). The town stands on the Volga River, 77 km from Tver. Population: 9,125 (2002 Census); 9,200 (1992 est.).

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[edit] History

The town was established in 1297 under the name of Gorodok (small town). In 1365 it was moved from the more elevated right to the lower left bank of the Volga River. The new settlement was called Novy Gorodok (new small town).

Since the 15th century, the town has been called Staritsa, which is Russian for "former river-bed". The name was misinterpreted by heraldists who represented on Staritsa's coat of arms an image of aged nun, which is another meaning of the Russian word "staritsa". In 1485, the town fell under the Muscovy rule with the rest of the Principality of Tver. The Golden Age of the town began.

View of Staritsa in 1912
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View of Staritsa in 1912

In the 15th century, the local principality was ruled by Ivan III's son Andrey, and then by Andrey's son Vladimir. While Ivan the Terrible had no children, Vladimir was regarded by boyars as his only heir. As the Tsar suspected Staritsa's ruler of plotting against him, Vladimir and his children were forced to take poison. The opulence of Staritsa during Vladimir's reign can be seen in the Assumption abbey.

In 1775, Staritsa became a center of an uyezd. From October 1941 till January 1942 the town was occupied by the German army.

[edit] Layout

The town is split by the river into two parts: the bigger left (Town part) and right (Moscow part). There are a lot of old abandoned limestone quarries in the neighbourhood, so there are a lot of old limestone buildings in the town.

In the right part of a town a site of an old settlement can be clearly traced, with huge mounds and ground walls. On the opposing left bank of a river stands the Assumption abbey, with a limestone cathedral from 1530 and a tented refectory from 1570. There are also several churches from the 18th and 19th centuries.

The city cathedral of Sts. Boris and Gleb is a ponderous Neoclassical edifice erected from 1805 to 1820. It replaced one of the miracles of old Russian architecture, a many-tented cathedral built in the 1560s by the same masters as worked on the famous St. Basil's Cathedral in Moscow. Actually, it was said that Moscow and Staritsa cathedrals were two sisters, just like the rulers of two towns, Ivan and Vladimir, were two brothers.

Main industries of Staritsa are clothes factory, flax-manufacturing factory, mechanical and vegetable food factories.

[edit] Caves

Staritsa is also famous among Moscow speleologists for its 18th–19th century quarries. The quarries were created by local people, without any general plan, so they are sometimes very tangled and can be used as a smaller model for horizontal caves labyrinths. The greatest quarries have a total length of passages of about three to five kilometers. The passages are clean and dry, which is unusual for Moscow region. It takes about three hours to reach these quarries from Moscow.

Currently volunteers try to force local administration to treat the quarries as a local heritage and to organize their visits. While in wild usage the quarries are gradually degrading due to carelessness and vandalism of visitors.

[edit] External links


Coat of arms of Tver Oblast Cities and towns in Tver Oblast Flag of Russia
Administrative center: Tver

Andreapol | Bezhetsk | Bely | Bologoye | Kalyazin | Kashin | Kimry | Konakovo | Krasny Kholm | Kuvshinovo | Likhoslavl | Nelidovo | Ostashkov | Rzhev | Staritsa | Torzhok | Toropets | Udomlya | Vesyegonsk | Vyshny Volochyok | Zapadnaya Dvina | Zubtsov


Trinity Lavra
Historical towns and monasteries of Moscow region New Jerusalem Monastery

Serpukhov | Zaraysk | Kolomna | Kirzhach | Trinity | Radonezh | Dmitrov | Klin | Staritsa | Zvenigorod | New Jerusalem | Volokolamsk | Joseph-Volokolamsk Monastery | Mozhaysk | Vereya | Ruza | Borovsk