Balakhna

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Coordinates: 56°29′″N 43°37′″E / <span class="geo-dec geo" title="Maps, aerial photos, and other data for Expression error: Unexpected / operator Expression error: Unexpected / operator">Expression error: Unexpected / operator, Expression error: Unexpected / operator

Coat of Arms of Balakhna (1781)
Coat of Arms of Balakhna (1781)
Nativity Church
Nativity Church

Balakhna (Russian: Балахна) is a town in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, Russia. It is located on the right bank of the Volga River, 32 km north of Nizhny Novgorod. Population: 57,338 (2002 Census); 32,133 (1989 Census); 33,500 (1968).

Balakhna was founded in 1474 as Sol-na-Gorodtse. After the Khan of Kazan razed it to the ground in 1536, a wooden fort was constructed to protect the settlement against further Tatar incursions. For the following three centuries, Balakhna prospered as a center of saltworks and grain trade. By the Time of Troubles, it was the 12th largest city in Russia.

Adam Olearius visited and described the town in 1636. That year several shipwrights from Holstein built the first Russian ships here, thus establishing Balakhna as a foremost centre of national river shipbuilding. The people of Balakhna were also reputed for their skills in knitting and making coloured tiles, which were used for decoration of the Saviour Church (1668) and other local temples. Balakhna is one of the few Russian cities shown on the 1689 Amsterdam World Map (labeled Balaghna).

The oldest structure in the city (and in the whole region) is the tentlike church of St Nicholas (1552). Of all the tentlike churches built in brick, this is the nearest approach to their wooden prototypes. Another handsome church, dating from the 17th century, houses a municipal museum. The Nativity church (1675) represents an archaic monumental type of monastery cathedral. Nearby is a statue of Kuzma Minin, who was born in Balakhna.

The northwestern part of Balakhna is known as Pravdinsk, and it used to be a separate urban-type settlement before it was annexed to Balakhna.

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