The Red Square is considered to be the center of
Moscow.
Symbolically, it separates the Kremlin citadel and the a merchant
neighborhood known as
Kitai Gorod (Chinatown). Most of the
important streets in Moscow start from the
Kremlin and extend to
different parts of Moscow in a sun-like, radiating fashion.
Originally, the area of Red Square was called
Pozhar
(burnt-out place) as it was covered in wooden buildings that often
caught fire. As a part of a grand project to renovate the Kremlin
in 1493, the square was cleared out.
Interestingly, the name Red Square is derived neither from the
color the
Kremlin walls nor from the link to the Soviet era.
Rather, the name came about from the Russian word
krasnaya
that means "beautiful" in the older, classical version of the
Russian language. The name was originally used to describe
St.
Basil's Cathedral standing on this square.
You have probably seen video footage of Soviet military parades on
the Red Square (and subsequent Russian military parades), but did
you know that during the Great Patriotic War (World War II), when
German forces were just 60 miles away form the Kremlin, Stalin
commanded the official parade in a celebration of the Communist
revolution of 1917? Russian troops were brought in from the
battlefields to march on Red Square and then moved back to the
front lines. Every year since the defeat of Hitler, the Red Square
hosts the official "victory parade" and in 2005 it celebrated the
60th anniversary of victory over the Nazis. This event was attended
by 60 leaders from the countries that took part in World War II and
was the largest gathering of world leaders in history.
Each building in the Red Square is a legend in its own right:
Lenin's Mausoleum, the Iberian Gate Chapel, Kazan Cathedral and
more. Red Square separates the
Kremlin - the symbol of the Russian
state - from
Kitai Gorod, the symbol of commerce. St.
Basil's Cathedral stands on the third edge of the Square
representing the Russian Orthodox religion. Interestingly, the
Iberian Gate Chapel, which has been turned into a Bolshevik
Revolution museum, stands on the remaining side.
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