Architecture
The
architectural richness of the Russian Empire reflected its long history
and the cultural, ethnic, and religious diversity of its people. Prokudin-Gorskii
photographed medieval churches and monasteries in European Russia and
mosques and Islamic schools in the Caucasus and Central Asia. Many of
the buildings he photographed were later destroyed by war or revolution,
but others survived the Soviet period and have been restored. In addition
to religious buildings, Prokudin-Gorskii photographed houses, country
estates, factories, and barns. His skill as a photographer and the technical
sophistication of his methods are apparent in the treatment of subjects
ranging from church interiors to panoramic shots of cities.
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Evening View of a Mosque
The Pamir Mountains provide a dramatic backdrop for an evening
view of the Shakh-i Zindeh Mosque in Samarkand, a complex of graves
and mortuary chapels built over many centuries for the women of
the dynasties descended from Timur (Tamerlane, 1336-1405), the
great medieval ruler of Central Asia.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
General View of the Shakh-i
Zinde Mosque, 1911.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03978) (41)
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Study of a Stork's Nest
A stork, traditionally a symbol of good luck among the Turkic
peoples, sits in her nest at the top of a palace wall in Bukhara
in Central Asia.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
A Stork (a scene in Bukhara),
1911.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03956) (42)
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Iconostasis and Miraculous Icon
This photograph of the interior of the Church of the Nativity
of the Virgin Mary in Smolensk shows the icon screen that in an
Orthodox church separates the altar area from the congregation.
At the right is a special shrine for the miracle-working icon known
as "Odigitria," traditionally associated with the city of Smolensk.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
Miraculous Icon of Mother
of God-Odigitria in the Mother of God Church, 1912.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03952) (43)
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View of the Nilova Monastery
The Monastery of St. Nil' on Stolobnyi Island in Lake Seliger
in Tver' Province, northwest of Moscow, illustrates the fate of
church institutions during the course of Russian history. St. Nil
(d. 1554) established a small monastic settlement on the island
around 1528. In the early 1600s his disciples built what was to
become one of the largest, wealthiest, monasteries in the Russian
Empire. The monastery was closed by the Soviet regime in 1927,
and the structure was used for various secular purposes, including
a concentration camp and orphanage. In 1990 the property was returned
to the Russian Orthodox Church and is now a functioning monastic
community once more.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
View of the Monastery from
the Solarium, 1910.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03973) (44)
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Church of St. Dmitrii
The Church of St. Dmitrii, built in the 1190s in the town of Vladimir,
east of Moscow in central European Russia, illustrates the verticality
common to early Russian church architecture. This church served
as the model for the Cathedral of St. Nicholas of the Orthodox
Church of America on Massachusetts Avenue, in Washington, D.C.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
Dmitrievskii Church,
1911.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03987) (45)
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View of the Solovetskii Monastery
The Solovetskii Monastery, founded in the early fifteenth century
on an island in the White Sea in the far north of European Russia,
was for centuries one of the most important monastic and cultural
institutions in Russia. The thick walls shown in this photo protected
the monastery from foreign invaders on several occasions. The monastery
was partially destroyed in the early Soviet period and became the
site of the first major concentration camp of the Gulag system.
In the post-Soviet era it was returned to the Orthodox Church and
is once again a functioning monastery.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
View of the Solovetskii Monastery
from the Land, 1915.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03961) (46)
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Tiled Porcelain Stove in the Prince's Palace
This photograph of the interior of the Prince's Palace shows a
ceramic tile heating stove surrounded by brightly painted furnishings
and walls with decorative frescoes. The palace was built in the
fifteenth century in Rostov the Great, an old Russian town northeast
of Moscow.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
Tiled Stove in the Kniazhii
[Prince's] Chamber, 1911.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03943) (47)
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Church of the Resurrection
Russian churches featured exterior and interior decoration in
the forms of mosaics, frescoes, and carvings, often in brilliant
colors. The Church of the Resurrection in Kostroma in the northern
part of European Russia was built in the 1650s and demonstrates
the exuberant decoration of the exterior characteristic of its
period. However, in spite of the dramatic exterior, the church
is noted primarily for its interior wall paintings.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
Church of the Resurrection
in the Grove, 1910.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-03975) (48)
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Cathedral of the Nativity of the Virgin
The Cathedral of the Nativity of the Virgin is the oldest church
building in Suzdal'. It is located in the Suzdal' kremlin, the
original walled, fortress-like part of the city. The cathedral,
which dates to the twelfth century, was rebuilt many times over
the years and displays the onion domes so characteristic of Russian
church architecture.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
Cathedral of the
Nativity of the Virgin, 1912.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04450) (49)
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Portion of the Shir-Dar Madrasa
The tiled columns, walls, and domes of the Shir-Dar ("Lions' House")
madrasa in Samarkand show the elaborate abstract designs and use
of calligraphy typical in much of Islamic and Central Asian architecture.
This madrasa, constructed 1619-1636 and in essence a Muslim theological
academy and school, is part of the complex of mosques and madrasas
found in Registan, the most sacred precinct of old Samarkand.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
A Portion of the
Shir-Dar Minaret and its Dome from Tillia-Kari, 1911.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04440) (50)
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Church of the Nativity of the Virgin
Founded around 1330, the Trinity-Ipat'ev Monastery in the old
Russian Volga River city of Kostroma, northeast of Moscow, contained
within its walls several old churches, including the Church of
the Nativity of Virgin the shown here. Originally constructed in
the sixteenth century, the church was demolished in the early Soviet
period. This photograph may be the only color photograph ever taken
of the church.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
The Cathedral of
the Nativity of the Holy Mother of God in Ipatevskii Monastery,
1910.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04444) (51)
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View of Tobol'sk from the Bell Tower of the Church of the Transfiguration
From the time of its founding in 1587 until the late 1800s, Tobol'sk
was one of the largest and most important cities in Siberia. For
several centuries Tobol'sk served as the military, administrative,
and political center of Russian rule in Siberia. This panoramic
view shows the Irtysh River in the foreground and the broad, flat
Siberian plain beyond the central part of the city.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
View of the City
of Tobol'sk from the North from the Bell Tower of the Church
of the Transfiguration, 1912.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04447) (52)
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View of Tiflis
This panoramic view of Tiflis shows the city nestled in a valley
amid ridges in the Caucasus Mountains. The city today is Tbilisi,
the capital of the now independent Republic of Georgia. At the
time this photograph was taken, around 1910, the city had a multinational
population of 160,000, including Georgians, Armenians, Russians,
Persians, Poles, Tatars, and Jews.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
View of Tiflis from
the Grounds of Saint David Church, ca. 1907-1915.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04434) (54)
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View of the Likanskii Palace from the Kura River
The Likany foothills of the Caucasus Mountains provide a dramatic
backdrop for a palace built on the Kura River, close to the Russian
border with Turkey and near the town of Borzhomi in present-day
Georgia.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
General View of the
Likanskii Palace from the Kura River, ca. 1907-1915.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04433) (55)
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Wooden Chapel on the Site of Old Belozersk
First mentioned in Russian chronicles for the year 862 A.D., the
town of Belozersk or "White Lake" was abandoned and relocated several
times. The original settlement, commemorated here by a small nineteenth-century
wooden chapel, was on the north side of the White Lake in north
central European Russia.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
A Chapel on the Site
Where the Old City of Belozersk Stood, 1909.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04420) (56)
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Storage Facilities for Hay
In the settlement of Viazovaia, along the Trans-Siberian mainline
in the Ural Mountain region, wooden storage facilities for hay
and food crops are photographed against the background of a dense
pine forest.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
A Method for Storing
Hay, 1910.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04426) (57)
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View of Suzdal' from the Kamenka River
Stone churches, wooden houses, and a small bridge over the Kamenka
River are photographed at the edge of the ancient Russian town
of Suzdal', northeast of Moscow. Once an important and powerful
principality, Suzdal' declined as Moscow rose in prominence and
consolidated control over several principalities in central European
Russia.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
View of Suzdal' from
the Kamenka River, 1912.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04449) (58)
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The Village of Kolchedan
A dirt road passing over a stone bridge leads to the small town
of Kolchedan in the Ural Mountains, southeast of Ekaterinburg.
Originally founded in 1673 as a frontier stockade, by the time
this photo was taken in 1912, the town was a center for sandstone
mining and processing and had two substantial stone church buildings,
including a convent with a school.
Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii.
The Village of Kolchedan,
1912.
Digital color rendering.
Prints and Photographs Division
(LC-DIG-ppmsc-04446) (62)
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