Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Day 4 - Monday: Uglich

In the morning, the riverside has opened up: it isn’t the thickly wooded bank of the previous day. There are a lot of large, impressive houses dotted along the shore, some with large cruisers. As we are still within a couple of hundred kilometres of Moscow, perhaps they are still weekenders for some Muscovites…

Today is mostly on the boat, moving onto Uglich in the late afternoon. It is a relief to have enforced out time as I do tend to try to see as much as possible, with the result that I tire myself (and Mum) out each day. Sitting up on the bed writing with the water and trees sliding past the window is pleasantly restful.

We had the second of our lecture series, with a more entertaining talk on the czars and why Russians feel the need for an autocrat in charge.

We are travelling on canals, locks and dams created in the 1930s to make sailing from St Petersburg to Moscow a practical thing – doing away with the need for the Volga boatmen to drag it when the water was low. In the process, buildings were drowned and you can see the tops of some still.


Coming into the lock before Uglich

Our stop today is in the town of Uglich, famous for its watches, cheese and the death of the eight-year-old heir to the throne. The town at one time was a rival of Moscow as the capital of Russia and was founded in the 11th century.

The Church of the Spilled Blood in Uglich commemorates the death of the last of the original czar dynasty, which could have been murder: it is a mystery. A number of other churches are also on the town’s kremlin (fortress). There is a new monument to the victims of Stalin. The highlight of the Uglich visit was a male choir of five voices. The name in Russian means ‘Arc’ – Kovcheg. They had beautiful voices and sang a religious chant and the famous song of the Volga boatmen. They achieved tremendous volume, of course with melodious light and shade, in the seventeenth century church that is now a museum, one singer with an extremely deep bass.

We wandered around the town, taking snaps of the old houses.


A flat ceiling made into a cupola with tricky paintwork (one of the churches in the kremlin, not church of spilled blood)


An old house in Uglich with satellite


An example of an iconostasis or icon stand, in the same church


15th century keep in the kremlin



Ceiling in the outdoor porch of a church



A house/shop in Uglich

A streetscape facing the water



1 comment:

  1. Looks like u r having a good time. All good back here!! Thought that ceiling was a pie and your lunch!! Justine

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