Protopopovsky Lane - a street in the center of Moscow in the Meshchansky and Krasnoselsky districts of the Central Administrative District between Prospect Mira and Kalanchevskaya Street .
| Protopopovsky Lane | |
|---|---|
Protopopovsky Lane. View of Prospect Mira (2009). | |
| general information | |
| A country | Russia |
| City | Moscow |
| County | TsAO |
| Area | Meshchansky , Krasnoselsky |
| Length | 0.65 km |
| Underground | Peace Avenue |
| Former names | Aptekarsky Lane, Godless Lane |
Content
- 1 History
- 2 Location
- 3 Noteworthy buildings and structures
- 4 Transport
- 5 In literature and art
- 6 notes
- 7 References
History
Initially, the lane was called Aptekarsky, as it passed along the pharmacy garden established in 1706 by decree of Peter the Great for the cultivation of medicinal plants . In 1805, the garden was transferred to Moscow University , and since then the Botanical Garden of Moscow State University has been here. The name Protopopovsky (Protopopov) arose in the first half of the 19th century by the name of the homeowner, college assessor I.G. Protopopov (according to other sources, the homeowner was the priest of the Church of the Life-giving Trinity at Pyatnitsky cemetery Fedor Simeonovich Protopopov). From 1924 to 1992 - Godless Lane. The renaming was made to contrast the religious sound of the previous name ( protopop - a priest of the highest rank), as well as due to the fact that the editorial office of the magazine βAtheistβ was located here. The anecdote of this renaming of the alley into Godless was that its former (and current) name was not religious.
Location
Protopopovsky Lane begins on the right side of Mira Avenue, passes east, to the right is the Botanical Garden of Moscow State University and Botanical Lane departs, then crosses Astrakhan Lane . It goes to the intersection where Bolshaya Pereyaslavskaya street (from the north-west), Panteleevskaya street (from the north) and Kalanchevskaya street (from the south) also converge.
Noteworthy buildings and structures
On the odd side:
- No. 5 - Interschool educational complex No. 15 (Meshchansky district);
- No. 9, Building 1 - Russian Union of Disabled Persons;
- No. 9 - Federal State Budgetary Institution of Culture βRussian State Library for the Blindβ;
- No. 19 - The House of Cheap Apartments of the Brother-Loving Society (1896, architect A. L. Ober , I. P. Mashkov ; rebuilt around 1910 by architect N. S. Kurdyukov );
- No. 19, building 6 - Mariinsky almshouse of the Brother-Loving Society for the Supply of Poor Apartments in Moscow with the Church of St. Prince Vladimir and St. Mary of Egypt (1900-1901, architect I. P. Mashkov );
- No. 19, building 7 - District courts: Ostankinsky (Alekseevsky, Butyrsky, Marfino, Maryina Roshcha, Ostankinsky, Rostokino);
- No. 19, building 15 - polyclinic No. 137 of the Central Administrative District;
- No. 23 - Residential building. The architect M. G. Piotrovich lived here [1] ;
- No. 25 - Eye Hospital (1905, architect P. A. Ushakov ), currently - the Labor Arbitration Court for the resolution of collective labor disputes;
On the even side:
- No. 6 - Residential building. Here lived General Designer A. M. Lyulka , General Secretary of the Communist Party of Uruguay Rodney Arismendi , Minister of Petroleum Industry of the USSR N. A. Maltsev , Chairman of the Board of the State Bank of the USSR V. V. Dementsev , Deputy Minister of Trade of the USSR I. L. Davydov . Since 1984, the writer V.O. Bogomolov lived here [2] ;
- No. 8 - Residential building. Here lived during emigration General Secretary of the Communist Party of Chile Luis Corvalan , film director Lev Kulidzhanov ;
- No. 14 - In 1977-1984, the writer V.O. Bogomolov lived in the house [2] .
- No. 16 - a residential building. Here lived the Soviet and Russian poet, bard, prose writer and screenwriter, composer Bulat Okudzhava , journalist Vitaly Syrokomsky [3] , poet Nikolai Starshinov [4] .
- No. 20 - the apartment building of A. N. Chabrov - E. S. Kuleshova (1912, architect S. M. Goncharov ) [5]
- No. 36/10 - residential building. Here lived G. A. Vartanyan [6]
Transport
- Tram routes No. 7, 50 pass along the lane.
In literature and art
- In Godless Lane spent the last years of his life [ specify ] Bulat Okudzhava . Lane is mentioned in his song βCrying on the Arbatβ (1982):
I am evicted from Arbat, an Arbat emigrant. |
- βGodless Laneβ - the song of the group β Architects β.
- βGodless Laneβ - a song by Natalia Stupishina .
- βGodless Laneβ - a novel by Marina Stepnova .
Notes
- β All of Moscow: Address and Reference Book for 1914. - M .: Partnership A. S. Suvorin "New Time", 1914. - S. 407. - 845 p.
- β 1 2 Moscow Encyclopedia / S.O. Schmidt . - M .: Publishing Center "Moskvovedenie", 2007. - T. I, Faces of Moscow. - S. 197. - 639 p. - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 978-5-903633-01-2 .
- β Syrokomsky Vitaliy Aleksandrovich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
- β Starshinov Nikolai Konstantinovich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
- β Nashchokina, M.V. Moscow Architectural Ceramics. The end of the XIX - the beginning of the XX century. - M .: Progress-Tradition, 2014 .-- S. 507. - 560 p. - ISBN 978-5-89826-434-5 .
- β Vartanyan Gevork Andreyevich // Moscow Encyclopedia. / Ch. ed. S.O. Schmidt . - M. , 2007-2014. - T. Volume I. Faces of Moscow : [in 6 books].
Links
- The official website of the Meshchansky district council
- Official site of the Krasnoselsky district council
- The names of Moscow streets . Toponymic Dictionary / R. A. Ageeva, G. P. Bondaruk, E. M. Pospelov and others; author foreword E.M. Pospelov. - M .: OGI, 2007. - (Moscow Library). - ISBN 5-94282-432-0 .
- Street map
- Click on the streets of Moscow ...
- Bulat Okudzhava. Arbat tunes (Crying on the Arbat) (text).