- Tver
Tver ( _ru. Тверь) is a city in
Russia , the administrative center ofTver Oblast . Population: 405,500 (2007 est.); 408,903 (2002 Census). Tver was formerly the capital of a powerful medieval state and a model provincial town inImperial Russia with population of 60,000 onJanuary 1/14.1913. It is located at the confluence of the Volga andTvertsa River s. The city was known as Kalinin ( _ru. Кали́нин) from 1931 to 1990.Medieval origins
The first written record of Tver is dated 1164. Originally a minor settlement of Novgorodian traders, it passed to the Grand Prince of
Vladimir in 1209. In 1246,Alexander Nevsky granted it to his younger brotherYaroslav Yaroslavich (d. 1271), from whom a dynasty of local princes descended. Four of them were killed by theGolden Horde and were proclaimed saints by theRussian Orthodox church .Formerly a land of woods and bogs, the
Tver principality was quickly transformed into one of the richest and most populous Russian states. As the area was hardly accessible forTatar raids, there was a great influx of population from the recently devastated South. By the end of the century, it was ready to vie withMoscow for supremacy in Russia. Both Tver and Moscow were young cities, so the outcome of their rivalry was far from being certain.Grand princedom
Mikhail of Tver, who ascended the throne of
Vladimir in 1305, was one of the most beloved of medieval Russian rulers. His policy of open conflict with theGolden Horde led to his assassination there in 1318. His son Dmitry "the Terrible Eyes" succeeded him, and, concluding an alliance with the mightyGrand Duchy of Lithuania , managed to raise Tver's prestige even higher.Exasperated by Dmitry's influence, Prince
Ivan Kalita of Moscow engineered his murder by the Mongols in 1326. On hearing the news of this crime, the city revolted against the Horde. The latter joined its forces with Muscovites and brutally repressed therebellion . Many citizens were killed, enslaved, or deported. This was the fatal blow to Tver's pretensions for supremacy in Russia.In the second half of the 14th century, Tver was further weakened by
dynastic struggles between its princes. Two senior branches of the ruling house, those ofKashin andKholm sky, asserted their claims to the grand ducal throne. The claimants were backed up by Moscow and eventually settled at the Kremlin court.During the Great Feudal War in
Muscovy , Tver once again rose to prominence and concluded defensive alliances with Lithuania, Novgorod,Byzantium , and the Golden Horde. Grand Prince Boris of Tver sent one of his men,Afanasiy Nikitin , to search for gold and diamonds as far asIndia . Nikitin's travelogue, describing his journey from 1466 to 1472, is probably the first ever firsthand account of India by a European. A monument to Nikitin was opened on the Volga embankment in 1955.Later history
At last, on
September 12 ,1485 , the forces of Ivan the Great seized the city. The principality was given as an appanage to Ivan's grandson, only to be abolished several decades later. Last scions of the ruling dynasty were executed by Ivan the Terrible during theOprichnina . At that turbulent time, Tver was ruled bySimeon Bekbulatovich , a former khan ofKasimov . The only remnant of his ephemeral reign is a gracefultent-like church in the , 28 km north-east of Tver.The city's decline was not irrevocable, however. With the foundation of St. Petersburg, Tver gained importance as a principal station on the highway (and later railway) from Moscow to St. Petersburg. It was much visited by
Russian royalty and nobility travelling from the old capital to the new one and back.Following a great fire of 1763, the city was rebuilt in Neoclassical style. Under Catherine the Great, the downtown was thoroughly reconstructed. Crumbling medieval edifices were razed and replaced with imposing Neoclassical structures. The most important of these are the Travel Palace of the Empress (designed by the celebrated
Matvei Kazakov ), and the Ascension church (designed by Prince Lvov and consecrated in 1813).In 1931, the city was renamed Kalinin, after a notable Soviet leader
Mikhail Kalinin who had been born nearby. A last vestige of the pre-Petrine epoch, the Saviour Cathedral, was blown up in 1936. In 1940 the NKVD executed more than 6,200 Polish policemen and prisoners of war fromOstashkov camp. During theCold War it was home to the air baseKryuchkovo , which is no longer in service. The historic name of Tver was restored in 1990.The
Wehrmacht occupied Kalinin for two months in 1941, leaving the city in ashes. A large-scale resistance movement in the city and the region resulted in over 30,000 Nazi soldiers and officers eliminated during the occupation of the city. Kalinin was the first major city inEurope to be liberated from the Wehrmacht.Apart from the suburban White Trinity Church (1564), there are no ancient monuments left in Tver. The downtown is graced with Catharinian and Soviet edifices, bridges and embankments. Tver's most notable industries are a
railroad car plant, opened in 1898, an excavation-machine factory, and a glass making factory. Tver is home toMigalovo , which is one of Russia's biggest military airlift facilities.Education
Tver is home to
Tver State University , the most highly rated university of the region. It is also home to a technical university, medical, military, and agricultural academies and more than 20 colleges and lyceums, branch campuses of some Moscow higher educational institutions and more than 50 high schools.Tver State Medical Academy is a medical college located in Tver.
Notable natives
*
Anastasia Dobromyslova , professional darts player
*Ilya Kovalchuk , professional hockey player
*Mikhail Krug , singer
*Afanasy Nikitin , merchant and explorer
*Andrei Tupolev , aircraft designer. Born in the region and went to school in Tver
*Viktor Troicki , professional tennis player.Competitor for Serbia.ister cities
*
Bergamo ,Italy
*Kaposvár ,Hungary
*Osnabrück ,Germany
*Veliko Turnovo ,Bulgaria
*Besançon ,France
*Lublin ,Poland
*Hämeenlinna ,Finland
*Buffalo, New York ,USA
*Yingkou ,People's Republic of China References
* [http://www.fallingrain.com/world/RS/77/Tver.html FallingRain Map - elevation = 127m]
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