- Great Lavra Belltower
The Great Lavra Belltower or the Great Belfry ( _uk. Велика Лаврська дзвіниця, _ru. Большая Лаврская колокольня) is the main belltower of the ancient
cave monastery ofKiev Pechersk Lavra inKiev ("Kyiv"), the capital ofUkraine . It is one of the most notable buildings of the Kiev skyline ().The belltower was the highest free-standing belltower at the time of its construction in 1731-1745.cite book|first=Ruta|last=Malikenaite|year=2003| title=Guidebook: Touring Kyiv|publisher=Baltija Dryk|location=Kyiv|id=ISBN 966-96041-3-3] It was designed by the architect Johann Gottfried Schädel, and the funds for its construction came from the Ukrainian
cossack Hetman Ivan Mazepa . [cite web|url=http://xyz.org.ua/discussion/lavra.html|title=Велика Лаврська дзвіниця|accessdate=2006-11-10|author=|last=Neiman|first=Yuriy|work=XYZ Internet Journal|language=Ukrainian] Its total height, with theChristian cross , is 96.5meter s ("316 feet").The Great Lavra Belltower is a Classical style construction with a total of four tiers, surmounted by a gilded
dome . The diameter of the tower's lowest tier at its base is 28.8 meters ("94 feet"), and the thickness of the first tier walls is 8 meters ("26 feet"). The tower's foundation exceedes 7 meters ("22 feet"). The tower is decorated with many architectural columns: the second tier is decorated with 32 Dorian columns, the third tier is decorated with 16 Ionic columns, and the fourth with 8 Corinthian columns.cite web|url=http://klymenko.data-tec.net/Kyiv/Kyiv.Lavra.htm|title=Велика дзвіниця Києво-Печерської Лаври|accessdate=2006-11-10|author=|last=Klymenko|first=Sergiy|work=Pictures of Kyiv|language=Ukrainian/Russian]On the third tier, there were some hanging bells, but they were later removed. To this day, only three small 18th-century bells have been preserved: the "Balyk", "Voznesenskyi", and "Bezymiannyi" bells. The former main bell of the Great Lavra Belltower, the "Uspenskyi", had a total weight of one ton and was cast in 1732 by Ivan Motorin, who was also responsible for the
Moscow Kremlin Tsar Bell. There is also a viewing platform atop the third tier , which provides visitors with abird's-eye view of the region around Kiev.On the fourth tier there is a chiming clock, manufactured in 1903, which has a total weight of 4.5 tons. The current belltower's clock, designed by the Moscow master A. Enodin and based on the
Kremlin clock , replaced the older 18th-century clock of the master A. Levynskyi. The clock has stopped only once during its existence: it happened in September 1941 when the Dormition Cathedral of the Pechersk Lavra was blown up by army forces, [The cathedral was apparently mined for destruction by retreating Soviet troops, as was theKhreschatyk street in Kiev, and was apparently blown up by Nazi German forces.Fact|date=February 2007 However, this is very controversial subject: the Germans blame the Soviets for the destruction of the cathedral and vice versa.] during the Second World War.The clock was repaired following the destruction of the nearby cathedral, which took a total of six years to complete.cite web|url=http://interesniy.kiev.ua/old/architecture/buildings/8|title=Kiev's largest clock|accessdate=2006-11-11|work=Interesniy Kiev|language=Russian] Since that time, the clock has never needed any repairs. The clock's mechanism is very accurate; up to within 10 seconds. However, it has been observed that its accuracy depends on the time of the year: in the Winter, the clock works somewhat slower than in the Summertime. The clock's mechanism has to be rewound once a week, and the clock's bells chime every quarter of the hour.
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