WORLD EUROPE UKRAINE SEVASTOPOL


Diveshops in Sevastopol:

Sevastopol

Sevastopol, also known as Sebastopol, is in the Crimea, in Ukraine.

California has a city of Sebastopol, named after this one.

Understand

One of the most important Black Sea ports. Founded in 1783 as the base of the Black Sea Navy of Russia, it was beseiged by the British in the Crimean War. In the 20th century it was the home port of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet, and the city retains a Russian naval presence.

Get in


Getting around Sevastopol, on a day to day basis, is much like getting around many Ukrainian cities -- by foot, by mini-bus (marshrutka), and by city bus. Given the hilly terrain and circuitous routes created as Sevastopol grew around its bays and shoreline, walking is less likely to be efficient, especially after one leaves the city center. Note that English maps and schedules for buses do not appear available (based on internet searching) and that one may need to depend on the word of citizens, operators, and fellow passengers to find the right route and stop. Buses and marshrutkas are economical, though often crowded, with marshrutkas being faster and slightly more expensive. Some travel sites (e.g., virtualtourist.com) contain comments recommending boats/skiffs that will take tourists to beaches and islands. Note that its much harder to get off boats if you realize you are on the wrong one and it is also difficult to leave a dicey location if the only transport is by boat.

See


Sevastopol is a good jumping-off place to see some of the sites from the Crimean War. There is an amazing museum called a Panorama, which depicts the siege of Sebastopol (from the Russian point of view) with a display a little like a diaorama, but much more impressive. There is a park (can't remember the name) with war memorials on one of the hills defended during the seige. You can visit the "Valley of Death", where the famous Charge of the Light Brigade occurred, and you can also visit nearby Balaklava, site of another famous battle, and an interesting little town, formerly a Russian submarine port.

Drink


For comfortable apartments in the center of sevastopol please see
www.travel2sevastopol.com


Sevastopol (English pronunciation: /ˌsɛv.ə'stoʊ.pəl/ or /sə'væs.təˌpoʊl/) (Севастополь; Aqyar), formerly known as Sebastopol, is a port city in Ukraine, located on the Black Sea coast of the Crimean peninsula. It has a population of 342,451 (2001). In May 1997, Russia and Ukraine signed the "Peace & Friendship" treaty ruling out Moscow's territorial claims to Ukraine.

Like in the rest of the Crimea, Russian remains the predominant language in the city, although following the independence of Ukraine there have been some attempts of Ukrainization that had very little success.

Etymology of the name
The name of Sevastopolis (Σεβαστόπολις), or currently Sevastopol, was originally chosen in the same etymology trend as other cities in the Crimean peninsula that was intended to reflect its ancient Greek origins. It is a compound of two Greek nouns, (sebastós, Modern sevastós) "venerable, reverend" and (pólis) "city". is the traditional Greek translation of the...



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Open Air Pirogovo Museum Tour Private 4 hours

Open Air Pirogovo Museum Tour

The museum of people's architecture and way of life of Ukraine is located on a territory of about 150 hectares on the picturesque Kyiv outskirts near the Goloseyevsky forest. This is a remarkable ensemble of open-air exhibits. The museum is located near the village Pirogov not far from the city ring road.

Construction began in 1969 on the initiative of the Ukrainian Society for Protection of Monuments of History and Culture, The museum has been open to visitors since 1976. S.Vergovsky, T.Dovzhenko, V.Orlov, L.Pribega, V.Sikorskiy, S.Smolinsky, B.Stamov, N.Khodakovsky and others took part in developing the conception and design of the museum.

The museum structures (there are more than 300) are original examples of wooden architecture transported here from the different regions of Ukraine. The territory is divided into separate zones corresponding to the historical regions of the country.

From the main entrance, the road leads across a large wheat field to the zone Middle Pridnieprovie with the great Church of the Great Martyn Saint Paraskeva Friday (Cherkassy region, 1742), the small Church of the Archangel Michael (1601), and the unique collection of windmills (vitriaky). Next on the hillside comes the zone Podolie where visitors tan see the Church of Saint Nicholas and the hell tower from the beginning of the 19th century from near Gusiatin. A stone pot-house stands near the road. The complex Poltavshchina and Slobozhanshchina is situated in the centre of the museum territory. A little farther on, visitors can see the Polesiye zone with the Voskresenskaya Church (Rovenshchina, 17th-18th century) under its hipped roof. The exposition of village houses (khatas) here is unique for its age (1587 and 1687). In the northern part of the museum, the Carpathians zone is divided into small farms. The bell tower of the ancient Pokrovskaya Church rises above this zone.

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Kiev Airport Departure Transfer Private Varies

Kiev Airport Departure Transfer Shuttle

Travel from your Kiev hotel to Kiev Airport. Transfer services are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. When making a booking, you will need to advise your departure flight details and your Nice pick-up details. Upon confirmation you will be provided with a travel voucher to present to the driver.

It's that easy!

Don't forget to book your arrival transfer here!
Kiev Arrival Airport Transfer Private
Product Code: 3401KBPAPTHTL

At time of booking, YOU MUST include the following flight and hotel details in the 'Special Requirements' box:
  • Airline
  • Flight Number
  • Departing City / Arrival City*
  • Arrival Time
  • Hotel Name
  • Hotel Address
Click here for more information and Booking Details


Kiev Airport Arrival Transfer Private Varies

Kiev Airport Arrival Transfer Shuttle

Travel from Kiev Airport to Kiev hotel. Transfer services are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. When making a booking, you will need to advise your arrival flight details and your Kiev drop-off details. Upon confirmation you will be provided with a travel voucher to present to the driver.

It's that easy!

Don't forget to book your return transfer here!
Kiev Airport Departure Transfer
Product Code: 3401KBPHTLAPT

At time of booking, YOU MUST include the following flight and hotel details in the 'Special Requirements' box:
  • Airline
  • Flight Number
  • Departing City / Arrival City*
  • Arrival Time
  • Hotel Name
Click here for more information and Booking Details


Kyivan Cave Monastery ( Kyievo-Pecherska Lavra)

An Orthodox monastery in Kyiv. It was founded by Saint Anthony of the Caves in the mid-11th century near the village of Berestove in a cave that the future metropolitan of Kyiv, Ilarion, had excavated and lived in until 1051. The first monks excavated more caves and built a church above them. The monastery's first hegumen was Varlaam (to 1057). He was succeeded by Saint Theodosius of the Caves (ca 1062–74), who introduced the strict Studite rule (see Studite fathers). The Kyivan princes and boyars generously supported the monastery, donating money, valuables, and land, and building fortifications and churches; some even became monks. Many of the monks were from the educated, upper strata, and the monastery soon became the largest religious and cultural center in Kyivan Rus’. Twenty of its monks became bishops in the 12th and 13th centuries. Saint Theodosius's ‘Teachings,’ Nestor the Chronicler's ‘Story about Borys and Hlib,’ ‘Life of Theodosius of the Caves,’ Povist’ vremennykh lit (Tale of Bygone Years), and the Kyivan Cave Patericon were written there. Foreign works were translated, and books were transcribed and illuminated. Architecture and religious art (icons, mosaics, frescoes)—the works of Master Olimpii, Deacon Hryhorii, and others—developed there Many folk tales and legends eventually arose about its saintly figures and the miraculous construction of its main church Early research on the monastery was done in the 17th century by Sylvestr Kosiv and Atanasii Kalnofoisky. The monastery was sacked several times, particularly in 1096 by the Cumans, in 1169 by Prince Andrei Bogoliubskii of Vladimir-Suzdal, in 1203 by Prince Riuryk Rostyslavych and the Chernihiv princes, and in 1240 by the Mongol Batu Khan. Each time it was rebuilt, new churches were erected, and the underground tunnels of caves and catacombs expanded. After a period of non-activity it was rebuilt in 1470 by Prince Semen Olelkovych, but in 1482 the Tatars burned it down. It was eventually again rebuilt, and in the late 16th century it received stauropegion status from the Patriarch of Constantinople, freeing it from the control of the local metropolitan. By that time consisting of six cloisters, the monastic complex was designated a lavra. For a few years after the 1596 Church Union of Berestia the Uniate Catholics fought the Orthodox for control of the monastery, but the Orthodox retained control. In 1615 Archimandrite Yelysei Pletenetsky established the first printing press in Kyiv at the Kyivan Cave Monastery Press, which became an important center of publishing in Ukraine. Archimandrite (later Metropolitan) Petro Mohyla restored and embellished the monastery. In 1631 he opened the Kyivan Cave Monastery School and introduced a ‘western’ curriculum; in 1632 it was merged with the Kyiv Epiphany Brotherhood School to form a college (later called the Kyivan Mohyla Academy). In 1688 the lavra became directly subordinate to the Moscow patriarch, retaining its stauropegion status. In 1718 a fire damaged most of its buildings, including the main church and the printing house, and destroyed the library and archive. Restorations lasted over 10 years. The monastery's cultural influence was later severely undercut by the Russian government's 1720 prohibition on the printing of new books and the imposition of synodal censorship on all publications. By the 18th century the monastery had acquired a great deal of wealth. It owned 3 cities, 7 towns, 200 villages and hamlets, 70,000 serfs, 11 brickyards, 6 foundries, over 150 distilleries, over 150 flour mills, and almost 200 taverns. In 1786 the Russian government secularized its property and made it a dependent of the state. At the same time the custom of electing the council elders, its governing body, was abolished. They were thereafter appointed by the Kyiv metropolitan, who also became the archimandrite and had his residence within the monastery's precincts. Russification of the monastery began towards the end of the 18th century and increased with time. Prior to the Revolution of 1917 there were over 1,200 monks and novices at the monastery. It was one of the most famous centers of religious life in the Orthodox world and attracted hundreds of thousands of pilgrims. Its best-known sacred objects were the relics of its saintly monks who had been canonized by Metropolitan Petro Mohyla in 1643. The caves (some of them dating from the Neolithic period) in which they lived and were buried, and from which the monastery's name is derived, form two underground labyrinths of tunnels, cells, and catacombs excavated in soft sandstone and loess. The labyrinths (the Far Caves and Near Caves) are 1.5 m wide, up to 2 m high, and 400 m apart. (See Plan of the Far Caves (1638); Plan of the Near Caves.) Burial niches in their walls are 0.5 m deep, 2 m long, and 1 m high; many still contain the mummified remains of monks and saints. (Photo monk's cell in the Near Caves; tunnels of the Far Caves; monk's cell in the Far Caves.) Several underground churches and chapels, such as Varlaam's Church in the Near Caves and Church of Saint Theodosius in the Far Caves, are located at the Kyivan Cave Monastery. In 1921–2 the Soviet authorities confiscated many of the relics and precious historical and artistic objects belonging to the monastery and converted a number of buildings to commercial and other use. Many of the monastery's monuments and collections became part of the Lavra Museum of Religious Cults and Way of Life, which also contained the collections of several Kyiv museums (eg, the Kyiv Museum of Church Antiquities, the Kyiv University Museum, and the Historical Museum of the Ukrainian SSR). In 1926 the Soviet Ukrainian government closed down the monastery completely and turned its grounds (22 ha) into a state museum-preserve—the All-Ukrainian Museum Quarter (Horodok), which contained several museums (particularly of antireligious propaganda), archives, libraries, and workshops. In 1934 the museum quarter was abolished, and many of its collections were gradually transferred to new museums in Kyiv. In 1941 Soviet forces retreating from the German advance mined the main church, the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyivan Cave Monastery, which once housed the legendary miracle-working icon of the Dormition; the mines exploded on 3 November 1941 after the Germans had occupied Kyiv. After the war the lavra preserve was restored and renamed the Kyivan Cave Historical-Cultural Preserve. Located there are several museums and institutions. Also on the preserve's grounds are the History Library of Ukraine and the Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Historical and Cultural Monuments. From the Second World War to 1961 a Russian Orthodox monastery was allowed to function at the lavra; it had over 100 monks. During the celebration of the millennium of East Slavic Christianity in 1988, the Far Caves of the monastery were ceded to the Orthodox church. Since 1992 they have been under the control of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP). The Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Kyiv Patriarchate, in turn, pressed for a concession on the grounds of the Cave Monastery; its efforts were unsuccessful, however, owing to the strong protests of the UOC-MP. In 1998–2000 the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyivan Cave Monastery was rebuilt by the city of Kyiv. Upon completion it was turned over to the UOC-MP. The Cave Monastery is rich in architectural monuments. Thirty-seven of them were built before the 20th century. Some, like the Dormition Cathedral built in 1073–8 and the Main Gate with the Holy Trinity Church (1106–8) above it, have been rebuilt several times. After the 1718 fire these buildings were painted and ornamented in the baroque style; their frescoes depicted hetmans, princes, and metropolitans. Prior to its demolition in 1941, the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyivan Cave Monastery contained the tombs of Pamva Berynda, Yelysei Pletenetsky, Prince Kostiantyn Ostrozky, Metropolitan Petro Mohyla, and other prominent nobles and personalities. Construction of the monastery's other churches was funded in the 17th and 18th centuries by Cossack hetmans and officers: the Church of the Elevation of the Cross, overlooking the Near Caves (1700); the All-Saints Church above the Economic Gate, funded by Hetman Ivan Mazepa (1696–8); the Tower-Church of Saint John the Calybite (Kushchnyk), Maliarna Tower, Onufriivska Tower, Hodynnykova Tower, and the fortified stone walls around the monastery; the Church of the Conception of Saint Anne (1679) and the Church of the Nativity of the Holy Mother of God (1696), both by the Far Caves; and the Resurrection Church (1698). In the 1720s cells for the council elders, a new printing house, a bakery, and other facilities were built. Many of the churches and buildings were altered by later restorations. The monastery's Great Bell Tower (96.5 m high), designed by the architect Johann Gottfried Schädel, was built in 1731–44 in the classical style. Square bell towers near the Far (1754–61) and Near Caves (1759–63) were erected by the monastery's master builder Stepan Kovnir. All bells were removed by the Soviet authorities in 1931–2. In the 19th and 20th centuries many ancient buildings were torn down or rebuilt in the official Russian synodal style. Several new churches (eg, the Refectory Church, 1893–5) were built in this style.

type:Churches and Cathedrals
url:www.encyclopediaofukraine.com
address:http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages\K\Y\KyivanCaveMonastery.htm


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