The name of the 17th century is given by the name of Myasnitskaya Sloboda, where there were many butcher shops and butcher's houses. The history of the street has been known since 1482, when Ivan III settled the families of Novgorod boyars and merchants in Moscow and the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary on Bor was built outside the Nikolsky Gate of Kitay-Gorod (it was better known as Grebnevskaya - after the name of the icon of the Mother of God). But it got its name later, previously, its initial part was called Evplovka - after the church of Archdeacon Euplus, while the other part was called Frolovka - after the church of Saints Frol and Laurus. Both of these temples located in the street area were demolished in the 1930s. In the 16th century, the street was lined with shops and houses of butchers, and their settlement was called Myasnitskaya Fifty. At the end of the 17th - beginning of the 18th centuries, the meat trade was pushed out to Zemlyanoy Val, and then the trade itself was destroyed, but the name Myasnitskaya (literal translation "Butcher's Street") was retained by the street. Under Peter I, Myasnitskaya became the road between the Kremlin and the German Settlement, along which the tsar constantly traveled. Nobles and a new aristocracy began to settle on the street. On the Moscow plan of 1767, several houses are shown to be made of stone, but the main part of the street's buildings was wooden; behind the houses there were vegetable gardens and orchards with ponds. During the fire of 1812, all the wooden houses on the street burned down. In 1813, by decision of the Commission on the Construction of Moscow, the street was widened to 25 meters and new stone houses began to be built on the new red line. In 1918, Myasnitskaya was renamed to Pervomaiskaya Street, but muscovites did not accept the name, and the street continued to be named and listed in official documents in the old way. On December 14, 1935, by a resolution of the Mossovet, the street was renamed to Kirov Street in memory of the prominent figure of the Communist Party Sergei Mironovich Kirov on the basis that the body of the murdered Kirov was transported along Myasnitskaya Street for burial on Red Square. In 1990, the street's historical name was returned.
@LowKeyContender7 ай бұрын
very nice buildings and clean. peaceful. looks like a very good place to live. one question. can the scooters along the street be rented?? thats kinda cool if u can just rent them and ride them around the city.
@steal_that_nick7 ай бұрын
Thank you! It's one of the oldest Moscow streets, the asphalt is still in bad condition. Yes, those are rental scooters, you can rent it and ride around town, but due to increasing number of incidents there are so called no scooter zones and zones with limited scooter speed, where it stops or slows down. For a ride you just install the app and scan the qr code on the scooter. There are several rental services and rates, for example, it roughly costs 50 cents to start plus 7 cents a minute for a "minute-by-minute" or about 3 USD for a hour.
@arielixta19638 ай бұрын
Todavía hace frío?. Ya es primavera?
@steal_that_nick8 ай бұрын
es el 5 de abril de 2024 y hace unos 10°C, normalmente es así hasta mayo, pero puede haber nieve o +20°C algunos días (en abril) it's 5 april 2024 and about 10°C, usually it's like this up until may, but it can be snow or +20°C on some days (in april)