Bely Gorod
Bely Gorod (Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA"., Template:Lit) is the central core area of Moscow, Russia beyond the Kremlin and Kitay-gorod.
The name comes from the color of its defensive wall, which was erected in 1585–1593 at the behest of tsar Feodor I and Boris Godunov by architect Fyodor Kon. The wall is Template:Convert in length, and its width ranges up to Template:Convert at its widest.
Bely Gorod had 28 towers and 11 gates, the names of some of which are still preserved in the names of squares, namely: Trehsvyatsky, Chertolsky (Prechistensky), Arbatsky, Nikitsky, Tversky, Petrovsky, Sretensky, Myasnitsky, Pokrovsky, Yauzskiy, Vasilievsky. The walls were cogged, like the Kremlin walls, with loopholes that allowed keeping a continuous fire.
During the reign of Catherine the Great and her grandson Alexander I the wall was demolished and replaced by a chain of boulevards, known as the Boulevard Ring.
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Semiverhaja tower, Vsehsvjatsky and Chertolsky (Prechistensky) gate on the plan of 1610
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Semiverhaya (Seven-tops) angular tower. By Apollinary Vasnetsov
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Myasnitsky Gate. By Apollinary Vasnetsov
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"Truba" ("Tube") at the river Neglinnaya. By Apollinary Vasnetsov
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The remaining foundation of the wall at the Khokhlovskaya square