Thursday, November 12, 2015


Kizhi Pogost


The pogost of Kizhi (i.e. the Kizhi enclosure) is located on one of the many islands in Lake Onega, in Karelia. Two 18th-century wooden churches, and an octagonal clock tower, also in wood and built in 1862, can be seen there. These unusual constructions, in which carpenters created a bold visionary architecture, perpetuate an ancient model of parish space and are in harmony with the surrounding landscape.

http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/544


The Kizhi Pogost is an enclosure that holds two 18th-century wooden churches and an octagonal bell tower. Kizhi is located on a narrow strip of land on the southern tip of the island of Kizhi on Lake Onega in Karelia. 

The jewel of its architecture is the 22-domed Transfiguration Church (1714), with a large iconostasis—a wooden screen covered with religious portraits, featuring much gold leaf. This massive church (also known as the "summer church") is about 30m tall, making it one of the tallest log structures in the world. 

The smaller, nine-domed Intercession Church (also known as the "winter church") was built in 1764, and its iconostasis is intact and can be seen by visitors. 

The third structure inside the Pogost is the belltower which was built in 1874. The belltower is also constructed with walls of horizontally-fitted logs, though they are covered by exterior wooden planks and cannot be seen. These structures were erected without any nails or other metal, and were made of scribe-fitted horizontal logs, with interlocking corner joinery—either round notch or dovetail—cut by axes. 

http://www.worldheritagesite.org/sites/kizhipogost.html

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