DiemazzLa Balme les GrottesTemplate talk:Private equity and venture capital Richard Attenborough Stippling Nikola Vignjevi maxjet airways Shingai Station Jementah Labarthe sur Lèze Albizzi kv7 Hosokawa Takakuni Serrières de Briord Henry Kissinger product placement in television Ultraviolence René Laënnec Pancreatic elastase User talk:Smatprt Dongguan Stadium King Caesar Tanlomo KL PLUS FC 0195170245 t108t United Kingdom and weapons of mass destruction Chartres Image:Nagasakibomb jpg Kasumi Station Category:1964 births Diefoula Sado Province Iroquois Confederacy Harissa Saint Nazaire, Gard Charavines UTC 2 Carisolo cpc co uk Plan, Wide VGA Fukuoka Prefecture Ibusuki Makurazaki Line Flight planning Image:Japanese Map symbol (City Hall) svg Kiawe |
For other uses, see Pantheon.
The Pantheon (Russian: Пантеон), officially also called the Monument to the Eternal Glory of the Great People of the Soviet Land (Памятник вечной славы великих людей Советской страны), was a project to construct a monumental memorial tomb in Moscow, Soviet Union. The tomb was planned to serve as the final resting place for prominent Communist figures along with the remains of Communists who had been buried at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis. According to the plan, Vladimir Lenin's embalmed body would be transferred from Lenin's Mausoleum to the new Pantheon. The decision to build the Pantheon was taken by the Central Committee of the CPSU and Council of Ministers of the USSR in a joint decision of March 6, 1953, the day following Joseph Stalin's death.[1] It was decided that the Pantheon would be built in Moscow, but its location was not further specified. A likely location would probably have been opposite the Kremlin, on the Sophie quay by the Moscow River.[2] The project was partly inspired by the Pantheon in Paris, and the idea was to transfer all the remains buried at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis, and convert the Lenin Mausoleum into a monumental tribune overlooking Red Square. According to the decision, the Pantheon would be accessible to broad masses of visitors. The decision to build the Pantheon was never executed. Its fate may be connected with the turning point of Stalinist architectural projects after Stalin's death, and with the official condemnation of Joseph Stalin, whose body was removed from the Lenin Mausoleum[3] on October 31, 1961 and buried next to the Kremlin Wall as part of the process of de-Stalinization. The decision of 1953 was further invalidated on December 4, 1974, when the Ministerial Council of the Russian SFSR decided to formally protect the historical monuments of the Lenin Mausoleum and the Kremlin Wall Necropolis. Since 1991, there has been some discussion about removing the Kremlin Wall Necropolis and burying Lenin's body. President Boris Yeltsin, with the support of the Russian Orthodox Church, intended to close the tomb and bury Lenin next to his mother, Maria Alexandrovna Ulyanova, at the Volkov Cemetery in Saint Petersburg; however, the former Russian President, Vladimir Putin, opposes all such measures, pointing out that a reburial of Lenin would imply that generations of citizens had observed false values during 70 years of Soviet rule.[4] See also
Footnotes
References
|
Site Map: RSS 2.0
Recent Searches:
Pantheon, Moscow
Related Pages: |