PDA

View Full Version : Irkutsk: Siberia's Nobility and Pride


Neilikka
09-07-2008, 07:53 AM
"Irkutsk is an excellent city. Quite intelligent. Theater, museum, city park with music, good hotels." Such was the impression of the city written by Anton Chekhov, famous Russian writer at the end of the 19th century. The western gateway to Lake Baikal, and one of the most important cities of Siberia, Irkutsk remains a great cultural and historical landmark.
Eastern Siberia's history is quite similar to the well-known history of American Wild West. Tens of thousands Cossacks, runaway serfs and other dashing individuals striving for a better life fought their way eastwards while engaging into numerous battles with indigenous people like Yakuts, Buryats, Tuvans and countless minor tribes. They were followed by merchants, gold diggers, mobsters and burdensome bureaucrats.
In 1652, in order to collect fur taxes from Buryats and trade gold, Cossack chieftain Yakov Pokhabov ordered the building of a fortress (or an ostrog as it was called then) at the location where the small Irkut River joins the Angara. Irkutsk's economy soared after the Siberian Road (or Trakt) reached Irkutsk in 1790. All goods heading to central Russia from Eastern Siberia and China - including furs, timber, gold, diamonds, tea etc. - traveled first through Irkutsk.
At the same time, as one of the largest trading hubs in Siberia, the distant city on the border of empire became a common place for exile. In the late 19th century, it was reported that there was one exiled person per every two native citizens. Many noble participants of Decembrist revolt of 1825 were sent there. In addition to revolutionary views, they brought much to the city's culture and architecture.
The best time to visit Irkutsk is certainly summer. As the saying goes, in Siberia it is cold for only three months out of the year, and very cold for the other nine. The central square is a strange blend of traditional Soviet-style city administration and Duma buildings, orthodox churches, a Roman Catholic Church and eternal flame.
Spasskaya and Bogoyavleniya churches standing at the corners of a small park fortunately survived the Soviet years. Today, they are interesting examples of Siberian clerical architecture. Meanwhile, an old gothic Polish Roman Catholic Church is not something one would expect to find in Siberia's heartland. The church was built mainly due to funds raised by Polish community of exiled living in Irkutsk at the end of the 19th century. Now the Catholic Church hosts Philharmonic Hall and provides services for Catholics.
The city center fascinates with its old dilapidated wooden architecture. Many run-down former houses of merchants, exiled noblemen, and revolutionaries are now populated by the city's marginalized and illegal Chinese migrants.
However, the other districts still preserve their cozy and warm feeling of an old, well-off city of tradesmen, where every rich merchant tried to show off his premises to the fullest. Despite their poor condition, the cost of these dwellings back then is obvious.
Visitors should make an effort to see two spectacular houses that were owned by the Decembrists Volkonsky and Trubetskoy (on Volkonsky and Dzerzhinsky streets, respectively). Both are open as museums.
After visiting the city center you can take a walk along Gagarina Boulevard to enjoy a magnificent view of the Angara and see a newly erected monument to Alexander III, the emperor who ordered the Trans-Siberian Railway to be constructed. The original monument stood at the same place before the revolution of 1917, but was demolished afterwards.
Take a walk to Karl Marx Street where you will soon find the Trud stadium, built in the 1950s by prison labor. The stadium hosts up to 20,000 spectatos and is said to have a vast cloud of vapors hovering from people's breath during major competitions in winter. Severe frosts do their job pretty well. Stop by the NEP (New Economic Policy) restaurant on Krasnogo Vosstaniya Street to get an impression of what life was like in the Soviet Union in the 1920s.
A large island in the Angara nearby provides another tourist attraction: a children's railroad. Even adults can enjoy a round trip of the island in a miniature but real train that is driven, controlled and supervised by children themselves.
Afterwards, take a stroll down the quay to the Irkutsk dam. Get to the middle of it and you will understand why even exiled Volkonsky's wife wrote to St. Petersburg that she found the city beautiful, the scenery picturesque and the river magnificent - although it was covered with ice. Make sure you do not miss the icebreaker Angara seen from the dam. Ordered in England and brought to Baikal in the last years of the 19th century, the Angara served well for several decades, sank twice and was completely abandoned to become later a museum and city's pride.
One more place of interest is Znamensky Monastery (on Angara Street) with a controversial newly erected monument to Admiral Alexander Kolchak, the ruler of Siberian part of Russia during the Civil War of 1918-1924. Killed by Bolsheviks and thrown into the Angara just a dozen meters from the spot Admiral Kolchak now stands in a uniform jacket, his head uncovered, wrapped deep into his thought.
Visiting Irkutsk is a worthy trip in itself, but it is much better to take another two or three days to see one of nature's miracles, Lake Baikal. It is about a one hour drive away.

TO GET THERE
Regular and frequent S7 and Aeroflot flights, lasting five hours are definitely the best choice. But more passionate travelers who can spare the time can take a train, which will give them an impression of the vast Trans-Siberian railway. It reaches Irkutsk in approximately three and a half days.

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 08:15 AM
I found it interesting to write about this city because it's sunny-m'snative town. FBIbob has gone there many times. Marina has written a lot about her life in America, Pocatello, Idaho. I think we all are thankful to her for her essays about her new home-country in spite of all our arguments about them. They captured our interest for almost a year. It was a great topic on LL Forum.
I know that Marina and Robert are registered here but Marina stopped writing, alas!
Marina, you have never written us about Irkutsk. And Robert has never described his impressions of this city.
I am sure you both have a lot to tell us about it. And I believe it would be interesting for many gentlemen here to find out where Russian ladies come to your countries from.
I hope Marina will share her photos from Siberia with us.

:hug::welcome::grouphug::viannen_01:

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 10:52 AM
OK. I will start posting photos. I hope Marina will join me.

Some of the remaining 19th Century Irkutsk architecture, which helped Irkutsk become known as the "Paris of Siberia".

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 10:56 AM
Downtown of Irkutsk

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 11:00 AM
To my mind, Irkutsk looks no worse than Pocatello, to say the least of it.

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 11:05 AM
A street scene, the river Angara and the Railway Station.

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 11:17 AM
In a very post-Soviet era move, this statue of Tsar Alexander III, considered to be the father of the Trans-Siberian railroad, replaced an obelisk commemorating the Trans-Siberian railroad. It's located along the Angara River promenade just across the river from the grand 19th Century Irkutsk Train Station.

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 11:22 AM
Relics of a bygone era, Irkutsk's old wooden houses are locked in a battle between the modern town planners who want to tear them down and replace them with more efficient modern structures, and the preservationists who want to hold onto Irkutsk's architectural heritage. So far the preservationist are winning the battle, but alas, cannot find any funds to refurbish these wonderful old structures.

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 11:25 AM
Wooden buildings in Irkutsk

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 11:30 AM
Beyond the colorful flower beds of Kirov Square, the imposing former Party Headquarters, now the Regional Administration Offices for the Irkutsk Oblast (Region) stands guard at the north end of the square.

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 11:41 AM
I hope to see the continuation.

alpine-frolic
09-07-2008, 02:27 PM
Neilik, again propaganda! You are only able to make us more curious about Russia!
You make more for your country than Putin, sorry Boris...

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 02:41 PM
Who is that Boris you are asking for apology, Raztapo? I will do one more thing for my country. I will tell you what Putin's first name is! He is Vladimir!:gossip:
I will do even more! I will tell you a top state secret! Our President's name is Dmitrii Medvedev! Surprise, surprise!:gossip:

alpine-frolic
09-07-2008, 03:55 PM
i know boris is eltsine, vlad is putin and i have heard medvedev a puppet, what is true?
no matter, let us enjoy the country and inhabitants by the right side.

Neilikka
09-07-2008, 04:10 PM
Medvedev is a very handsome gentleman. His eyes are so blue! A lot of Russian ladies find him good-looking. If a puppet, then a very nice one. http://netz.ru/uploads/myblog-106824-1211418812.jpg

Don't you think that he resembles NicolasII, Russian last Tsar?

fbibob
09-07-2008, 09:00 PM
I have only been to Irkutsk a couple of times, so I cannot give as many impressions as Bella thinks I can.

In general, I can say that public buildings are either new and very nice, or older and the cheap concrete is spalling and flaking apart. I loved the old houses, but it was sad to see how they are falling apart from lack of paint and maintenance. But it also reminds me of streets I have seen in many American cities.

One of my biggest impressions was all of the places you could buy booze. Every block had a convenience store at each end, and half of the inventory was alcohol. And in the middle of the block would be a small kiosk with more booze.

For people who are interested in finding a lady, there are many more beauties there. And they have a wonderful sense of family. Go there, guys.

RiverRock
09-08-2008, 04:56 AM
Kazansky Church in Irkutsk. Russia has spectacular looking buildings.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4a/Kazansky_Church_Irkutsk.jpg