Sanctuary land of Kasimov

Kasimov is a town with an interesting history, without exaggeration: founded as Gorodets Meshchersky, later turned into a guard fortress and then given to the Tatar princes Kasim and Yakub in gratitude for their help to Tsar Vasily the Dark. This is how the Kasimov Khanate emerged – the largest Tatar Muslim center in Russia at that time. In the late 17th century, after the end of the Time of Troubles and during the reign of the last ruler – Regent Dowager Fatima Sultan, the Kasimov Khanate finally became part of Russia. Today Kasimov is a small town (administrative center) in the Ryazan region on the banks of the Oka River, where two cultures have intertwined, preserving their characteristics through the centuries – like a sanctuary land.

View of Kasimov from the opposite bank of the Oka River

My journey from Moscow was not very long and flew by almost unnoticed. Kasimov greeted me with a completely peaceful and calm provincial atmosphere, even calmer than the polar city of Vorkuta, which I visited relatively recently.

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Typical Kasimov houses outside the main street

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This photo expedition was supposed to last only three and a half days, and I knew that they would be very eventful. From early morning until sunset. Luckily, I went to bed early, and therefore always got enough sleep.

Early spring morning – 4 AM

The entire expedition can be divided into four parts. The first day turned out to be relatively warm and sunny. Early in the morning I went to the historical center of Kasimov. The central Cathedral Square is an ensemble of 19th century buildings, and it seems to me that the town as a whole has retained its appearance from the century before last. But little remains of the distant khan’s past. Just as the Russians adopted a lot from the Tatars, so the Tatars adopted European-Russian architecture. After this, the Tatars began to build mansions in the architectural style more familiar to Europeans (sometimes with the addition of something oriental).

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Houses and city estates

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The first thing that catches your eye on the square is the shopping arcade or «linen hall» from the 19th century. Linen hall is a common thing for any old town in central Russia, and they have been preserved in many cities. But in Kasimov I saw much more majestic buildings, with ancient preserved doors and gates and generally similar to the ancient Roman forum (the commercial and economic center (square) of the ancient Roman / Greek town).

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The brick columns, arches and half-ruined vaulted passages into the basements, as well as the closed old gates – all this made a sad, but also majestic impression on me. My imagination immediately completed the image of how people traded and worked here in the past, how it all looked in those days. I have never been to Rome, but I have seen ancient ruins of the Greco-Roman town of Chersonesos in Crimea, and I realized that in front of me was a more modern version of Empire and Classicism.

The architect of the presented shopping arcades was Ivan Sergeevich Gagin, a hereditary merchant and self-taught architect. He also designed the Empire style porches for the church on photographs below.

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In this square, a little away from the crumbling “forum”, there are modern one – temporary tents that are dismantled every night and reassembled as soon as the sun appears. Even one of the restored “forum” buildings is not in use and stands closed.

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Closed gates of empty part of the restored “forum”

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Modern trade on film – Kodak Ektachrome E100D

Near one of the authentic residential buildings, I met some guys who were unsuccessfully trying to start an old Soviet motorcycle. One of the guys told his friend that he didn’t want a Chinese motorcycle, but wanted to restore this one. He thought it was more reliable and more beautiful – “it’s less plastic”.

“Х”I want to restore it! It already starts and only a couple of parts need to be replaced”

The town is mainly populated by private houses, there are just few apartments, and fortunately they are not very high.

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Top and bottom Kodak Ektachrome E100D

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Following the roads along the Oka River, I reached the Khan’s Mosque. Next to it is the mausoleum of noble people and khans of Kasimov – takya (left photo below). There are 2 of them in the town. As I understand it, originaly, this is something similar to the cells of Christian monks or the dwellings of religious hermits.

Nearby on the square there is a monument to those who died in the Great Patriotic War and the Eternal Flame. For reference: The Eternal Flame in Russia has no religious connotations and symbolizes the people’s eternal memory of fallen heroes, fighters for the freedom of the Motherland.

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After the lunch break, I headed to the next “Roman ruins” – the Barkovs’ house, built in the early 19th century. The house was wooden with a brick Corinthian portico and a stone ground floor (often called an “earth” floor) – that was the accepted way to build here, and besides, it was cheaper.

Kodak Ektachrome E100D

Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, the house burned down in 2020, and after that only the colonnade and that very ground floor remained. Wooden houses in many old Russian cities burned down more often than they were rebuilt. Those that survived the Soviet era received no funding for restoration, and their fate seemed predetermined. Restoring a wooden house is more expensive than building a new one, especially if significant restoration or foundation replacement is required.

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I climbed these ruins and took a photo of the view of the Oka River. These ruins look as if they are “romantic”, i.e. artificially created for aesthetics. My expedition mate shared his opinion that it would be better to preserve something like this as ruins rather than restore it. Personally, I am not a fan of this, but in a weak economy, this may be a solution, and perhaps future generations will be able to restore such buildings.

In the evening, the organizers of our expedition staged a photo shoot with artificial light.

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Unusual houses on the way to an evening photo session-training

I really don’t like taking staged photos, and mostly, I took pictures of things unrelated to the main task.

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In the second half of photo shooting, we moved to a nearby abandoned site, where there was a small wooden house, more like a summer house than a permanent house.

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We had been taking photos until it got dark and it started raining heavily. Thus ended the first day of the expedition.

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