- 56°25′27″N 40°31′19″E / 56.42417°N 40.52194°E / 56.42417; 40.52194
Kideksha (Russian: Кидекша) is a
village (selo) in
Seletskoye Rural Settlement, Suzdalsky...
- is a
church built in 1152, on the
orders of
Prince Yuri Dolgoruky, in
Kideksha on the Nerl River, "where the
encampment of
Saint Boris had been"[1]. It...
-
includes the 12th-century
cathedrals of Vladimir, Suzdal, Bogolyubovo, and
Kideksha.
Vladimir Oblast borders Moscow, Yaroslavl, Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Nizhny...
- folk etymology, the name of the town came from the
royal residence of
Kideksha (near Suzdal),
ransacked by the
Mongols in 1237; Max
Vasmer labels the...
-
controller for the "Cambridge Five"
Church of
Boris & Gleb—church in a
nearby Kideksha village,
UNESCO World Heritage Site, 4 km (2.5 mi) away. Устав муниципального...
- cities—Vladimir,
Suzdal and Gus-Khrustalny—as well as
villages of
Bogolyubovo and
Kideksha.
Architecture of the
Soviet period is
present in
structures such as building...
- son of Yuri
Dolgorukiy and his
first wife. He was
kniaz of
Belgorod Kievsky,
Prince of
Turov and
Kideksha. He was
buried in the
Kideksha Church. v t e...
-
Boris and Gleb
Church commissioned by Yuri Dolgoruky, a church-fortress in
Kideksha near Suzdal, at the
supposed place of the stay of
knyazes Boris and Gleb...
-
Euthymius (pictured) in Suzdal, and the
Church of Sts
Boris and Gleb in
Kideksha.
Architectural Ensemble of the
Trinity Sergius Lavra in
Sergiev Posad Moscow...
-
means it is made up of
multiple monuments. The
Church of
Boris and Gleb in
Kideksha (1152, with
later modifications) The
Suzdal Kremlin with the Cathedral...