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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Etymology  





2 Description  





3 History  





4 Gallery  





5 Literature  





6 See also  





7 Notes  














Naryn-Kala






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Coordinates: 42°0310.87N 48°1626.83E / 42.0530194°N 48.2741194°E / 42.0530194; 48.2741194
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Naryn-Kala
Нарын-кала
Derbent, Dagestan, in Russia
Citadel Naryn-Kala
Coordinates42°03′10.87″N 48°16′26.83″E / 42.0530194°N 48.2741194°E / 42.0530194; 48.2741194
TypeCitadel
Height20-25 meters (65.62-82.02 ft)
Length255 meters (836.614 ft)
Site information
Open to
the public
Open
Conditionruined/medium
Websitehttps://derbentmuseum.ru/
Site history
Built6 CE
Built byKhosrow I
In useMuseum
MaterialsLimestone blocks
Garrison information
OccupantsDerbent Historical, Architectural and Art Museum-Reserve

UNESCO World Heritage Site

Official nameCitadel, Ancient City and Fortress Buildings of Derbent
CriteriaCultural: iii, iv
Reference1070
Inscription2003 (27th Session)
Endangered2003
Area4.5 hectares (11 acres)
Buffer zone2 hectares (4.9 acres)

Naryn-Kala (Russian: Нарын-кала) is an ancient pre-Arab citadel, part of the Derbent fortress, connected to the Caspian Sea by double walls designed to block the so-called Caspian gates to the Persian state.[1] It is included in the UNESCO World Heritage List.[2][3]

Etymology

[edit]

One of the translations of the name Naryn-Kala from Middle Persian into Russian is "Sunny Fortress".[3] According to other sources, it got the name Naryn in honor of the daughter of the Persian Shah, which means "tender", "beautiful".

Description

[edit]

Naryn-Kala citadel occupies the top of the hill closest to the Caspian Sea. The path along the coast was blocked by two parallel fortress walls (the Derbent wall), adjoining the citadel in the west, and leaving the sea at the eastern end, preventing the fortress from being bypassed in shallow water and forming a harbor for ships.[4] Between the walls spaced 350–450 meters apart lay the medieval city of Derbent. To the west of the citadel, the Mountain Wall (Dagh-Bary) stretched for 40 km, designed to prevent bypassing the fortress along mountain valleys and passes.[2] Despite its age, the fortress played an important defensive role for centuries. The new owners rebuilt and updated it, which is why today, as in the annual rings of a tree, one can trace the entire history of Derbent by construction.

The irregularly shaped citadel occupies an area of 4.5 hectares.[3] Dimensions: approximately 180 meters wide and 255 meters long; the walls are fortified with small towers (at a distance of 20–30 meters from each other) and a gun tower in the southwest. The steep slopes of the mountain provide additional protection from three sides.

Inside the citadel there are baths, a fortress water supply system made of ceramic pipes, the ruins of the Shah's palace, a large entrance portal and part of the walls. Opinions about the existence of an early Christian church of the 4th and 5th centuries - the oldest in Russia - are diverse. The cross-domed room is considered by some experts to be a repository; others note the lack of a water conduit at the bottom and the ground—rather than half underground or subterranean—of the structure, consider the form of construction inconvenient for a reservoir, which was generally rectangular or square in Derbent, and they also note the orientation of the structure to the cardinal points.[5] Each wall has three gates, the oldest of which is the Orta Cana (Middle Gate).[6]

Powerful walls with a thickness of 3.5-2.5 meters (11.48-8.2 ft), reaching a height of 20–25 meters (65.62-82.02 ft) in some areas, make it an impregnable fortress capable of withstanding a heavy and prolonged siege.[7]

History

[edit]

Derbent is located in the most strategically vulnerable place of the Caspian Pass, where the Greater Caucasus Mountains are closest to the sea, leaving a single narrow 3 km strip of plain. Derbent Fortress is part of a large defensive system that protected the peoples of Transcaucasia and Western Asia from invasions by nomads from the north. The system included city walls, a citadel, embankments, and the Dagh-Bary mountain wall.[2]

From the west, the Derbent walls adjoin the Naryn-Kala citadel, which was built after the 10th century, since before that a signal fire was kindled at this place when the enemy approached.[6]

The fortress known today was built in the 6th century on the Dzhalgan ridge[3] by order of the Persian ruler Khosrov I Anushirvan (531-579) ("Immortal in Soul") from the Sasanian dynasty.[2]

Since 735, Derbent and Naryn-Kala became the military-administrative center of the Arab CaliphateinDagestan, as well as the largest trading port and the center of the spread of Islam in this land.[3]

As a result of the Caspian campaign, the city of Derbent became part of the Russian Empire. From the dugout, which is now a local landmark, Emperor Peter the Great moved to the Khan's palace, to whom the beys of Derbent presented the city keys on a silver platter covered with Persian brocade (stored in the KunstkameraofSaint Petersburg) with words.[8]

In some sources, the Derbent fortress was called the "wall of Alexander the Great"[9] because of the belief in the legend that it was built by the great conqueror.[8][10] But Alexander the Great was never at the Derbent gates.[11]

During the Persian expedition of 1796, the fortress was retaken by Russian troops under the leadership of General-in-chief Valerian Zubov, who placed the general headquarters in the citadel.[12]

Archaeological excavations are still underway on the territory of Naryn-Kala. Today, Naryn-Kala is included in the UNESCO World Heritage List and is one of the important sights.[5][13]

[edit]

Literature

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Selim Omarovich Khan-Magomedov. Derbent
  • ^ a b c d Shikhabudin Mikailov. Dagestan in photographs. Moments of history. Epoch, 2012. p. 464 - (Dagestan. Triumph and tragedy). ISBN 9785457879478.
  • ^ a b c d e 100 most beautiful places in Russia. - M.: Eksmo, 2013. pp. 36-98. ISBN 9785457545762.
  • ^ Alekseev Yu. V., Somov G. Yu. Objects of cultural heritage. Volume 1 and 2. Textbook. Prospect, 2015. p. 662. ISBN 9785392197484.
  • ^ a b New era of old Derbent // Moskovsky Komsomolets. 2014. July 21 (No. 154). p. 6.
  • ^ a b Trever, Camilla Vasilievna. Essays on the history and culture of Caucasian Albania: IV century BC - 7th century AD. USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow-Leningrad, 1959. p. 419.
  • ^ Citadel "Naryn-Kala", Derbent
  • ^ a b Vasily Potto. From ancient times to Yermolov. Caucasian war. In 5 volumes. Tsentrpoligraf, 2006. Vol. 1. p. 528 p. 3000 copies. ISBN 5952421059.
  • ^ Mohammed Muslimovich Kurbanov. The soul and memory of the people: the genre system of Tabasaran folklore and its historical evolution. Dagestan book. publishing house, 1996. p. 232
  • ^ Boris Nikolaevich Rzhonsnitsky, Boris Yakovlevich Rosen. E. Kh. Lenz. Thought, 1987. pp. 95-152
  • ^ Barmankulov M.K. Turkic universe. Bilim, 1996. pp. 62-248
  • ^ Alexey Shishov. Order of Saint George. All about the most honorable award of the Russian Empire. — M. Yauza, Eksmo, 2013. pp. 227-745. ISBN 9785457595934
  • ^ Nikolay Protsenko. Very respectable hero of the day. Expert South. 2014. No. 1-2. pp. 50-52.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Naryn-Kala&oldid=1232009628"

    Categories: 
    Cultural heritage monuments in Derbent
    World Heritage Sites in Russia
    Military history of Derbent
    Sasanian castles
    Persian-Caucasian architecture
    Khosrow I
    History of Derbent
    Cultural heritage monuments in Dagestan
    Cultural heritage monuments of federal significance in Dagestan
    Fortifications in Russia
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Coordinates on Wikidata
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Articles containing Russian-language text
    Commons category link is locally defined
     



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