Minsk Castle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Typecastle
LocationMinsk, Belarus
Coordinates55°54′28″N 27°33′6″E / 55.90778°N 27.55167°E / 55.90778; 27.55167
Construction startedSecond half of the 11th century
Minsk Castle
Мінскі замак
Ruins of Minsk Castle (drawing by J. Drazdowicz)
Interactive map of the Minsk Castle area
General information
Typecastle
LocationMinsk, Belarus
Coordinates55°54′28″N 27°33′6″E / 55.90778°N 27.55167°E / 55.90778; 27.55167
Construction startedSecond half of the 11th century
DestroyedBeginning of the 19th century, second half of the 20th century

The Minsk Castle (Belarusian: Мінскі замак, romanized: Minski zamak)[1] was a wooden defensive structure in Minsk, built in the mid-11th century on the right bank of the Svislach river at its confluence with the Nyamiha river (in the area of March 8 Square); destroyed in the early 19th century, and ultimately leveled by the Soviet authorities in the 1950s. The area formerly surrounded by castle ramparts received the name Zamczysko.

The Minsk Castle was built on a natural island where the Nyamiha river flows into the Svislach river. The Nyamiha river has survived to this day in the form of a small stream, enclosed in concrete collectors. The castle grounds were located near the present-day March 8 Square. Currently, the Victors Avenue runs alongside it.[2]

Mentions of the Minsk Castle include notes from the Moscow merchant Trifon Korobeynikov from 1593 and correspondence between Tsar Alexis of Russia and the Moscow voivodes appointed by him for the Lithuanian cities during the Russo-Polish War of 1654–1667. Plans of the castle from the 18th to 19th centuries have been preserved, marking the location of fragments of the rampart. In the 1950s, before the construction of the Park Avenue thoroughfare (now Victors Avenue), traces of the old street system were visible.

Archaeological excavations on the site of today's March 8 Square, located on a small hill measuring 75×45 meters, began in the mid-20th century.[3] They were conducted in several stages: from 1945 to 1951 and from 1957 to 1961, as well as in 1976.[4] The research revealed that the city was initially planned as a fortress to protect the borders. Previous analysis of the cultural layers of the rampart did not show any human presence in this area before the construction of the castle in the second half of the 11th century. Dendrochronological studies of the beams, which reinforced the rampart, allowed the determination of the time of the first buildings on this site to the year 1063.[3] In 1949, at a depth of 1.5 meters near the present-day House of Physical Culture of the DSO Trudovyje rezerwy, remnants of a temple were discovered in the eastern part of the castle. Scientists date its construction using the stratigraphic method to the years 1071–1085. There is no mention in any written sources that there was a Christian temple in Minsk in the 11th century.[5]

History

Ruins of the Minsk Castle (drawing by J. Drazdowicz)

Minsk first appeared in written sources in the Primary Chronicle under the year 1067.[6] It belonged to the Principality of Polotsk. On the right bank of the Svislach river, at the confluence of the Nyamiha River, a wooden castle was built in the second half of the 11th century, intended to serve as a defensive fortification for the southern borders of the state of Vseslav of Polotsk. For unknown reasons, however, the construction was never completed.[7][8][9] The castle was surrounded by a rampart, with some sections reaching over 10 meters in height. The castle's defenses also included a moat filled with water.[8]

In the 12th and 13th centuries, a town began to form around the castle – in the southern, southwestern, and southeastern directions;[7] the defensive stronghold consisted of 80–82 houses and around 400–500 residents.[10] By the late 15th and early 16th centuries, the castle possessed a considerable number of cannons and other similar weaponry. According to the Bychowiec Chronicle, in 1505, the castle repelled an invasion by the Tatars led by Meñli I Giray, while the city itself was burned.[11]

The 16th century saw the development of the city. The areas around the castle were developed into a crafts and trade posad. On the adjacent hill, to the south of the castle, a new center of economic and cultural life emerged – the High Market [pl], with a town hall erected at its center. The favorable location of the new district, away from the marshy areas around the castle hill, provided greater opportunities for Minsk's economic development and diminished the significance of the castle.[7] By the mid-16th century, the Minsk Castle was merely a part of the urban public space. Within its grounds were buildings such as residential houses, the Nativity of the Theotokos Church, warehouses, stables, and a prison housed in one of the towers.[12] The wooden fortifications of the castle were repeatedly destroyed by fires, for example, in 1505, 1547, 1552, 1569, and others.[8] Despite being rebuilt each time, it gradually ceased to fulfill its defensive function.[2]

After the signing of the Union of Lublin in 1569, Minsk became the capital of the Minsk Voivodeship, and the castle buildings were allocated for administrative use. From 1581, sessions of the Supreme Tribunal of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania were held at the castle. The sessions lasted for 12 weeks every two years, elevating the city's status to the same level as Novogrudok and Vilnius.[10] Until the mid-17th century, the castle served as the residence of the viceroy of the Grand Duchy.[12] From 1612, the city archive was housed in the castle's judicial building.[10] Documents from the 17th and 18th centuries typically mention the Minsk Castle as the venue for noble sejmiks, yet as late as 1750, it was still garrisoned.[9] In the 17th century, a brick building of the district court (castle court) was erected within the castle, known from drawings by Jazep Drazdovič and photographs from the first half of the 20th century.[13]

Due to warfare during the conflicts of the 17th and 18th centuries, along with accompanying epidemics, Minsk was nearly completely destroyed and depopulated.[14] During the Russo-Polish War of 1654–1667, the castle and the city were occupied by the forces of Tsar Alexis of Russia from 1655 to 1660. Simultaneously, the city was the theater of Russian military actions led by Ivan Khovansky against the Lithuanians until Minsk was recaptured by the combined Lithuanian-Polish forces in 1660.[15] During the Great Northern War from 1700 to 1721, the castle was successively destroyed by Russian and Swedish forces.[14] In 1778, it was destroyed by fire.[16] The last written record of it appeared in 1793 in a survey conducted by Russian officials after the annexation of Minsk by the Russian Empire following the partitions of Poland. After the partitions of Poland, the castle buildings passed into private hands[10] and underwent degradation.

Until the mid-19th century, Zamczysko was one of the commercial centers of Minsk. At the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, the area around the former castle saw the expansion of urban transportation lines. As a result of clearing the area after the castle, only the ramparts remained. In 1931, a square called March 8 Square was built on the former castle grounds.[17] In the second half of the 20th century, during archaeological excavations, the castle hill was excavated, and the soil was removed beyond the city limits.[10] To this day, remnants of the oldest cultural layer, protected by the Belarusian state, have survived.[2]

Architecture

References

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