Kiev Fortress
Kiev fortress is a generic name for the 19th century fortification buildings situated in the Ukrainian capital Kiev, that once belonged to western Russian fortresses. These structures (once a united complex) were built in the Pechersk and neighbourhoods by the Russian army. Now some of the buildings are restored and turned into a museum called the Kiev Fortress, while others are in use of various military and commercial installations.
Having lost their military importance in the 20th century, the buildings continued to be used as barracks, storage and incarceration facilities. However, some of them played independent historical roles. The Kosyi Kaponir ("Skew Caponier") became a prison for the political inmates in the 1900s–1920s and was later turned into a Soviet museum. Now it is the center of the modern museum. A small fortress built in 1872 on the legendary Lysa Hora ("Bald Mountain") in 1906 became a place of executions for convicted political inmates. It is now a landscape reserve and part of the museum complex.
Open: Tuesday-Sunday 10am-6pm.
Price: Free
- Kiev in miniature
- The building of Telegraph
- Chernobyl Museum
- Monument to Pantusha
- Kiev Railway Station
- St. Catherine Monastery
- The Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine
- Solitude of Kitaevo
- The former Institute for Noble Maidens
- St. Nicholas Cathedral of Intercession (Pokrovsky) Monastery
- The Ukrainian National Museum of History
- Zoo
- Monument to Mykhail Hrushevsky
- Teacher's House (Pedagogical Museum )
- Kiev Museum of Western and Oriental Art
- Monument to Taras Shevchenko
- Ivan Kavaleridze Museum
- “Ukrzaliznitsya” Administrative House
- Monument to Prince Volodymyr
- Museum of Mikhail Bulgakov