Le cimetière de Kountsevo est un cimetière de Moscou, situé dans un terrain de plus de 16 hectares dans le district administratif ouest de la capitale.
Gallery
Sponsored
Location
1 explorer visited this place
0 m
Alexander Grigoryevich Tyshler, also known as Dzhin-Dzhikh-Shvil’, was a Russian and Soviet painter, stage designer, graphic designer and sculptor.
0 m
The Kuntsevo Cemetery is a cemetery servicing Kuntsevo, Moscow. It is located on the bank of the Setun River, to the south of the Mozhaisk Highway. The local five-domed church was commissioned in 1673 by Artamon Matveyev. The cemetery is administered as part of the Novodevichy Cemetery complex.
632 m
Setun River's Valley is the largest wildlife sanctuary within the Moscow bounds. The sanctuary territory is located along the course of the Setun River. The Setun River's flow is entirely within the Western Administrative Okrug of the city.
The fauna is represented by the least weasel, stoat, Eurasian water shrew, and muskrat.
It was founded in 1998.
993 m
Konstantin Vasilyevich Frolov was a Soviet and Russian academician, engineer, and scientist. He primarily worked in the field of mechanical engineering, specifically with oscillations and biomechanics. He served as vice president of the Russian Academy of Sciences from 1985 until 1996.
993 m
The Troyekurovo Cemetery, alternatively known as Novo-Kuntsevo Cemetery, is a cemetery in Moscow, Russia.
The cemetery is located in the former village of Troyekurovo on the western edge of Moscow, which derives its name from the Troyekurov princely family, a branch of the Rurikid House of Yaroslavl, that owned the village in the 17th century. Troyekurovo Cemetery includes the Church of Saint Nicholas, built by Prince Troyekurov in 1699–1704, which was closed during the Soviet era but reopened in 1991.
Troyekurovo Cemetery is administered as a branch of the Novodevichy Cemetery and is the resting place of numerous notable Russian and Soviet figures.