October Square, Minsk
City square in Minsk, Belarus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
City square in Minsk, Belarus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
October Square (Russian: Октябрьская площадь; Belarusian: Кастрычніцкая плошча) is a square in the center of Minsk, Belarus, which is located between Independence Avenue, Engels streets and International Street. To its east side there are areas limited to buildings of the Palace of Culture of Trade Unions, the Museum of the Great Patriotic War and the Minsk Palace of Republic. Around the Square is the Central House of Officers, the residence of the President of Belarus, and the Janka Kupała National Academic Theater. On the square there are the main metro stations in Minsk: Kastryčnickaja and Kupawaŭskaja.[1]
Kastryčnickaja plošča | |
Native name | Кастрычніцкая плошча (Belarusian) |
---|---|
Former name(s) | Central Square |
Type | Square |
Location | Independence Avenue, Minsk |
Nearest metro station | Kastryčnickaja (Кастрычніцкая) |
Construction | |
Construction start | 1949 |
Completion | 1961 |
Other | |
Known for | Being a central square in Minsk |
In September 1952, a monument to Soviet leader Joseph Stalin was installed on the square with a height of 10 metres (33 ft). In 1957, between the main square and central park were government stands, from which the party and state leadership of the BSSR reviewed military parades and welcomed the demonstrations on International Workers' Day, Victory Day, and October Revolution Day. Therefore, the square acquired the status of the city's main square. On 3 November 1961, Stalin's monument was demolished, and in 1966 the area was replaced by the opening of a museum built in honor of the Great Patriotic War. In 1984, the area was renamed to October Square and construction of the Palace began on it, which dragged on for 17 years, resulting in Lenin Square having regained the status as the official central square of the city.
After independence, the area was often the venue for concerts and festivals, as well as socio-political action, in which the area is decorated with the appropriate decorations. Since 2000, the centre of the square has hosted the highest artificial Christmas tree in the country (height 30 metres (98 ft), diameter 18 metres (59 ft)) around which the skating-rink and above the area carried out a festive illumination.
In 2002, the Minsk Independence Day Parade was held on the square for the first time, being the first parade that took place on October Square since 1984.[2] In March 2017, the centennial of the Belarusian Militsiya was celebrated with a parade of the personnel of the country's Ministry of Internal Affairs on October Square.[3][4] The tradition of holding military ceremonies on the square after presidential inaugurations began in 2001.[5] On Freedom Day in 2006, the AMAP stormed an opposition tent at October Square without provocation, violently ending the peaceful Jeans Revolution against President Alexander Lukashenko. Hundreds of thousands of people were beaten and detained on the square, including opposition presidential candidate Alaksandr Kazulin.[6]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.