Fun Day Trips to Take From Kazan

Want to get out of the city and explore more of the surrounding region? We’ve got the perfect spots for you.

Sviyazhsk

Sviyazhsk, just 58 kilometers from Kazan, is an ideal day trip. The best and most picturesque way to get there is on a boat called an omik, and it only takes an hour and a half to get to the place. Formerly a military fortress in the war between Russia and the Kazan Khanate, today it’s a quiet museum town with 16th and 17th century churches and monasteries.

Sviyazhsk was founded in 1551 by Ivan the Terrible as the launching ground for the siege of the Kazan Khanate capital. Wood for the fortress was cut near Uglich and rafted down the Volga river. The fortress at the top of the hill went up in a matter of mere days; Kazan fell a few months later.

Sviyazhsk is also considered the place where the “Red Terror” started in earnest during the Civil War, where Leon Trotsky ordered every tenth Red Army soldier executed for failing to defend Kazan against Czech soldiers on the side of the White Army.

Sviyazhsk wasn’t always an island city. Construction of the Kuybyshev hydroelectric plant in the middle of the 20th century led to the creation of a large water reservoir, which separated Sviyazhsk from the shore. In 2008, a dam was built, and today it’s much easier to reach the island.

There are two medieval monasteries in Sviyazhsk — John the Baptist and Uspensky (Assumption) — but both have only partially survived. After the October Revolution in 1917, Uspensky first became a prison and then a mental hospital. The Assumption Cathedral in Uspensky has been reconstructed and is one of the main attractions of the island city. St. Nicholas Church, which was also part of Uspensky Monastery and built in the 16th century, also survives. The wooden Church of the Holy Trinity, which was once part of the John the Baptist monastery, is probably the most authentic sight, also constructed in the 16th century.

The largest church on the island is the Cathedral of the Icon of the Virgin, “Joy of All Who Grieve.” Built in 18981906 in the neo-Byzantine style, it’s one of the sights visible from the river when you approach Sviyazhsk by boat. Tourists can also visit stable yards, craft villages and historical reconstruction sites.

OPEN Tues. to Thurs. and Sun. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,

Fri. and Sat. from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

TICKETS from 500 rubles

Boat leaves from Kazan river port (Ulitsa Devyatayeva, 1) at 8:20 a.m. You can also take the commuter train to Sviyazhsk station and then the bus. ostrovgrad.org

Bolgar

Bolgar is a small town located 191 kilometers from Kazan; it is best reached by boat or car (taxi or a rental). Bolgar was built in the 1950s (first called Kuybyshev) near the site of ancient Bulgar or Great Bulgar, which was founded in the 10th century and at one point was the main city of Volga Bulgaria.


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