Difference between revisions of "Red Army Theatre [Moscow] (Q8492)"
From CanonBase
(Created claim: Les Archives du Spectacle ID (P355): /o/20519-Theatre-academique-central-de-l-Armee-russe, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1733142860313) | (Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939) | ||
| (4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Property / Carthalia ID | |||
| + | |||
| Property / Carthalia ID: 2199 / rank | |||
| + | Normal rank | ||
| Property / Preservation state | |||
| + | |||
| Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank | |||
| + | Normal rank | ||
| Property / Preservation state | |||
| + | |||
| Property / Preservation state: Used as theatre today / rank | |||
| + | Normal rank | ||
| Property / Note | |||
| + | Built 1934 by Karo S. Halabyan and V. N. Simbirchev as Teatr Krasnoi Armii (Theatre of the Red Army), with an underground walking connection to the Kremlin. As a reference to the symbol of the Red Army, the theatre is built to the ground shape of a five-pointed star. One of the the largest dramatic theatre buildings in Europe, it was the location of spectacular performances with real tanks and giant ship models on stage. Currently used for performances of Russian and international drama. 1900 seats. (English) | ||
| Property / Note: Built 1934 by Karo S. Halabyan and V. N. Simbirchev as Teatr Krasnoi Armii (Theatre of the Red Army), with an underground walking connection to the Kremlin. As a reference to the symbol of the Red Army, the theatre is built to the ground shape of a five-pointed star. One of the the largest dramatic theatre buildings in Europe, it was the location of spectacular performances with real tanks and giant ship models on stage. Currently used for performances of Russian and international drama. 1900 seats. (English) / rank | |||
| + | Normal rank | ||
| Property / Note: Built 1934 by Karo S. Halabyan and V. N. Simbirchev as Teatr Krasnoi Armii (Theatre of the Red Army), with an underground walking connection to the Kremlin. As a reference to the symbol of the Red Army, the theatre is built to the ground shape of a five-pointed star. One of the the largest dramatic theatre buildings in Europe, it was the location of spectacular performances with real tanks and giant ship models on stage. Currently used for performances of Russian and international drama. 1900 seats. (English) / qualifier | |||
| + | |||
Latest revision as of 12:49, 11 September 2025
Theatre building in Moscow, Russia
- Red Army Theatre
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Red Army Theatre [Moscow] | Theatre building in Moscow, Russia |
|
Statements
55°46'58.051"N, 37°36'49.579"E
0 references
Built 1934 by Karo S. Halabyan and V. N. Simbirchev as Teatr Krasnoi Armii (Theatre of the Red Army), with an underground walking connection to the Kremlin. As a reference to the symbol of the Red Army, the theatre is built to the ground shape of a five-pointed star. One of the the largest dramatic theatre buildings in Europe, it was the location of spectacular performances with real tanks and giant ship models on stage. Currently used for performances of Russian and international drama. 1900 seats. (English)
0 references
1934
0 references