The Peter (Petrovskaya, Ugreshskaya) Tower
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Originally, the Petrovskaya (Peter’s) Tower was called the 3rd Bezymyannaya, later it was renamed Ugreshskaya after the Kremlin’s monastery of the same name. In the XVIIIth century, it was given its present-day name Petrovskaya after the Metropolitan of Moscow Peter’s Church, which was an annex of the tower. In 1771, the tower, the Ugreshskiy monastery and the Church were abolished, as they obstructed the ongoing construction of the Grand Kremlin Palace on the project of architect Vassiliy Bazhenov. The tower was rebuilt in 1783. In 1812, the French invaders blew the tower up. Later, it was reconstructed under the supervision of Ossip Bove.
The tower’s height is 27,15 m.
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- The Secret (Tainitskaya) Tower
- The Beklemishev Tower
- The Water Supplying Tower
- The Annunciation Tower
- The Peter Tower
- The 1st Nameless Tower
- The 2nd Nameless Tower
- The Borovitskaya Tower
- The Sts. Constantine and Helen Tower
- The Saviour Tower
- The St. Nicholas Tower
- The Corner Arsenal Tower
- The Senate Tower
- The Alarm Bell Tower
- The Middle Arsenal Tower
- The Сommandant Tower
- The Armoury Tower
- The Trinity Tower
- The Kutafiya Tower
- The Tsar's Tower


















