geotsy.com logo

What to See in Kostroma - Top Sights and Attractions

Discover 11 hidden attractions, cool sights, and unusual things to do in Kostroma (Russia). Don't miss out on these must-see attractions: Museum of Nature, Ipatievsky Monastery, and Church of the Resurrection. Also, be sure to include Theophany Convent in your itinerary.

Below, you can find the list of the most amazing places you should visit in Kostroma (Kostroma).

Museum of Nature

Museum of Nature
wikipedia / almapater44 / Public Domain

The Kostroma region Museum of Nature is a natural history museum located in Kostroma, Russia. The museum was founded in 1958 as a department of the Kostroma State Historical and Architectural Museum.

The museum's dioramas about the area's animals and plants include the themes "Spring", "Early winter", "Root winter", and a large collection of Russian insects. Other displays include birds and mammals of the Kostroma region, area fish and fossils.

The Museum's activities and programs include nature excursions, themed excursions in one of the halls, interactive adult and children's programs, master classes, event days, competitions and educational activities for students.[1]

Open in:

Ipatievsky Monastery

Monastery in Kostroma, Russia
wikipedia / Anton Zelenov / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Ипатьевский монастырь

1330-founded monastic center . The Ipatiev Monastery, sometimes translated into English as Hypatian Monastery, is a male monastery situated on the bank of the Kostroma River just opposite the city of Kostroma. It was founded around 1330 by a Tatar convert, Prince Chet, whose male-line descendants include Solomonia Saburova and Tsar Boris Godunov, and is dedicated to St. Hypatios of Gangra.[2]

Address: ул. Просвещения, 1, 156004 Кострома

Open in:

Church of the Resurrection

Church in Kostroma, Russia
wikipedia / Mvad / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Церковь Воскресения Христова на Дебре

Church in Kostroma, Russia. Church of the Resurrection is a Russian Orthodox Church in Kostroma, Russia near the Volga River.[3]

Address: ул. Дебря, 37, 156005 Kostroma

Open in:

Theophany Convent

Monastery in Kostroma, Russia
wikipedia / Author / Public Domain

Also known as: Богоявленско-Анастасиин монастырь

Monastery in Kostroma, Russia. Bogoyavlensky Convent is one of the most populous Russian Orthodox convents. It is situated in Kostroma and is known as the location of the ancient Feodorovskaya Icon of the Mother of God.

It was founded as Bogoyavlensky (Theophany) Monastery in the 15th century by Nikita, a disciple and a relative of St Sergius of Radonezh.

The five-domed katholikon of traditional Byzantine design was constructed under Ivan the Terrible, starting in 1559. The Tsar accused the father superior and some of the brethren of supporting his rival Vladimir of Staritsa and had them executed in 1570.

The monastery was besieged and taken by Aleksander Józef Lisowski during the Time of Troubles. The attack claimed the lives of 11 monks. A monastic house dates from the 17th century. The other buildings arose from the monastery's reconstruction in the Russian Revival style in the late 19th century. In 1863 the monastery was transformed into a convent.

After the Revolution the convent was abolished and was not revived until the 1990s. The remains of the wall paintings in the katholikon were destroyed in a recent fire.[4]

Address: Ulitsa Simanovskogo, 26, 156000 Kostroma

Open in:

Kostromskoj gosudarstvennyj istoriko-arhitekturnyj i hudozestvennyj muzej-zapovednik

Kostromskoj gosudarstvennyj istoriko-arhitekturnyj i hudozestvennyj muzej-zapovednik
wikipedia / A.Savin / CC BY-SA 3.0

Kostroma Historical-Architectural and Art Museum-Reserve is a state cultural institution, the largest museum of Kostroma and the Kostroma region.

Address: 5 проспект Мира, Kostroma

Open in:

Pozarnaa kalanca

Pozarnaa kalanca
wikipedia / WASD / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Kostroma fireplace chapel is an outstanding monument of architecture of the Classicism epoch, one of the city's landmarks, the main decoration of the central Susaninskaya square. Architect P. I. Fursov.

Address: 1/2 улица Симановского, Kostroma

Open in:

Kostroma Gostiny Dvor

Arcade in Kostroma, Russia
wikipedia / Al Silonov / CC BY-SA 3.0

Also known as: Торговые ряды

Arcade in Kostroma, Russia. The Gostiny Dvor in Kostroma is the best preserved complex of provincial Neoclassical trading arcades in Russia. It was built on the site of the ancient Kostroma kremlin after the great fire of 1773. The complex comprises more than ten buildings constructed over a period of almost five decades.

The merchant court was designed by Charles Claire, although many other architects (including Vasily Stasov) modified the original design. The construction was supervised by the local Vorotilov family. Each arch was occupied by a separate shop or tavern. The ground floor was for trade, whereas the second and third storeys were for storage and general warehousing.

The centerpiece of the inner trade square is the five-domed Saviour church (1766) with a distinctive tall belltower. The white obelisks flanking the main entrance were erected to commemorate a royal visit to the city in 1823.[5]

Open in:

Kostromskaya Sloboda

Kostromskaya Sloboda
wikipedia / A.Savin / CC BY-SA 3.0

Kostroma Architectural, Ethnographic, and Landscape Museum-Reserve "Kostroma Sloboda" is one of the oldest open-air museums in Russia, located in the city of Kostroma.

Open in:

Pamatnik Ivanu Susaninu

Pamatnik Ivanu Susaninu
wikipedia / Unknown / Public Domain

Monument to Tsar Mikhail Feodorovich and the peasant Ivan Susanin is a monument erected in Kostroma in 1851 to commemorate the legendary feat during the Time of Troubles. The author of the monument - sculptor V. Demut-Malinovsky. The monument was located in the center of the town, in the middle of Susaninskaya Square. It was destroyed in 1918-1928. In 1967 a monument to Ivan Susanin by sculptor N.A. Lavinsky was installed in Kostroma.

Open in:

Znamenskij zenskij monastyr

Znamenskij zenskij monastyr
wikipedia / Mvad / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Kostroma Znamensky Monastery is an Orthodox nunnery of the Kostroma diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church.

The main church of the monastery, the Church of the Sign, was first mentioned in chronicles in the 17th century. The monastery was founded in 1993 with the blessing of Archbishop Alexander (Mogilev) of Kostroma and Galich. According to the old drawings, the chief architect of the Kostroma diocese, Leonid Vasilyev, drew up a project to restore the church and bell tower.

Open in:

Cerkov Aleksea

Cerkov Aleksea
wikipedia / VolgaKostroma / CC BY-SA 3.0

The Church of St. Alexius the Man of God is an Orthodox church built in 1762 in the city of Kostroma. It is a monument of history and culture of federal importance. The church is located on 14 Katushechnaya Street.

Address: 14 Катушечная улица, Kostroma

Open in:

More Ideas on Where To Go and What To See

Citations and References