Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Moscow)
From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Могила Неизвестного Солдата in Russian, or Mogila Neizvestnogo Soldata) is a war memorial, dedicated to the Soviet soldiers killed during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. It is located at the Kremlin Wall in the Alexander Garden in Moscow.
The remains of the Unknown Soldier, killed in the Battle of Moscow in 1941 and initially buried in a mass grave at the 41st km of the Leningrad highway, were relocated to the Kremlin Wall in December of 1966 (25th anniversary of the battle). The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier was unveiled on May 8, 1967. The torch for the memorial's flame was transported from Leningrad, where it had been lit from the Eternal Flame at the Field of Mars. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier was designed by architects D.I.Burdin, V.A.Klimov, Yu.R.Rabayev and sculptor N.V.Tomsky. The centerpiece of the memorial is a platform, which consists of big plates made of polished red granite. The tombstone itself is decorated with a sculptural composition made of bronze (a laurel twig and a soldier's helmet lying on a banner; installed in 1975). In front of the tombstone, there is a five-pointed star in a square pit, which emanates the Eternal Flame of Glory from its center. The flame illuminates a bronze inscription saying "Your name is unknown, your heroic deed is immortal" (Имя твоё неизвестно, подвиг твой бессмертен, or Imya tvoyo neizvestno, podvig tvoy bessmerten). To the left of the tomb, there is a granite wall with an inlay saying "1941 - To Those Who Have Fallen For The Motherland - 1945". To the right of the tomb, there is a granite alley made of porphyry plates with incapsulated soils from different hero cities, such as Leningrad, Kiev, Volgograd, Odessa, Sevastopol, Minsk, Kerch, Novorossiysk, Tula and Brest.
In 1997, Guard of Honor was placed at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier by the order of the President of the Russian Federation.

