The Prishletsov’s House

The Prishletsov’s House in Gorohovec city

Long, long time ago, a chairman of the Zemstvo (elective district council in pre-revolutionary Russia) Council in the town of Gorokhovets, Vladimir Region, built this wooden palace. Since then, it has been known as «The Prishletsov’s House» after the name of its first owner. Built in 1915, it is a bit under 100, yet I failed to find any information on its architect. Somebody local, I suspect.

Many parts of the wooden house facade bears names of human face parts.

Russian wooden house

This is what I have discovered in a dictionary of Russian dialects: many parts of the wooden house façade bear names of… human face parts.

E.g.,

In Karelia, «face» means simply «facade»;

«forehead»  stands for «fronton» in Novgorod, Kostroma and Tver Oblasts;

In the town of Bezhetzk, they use «earrings» to denote carved boards drooping from the side of the roof at the facade;

In Arkhangelsk and Murmansk Oblasts, «eyes» was in wide use instead of «windows»;

In Vologda Oblast, «blinker» was a name for a window glass;

«Brow» was an upper bar of the window in Murmank Oblast and carved decorations of the façade in Karelia.

Etcetera, etcetera, etcetera…

An ordinary window frame

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…When you photograph window frames throughout the country, you just cannot miss a very delicate feel of color at some of them.  This is a window from the town of Engels, Saratov Oblast. White at the blue flowerpot is twice as many as yellow, in the very same proportion with the color balance of the window frame. Is it just a coincidence? I don’t think so

House of crafts in Udomlya city

Wooden house in Art Nouveau

Just recently I had a trip to the town of Udomlya in the North of the Tver Oblast in a hope to take photos of window frames I expected to fund there. Yet my hope was vain: 360 km to destination, two hours of work – as the days are short now – and the road back. May be the only luck I had there was this art nouveau house of the early XX century, now a headquarters of the local Department of Culture. How many of houses like this one are there in Russia?