Lalsk

{{Infobox Russian inhabited locality

| en_name = Lalsk

| ru_name = Лальск

| image_skyline = Lalsk-cathedral-complex.jpg

| image_caption = The cathedral compound in Lalsk

| coordinates = {{Coord|60|44|14|N|47|35|21|E|dim:10000_region:RU-KIR_type:city(4356)_source:dewiki|display=title,inline}}

| map_label_position = bottom

| image_coa =

| coa_caption =

| image_flag =

| flag_caption =

| federal_subject = Kirov Oblast

| adm_district_jur = Luzsky District

| inhabloc_cat = Urban-type settlement

| pop_2010census = 3705

| pop_2010census_ref = {{ru-pop-ref|2010Census}}

}}

Lalsk ({{langx|ru|Лальск}}) is an urban locality (an urban-type settlement) in Luzsky District of Kirov Oblast, Russia, located {{convert|27|km|sp=us}} northeast from Luza, the administrative center of the district. Population: {{ru-census|p2010=3,705|p2002=4,551|p1989=5,471}}

History

It takes its name from the Lala River, a tributary of the Luza. The settlement was established by the Novgorodians fleeing east from Ivan the Terrible after the Massacre of Novgorod.{{Cite web|url=http://www.lalsk.ru/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=51:history-vv-lalsk&catid=36:lalsk-history&Itemid=61|title=срок регистрации доменного имени www.lalsk.ru истек}} It was a large trading outpost in the eastern part of the Russian North in the late 17th and 18th centuries. The earliest stone church was consecrated in 1711.

Lalsk had town status between 1779 and 1927 and served as the administrative center of Lalsky District between 1924 and 1963.

Architecture

Lalsk is notable for a remarkable cluster of 18th-century Orthodox churches in various stages of disrepair:{{cite web |url=http://www.municipal.ako.kirov.ru/luza/tourism/monument/ |title=Муниципальные образования - Лузский район - Памятники истории и культуры |website=www.municipal.ako.kirov.ru |access-date=13 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426081755/http://www.municipal.ako.kirov.ru/luza/tourism/monument/ |archive-date=26 April 2012 |url-status=dead}}

  • The Cathedral of Christ's Resurrection (1698–1715) with a campanile dating from 1729
  • The nearby Church of the Annunciation for winter services (1732–1762)
  • The partly ruined Church of the Epiphany (1711)
  • The Church of St. John the Baptist (1714)
  • The Church of the Savior's Transfiguration (1730–1732)
  • The Church of the Virgin's Dormition (1791–1796)

References