, 1922 in the early 19th century. Note the space between the bridge and the corner Kremlin tower A "live" bridge of boats linked the Kremlin with
Zamoskvorechye on a nearby site as early as the 15th century. In 1643, Tsar
Mikhail Feodorovich engaged Anie and Jogann Cristler, architects from
Strassburg to design a stone bridge. Anie Cristler and Tsar Mikhail died in 1645, construction halted. Sources about the completion of the first
Stone Bridge are contradictory. • The most widely accepted version attributes it to
Patriarch Filaret, who picked up the job in 1682; year of completion is either 1687 or 1692. • Another version connects the completion in 1687 with
Vasily Golitsyn, notable for his sponsorship of architecture. Archive studies by
Ivan Kondratyev indicate that original draft had 5 main spans of 40
arshin each. Later, numerous repairs (1707, 1731, 1771, 1788–1792, 1809–1812) changed it to seven spans over eight stone pillars. It is estimated that the river maximum width was 105 meters (50
sazhen), and overall length of the bridge was 70
sazhen, 11
sazhen wide. Its south end terminated with a
barbican tower, commonly called
Six Gates (two for through traffic, four looking sideways). This ornate tower is believed to be the first stone
Triumph arch in Muscovy. The bridge deck originally included wooden storehouses, mills, taverns and tax collector's booths. All of these additions were destroyed in 1785 by the governor's decree. Still, it remained a busy public square and a place for religious ceremonies. Police reported frequent illegal
street races in
troikas, which assembled thousands of bystanders; more races followed when a new and wider bridge was completed. ==Bolshoy Kamenny Bridge (1859, demolished)==