The Cathedral of the Annunciation was built by architects from
Pskov in 1484-1489 as part of Grand Duke
Ivan III's plans for a large-scale renovation of the Moscow Kremlin. Construction work began using the existing foundations in 1484 and was completed in August 1489. A number of the early 15th-century
icons were re-used in the new building. After being badly damaged in a fire in 1547, the then Grand Duke (and subsequently first
Russian Tsar)
Ivan the Terrible began a restoration of the church, which was completed in 1564 Many of the church treasures were lost during the occupation of Moscow by the armies of the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1612 at the close of the
Time of Troubles. It was also damaged by the great Kremlin fire of 1737. During the
French occupation of Moscow in 1812, the cathedral was used as a barracks and was mostly robbed. It was restored in 1815–1820. During the
1917 Russian Revolution, the cathedral was damaged during the fighting. Afterwards, it was closed by the
Bolshevik regime. During the 1950s, along with the other surviving churches in the Moscow Kremlin, it was preserved as a museum. After 1992, occasional religious services resumed. The church building underwent a restoration in 2009. From the time of Ivan the Terrible's coronation as tsar, the members of the royal family worshiped at the Annunciation Cathedral, got married and baptized their children there. ==Architecture==