Kirzhach is famous for its great monastery—Blagoveschensky cathedral. The diminutive
katholikon, erected during the reign of
Ivan the Terrible, conforms to the early
Muscovite type of cathedral church. It is commonly regarded as one of the last and loveliest specimens of this conservative strain. The monastery's open gallery connects the cathedral with the nearby Savior church, which has a square tower and a tent-like
belfry. This church is a tomb of prominent Russian boyars-
Miloslavskys. The 16th-century church was demolished during the Soviet time, but people began to rebuild it in 1990s. Today the cathedral is a
convent. Since 1997, the monastery possesses the relics of the Russian Saint, Roman Kirzhachsky, the student of another great Russian saint, Sergey Radonezhsky. Tourists can see two ancient St. Nikolay's churches—one was built in 1764, the other in 1846. On the local art palace's facade is a plaque that commemorates the meeting of
Yuri Gagarin, the world's first spaceman, with local people on 29 March 1963. On 27 March 1968, 18 km from Kirzhach (near the village of Novoselovo), Gagarin and flight instructor
Vladimir Seryogin died in a plane crash. A large memorial, museum and visitors spot have been built on the crash site. Tourists can also see the buildings of shopping malls, built in the 1850s. ==References==