Yeni Kale Lighthouse

The Yeni Kale Lighthouse (Ukrainian: Єнікальський маяк, Enikal'skyy mayak, Russian: Еникальский маяк, Yenikal'sky mayak) is an active lighthouse on Cape Fonar near Yeni-Kale fortress in eastern Crimea on the shore of Kerch Strait. Navigation cressets on this coast were first mentioned in the Periplus of Scylax, dated 350 BC.

Yeni Kale Lighthouse
Yeni Kale Lighthouse
Crimea
LocationKerch
Crimea
Coordinates45.385632°N 36.638835°E / 45.385632; 36.638835
Year first constructed1820 (first)
1861 (second)
Year first lit1953 (current)
Constructionstone tower
Tower shapecylindrical tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / patternwhite tower and lantern
Tower height27 metres (89 ft)
Focal height123 metres (404 ft)
CharacteristicFl WR 12s.
Admiralty numberE5422
NGA number18560
ARLHS numberUKR-009
Managing agentGosgidrografiya[1]

History

Cape Fonar

In 1820 a lighthouse tower was built on the top of Cape Fonar to guide ships navigating from the Sea of Azov to Kerch Strait. Oil lamps were used as a light source. In 1861 Fresnel lens with kerosene lamps were installed.[2]

Until the Second World War the Yeni Kale Lighthouse was considered as the oldest lighthouse in Crimea. In 1941, during World War II, the lighthouse equipment was evacuated to Taman coast by light-house keeper Mikhail Egorov. In May 1942 a battle between retreating Red Army and Nazi Germany took place in Cape Fonar area. Alexander Filimonov, a Soviet mariner, aimed the fire of Soviet batteries. When German tanks appeared near the lighthouse, a flag was risen on the tower targeting the Soviet fire from the Chushka Spit. The tower got destroyed in this battle and hydrographers besieged in the lighthouse died. In 1943 a temporary light was installed on lighthouse ruins. When Kerch was liberated from German troops in April 1944, the lighthouse equipment was returned.[3]

After the war a provisional wooden tower was constructed in 1946. It was replaced with an electric-powered lighthouse with a modern stone tower in 1953. The EMV-3 optical system was installed on the Yenikalsky Lighthouse in 1957. The lighthouse was equipped with a modern GLONASS-GPS system in 2002.[4]

gollark: I think a Markov chain could produce more coherent messages sometimes.
gollark: Who is "kevin"?
gollark: What?
gollark: People running around with bits of paper.
gollark: Carrier pigeons.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.