Russky (Bolshoy Oleniy) Lighthouse
Also known as: Русский, Большой Олений
active · Tower 24 m · Focal 49 m
Published as a public-ready text record; documentary media remains under attribution review.
At a glance
Place
- Country
- Russia
Structure
- Status
- active Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
- Construction date
- 1925; 1959 Multiple lighthouse phases Русский (Большой Олений) archiveРусский (Большой Олений) archive
- Tower height
- 24 Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
- Focal height
- 49 Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
Signal
- Visibility
- 19 Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
Light Signature
No accepted light signature claims yet.
Signal pattern, color, period, visibility, optics, and operating context appear here after field-level review.
Light signature JSON will appear here after review.
Names & naming history
RU · Alternative
- Большой Олений
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: title.variant
- Маяки России Record-level source link
RU · Official
- Русский
- Mayachnik Drupal export Field: title.variant
- Маяки России Record-level source link
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
Installed on the northwestern tip of Bolshoi Oleniy Island in the Barents Sea, 40 miles east of Kildin Island. Provides entry into the Bolshoi Oleniy Strait and navigation in the sea adjacent to the island.
The island was first described and mapped in 1779 by officers of the frigate "Eustathius" from the squadron of Rear Admiral Khmetevsky, sailing off the coast of the Barents and Norwegian seas.
Until the beginning of the 20th century, the island was also called Russian, or Dalniy, in contrast to Nemetsky, or Nizhny Island (now Maly Oleniy), lying between the island of Kildin and Teriberskaya Bay. Hence the name of the lighthouse.
The island, which is about two miles long in the WNW-ESE direction and about half a mile wide, is quite noticeable. It is high and its banks are steep, except for the southeastern end, which slopes down to the sea with a sharp, sloping cape. Lapps have long lived on the island in the summer, herding deer and fishing. They swam only during daylight hours and successfully navigated without lights.
When, at the end of the 19th century, steamships began to ply along the Murmansk coast around the clock, the need arose for a reliable navigational fence against dangers. In 1909, at the request of shipowners on the mainland, a line of wooden signs was built opposite Bolshoi Oleniy Island, which led in the middle of the narrowness between the southern shore of the island and the drainage stones.
In 1915, the Main Hydrographic Directorate planned to install a light beacon on the island, but the outbreak of the First World War broke these plans.
The issue of fencing off dangers on the Arkhangelsk-Murmansk sea route was returned to after the Civil War. In 1922, Ubekosever reported to the Main Hydrographic Directorate: “The Northern Seas are becoming increasingly important for the country’s economy, fisheries are developing, new ports and settlements are being developed, the Northern Sea Route will soon begin to operate, and the navigation fencing of the fairways remains at an extremely low level... along the 60-kilometer stretch of the coast of the Russian Murman there are only 25 lights and two foggy warning stations, that is, for 30 miles there is only one lighthouse light and one fog signal station for 325 miles. But if we take into account that 11 lighthouse lights are concentrated in one Kola Bay and two warning lights on the Iokangsky roadstead, then only 9 lights fall on the rest of Murman, that is, one lighthouse light for 60 miles of the coastline. no more than 10 miles... A developed network of lighthouses, signs, etc. will reduce the number of accidents, lower freight rates and insurance premiums, and will most significantly contribute to the growth of local cabotage and the development of fish and animal industries.”
The Soviet government made big plans for the Northern Sea Route. already in 1921, annual Kara trade expeditions were organized for export-import transportation between the ports of Western Europe and the rivers of Western Siberia. By the end of the 1920s, they had become regular large-scale transport operations involving a dozen ships.
Their success depended not only on reliable ice reconnaissance, weather reports and weather forecasts, but also on navigational protection of dangers along the route.
Ubekosever was allocated substantial funds for the restoration of previously built lighthouses and lighthouse lights and for the construction of new ones. Among the first lighthouses built in Soviet times in the North was Bolshoi Oleniy, erected in 1925 on the western tip of the island. Due to the insufficient light intensity and, as a result, the short visibility range, it was classified as a lighthouse light. Its tower looked like a tetrahedral pyramid, the sides of which
were covered with boards with gaps and painted with white and black horizontal stripes. At the bottom of the pyramid there was a white hut for watch and storage of kerosene. The lighthouse marked the entrance to the strait and
indicated an anchor place at the camp of Zakhrebetnoye.
In 1953, a new yellow reinforced concrete monolithic tower 24 m high with a red steel lantern structure was built on the island. The source of red light was an electric rotating light-optical apparatus EMV-930 with a group-flash characteristic of fire, installed at an altitude of 49 m from sea level. Fire visibility range 19 miles. The lighthouse is equipped with a circular radio beacon KRM-300. A great contribution to the development of new technical means of the lighthouse and maintaining them in constant readiness for action was made by the heads of the lighthouse V. Popov, V. N. Peshin and other specialists.
In 1998, the lighthouse was transferred to the category of automatic light equipment powered by ASA-500 light equipment from two sets of radioisotope power plants REU-3-2K, which was a consequence of the difficulties associated with hiring service personnel and ensuring their life in the Arctic.
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
Installed on the northwestern tip of Bolshoi Oleniy Island in the Barents Sea, 40 miles east of Kildin Island. Provides entry into the Bolshoi Oleniy Strait and navigation in the sea adjacent to the island.
The island was first described and mapped in 1779 by officers of the frigate "Eustathius" from the squadron of Rear Admiral Khmetevsky, sailing off the coast of the Barents and Norwegian seas.
Until the beginning of the 20th century, the island was also called Russian, or Dalniy, in contrast to Nemetsky, or Nizhny Island (now Maly Oleniy), lying between the island of Kildin and Teriberskaya Bay. Hence the name of the lighthouse.
The island, which is about two miles long in the WNW-ESE direction and about half a mile wide, is quite noticeable. It is high and its banks are steep, except for the southeastern end, which slopes down to the sea with a sharp, sloping cape. Lapps have long lived on the island in the summer, herding deer and fishing. They swam only during daylight hours and successfully navigated without lights.
When, at the end of the 19th century, steamships began to ply along the Murmansk coast around the clock, the need arose for a reliable navigational fence against dangers. In 1909, at the request of shipowners on the mainland, a line of wooden signs was built opposite Bolshoi Oleniy Island, which led in the middle of the narrowness between the southern shore of the island and the drainage stones.
In 1915, the Main Hydrographic Directorate planned to install a light beacon on the island, but the outbreak of the First World War broke these plans.
The issue of fencing off dangers on the Arkhangelsk-Murmansk sea route was returned to after the Civil War. In 1922, Ubekosever reported to the Main Hydrographic Directorate: “The Northern Seas are becoming increasingly important for the country’s economy, fisheries are developing, new ports and settlements are being developed, the Northern Sea Route will soon begin to operate, and the navigation fencing of the fairways remains at an extremely low level... along the 60-kilometer stretch of the coast of the Russian Murman there are only 25 lights and two foggy warning stations, that is, for 30 miles there is only one lighthouse light and one fog signal station for 325 miles. But if we take into account that 11 lighthouse lights are concentrated in one Kola Bay and two warning lights on the Iokangsky roadstead, then only 9 lights fall on the rest of Murman, that is, one lighthouse light for 60 miles of the coastline. no more than 10 miles... A developed network of lighthouses, signs, etc. will reduce the number of accidents, lower freight rates and insurance premiums, and will most significantly contribute to the growth of local cabotage and the development of fish and animal industries.”
The Soviet government made big plans for the Northern Sea Route. already in 1921, annual Kara trade expeditions were organized for export-import transportation between the ports of Western Europe and the rivers of Western Siberia. By the end of the 1920s, they had become regular large-scale transport operations involving a dozen ships.
Their success depended not only on reliable ice reconnaissance, weather reports and weather forecasts, but also on navigational protection of dangers along the route.
Ubekosever was allocated substantial funds for the restoration of previously built lighthouses and lighthouse lights and for the construction of new ones. Among the first lighthouses built in Soviet times in the North was Bolshoi Oleniy, erected in 1925 on the western tip of the island. Due to the insufficient light intensity and, as a result, the short visibility range, it was classified as a lighthouse light. Its tower looked like a tetrahedral pyramid, the sides of which
were covered with boards with gaps and painted with white and black horizontal stripes. At the bottom of the pyramid there was a white hut for watch and storage of kerosene. The lighthouse marked the entrance to the strait and
indicated an anchor place at the camp of Zakhrebetnoye.
In 1953, a new yellow reinforced concrete monolithic tower 24 m high with a red steel lantern structure was built on the island. The source of red light was an electric rotating light-optical apparatus EMV-930 with a group-flash characteristic of fire, installed at an altitude of 49 m from sea level. Fire visibility range 19 miles. The lighthouse is equipped with a circular radio beacon KRM-300. A great contribution to the development of new technical means of the lighthouse and maintaining them in constant readiness for action was made by the heads of the lighthouse V. Popov, V. N. Peshin and other specialists.
In 1998, the lighthouse was transferred to the category of automatic light equipment powered by ASA-500 light equipment from two sets of radioisotope power plants REU-3-2K, which was a consequence of the difficulties associated with hiring service personnel and ensuring their life in the Arctic.
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
Installed on the northwestern tip of Bolshoi Oleniy Island in the Barents Sea, 40 miles east of Kildin Island. Provides entry into the Bolshoi Oleniy Strait and navigation in the sea adjacent to the island.
The island was first described and mapped in 1779 by officers of the frigate "Eustathius" from the squadron of Rear Admiral Khmetevsky, sailing off the coast of the Barents and Norwegian seas.
Until the beginning of the 20th century, the island was also called Russian, or Dalniy, in contrast to Nemetsky, or Nizhny Island (now Maly Oleniy), lying between the island of Kildin and Teriberskaya Bay. Hence the name of the lighthouse.
The island, which is about two miles long in the WNW-ESE direction and about half a mile wide, is quite noticeable. It is high and its banks are steep, except for the southeastern end, which slopes down to the sea with a sharp, sloping cape. Lapps have long lived on the island in the summer, herding deer and fishing. They swam only during daylight hours and successfully navigated without lights.
When, at the end of the 19th century, steamships began to ply along the Murmansk coast around the clock, the need arose for a reliable navigational fence against dangers. In 1909, at the request of shipowners on the mainland, a line of wooden signs was built opposite Bolshoi Oleniy Island, which led in the middle of the narrowness between the southern shore of the island and the drainage stones.
In 1915, the Main Hydrographic Directorate planned to install a light beacon on the island, but the outbreak of the First World War broke these plans.
The issue of fencing off dangers on the Arkhangelsk-Murmansk sea route was returned to after the Civil War. In 1922, Ubekosever reported to the Main Hydrographic Directorate: “The Northern Seas are becoming increasingly important for the country’s economy, fisheries are developing, new ports and settlements are being developed, the Northern Sea Route will soon begin to operate, and the navigation fencing of the fairways remains at an extremely low level... along the 60-kilometer stretch of the coast of the Russian Murman there are only 25 lights and two foggy warning stations, that is, for 30 miles there is only one lighthouse light and one fog signal station for 325 miles. But if we take into account that 11 lighthouse lights are concentrated in one Kola Bay and two warning lights on the Iokangsky roadstead, then only 9 lights fall on the rest of Murman, that is, one lighthouse light for 60 miles of the coastline. no more than 10 miles... A developed network of lighthouses, signs, etc. will reduce the number of accidents, lower freight rates and insurance premiums, and will most significantly contribute to the growth of local cabotage and the development of fish and animal industries.”
The Soviet government made big plans for the Northern Sea Route. already in 1921, annual Kara trade expeditions were organized for export-import transportation between the ports of Western Europe and the rivers of Western Siberia. By the end of the 1920s, they had become regular large-scale transport operations involving a dozen ships.
Their success depended not only on reliable ice reconnaissance, weather reports and weather forecasts, but also on navigational protection of dangers along the route.
Ubekosever was allocated substantial funds for the restoration of previously built lighthouses and lighthouse lights and for the construction of new ones. Among the first lighthouses built in Soviet times in the North was Bolshoi Oleniy, erected in 1925 on the western tip of the island. Due to the insufficient light intensity and, as a result, the short visibility range, it was classified as a lighthouse light. Its tower looked like a tetrahedral pyramid, the sides of which
were covered with boards with gaps and painted with white and black horizontal stripes. At the bottom of the pyramid there was a white hut for watch and storage of kerosene. The lighthouse marked the entrance to the strait and
indicated an anchor place at the camp of Zakhrebetnoye.
In 1953, a new yellow reinforced concrete monolithic tower 24 m high with a red steel lantern structure was built on the island. The source of red light was an electric rotating light-optical apparatus EMV-930 with a group-flash characteristic of fire, installed at an altitude of 49 m from sea level. Fire visibility range 19 miles. The lighthouse is equipped with a circular radio beacon KRM-300. A great contribution to the development of new technical means of the lighthouse and maintaining them in constant readiness for action was made by the heads of the lighthouse V. Popov, V. N. Peshin and other specialists.
In 1998, the lighthouse was transferred to the category of automatic light equipment powered by ASA-500 light equipment from two sets of radioisotope power plants REU-3-2K, which was a consequence of the difficulties associated with hiring service personnel and ensuring their life in the Arctic.
Установлен на северо-западной оконечности острова Большой Олений в Баренцевом море в 40 милях к востоку от острова Кильдин. Обеспечивает вход в пролив Большой Олений и плавание в прилегающей к острову акватории моря.
Остров впервые описан и нанесен на карту в 1779 году офицерами фрегата "Евстафий" из состава эскадры контр-адмирала Хметевского, плававшей у берегов Баренцева и Норвежского морей.
До начала ХХ века остров называли также Русским, или Дальним, в отличие от острова Немецкого, или Ближнего (ныне Малый Олений), лежащего между островом Кильдин и Териберской губой. Отсюда и название маяка.
Остров, имеющий в длину по румбу WNW-ESE около двух миль и в ширину около полумили, весьма приметен. Он высок и берега его круты, кроме юго-восточной оконечности, которая снижается к морю острым, отлогим мысом. На острове в летнее время издавна жили лопари, которые пасли оленей и занимались рыбной ловлей. Они плавали только в светлое время суток и с успехом ориентировались без огней.
Когда в конце XIX века вдоль Мурманского побережья стали круглосуточно курсировать пароходы, появилась необходимость в надежном навигационном ограждении опасностей. В 1909 году по просьбе судовладельцев на материке против острова Большой Олений выстроили створ деревянных знаков, который вел посредине узкости между южным берегом острова и осушными камнями.
На 1915 год Главным гидрографическим управлением была запланирована установка на острове светового маяка, но начавшаяся Первая мировая воина сломала эти планы.
К вопросу ограждения опасностей на морской трассе Архангельск-Мурманск вернулись после Гражданской войны. В 1922 году Убекосевер докладывало в Главное гидрографическое управление: "Северные моря приобретают все большее значение для экономики страны, развиваются промыслы, осваиваются новые порты и становища, в скором времени начнет действовать Северный морской путь, а навигационное ограждение фарватеров остается на крайне низком уровне... на б50-километровом протяжении берегов Русского Мурмана приходится всего 25 огней и две туманные предостерегательные станции, то есть на 30 миль только один маячный огонь и на 325 миль одна сигнальная туманная станция. Но если принять во внимание, что 11 маячных огней сосредоточено в одном Кольском заливе и два предостерегательных огня на Иоканьгском рейде, то на весь остальной Мурман падает только 9 огней, т. е. один маячный огонь на 60 миль береговой черты. При этом дальность видимости всех маячных огней не более 10 миль... Развитая сеть маяков, знаков и т. п. уменьшит количество аварий, понизит ставки фрахта и страховых премий и будет самым существенным образом способствовать росту местного каботажа и развитию рыбных и звериных промыслов".
Советское правительство строило большие планы относительно Северного морского пути. уже в 1921 году были организованы ежегодные Карские товарообменные экспедиции по экспортно-импортным перевозкам между портами Западной Европы и реками Западной Сибири. К концу 1920-к годов они превратились в регулярные широкомасштабные транспортные операции с участием десятка судов.
Их успех зависел не только от надежной ледовой разведки, метеосводок и прогнозов погоды, но и от навигационного ограждения опасностей на маршруте.
Убекосеверу были выделены солидные средства на восстановление ранее построенных маяков и маячных огней и на строительство новых. В числе первых, построенных в советское время на Севере маяков, был Большой Олений, возведенный в 1925 году на западной оконечности острова. Ввиду недостаточной силы света и вследствие этого небольшой дальности видимости, он был отнесен к разряду маячных огней. Башня его имела вид четырехгранной пирамиды, стороны которой
были обшиты досками с просветами и окрашены белыми и черными горизонтальными полосами. Внизу у пирамиды была выстроена белая будка для вахты и хранения керосина. Маяк обозначал вход в пролив и
указывал якорное место у становища Захребетное.
В 1953 году на острове была выстроена новая железобетонная монолитная башня желтого цвета высотой 24 м с красным стальным фонарным сооружением. Источником красного света служил электрический вращающийся светооптический аппарат ЭМВ-930 с группопроблесковой характеристикой огня, установленный на высоте 49 м от уровня моря. Дальность видимости огня 19 миль. Маяк оборудован круговым радиомаяком КРМ-300. Большой вклад в освоение новых технических средств маяка и поддержание их в постоянной готовности к действию внесли начальники маяка В. Попов, В. Н. Пешин и другие специалисты.
В 1998 году маяк переведен в разряд автоматических с питанием световой аппаратуры АСА-500 от двух комплектов радиоизотопных энергетических установок РЭУ-3-2К, что явилось следствием трудностей, связанных с наймом обслуживающего персонала и обеспечением его жизнедеятельности в условиях Заполярья.
(autotranslated, could have mistakes)
Installed on the northwestern tip of Bolshoi Oleniy Island in the Barents Sea, 40 miles east of Kildin Island. Provides entry into the Bolshoi Oleniy Strait and navigation in the sea adjacent to the island.
The island was first described and mapped in 1779 by officers of the frigate "Eustathius" from the squadron of Rear Admiral Khmetevsky, sailing off the coast of the Barents and Norwegian seas.
Until the beginning of the 20th century, the island was also called Russian, or Dalniy, in contrast to Nemetsky, or Nizhny Island (now Maly Oleniy), lying between the island of Kildin and Teriberskaya Bay. Hence the name of the lighthouse.
The island, which is about two miles long in the WNW-ESE direction and about half a mile wide, is quite noticeable. It is high and its banks are steep, except for the southeastern end, which slopes down to the sea with a sharp, sloping cape. Lapps have long lived on the island in the summer, herding deer and fishing. They swam only during daylight hours and successfully navigated without lights.
When, at the end of the 19th century, steamships began to ply along the Murmansk coast around the clock, the need arose for a reliable navigational fence against dangers. In 1909, at the request of shipowners on the mainland, a line of wooden signs was built opposite Bolshoi Oleniy Island, which led in the middle of the narrowness between the southern shore of the island and the drainage stones.
In 1915, the Main Hydrographic Directorate planned to install a light beacon on the island, but the outbreak of the First World War broke these plans.
The issue of fencing off dangers on the Arkhangelsk-Murmansk sea route was returned to after the Civil War. In 1922, Ubekosever reported to the Main Hydrographic Directorate: “The Northern Seas are becoming increasingly important for the country’s economy, fisheries are developing, new ports and settlements are being developed, the Northern Sea Route will soon begin to operate, and the navigation fencing of the fairways remains at an extremely low level... along the 60-kilometer stretch of the coast of the Russian Murman there are only 25 lights and two foggy warning stations, that is, for 30 miles there is only one lighthouse light and one fog signal station for 325 miles. But if we take into account that 11 lighthouse lights are concentrated in one Kola Bay and two warning lights on the Iokangsky roadstead, then only 9 lights fall on the rest of Murman, that is, one lighthouse light for 60 miles of the coastline. no more than 10 miles... A developed network of lighthouses, signs, etc. will reduce the number of accidents, lower freight rates and insurance premiums, and will most significantly contribute to the growth of local cabotage and the development of fish and animal industries.”
The Soviet government made big plans for the Northern Sea Route. already in 1921, annual Kara trade expeditions were organized for export-import transportation between the ports of Western Europe and the rivers of Western Siberia. By the end of the 1920s, they had become regular large-scale transport operations involving a dozen ships.
Their success depended not only on reliable ice reconnaissance, weather reports and weather forecasts, but also on navigational protection of dangers along the route.
Ubekosever was allocated substantial funds for the restoration of previously built lighthouses and lighthouse lights and for the construction of new ones. Among the first lighthouses built in Soviet times in the North was Bolshoi Oleniy, erected in 1925 on the western tip of the island. Due to the insufficient light intensity and, as a result, the short visibility range, it was classified as a lighthouse light. Its tower looked like a tetrahedral pyramid, the sides of which
were covered with boards with gaps and painted with white and black horizontal stripes. At the bottom of the pyramid there was a white hut for watch and storage of kerosene. The lighthouse marked the entrance to the strait and
indicated an anchor place at the camp of Zakhrebetnoye.
In 1953, a new yellow reinforced concrete monolithic tower 24 m high with a red steel lantern structure was built on the island. The source of red light was an electric rotating light-optical apparatus EMV-930 with a group-flash characteristic of fire, installed at an altitude of 49 m from sea level. Fire visibility range 19 miles. The lighthouse is equipped with a circular radio beacon KRM-300. A great contribution to the development of new technical means of the lighthouse and maintaining them in constant readiness for action was made by the heads of the lighthouse V. Popov, V. N. Peshin and other specialists.
In 1998, the lighthouse was transferred to the category of automatic light equipment powered by ASA-500 light equipment from two sets of radioisotope power plants REU-3-2K, which was a consequence of the difficulties associated with hiring service personnel and ensuring their life in the Arctic.
Heritage identity & evidence
Identity
- LUX ID
LUX-LH-000031- Type
- Range light
- Object kind
- Range light
- Current status
- active
Review & coverage
External identifiers
No reviewed external identifiers yet.
Key source-backed claims
- Construction or building date 1925 · Русский (Большой Олений) archive
- Construction or building date 1959 · Русский (Большой Олений) archive
- Focal height 49 · Русский (Большой Олений) archive
- Light visibility / range 19 · Русский (Большой Олений) archive
Claim evidence
Operational status
Selected value: active
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: active
Show claim history
- active selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Русский (Большой Олений) Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-status-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
status- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-status-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Construction or building date
Phase history: 1925; 1959
Reviewer action: Treat each active date as a separate lighthouse phase, rebuild, first-light, or current-structure date before promoting phase-specific facts.
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: 1925, 1959
Show claim history
- 1925 · Русский (Большой Олений) Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-construction_date-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field
- 1959 · Русский (Большой Олений) Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-construction_date-002- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field
Technical details
- field_id
construction_date- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-construction_date-002- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
2- distinct_value_count
2- review_guidance
repeatable lifecycle phase field; display active values as phase history and only flag conflict when review assigns two different values to the same phase.
Tower height
Selected value: 24
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: 24 m
Show claim history
- 24 selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Русский (Большой Олений) Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-tower_height-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
tower_height- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-tower_height-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Focal height
Selected value: 49
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: 49 m
Show claim history
- 49 selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Русский (Большой Олений) Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-focal_height-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
focal_height- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-focal_height-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Light visibility / range
Selected value: 19
Why this value is shown: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive
Field support: Needs a reviewed field source
Archive value: 19 miles
Show claim history
- 19 selected why: Current evidence is active; Source: Legacy archive field; Inherited from the archive · Русский (Большой Олений) Current · archive · Legacy archive field
Technical details
- claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-light_visibility-001- review_status
current- confidence
archive- source_type
migration_field- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive
Technical details
- field_id
light_visibility- current_claim_id
CLAIM-LUX-LH-000031-light_visibility-001- winner_reason
current active claim; source type migration_field; confidence archive- field_support_status
no-trusted-reference- candidate_count
1- distinct_value_count
1- review_guidance
accepted/current claims without valid_to; prefer accepted, then latest valid_from, curated source, confidence, id.
Key sources
1 active / 1 total in-archive source link. Full sources and reference search leads below
External Identity Graph
- LUX Light ArchiveLUX-LH-000031 Canonical LUX ID
Local identity anchor for the record and related claims.
- Wikidata
- WikipediaSearch / review Search lead
review lead · Useful for public descriptions and cross-checking, but text must be rewritten or quoted sparingly.
- ARLHSSearch / review Review source
review lead · Search the World List of Lights and add a verified ARLHS ID when found.
- OpenStreetMapSearch / review Search lead
review lead · Resolve to a stable node, way, or relation URL before acceptance.
- Source URLs1 active / 1 total in-record source link Record source URLs
record provenance · Record-level source URLs are listed in the source provenance section.
- Lighthouse DirectorySearch / review Review source
review lead · Use the regional directory page as a trusted catalogue lead; add the exact URL after review.
Evidence graph
Derived view of how sources, facts, identifiers, lifecycle events, and relationships support this record.
Sources
Facts
- Construction or building date construction_date · 1925
- Construction or building date construction_date · 1959
- Focal height focal_height · 49
- Light visibility / range light_visibility · 19
- Operational status status · active
- Tower height tower_height · 24
Identifiers
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
- Search / review object
Lifecycle
- No lifecycle evidence nodes yet.
View by year
Reconstructed state
History and connections
Lifecycle summary
Current status: active
Lifecycle events
- BuiltInherited from legacy archive
Construction date recorded.
1 source · medium confidence
Construction phases
Repeated construction dates are treated as lighthouse phases or rebuilds, not one current-date conflict.
- 1925 · Русский (Большой Олений) · Phase claim
Source narrative context: ...construction of new ones. Among the first lighthouses built in Soviet times in the North was Bolshoi Oleniy, erected in 1925 on the western tip of the island. Due to the insufficient light intensity and, as a result, the short visibility range, it was classified as a lighthouse light. Its tower looked like a tetrahedral pyramid, the sides of which
- 1959 · Русский (Большой Олений) · Phase claim
Needs review classification for this phase.
Evidence and data
Detailed timeline, graph, map history, and JSON exports for review and research.
Coverage: no-accepted-coordinates
Open timeline JSON · Open graph JSON · Open map history JSON · Open state profile JSON
Lighthouse history (2 events)
- Construction date recordedrecord-derived
- Construction date recordedrecord-derived
Record history (2 changes)
- Archive record createdarchive-metadata
- Archive record updatedarchive-metadata
Connection graph (1 objects)
Geo timeline (0 places)
No accepted coordinate point yet. The text geography remains listed as context.
- Geography contextРоссия · text-only
Referenced by
- Маяки России (исторические очерки). издание ГУНиО МО РФ, СПб, 2001 год, авторы А.А. Комарицин, В.И. Корякин, В.Г. Романов. mentions · booklighthouse_names
- РУССКИЙ (БОЛЬШОЙ ОЛЕНИЙ) МАЯК mentions · enc_lighthouse_names
Rights & Attribution
Content License
Original editorial content on this page: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International. See Rights & Reuse.
Media Rights
No published media with documented rights on this record.
Attribution
"Russky (Bolshoy Oleniy) Lighthouse" · LUX-LH-000031 · © LUX143 · Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International · https://light.lux143.org/lighthouses/LUX-LH-000031/
Citation
LUX Light Archive, Lighthouse record: "Russky (Bolshoy Oleniy) Lighthouse", LUX-LH-000031, https://light.lux143.org/lighthouses/LUX-LH-000031/, accessed 2026-07-03, archive v0.24.42.
Legacy archive provenance
This object now uses its LUX identity as the public record. The original Drupal node is preserved as migration provenance and a compatibility route.
- Canonical LUX ID
- LUX-LH-000031
- Legacy node
- node:521
- Legacy URL
- /node/521/
- Drupal source type
- lighthouse
- Source system
- drupal_migration
- Source path
- /node/521
Trusted References
Known external identifiers and review leads for Wikipedia, Wikidata, map, registry, and catalogue coverage. Search leads are not accepted evidence until reviewed. Field-level evidence is implied only when evidence scope or supported fields are explicit.
| Source | Status | Evidence scope | Reference | Review note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wikidata | search-candidate | Search / review | Resolve to a verified QID before treating as evidence. | |
| Wikipedia | search-candidate | Search / review | Useful for public descriptions and cross-checking, but text must be rewritten or quoted sparingly. | |
| OpenStreetMap | search-candidate | Search / review | Resolve to a stable node, way, or relation URL before acceptance. | |
| ARLHS | review-source | Search / review | Search the World List of Lights and add a verified ARLHS ID when found. | |
| Lighthouse Directory | review-source | Search / review | Use the regional directory page as a trusted catalogue lead; add the exact URL after review. |
Record identifiers
- Node
- 521
- Source type
- lighthouse
- Review class
- Navigation light or range light
- Created
- 27/05/2011 12:10:53 UTC
- Changed
- 12/03/2015 14:56:45 UTC
- Source path
- /node/521
All technical fields
- Status
- active Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
- Construction date
- 1925; 1959 Multiple lighthouse phases Русский (Большой Олений) archiveРусский (Большой Олений) archive
- Tower height
- 24 Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
- Focal height
- 49 Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
- Light height
- Not recorded
- Light characteristic
- Not recorded
- Light number
- Not recorded
- Operation
- Not recorded
- Visibility
- 19 Legacy archive claim · Русский (Большой Олений)
- Legacy light IDs
- Not recorded
- Call sign
- Not recorded
- Lens / optics
- Not curated
- Latitude
- Not recorded
- Longitude
- Not recorded
Empty lighthouse fields are shown so review gaps are visible. Lens and optics are curated as heritage assets when evidence exists.