Every city has a surface story and a story underneath it. Kyiv has more layers than most – and on Sunday, July 19, a small group of walkers will step through them, one courtyard at a time.
The tour, put together by the Ukrainian language school, Language Lab, marks the Baptism of Kyivan Rus Day, the anniversary of the moment more than a thousand years ago when Prince Volodymyr chose to Christianize his realm and, in doing so, pulled Kyiv permanently into the orbit of the wider European world. It’s an occasion for slowing down and looking closely at a city many assume is already familiar.
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Why Volodymyr’s story still matters here
Volodymyr wasn’t born to rule. His mother, Malusha, held a modest position in the household of Princess Olha, and chroniclers still argue about where her family really came from – a merchant clan, a conquered prince’s line, maybe even traders from further west. Volodymyr grew up carrying the stigma of that uncertain birth, sent north to govern a distant, half-pagan frontier town while his half-brothers held the prestigious seats closer to home. It took years of exile, alliance-building, and a hard-fought return south before he took Kyiv by force and, eventually, made the decision that would define the city for a millennium: baptism, and a permanent turn toward Byzantium and Europe rather than the old gods of the steppe.
It’s a very human story before it’s a saintly one – which is part of why it’s worth telling on the ground, in the streets where it actually happened, rather than in a textbook.
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What the walk covers
Over three hours through Kyiv’s city center, a professional guide will trace that history and its long afterlife – including how, centuries later, the Russian Empire worked to rewrite Kyiv’s past as a mere prologue to its own.
Along the way, expect some genuine surprises:
- A cathedral that the Soviets converted into an anti-religious museum
- The Kyiv home of aviation pioneer Igor Sikorsky
- Hidden courtyards and buildings most passersby never notice
- Volunteers quietly restoring the city’s historic doors
- A cycling community that gathers above the old Kyiv Velodrome
- The sugar-beet fortunes that built entire family dynasties
- The old traditions behind the carol *Shchedryk*
The details
**When:** Sunday, July 19, 11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
**Where:** Kyiv city center (exact meeting point shared after registration)
**Language:** English
**Group size:** 15 people (a second tour will be added if demand is high enough)
**Fee:** Hr.1,800 ($40), pre-payment required
Registration is open here; the meeting point is shared upon signup. The group is kept deliberately small, at 15 participants, to keep the walk personal in a city with this much to unpack.
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