Loyalty (Russian: Памятник преданности) is a monument to a faithful dog in the Russian city of Tolyatti.

Loyalty
Памятник преданности
Map
53°32′46.59″N 49°21′43.61″E / 53.5462750°N 49.3621139°E / 53.5462750; 49.3621139
LocationTolyatti, Samara Region
DesignerOleg Klyuyev
MaterialBronze
Heightabout 1.5 metres (4.9 ft)
Opening dateJune 1, 2003
Dedicated toDog "Kostya"

Background

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In 1995, residents of a Tolyatti began noticing a German Shepherd dog at the edge of South Highway, a bypass road in the Auto Factory District of the town which leads to the AvtoVAZ car factory. He was always in the same place, and he rushed at passing cars. Word of the dog spread around the city and the people of the city informally adopted him.[1][2]

Further research showed that in the summer of 1995 the dog had been riding in a car with a man and a girl. The car had crashed, the girl was killed on the spot, and the man was taken to a hospital where he died a few hours later; the dog survived. His name was not known, so people began calling him "Faithful"[3] or "Kostya" (a hypocorism (affectionate diminutive) of Constantine which itself devolves from "constant, steadfast").[1][4]

People built doghouses for him and some tried to adopt him into their homes, but no such attempt succeeded: the dog always came back, looking for his master, nor would he stay in the shelters; all he would take from the people was food.[2][5] In the snow and rain, in any weather and time of year, he was always in his spot. The dog always waited and ran up to all passing vehicles. Everyone who traveled that road from the old city to the new always saw Kostya running along the roadside or resting quietly on the grass. The citizens became very fond of Kostya and turned his story into a living legend.[1] Stories about the dog were published throughout Russia.[3]

For seven years Kostya kept his post,[3] but in 2002, he was found dead in the woods. A rumor spread that he had been hit by a truck driver who, fearing the wrath of the people, hid his body in the woods to conceal the evidence, thereby walking away from responsibility. However, there were no signs of injury to his body.[citation needed]

The loss of the popular dog was sad news for many residents. In his memory a homemade billboard was erected with the legend "Dog, teach us love and devotion", but it was often blown away by the wind and hooligans threw stones at it, so the city of Tolyatti initiated a campaign to construct a bronze statue of Kostya.[2]

Description

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The sculpture was made by Ulyanovsk sculptor Oleg Klyuyev, son of sculptors Anatoly Klyuyev and Lyubov Turskaya.[1] The bronze sculpture, about 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) tall[2] and set on a granite pedestal of about the same height,[6] cost about 250,000 rubles[2] It stands in District 21 at the intersection of South Highway and Lev Yashin Street. Klyuyev made the sculpture so that it seems to drivers that he is turning his head for each passing car, hoping to see once more his dead master.[2][3]

The memorial was dedicated on June 1, 2003,[3] the 266th anniversary of the founding of Tolyatti, which is celebrated on the first Sunday of summer. The dedication was attended by about 100 to 150 people, half being members of the Tolyatti Rotary Club which had financed the monument[6] and the others being journalists and private citizens. Mayor Nikolai Utkin spoke at the dedication, as did deputy mayor and Rotary Club president Nikolai Renz, who said:

This shall be a symbol of our city. In Copenhagen – The Little Mermaid. In Brussels – the famous boy. And here we have in Tolyatti – a monument to the dog whose loyalty has become a legend!

— Nikolai Renz, Monument Dedication[1]

After the official unveiling, Mayor Utkin, mindful of the vandalism of The Little Mermaid, put the memorial under guard until such time as an alarm system could be installed.

The monument was the first in Tolyalli not erected for political reasons.[3] Today, the memorial is a popular visiting place for newlyweds, as a symbol of unbreakable fidelity. By tradition, the young couple, to demonstrate and ensure their commitment to each other and to a happy family life, rub the nose of the statue, so that the dog's nose has become polished by many hands.

In literature and the arts

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The song "Watchdog" by Cat Sasha (the stage name of the Moscow singer-songwriter and rock poet Aleksandra Pavlova) on her 2013 album Intercity Traveler is about Kostya the dog.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Alexander Baryshev. "Памятник преданности" [Monument Dedication]. Your Choice. Archived from the original on January 28, 2018. Retrieved March 16, 2015. (in Russian)
  2. ^ a b c d e f Ilya Chernyshev (September 9, 2004). "Преданый пес стал символом волжского города" [A Loyal Dog Has Become A Symbol Of This Volga City]. BBC Russian. Retrieved March 16, 2015. (in Russian)
  3. ^ a b c d e f News of Russia, cited at Hope Kazitsina (June 2, 2003). "Памятник истинно Верному" [A Monument to True Faith]. Elib.ru. Retrieved March 16, 2015. (in Russian)
  4. ^ "Interesting Places of Tolgliatti". Adventour. Retrieved March 16, 2015. (in English)
  5. ^ Choron, Sandra; Choron, Harry (2005). Planet Dog: A Doglopedia. Mariner Books. p. 138. ISBN 978-0618517527. Retrieved March 16, 2015. (in English)
  6. ^ a b Eugene Leontiev; Natalia Andropov; Praskovja Tulupova. "Верный в бронзе" [Faithful in Bronze]. Monuments of Tolyatti. Retrieved March 16, 2015. (in Russian)