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Novodevichy Convent
Novodevichy Convent
Categories /
Religion. Church/Monasteries and Convents
NOVODEVICHY CONVENT OF HOLY RESURRECTION, located at 100 Moskovsky Avenue. An architectural monument. It was established in 1845 by order of Emperor Nicholas I, who decided to recreate the abolished Smolny Convent on a new location. The first Mother Superior of the Convent was Feofania (Gotovtseva). Building started in 1848, following the plans of architect N. E. Efimov, in the Russian Byzantine style. After his death, L. L. Bonstedt, and then N. A. Snychev directed the construction. In 1848, a temporary wooden Kazan Church was built (demolished in 1929). In 1854, the south wing with a home church dedicated to Our Lady of Vatoped was completed, and in 1855 - the north wing with the Church of Three Saints and a bell tower. In 1856-61, the Holy Resurrection Cathedral with five domes and five side-altars was erected in the centre of Novodevichy Convent (internal painting was done by artists A. A. Kolchin and R. F. Vinogradov, and icons were painted by nuns supervised by artist G. I. Yakovlev). The bell tower of St. Isidor Church was erected in 1892-95 (architects L. N. Benois, V. P. Tseidler, now destroyed), which gave a less traditional look to the ensemble. The stone church sepulchre with large domes dedicated to the icon of Our Lady Assuaging My Sorrows (by architect V. A. Kosyakov) was built In 1907-18, and painted by artist F. R. Raylyan. By 1917, about 80 nuns lived at Novodevichy Convent. The Convent had several art workshops, a hospital and the St. Vladimir School, training teachers for parish schools. At the end of the 19th century, two metochions of Novodevichy Convent were founded in Vokhonov and Elizavetino (St. Petersburg Province). In 1918, Novodevichy Convent was closed. In 1932, the services in the cathedral were ceased; and in 1938, the Church of Our Lady of Vatoped was also closed. In 1928-33, Metropolitan of Leningrad Serafim (Chichagov) lived at Novodevichy Convent and the Eparchy administration was located there. In 1995, the Novodevichy Convent was reopened; in 2002, all the buildings were returned to the convent. Novodevichye Cemetery is located near Novodevichy Convent. References: Антонов В. В., Кобак А. В. Святыни Санкт-Петербурга: Ист.-церков. энцикл. СПб., 1994. Т. 1. С. 65-71; Соколова Л. И. Никто молитвы не отнимет. СПб., 2000. S. V. Boglachev.
Persons
Benois Leonty Nikolaevich
Bonstedt Lyubim (Ludwig) Lyubimovich
Efimov Nikolay Efimovich
Feofania (Gotovtseva)
Kolchin Alexander Alexandrovich
Kosyakov Vladimir Antonovich
Nicholas I, Emperor
Raylyan Foma Rodionovich
Serafim (Chichagov), Metropolitan
Sychev Nikolay Alexandrovich
Tseidler Vladimir Petrovich
Vinogradov Roman Fedorovich
Yakovlev Gavriil Ivanovich
Addresses
Moskovsky Ave/Saint Petersburg, city, house 100
Bibliographies
Антонов В. В., Кобак А. В. Святыни Санкт-Петербурга: Ист.-церков. энцикл. СПб., 1994
Соколова Л. И. Никто молитвы не отнимет. СПб., 2000
The subject Index
Novodevichye Cemetery
Novodevichye Cemetery
Chronograph
1848
1861
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Alexy (Simansky), metropolitan in 1933-1945
ALEXY (born Sergey Vladimirovich Simansky) (1877-1970), religious figure, Doctor of Theology (1949). After graduating from the Faculty Of Law of Moscow University in 1899
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Cemetery Churches (entry)
CEMETERY CHURCHES built in municipal cemeteries from the middle of the 18th century. In 1759-1760, the wooden Church of Our Lady of Smolensk was erected at the Smolensk Orthodox Cemetery (see Smolenskoe Cemeteries); in 1756-1759
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Efimov N.E. (1799-1851), architect.
EFIMOV Nikolay Efimovich (1799-1851, St. Petersburg), architect, urban planner. From 1806 to 1821, he studied at the St. Petersburg Academy of Fine Arts; was later involved in studying traditional Russian architecture. In 1827-40, he lived in Italy
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Historical style (Eclecticism)
HISTORICAL STYLE (Eclecticism), architectural style of the 1830s-90s. The sense of Eclecticism is the free choice or the amalgamation of methods and motifs of a variety of historical styles, associatively expressing the purpose of buildings
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Holy Annunciation Church (Eighth Line of Vasilievsky Island)
HOLY ANNUNCIATION CHURCH located at 67 Eighth Line of Vasilievsky Island. An architectural monument in the Baroque style. The stone two-storeyed church was built in 1750-72, financed by merchants I. S. Chirkin and I. I
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Metochion of Kiev Pechersk Lavra
METOCHION OF KIEV PECHERSK LAVRA, located at 27 Lieutenant Schmidt Embankment, an architectural monument. It was built in 1895-1900 and decorated in the Russian style (architect V. A. Kosyakov; see The Kosyakov family) for the Kiev Pechersk Lavra
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Metochion of the Holy Assumption Monastery in Staraya Ladoga
METOCHION OF THE HOLY ASSUMPTION MONASTERY IN STARAYA LADOGA, located at 29/1 Staropetergofsky Avenue. An architectural monument. A piece of land for the metochion was bought in 1902, when a wooden Holy Assumption chapel was erected
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Monasteries (entry)
MONASTERIES, there were four monasteries in Petrograd (two women’s convents and two men’s monasteries) by 1917, and 42 metochions, which functioned according to monastery regulations
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Moskovsky Avenue
MOSKOVSKY AVENUE (in 1918-50 - Mezhdunarodny Avenue, in 1950-56 - Stalina Avenue, after I.V. Stalin), from Sennaya Square to Pobedy Square, one of the main thoroughfares of St
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Novodevichye Cemetery
NOVODEVICHYE CEMETERY (100 Moskovsky Avenue). Situated in the southern part of St. Petersburg. Founded in 1845, for the Novodevichy Convent; burials lasted from 1849 to the 1930s. Its area includes 10 hectares
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Russian Style
RUSSIAN STYLE. A trend in Russian architecture of the 19th - beginning of the 20th century, based on using methods and shapes of ancient and traditional Russian art and architecture. The Russian style emerged out of the aesthetics of Romanticism
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Smolny Architectural Ensemble
SMOLNY ARCHITECTURAL ENSEMBLE, created over the course of the 18th-20th centuries on the curve of the left bank of the Neva River, on the place of the early 18th century Smolyanoy (Russian "smola" means "resin") courtyard (hence the name)
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