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                                                                                The subject index
                      
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                                                                                                  Volkovskoe Cemeteries
                                               
                      
                                                                              
           
    
    
    
        
    
                                   
    
            
                            
                
                   
                                                                                              Volkovskoe Cemeteries
                                                  
                                                                  
                          
                     
                                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                                                            Categories /
          City Services/Cemeteries (see also Architecture and Urban Planning)
       
   
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Categories /
          Architecture/Cemeteries (see also Municipal Economy)
       
   
                                                                                                                                        
                           
                       
                                                                
                                                                       VOLKOVSKOE CEMETERIES is situated in the north-eastern part of Frunzensky region, the oldest of the St. Petersburg cemeteries functioning today. Volkovskoe Orthodox Cemetery (7а Rasstanny Passage), is located between Kamchatskaya Street and the Volkovka River. The area is 26 hectares; the total length of paths is over 13 kilometres. Its history goes back to the Exaltation of the Holy Cross Cemetery in Moscovskaya Yamskaya Sloboda (contemporary address, 128 Ligovsky Ave), founded in 1719 and abolished in the mid-18th century. The contemporary cemetery was founded in 1756 on the left bank of Volkovka River (in the 18th century it was also called Admiralteiskaya Side Cemetery and Moskovskaya Side Cemetery). In 1759, the first wooden Holy Face Church was built (not preserved); in 1777, a wooden Church of the Renewal of the Jerusalem Holy Resurrection Temple was constructed (burned down in 1782); in 1782-85, the stone Holy Resurrection Church (architect thought to be I.E. Stasov, bell tower and gates - 1832-34, architect P.F. Votsky), in 1837-42, the Holy Face Church was built (architect V.I. Beretti, F.I. Rusсa; in 1936 it was adapted for Monumentskulptura Plant workshop); in 1850-52, the All Russian Saints Church (architect Rusca; not preserved) was also built; in 1885-87 - St. Job’s Church, and the Kryukov merchants burial vault (architect I.A. Aristarkhov; today it is a functioning cemetery chapel); in 1912-13, a Holy Assumption Church was built at the cemetery (architect A.P. Apraksin; not preserved). The cemetery was mainly designated for the poor, but from the 19th century it was used by all classes. Cemetery paths or planked footways (mostki - paved with wooden planks to protect from moisture) were named after the churches, professions, ranks and names of the buried. During the second half of 19th century it was the burial place for men of letters and arts. From 1933 to 1980s it was closed for burials. The museum part, known as Literatorskie Mostki, preserves all the historical burial places, while in the functioning part, many of the pre-revolutionary monuments have been lost. Among the preserved tombs are those of architect K.A. Ton, publisher I.V. Slenin, A.F. Smirdin, poets V.S. and N.S. Kurochkins, Pushkin scholar L.B. Modzalevsky, historian and philologist A.A. Shakhmotov, pedagogue V.Y. Stoyunin. Volkovskoe Lutheran Cemetery (1 Volkovka River Embankment). Its area is 22.5 hectares. It was founded in 1772, to bury the representatives of foreign Christian confessions after the closing of Sampsonyevskoe German Cemetery. The parishioners of the St. Peter Lutheran Church at Nevsky Prospect and St. Anna Church at Furshtadskaya Street, Catholics of St. Catherine community at Nevsky Prospect were buried there (one of the footways is called Katolicheskaya). It had brick gates and the chapel was built in the Neo-Gothic style (1879, not preserved). In the 1920s-30s, some burial places and monuments were destroyed, and the ashes of A.A. Delvig, K.I. Rossi, etc. were transferred from the cemetery to necropolis-museums. Among those buried there are navigator F.P. Litke, Field Marshal I.I. Dibich, philologist A.K. Vostokov, journalist and publisher N.I. Grech, physician Y.V. Willie, architect A.K. Cavos, biochemist and physician N.I. Lunin, physician K.A. Rauchfus, A.N. Shabanova. Tombs from the 18-19 centuries made by Maderni, D.I. Visconti, L. Rusca, and other masters are preserved. Old Believers' Volkovskoe Cemetery (Volkovka Embankment) is situated to the north of Lutheran Cemetery. It was founded by the Bezpopovtsy Old Believers of the Fedoseyan hierarchy by merchants Vorobyev and Volkov, who took burial places there in 1787. Hospices for men and women were also built there. The fore building of the hospices have been preserved (1884, architect F.I. Haberzetel, A.O. Tomishko; 3 Volkovka River Embankment), today occupied by a clinic. Volkovsky cell was a kind of centre of Fedoseyan community in St. Petersburg. In the second half of the 19th century, millionaire and house owner F.E. Egorov was Fedoseyan community leader. By 1917, the Volkovskaya Hospice had a large collection of antique icons. It was closed down in 1930s. According to Old Believers' canons, wooden crosses with reliefs and inscriptions were erected on the cemetery. Golubets - a wooden column with gable cover bearing a copper cross with crucifixion was in use as well. All the old monuments had been lost by the beginning of the 1990s. Edinovercheskoe Volkovskoe Cemetery neighbours the Old Believers One, it was founded at the end of the 18th century. In 1813-18, the stone Holy Annunciation Church was constructed (architect V.I. Beretti, reconstructed by architect A.I. Melnikov, in 1931, closed down and shortly afterwards, destroyed). Mass burials were abolished at the cemetery, marked by a memorial took place during the Siege. Reference: Простосердов А. И. Волковское единоверческое кладбище: К столетию его Благовещенской церкви, 1816-1916. Пг., 1916;Исторические кладбища Петербурга: Справ.-путеводитель. СПб., 1993. С. 315-75; Антонов В.В., Кобак А.В. Святыни Санкт-Петербурга: Ист.-церков. энцикл. СПб., 1996. Т. 3. С. 168-173. A. A. Alexeev.
                                                                      
                          
                      
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Persons 
                     
                                    Aplaksin Andrey Petrovich
                        
                                    Aristarkhov Ivan Aristarkhovich
                        
                                    Beretti Vikenty Ivanovich
                        
                                    Cavos Albert Katarinovich
                        
                                    Delwig Anton Antonovich
                        
                                    Dibich Ivan Ivanovich, Count
                        
                                    Egorov Fedor Egorovich
                        
                                    Grech Nikolay Ivanovich
                        
                                    Haberzetel Fedor Ivanovich
                        
                                    Kurochkin A.M.
                        
                                    Kurochkin Nikolay Stepanovich
                        
                                    Litke Fedor Petrovich
                        
                                    Lunin Nikolay Ivanovich
                        
                                    Maderni Vincenzo
                        
                                    Melnikov Avraam Ivanovich
                        
                                    Modzalevsky Lev Borisovich
                        
                                    Rauchfus Karl Andreevich
                        
                                    Rossi Carl Ivanovich (Carlo Giovanni)
                        
                                    Rusca Luigi (Aloisy Ivanovich)
                        
                                    Rusca (Rusco) Franz Ivanovich
                        
                                    Shabanova Anna Nikolaevna
                        
                                    Shakhmatov Alexey Alexandrovich
                        
                                    Slenin Ivan Vasilievich
                        
                                    Smirdin Alexander Filippovich
                        
                                    Starov Ivan Egorovich
                        
                                    Stoyunin Vladimir Yakovlevich
                        
                                    the Krykovs
                        
                                    Tomishko (Tomishka) Antony Osipovich (Iosifovich)
                        
                                    Ton Konstantin Andreevich
                        
                                    Viskonti David Ivanovich
                        
                                    Volkov
                        
                                    Vorobyev
                        
                                    Vostokov Alexander Hristoforovich
                        
                                    Votsky P.F.
                        
                                    Willie Yakov (James) Vasilievich
                        
                         
                          
                      
                                                                
                    Addresses 
                                            
                                                  
          Ligovsky Ave/Saint Petersburg, city, house 128
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Rasstanny Passage/Saint Petersburg, city, house 7, litera л. А
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Volkovka River Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 3
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Volkovka River Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city
       
   
                                                     
                                                  
          Volkovka River Embankment/Saint Petersburg, city, house 1
       
   
                                                     
                                            
                          
                     
                                                                                     Bibliographies 
                     
                                    Кобак А. В., Пирютко Ю. М. Волковское лютеранское кладбище // Исторические кладбища Петербурга: Справ.-путеводитель. СПб., 1993
                                                                
                          
                      
                                                                
                    The subject Index 
                                            
                                                  
          Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross
       
   
                              
                                                   
                                                   
                                                   
                                                   
                                                  
          Literatorskie (Literary) Mostki, the museum-necropolis
       
   
                              
                                                   
                                                   
                                                  
          St. Anne’s Lutheran Church
       
   
                              
                                                  
          Siege of 1941-44
       
   
                              
                                            
                          
                     
                                                                                                                                                                                                                            
                    Chronograph 
                                            
                                                  
          1772
       
   
                              
                                                  
          1756
       
   
                              
                                                  
          1787
       
   
                              
                                                  
          1883
       
   
                              
                                                  
          1935
       
   
                              
                                            
                          
                     
                                                                                                                                                                     
                
  
                     
    
    
    
        
        
                                      
                
                
        
    
    
    
                        
    
                      
      
        
    
    
        
    
        
    
            
    
    
                    
        
                                                               
                                                                                                
                            
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                                                        Alms-houses (entry) 
                                                                           
                         
                        ALMS-HOUSES, boarding institutions for poor, ill and aged people. The first alms-houses set up in St. Petersburg were attached to churches, the first ones being theHoly Ascension Church in Shpalernaya Street (1713) and St
                                             
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                                                        Cemeteries (entry) 
                                                                           
                         
                        CEMETERIES. Even before the foundation of St. Petersburg there were several necropolises on the location of the future city: the records of the beginning of the 18th century indicate a Finnish-Swedish cemetery at Elagin (Aptekarsky) Island
                                             
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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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                                                        Decembrists 
                                                                           
                         
                        DECEMBRISTS, members of secret societies, mainly, Guard officers and Masonic lodge members, who excited a rebellion against autocracy and serfdom in December 1825 (hence the name). Many of the future Decembrists were born in St
                                             
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                                                        Frunzensky District 
                                                                           
                         
                        FRUNZENSKY DISTRICT, an administrative and territorial unit of St. Petersburg, with its administration located at 46 Prazhskaya Street. Formed in 1936, it was named in honour of Soviet statesman and military commander M. V
                                             
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                                                        Funeral Rites (entry) 
                                                                           
                         
                        FUNERAL RITES. Burials during the building of St. Petersburg were noted for their utmost simplicity. As C. Weber (1718) witnessed, "a body wrapped in a coarse bast sack, tightened with ropes, and put on a bier
                                             
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                                                        Literatorskie (Literary) Mostki, the museum-necropolis 
                                                                           
                         
                        LITERATORSKIE (LITERARY) MOSTKI (30 Rasstannaya Street). A museum-necropolis on the territory of the Volkovskoe Orthodox Cemetery (in the northeastern section; the square covers 7
                                             
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                                                        Volkova Village 
                                                                           
                         
                        VOLKOVA VILLAGE, an area to the south of Obvodny Canal, between Moscow Line and Vitebsk Line of Oktyabrskaya Railway, on the banks of the Volkovka River. Since the early 16th century, there was a Novgorod settlement
                                             
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                                                        Volkovka, river 
                                                                           
                         
                        VOLKOVKA, a river, formerly the left tributary to the Neva River. It assumed its name in 1887 after the village of Volkovo (see Volkova Village; formerly known as Chernaya Rechka)
                                             
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