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Feodorovskaya Church

The Feodorovskaya Church (Russian: Феодоровская церковь), or in full, the Church of the Holy Prince Feodor of Novgorod (Russian: Церковь святого благоверного князя Феодора Новгородского) is a Russian Orthodox church in Saint Petersburg. It is in the Diocese of Saint Petersburg [ru] and is part of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra.

The Church of the Holy Prince Feodor of Novgorod
Церковь святого благоверного князя Феодора Новгородского
Religion
AffiliationRussian Orthodox
Location
LocationMonastyrki Embankment [ru] 1,
Saint Petersburg
Architecture
Architect(s)Leonard Theodor Schwertfeger [ru]
Pietro Antonio Trezzini
StylePetrine Baroque
Groundbreaking1745
Completed1770
Website
www.lavra.spb.ru

The church was built as part of the southern extension from the Holy Trinity Cathedral, creating a symmetrical effect. The Feodorovskaya Church was designed as the counterpart to the Annunciation Church. Construction work began in 1745 and took a number of years. As completed the two-storey building hosted two churches, one on the upper floor, dedicated to Feodor of Yaroslav [ru], and the ground floor dedicated to Saint John Chrysostom. After repairs in the 1840s the churches were re-consecrated. This time the upper church was dedicated to Feodor of Yaroslav, while the ground floor was dedicated to Saint Nicholas.

The church became a popular site for burials of leading churchmen, Georgian and Imeretian royalty, and other elite members of Saint Petersburg society. In 1891 an extension was opened, and also consecrated as a separate church, in the name of Saint Isidore of Pelusium. Over the next twenty-five years, around 150 burials took place. The churches were closed in 1931, during the Soviet period, and allocated to various organisations. The church served as a dormitory and office space. Almost all of the graves were destroyed during this period, with the exception of two that were transferred to one of the lavra's cemeteries. The church was returned to the monastery officials in 1996 and underwent a complex restoration, being re-consecrated in 2018.

Design and construction edit

 
Icon, mid 18th century. Alexander Nevsky and his elder brother Feodor [ru] looking over the Alexander Nevsky Monastery. The Feodorovskaya Church was dedicated to Feodor.

Construction of the southern wing of the monastery building, from the Holy Trinity Cathedral to the southern boundary of the monastery, began in 1725, overseen by Leonard Theodor Schwertfeger [ru].[1] Construction stalled in 1730, and only resumed in 1741 under Pietro Antonio Trezzini.[2] The two-storey wing was finally completed under the auspices of Ivan Rossi in 1748. The south-eastern corner continued the style of the north Dukhovsky wing, and like that wing, was finished with a two-storey church, laid down on 9 August 1745, and intended to be the symmetrical counterpart of the Annunciation Church.[1][3][4] Construction of the church lasted for seven years, with further work to attach a staircase carried out between 1755 and 1761 by M. D. Rastorguev.[1][5] The decoration was completed by 1766.[2] As completed the church building contained two churches, one on the ground floor and one on the upper floor.[3] The icons were painted by Aleksey Antropov.[1] The churches were only consecrated in 1770; the upper one in the name of Holy Prince Feodor of Yaroslav [ru], brother of Saint Alexander Nevsky; and the lower one in the name of Saint John Chrysostom.[1][2][3]

In 1840, both churches underwent repairs. The iconostases were replaced, and new images by Dmitriy Antonelli [ru] were installed.[1][5] The upper church was repainted and the painting “The Descent from the Cross” by Jacopo Bassano, originally in the private church of Grigory Orlov, was placed in it.[1][5] The churches were then re-consecrated: the upper one on 11 June 1842 by Bishop Venedict [ru] of Revel in the name of Saint Nicholas, and the lower church on 17 September 1842 by Bishop Afanasiy [ru] of Vinnytsia in the name of Holy Prince Feodor of Yaroslav.[2][3][5] In 1867 the iconostasis and the royal doors of the Feodorovskaya Church were again refurbished.[1]

 
The funeral of Metropolitan Isidore [ru] in the Isidorskaya Church in 1892.

From 1806 the lower church was the site of burials of Georgian and Imeretian princes, and those of important members of Saint Petersburg society.[2][3] In total around 100 burials took place in the Feodorovskaya Church, though none have survived.[1] On 5 October 1889 the metropolitan approved a suggestion by the Spiritual Council to construct an extension to the church to allow further burials. This was built to a design by Grigory I. Karpov, and contained 167 spaces in its burial vault, with a two-tier iconostasis.[1] On 6 October 1891 it was consecrated as a separate church in the name of Saint Isidore of Pelusium by Metropolitan Isidore [ru].[4][5] Over the 25 years of its operation some 150 burials took place, mostly those of bishops and church leaders.[3][4]

Soviet period edit

The churches remained open for a period after the Russian revolution, though they had ceased to function by December 1930.[5] On 2 September 1931 the Feodorovskaya churches were ordered to be closed by order by the Presidium of Lensovet [ru].[4] The Isidorovskaya church closed three months later.[4] The Feodorovskaya Church was transferred to the Volodarsky District Council, becoming a factory dormitory.[2] The Isidorovskaya Church housed the Prometey Central Research Institute from 1931 to early 2000.[1] The remains of Metropolitans Isidore and Palladiy were transferred to the Nikolskoe Cemetery, while the rest of the graves were destroyed.[1][4]

Post-Soviet developments edit

The Feodorovskaya Church and wing of the monastery were returned to the Orthodox Church in 1996.[2] Novices from the monastery established metalworking, carpentry and jewelry workshops in the Feodorovskaya wing, supporting a major restoration of the church.[2] On 18 June 2017, the feast day of Feodor of Yaroslav, the Bishop of Kronstadt Nazariy and the monastery monks performed the first prayer service after the church's restoration.[2] The church was re-consecrated on 2 January 2018 in the name of Feodor of Yaroslav, and regular worship resumed.[2] The grave of Yakov Rostovtsev, one of the architects of the Emancipation reform of 1861, was re-discovered in the lower church during restoration works.[1]

Burials edit

Feodorovskaya Church edit

Image Name Born Died Occupation Reference
  David 1767 1819 Georgian prince, writer and scholar, regent of the Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti. Memorial plaque and epitaph to the Annunciation Church in 1930. [6]
  Mikhail Khomutov 1795 1864 Army officer, general. Ataman of the Don Cossacks. [7]
  Prince Mirian of Georgia 1767 1834 Georgian prince, son of King Heraclius II and Queen Darejan Dadiani. Army officer, major general, senator, translator, poet. [8]
  Yakov Rostovtsev 1803 1860 Army officer, general. Military education, cadet corps administration, Emancipation reform of 1861. [9]
  Sergei Stroganov 1794 1882 Statesman, art historian, archaeologist, collector, and philanthropist. Stroganov Moscow State Academy of Arts and Industry, Governor-General of Moscow. [10]

Isidorovskaya Church edit

Image Name Born Died Occupation Reference
  Terty Filippov 1825 1899 Folklorist, singer, pedagogue, Honorary member of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences, journalist, Orthodox Church official, Chairman of the Russian State Control committee. [11]
  Fyodor Geyden 1821 1900 Military commander, Governor-General of Finland. [12]
  Eugen Maximilianovich 1847 1901 Duke of Leuchtenberg. Army officer, division general, Russo-Turkish War, commander of the 37th Infantry Division. [13]
  Vladimir Meshchersky 1839 1914 Journalist and novelist. Grazhdanin. [14]
  Palladiy 1827 1898 Orthodox bishop, Metropolitan of St. Petersburg and Ladoga, member of the Holy Synod. Remains transferred to the Nikolskoe Cemetery in 1932. [15]
  Ivan Vyshnegradsky 1832 1895 Politician, Finance minister, member of the Council of Ministers of Public Instruction, member of the State Council. [16]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Федоровский корпус с церковью св. Феодора и церковью Исидора" (in Russian). citywalls.ru. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Церковь святого благоверного князя Феодора Новгородского" (in Russian). lavra.spb.ru. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Федоровская усыпальница и усыпальница митрополита Исидора" (in Russian). lavra.spb.ru. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Церковь Феодора Ярославича в Александро-Невской лавре" (in Russian). temples.ru. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Церкви благ. кн. ФЕОДОРА ЯРОСЛАВИЧА и прп. ИСИДОРА ПЕЛУСИОТА в Александро-Невской Свято-Троицкой лавре" (in Russian). Sankt Peterburg Entsiklopediya. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  6. ^ "Давид Георгиевич". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  7. ^ "НЕКРОПОЛЬ Федоровской церкви Александро-Невской Лавры" (in Russian). poxoronka.ru. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  8. ^ Brosset, Marie-Félicité (1840). "Inscriptions tumulaires géorgiennes de Moscou et de St.-Pétersbourg" [Georgian tombstone inscriptions from Moscow and St. Petersburg]. Mémoires de l'Académie Impériale des Sciences de Saint-Pètersbourg. 6 (in French). St.-Pétersbourg: L'académie Impériale des Sciences. 4: 510.
  9. ^ "Ростовцев Яков Иванович". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  10. ^ "Строганов Сергей Григорьевич". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  11. ^ "Филиппов Тертий Иванович". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  12. ^ "Гейден Федор Логинович". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  13. ^ "Лейхтенбергский Евгений Максимилианович, князь Романовский". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  14. ^ "Мещерский Владимир Петрович". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  15. ^ "Палладий (Раев)". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  16. ^ "Вышнеградский Иван Алексеевич". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 22 April 2019.

External links edit

  • Feodorovskaya Church at the Alexander Nevsky Lavra

59°55′12″N 30°23′24″E / 59.92000°N 30.39000°E / 59.92000; 30.39000

feodorovskaya, church, russian, Феодоровская, церковь, full, church, holy, prince, feodor, novgorod, russian, Церковь, святого, благоверного, князя, Феодора, Новгородского, russian, orthodox, church, saint, petersburg, diocese, saint, petersburg, part, alexand. The Feodorovskaya Church Russian Feodorovskaya cerkov or in full the Church of the Holy Prince Feodor of Novgorod Russian Cerkov svyatogo blagovernogo knyazya Feodora Novgorodskogo is a Russian Orthodox church in Saint Petersburg It is in the Diocese of Saint Petersburg ru and is part of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra The Church of the Holy Prince Feodor of NovgorodCerkov svyatogo blagovernogo knyazya Feodora NovgorodskogoReligionAffiliationRussian OrthodoxLocationLocationMonastyrki Embankment ru 1 Saint PetersburgArchitectureArchitect s Leonard Theodor Schwertfeger ru Pietro Antonio TrezziniStylePetrine BaroqueGroundbreaking1745Completed1770Websitewww lavra spb ruThe church was built as part of the southern extension from the Holy Trinity Cathedral creating a symmetrical effect The Feodorovskaya Church was designed as the counterpart to the Annunciation Church Construction work began in 1745 and took a number of years As completed the two storey building hosted two churches one on the upper floor dedicated to Feodor of Yaroslav ru and the ground floor dedicated to Saint John Chrysostom After repairs in the 1840s the churches were re consecrated This time the upper church was dedicated to Feodor of Yaroslav while the ground floor was dedicated to Saint Nicholas The church became a popular site for burials of leading churchmen Georgian and Imeretian royalty and other elite members of Saint Petersburg society In 1891 an extension was opened and also consecrated as a separate church in the name of Saint Isidore of Pelusium Over the next twenty five years around 150 burials took place The churches were closed in 1931 during the Soviet period and allocated to various organisations The church served as a dormitory and office space Almost all of the graves were destroyed during this period with the exception of two that were transferred to one of the lavra s cemeteries The church was returned to the monastery officials in 1996 and underwent a complex restoration being re consecrated in 2018 Contents 1 Design and construction 2 Soviet period 3 Post Soviet developments 4 Burials 4 1 Feodorovskaya Church 4 2 Isidorovskaya Church 5 References 6 External linksDesign and construction edit nbsp Icon mid 18th century Alexander Nevsky and his elder brother Feodor ru looking over the Alexander Nevsky Monastery The Feodorovskaya Church was dedicated to Feodor Construction of the southern wing of the monastery building from the Holy Trinity Cathedral to the southern boundary of the monastery began in 1725 overseen by Leonard Theodor Schwertfeger ru 1 Construction stalled in 1730 and only resumed in 1741 under Pietro Antonio Trezzini 2 The two storey wing was finally completed under the auspices of Ivan Rossi in 1748 The south eastern corner continued the style of the north Dukhovsky wing and like that wing was finished with a two storey church laid down on 9 August 1745 and intended to be the symmetrical counterpart of the Annunciation Church 1 3 4 Construction of the church lasted for seven years with further work to attach a staircase carried out between 1755 and 1761 by M D Rastorguev 1 5 The decoration was completed by 1766 2 As completed the church building contained two churches one on the ground floor and one on the upper floor 3 The icons were painted by Aleksey Antropov 1 The churches were only consecrated in 1770 the upper one in the name of Holy Prince Feodor of Yaroslav ru brother of Saint Alexander Nevsky and the lower one in the name of Saint John Chrysostom 1 2 3 In 1840 both churches underwent repairs The iconostases were replaced and new images by Dmitriy Antonelli ru were installed 1 5 The upper church was repainted and the painting The Descent from the Cross by Jacopo Bassano originally in the private church of Grigory Orlov was placed in it 1 5 The churches were then re consecrated the upper one on 11 June 1842 by Bishop Venedict ru of Revel in the name of Saint Nicholas and the lower church on 17 September 1842 by Bishop Afanasiy ru of Vinnytsia in the name of Holy Prince Feodor of Yaroslav 2 3 5 In 1867 the iconostasis and the royal doors of the Feodorovskaya Church were again refurbished 1 nbsp The funeral of Metropolitan Isidore ru in the Isidorskaya Church in 1892 From 1806 the lower church was the site of burials of Georgian and Imeretian princes and those of important members of Saint Petersburg society 2 3 In total around 100 burials took place in the Feodorovskaya Church though none have survived 1 On 5 October 1889 the metropolitan approved a suggestion by the Spiritual Council to construct an extension to the church to allow further burials This was built to a design by Grigory I Karpov and contained 167 spaces in its burial vault with a two tier iconostasis 1 On 6 October 1891 it was consecrated as a separate church in the name of Saint Isidore of Pelusium by Metropolitan Isidore ru 4 5 Over the 25 years of its operation some 150 burials took place mostly those of bishops and church leaders 3 4 Soviet period editThe churches remained open for a period after the Russian revolution though they had ceased to function by December 1930 5 On 2 September 1931 the Feodorovskaya churches were ordered to be closed by order by the Presidium of Lensovet ru 4 The Isidorovskaya church closed three months later 4 The Feodorovskaya Church was transferred to the Volodarsky District Council becoming a factory dormitory 2 The Isidorovskaya Church housed the Prometey Central Research Institute from 1931 to early 2000 1 The remains of Metropolitans Isidore and Palladiy were transferred to the Nikolskoe Cemetery while the rest of the graves were destroyed 1 4 Post Soviet developments editThe Feodorovskaya Church and wing of the monastery were returned to the Orthodox Church in 1996 2 Novices from the monastery established metalworking carpentry and jewelry workshops in the Feodorovskaya wing supporting a major restoration of the church 2 On 18 June 2017 the feast day of Feodor of Yaroslav the Bishop of Kronstadt Nazariy and the monastery monks performed the first prayer service after the church s restoration 2 The church was re consecrated on 2 January 2018 in the name of Feodor of Yaroslav and regular worship resumed 2 The grave of Yakov Rostovtsev one of the architects of the Emancipation reform of 1861 was re discovered in the lower church during restoration works 1 Burials editFeodorovskaya Church edit Image Name Born Died Occupation Reference nbsp David 1767 1819 Georgian prince writer and scholar regent of the Kingdom of Kartli Kakheti Memorial plaque and epitaph to the Annunciation Church in 1930 6 nbsp Mikhail Khomutov 1795 1864 Army officer general Ataman of the Don Cossacks 7 nbsp Prince Mirian of Georgia 1767 1834 Georgian prince son of King Heraclius II and Queen Darejan Dadiani Army officer major general senator translator poet 8 nbsp Yakov Rostovtsev 1803 1860 Army officer general Military education cadet corps administration Emancipation reform of 1861 9 nbsp Sergei Stroganov 1794 1882 Statesman art historian archaeologist collector and philanthropist Stroganov Moscow State Academy of Arts and Industry Governor General of Moscow 10 Isidorovskaya Church edit Image Name Born Died Occupation Reference nbsp Terty Filippov 1825 1899 Folklorist singer pedagogue Honorary member of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences journalist Orthodox Church official Chairman of the Russian State Control committee 11 nbsp Fyodor Geyden 1821 1900 Military commander Governor General of Finland 12 nbsp Eugen Maximilianovich 1847 1901 Duke of Leuchtenberg Army officer division general Russo Turkish War commander of the 37th Infantry Division 13 nbsp Vladimir Meshchersky 1839 1914 Journalist and novelist Grazhdanin 14 nbsp Palladiy 1827 1898 Orthodox bishop Metropolitan of St Petersburg and Ladoga member of the Holy Synod Remains transferred to the Nikolskoe Cemetery in 1932 15 nbsp Ivan Vyshnegradsky 1832 1895 Politician Finance minister member of the Council of Ministers of Public Instruction member of the State Council 16 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Fedorovskij korpus s cerkovyu sv Feodora i cerkovyu Isidora in Russian citywalls ru Retrieved 25 April 2019 a b c d e f g h i j Cerkov svyatogo blagovernogo knyazya Feodora Novgorodskogo in Russian lavra spb ru Retrieved 25 April 2019 a b c d e f Fedorovskaya usypalnica i usypalnica mitropolita Isidora in Russian lavra spb ru Retrieved 25 April 2019 a b c d e f Cerkov Feodora Yaroslavicha v Aleksandro Nevskoj lavre in Russian temples ru Retrieved 25 April 2019 a b c d e f Cerkvi blag kn FEODORA YaROSLAVIChA i prp ISIDORA PELUSIOTA v Aleksandro Nevskoj Svyato Troickoj lavre in Russian Sankt Peterburg Entsiklopediya Retrieved 25 April 2019 David Georgievich lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 NEKROPOL Fedorovskoj cerkvi Aleksandro Nevskoj Lavry in Russian poxoronka ru Retrieved 25 April 2019 Brosset Marie Felicite 1840 Inscriptions tumulaires georgiennes de Moscou et de St Petersbourg Georgian tombstone inscriptions from Moscow and St Petersburg Memoires de l Academie Imperiale des Sciences de Saint Petersbourg 6 in French St Petersbourg L academie Imperiale des Sciences 4 510 Rostovcev Yakov Ivanovich lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 Stroganov Sergej Grigorevich lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 Filippov Tertij Ivanovich lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 Gejden Fedor Loginovich lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 Lejhtenbergskij Evgenij Maksimilianovich knyaz Romanovskij lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 Mesherskij Vladimir Petrovich lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 Palladij Raev lavraspb ru Retrieved 15 April 2019 Vyshnegradskij Ivan Alekseevich lavraspb ru Retrieved 22 April 2019 External links editFeodorovskaya Church at the Alexander Nevsky Lavra 59 55 12 N 30 23 24 E 59 92000 N 30 39000 E 59 92000 30 39000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Feodorovskaya Church amp oldid 1126823257, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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