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St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery

St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery (Ukrainian: Михайлівський золотоверхий монастир, Mykhailivskyi zolotoverkhyi monastyr) is a monastery in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, dedicated to Michael the Archangel. It is located on the edge of the bank of the Dnieper, northeast of the Saint Sophia Cathedral. The site is located in the historic administrative Uppertown and overlooks Podil, the city's historical commercial and merchant quarter. The monastery has been the headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine since December 2018.

St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery
Києво-Михайлівський Золотоверхий чоловічий
Location within Ukraine
Monastery information
DenominationOrthodox Church of Ukraine
Established1108–1113
Dedicated toSaint Michael the Archangel
People
Founder(s)Sviatopolk II of Kyiv
AbbotAgapit (Humenyuk)  [uk] (Vicar)
ArchbishopEpiphanius I of Ukraine (Metropolitan)
Architecture
StatusActive
ArchitectIvan Hryhorovych-Barskyi (reconstruction)
Completion date1999 (reconstruction)
Site
LocationKyiv
CountryUkraine
Websitearchangel.kiev.ua

Originally built in the Middle Ages by the Kievan Rus' ruler Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych, the monastery comprises the cathedral church, the Refectory Church of the Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian, Kyiv [uk], built in 1713, the Economic Gate, constructed in 1760, and the bell tower, which was added in the 1710s. The exterior of the structure was remodelled in the Ukrainian Baroque style during the 18th century, while the interior kept its original Byzantine architecture.

Much of the monastery, including the cathedral church, was demolished by the Soviet authorities in the 1930s. The complex was rebuilt following Ukrainian independence in 1991; the cathedral reopened in 1999.

History edit

Early years edit

 
Nikolai Zakrevsky [ru]'s plan of Kyiv from 988 to 1240, from his Description of Kyiv (1868)

There were once many medieval churches in Kyiv, but nearly all of them were timber-built; none of those made of wood have survived.[1] During the 1050s, Iziaslav I (died 1078), the Grand Prince of Kyiv, built a monastery dedicated to Demetrius of Thessaloniki, close to the Saint Sophia Cathedral.[2][3] The heads of the monastery were the hegumens of Kyiv Pechersk Lavra.[4]

Construction edit

According to an 1108 annal from the Laurentian Codex, Iziaslav's son Sviatopolk II of Kyiv founded a stone church in Kyiv,[5] and it is thought that the monastery of St. Michael was founded at the same time.[6] Contemporary chronicles give no account of a monastery founded during this period, and it is likely that Svyatopolk built the cathedral for the new monastery within the precincts of the monastery of St. Demetrius. There are no historical references to St. Michael's before the end of the 14th century.[3] The monastery church was dedicated to Michael the Archangel, Iziaslav's patron saint.[2] but it may have been built to commemorate Svyatopolk's victory over the Polovtsians, as Michael the Archangel is the patron saint of war victories.[7]

The exact date of completion of St. Michael's is unknown.[8] It is considered to have been built between 1108 and 1113,[9] the year Svyatopolk was buried in the cathedral.[10] By tradition, the relics of Saint Barbara were transferred to the monastery during Svyatopolk's rule. He was a vassal prince of the kings of Poland, who gave him charters that allowed him the freedom to choose the monastery's hegumens.[6] The cathedral's dome was probably the first in Kyivan Rus to be gilded,[11] and the monastery was likely called "the Golden-Domed" for that reason.[6]

Medieval period edit

During the Middle Ages, the cathedral became the burial place of members of the ruling Izyaslavych family.[12] St. Michael's Monastery probably came under the control of the Pechersk Lavra in c. 1128.[13]

The monastery was looted and sustained damage during the Mongol invasion in 1240, when Kyiv was occupied.[14] It survived the Mongol invasion and subsequent political violence,[9] but afterwards ceased to function as an institution.[13] It was mentioned again in documents in 1398.[12] A 1523 charter of Sigismund I the Old described the monastery as being deserted in 1470.[15] It sustained further damage in 1482, during the raid on Kyiv by the Crimean Khan Meñli I Giray,[6] after which it was abandoned.[8] It had re-emerged by 1496,[16] shortly before the epithet "the Golden-Domed" started to be used.[13]

16th–17th centuries edit

 
The monastery depicted in part of Lieutenant Colonel Ushakov's plan of the city (1695)

During the 16th century, the monastery became one of the most popular and wealthiest in Ukraine.[2][11] From 1523, it was granted freedoms by Sigismund I, which encouraged restoration work to be undertaken.[8]

The Austrian soldier and diplomat Erich Lassota [de; uk] visited Kyiv in 1594. He wrote a diary of his travels, later published as Tagebuch des Erich Lassota von Steblau,[17] and described the monastery:[18][19]

It is a fine building. In the center it has a round cupola with a golden roof. The choirs are turned inwards and are also decorated with mosaics. The floor is laid out with small, colored stones. As one enters the church through the gates which are directly opposite the high altar, one sees on the left a wooden casket which holds the body of a saintly virgin, Barbara,68 a king's daughter: she was a young girl, about 12 years old, as can be judged by her size. Her remains, covered down to her feet with a piece of fine linen, have not decomposed yet as I myself could observe by touching her feet which were still hard and not deteriorated. On her head there is a gilded crown made of wood.

— Erich Lassota von Steblau (trans. Orest Subtelny), Habsburgs and Zaporozhian Cossacks (1594)

While most of the city's Orthodox clergy and monasteries converted to the Uniate Church in the 17th century, St. Michael's retained its Orthodox doctrine.[9] In 1612, the Polish king Sigismund III Vasa gave the monastery to the Uniate Church, which never took possession of the monastery and its estates.[6] A wooden refectory church was built in 1613.[12] In 1618, the religious figure Antony Grekovych [uk] tried to extend his power over the monastery. This provoked a sharp reaction—the Cossacks captured him and drowned him in a ditch opposite the Vydubychi Monastery.[20]

 
Athanasius Kalnofoisky [uk]'s 1638 map of Kyiv shows the monastery at the top

In 1620, St. Michael's hegumen Job Boretsky made the monastery's cathedral the seat of the re-established Metropolis of Kyiv, Galicia and all Rus'.[12] The monastery's bell tower and refectory were constructed during his hegumenship.[16] Under Boretsky, a convent was established close to the monastery, on the site of what is now Kyiv Funicular’s upper station.[15][note 1] During this period a printing house was established.[12] On both a map of Kyiv in Teraturgy (1638), written by the Kyiv monk Athanasius Kalnofoisky [uk], and on a Dutch drawing of 1651, the monastery is shown with its single dome.[15]

The work on rebuilding the medieval cathedral was mentioned by the French engineer Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan in his Description d'Ukranie (1650).[15] The Syrian traveller and writer Paul of Aleppo visited the monastery whilst in Kyiv during the summer of 1654.[21] He wrote that:[22]

The entire building is of wood, except the magnificent, lofty, and elegant church, which is of stone and lime, and has a high cupola shining with gold. This church consists only of one nave. It is lighted all round with glazed windows. The three churches I have been describing are all of one style of architecture, and of one age.

18th century edit

In 1712, the nuns of St. Michael's, who lived in a convent adjoining the monastery, were transferred to a separate institution in the Podil district of Kyiv.[6] The refectory church was built in 1713–1715 in the Ukrainian Baroque style from the bricks of Kyiv's Simeon Church, which had been destroyed by fire in 1676.[23]

The remains of 18th-century foundations for part of the western aisle of the cathedral have been preserved.[24] As indicated by the foundations of the cathedral’s extension in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, the northern aisle was added first, followed by the southern aisle in 1709, while the western aisle was built at a later date. It could be seen that the flying buttresses had been put in place to strengthen the structure where it is placed on low-strength soil. This had become necessary after the dismantling of the old walls of the original church when the cathedral was enlarged.[25]

During the late 18th century, a number of the monastery's properties were sold off.[13] All of its estates were lost in 1786, after a decree issued by Catherine the Great. As a result of the decree, the number of monks capable of being supported by the monastery was greatly reduced, and all new building work stopped.[26]

19th century edit

 
The monastery photographed in 1888

In 1800, the monastery became the residence of both of the bishop of Chernihiv and the vicars of the diocese of Kyiv.[6]

By the start of the 19th century, the monastery had a library, a teacher training school and a choir school. The growth of church choirs during this period meant that musical education became a priority for the authorities. The choir at St. Michael's at first recruited from Chernihiv. The most important choir in the Kyiv eparchy, St. Michael's was also one of the earliest to be formed in the city.[27] In 1886, a singing school was opened, which ran until start of the 1920s.[15] During the 19th century there were up to 240 monks at St. Michael's.[13]

In the 1880s, the Russian art historian Adrian Prakhov discovered some of the cathedral's 12th-century mosaics and frescoes, which he cleaned and restored. He made life-sized copies of them in oil, and photographed the restoration process. Copies of his work were exhibited in St. Petersburg in 1883 and in Odesa in 1884.[28]

In 1888, the cathedral was equipped with a hot air heating system, and provided with new flooring. The interior decoration was left unaltered. Construction work in the monastery precinct continued up to 1902 and included the construction of a large pilgrims’ hotel and a new building for the monks’ cells.[29]

20th century edit

The refectory church was damaged by fire in 1904.[23] In 1906, a medieval hoard was discovered in a casket on Trekhsvyatytelska Street, opposite the gates of St. Michael's. The hoard, which was dated to the 11th–12th centuries, was probably hidden in 1240, when Kyiv was sacked by the Mongols. Gold jewellery from the hoard is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York; other pieces are in the British Museum.[30]

The cathedral was nearly destroyed in the aftermath of World War I, when it was hit by shells fired by the Bolsheviks. One of the arches supporting the cathedral's central dome was destroyed, and large hole made in the side of the building.[31]

In 1919, the monastic buildings were appropriated by the new Soviet government.[31] In 1922, the monastery was closed by the authorities. The refectory was converted into the Proletarian Students' House, and used as sleeping quarters. The other buildings were used by various institutions, including a driver training school.[12][32]

 
The Bohdan Khmelnytsky Monument, with the monastery in the distance (late 19th century)
 
The monastery in the 1900s
 
The cathedral photographed in 1914
 
Cossacks of the 3rd Haydamatsky Infantry Regiment [uk] near the cathedral in 1918

Demolition edit

 
A submission by the Ukrainian architect Rykov Mykytovych [ru] for the planned Government Centre (1935)

In January 1934, the government decided to move the Ukrainian capital from Kharkiv to Kyiv, and in April that year a competition to build a Government Centre in Kyiv was announced, to be built on the site occupied by St. Michael's.[15] Many of the architects who entered the competition, such as Yakiv Shteinberg [uk], suggested the inclusion of a huge Lenin statue as a part of their overall plans for the complex.[33]

To prevent public protests against the need to demolish the monastery, the art critics Fyodor Ernst [uk], Mykola Makarenko [uk], and Stefan Taranushenko [uk] were arrested, and archaeologists, including Volodymyr Goncharov, condoned the proposed demolition of the cathedral, declaring that it was not worth preserving because it dated to no earlier than the 17th century.[15][34][note 2]

On 27 March 1934, the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine made the decision to remove the most important mosaics and frescoes, and then demolish the monastery.[12] On 26 June 1934, under the supervision of Vladimir Frolov [ru] of the Leningrad Academy of Arts, work began on the removal of the 12th-century Byzantine mosaics.[35] Covering an area of 45 square metres (480 sq ft), they were apportioned among the State Hermitage Museum, the Tretyakov Gallery, and the State Russian Museum.[36]

 
The ruins of the destroyed cathedral

The monastery was systematically demolished. During the spring of 1935, the golden domes of the cathedral were dismantled, and its iconostasis gates, Mazepa's reliquary, and other valuables were sold abroad or destroyed.[37] The bell tower was destroyed between 1934 and 1935, followed by the Economic Gate and the monastery's outer walls (1936–1937). The bishop's house, and farm buildings were dismantled in 1936.[12][37][38] The shell of the cathedral was dynamited on 14 August 1937.[16]

The refectory was left intact,[23] and two buildings used to house the monks, the choristers' building, part of the bell tower's lower southern wall, and the monastery's cellars also survived.[24][39] The foundations of the cathedral and the bell tower, and one part of the monastery wall were not completely demolished. Archaeologists have since found that the foundations of the old core of the cathedral were made of large rubble stone bound by opus signinum mortar, and that they were set in rubble-filled ditches that were reinforced with wood fastened with iron pins.[24]

Aftermath edit

Surveys of the monastery were made by the Institute of the History of Material Culture of the Ukrainian SSR between 1928 and 1937,[40] and following the demolition of the complex, excavations were carried out on the site of the monastery and in adjacent areas in 1938.[note 3] The information obtained consisted of documents and photographs of the interior and exterior of the cathedral, and of the excavation process.[40]

The new headquarters of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine was built on the site of the demolished Three Saints Church.[15][note 4] Work on the site of the demolished monastery was interrupted by the Second World War, but resumed after the liberation of Kyiv in 1944. The refectory church was then used as a canteen for archaeology students.[40] The empty site was converted into pitches,[15] and until the mid-1970s, the refectory was used as an indoor sports facility.[23]

The refectory and several of the other surviving buildings were threatened with destruction in the 1970s, when a projected Lenin Museum was planned to be built on the site. The refectory, at that time in a state of disrepair, was restored.[41]

Restoration edit

Plans and preparatory work edit

The idea to rebuild the monastery was first suggested in 1966 by the Russian architect Pyotr Baranovsky. It had public support, as well as the backing of the newly-founded Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Historical and Cultural Monuments [uk].[15] During the 1970s, architects and engineers worked out plans for reconstructing the monastery. The plans were only seriously considered after Ukraine became an independent state in 1991,[42] when there were calls for the monastery's full-scale reconstruction as part of the rebuilding of the country's lost cultural heritage.[43]

 
 
Drawings by Carl Peter Mazer of St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery and its cathedral (1851), which were used to help rebuild the complex

The Swedish artist Carl Peter Mazer visited had Ukraine in 1851, when he had made a series of architectural drawings. Included were depictions of St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery, and the interior of the cathedral. The drawings, which are a unique record of mid-19th century Kyiv and have great historical significance,[44][note 5] were accurate enough to be used to help rebuild the monastery.[45] Documentation produced by the Soviet architectural historian prior to the destruction of the monastery Ipolit Morgilevskyi [uk] was of sufficient accuracy to be used to rebuild the cathedral.[12]

To find its correct orientation and position, the restorers in 1981 devised a technique first used for the reconstruction of the city's Fountain of Samson. An old photograph of the cathedral taken from the 12th storey of the bell tower was used to produce an electronically-generated drawing of the cathedral's true position and orientation.[46]

The monastery was designed to include the Ukrainian Baroque additions it had possessed at the time of its destruction.[47] The restorers researched Baroque-style imagery to incorporate into those parts of the monastery known to have been built in the 17/18th centuries, such the cathedral's side aisles dedicated to Saint Barbara and Saint Catherine. The core of the cathedral's interior was planned to look as it might have appeared during the 11th century.[48] Drawings and photographs of the 12th-century mosaics and frescoes were used as templates, and the styles of the interiors of extant Rus' and Byzantine churches such as St. Sofia's Cathedral and the Church of St. Cyril was copied.[48][49]

The site was sanctified on 24 May 1997.[50] During excavation work, which was done by the NASU Institute of Archaeology between 1992 and 1995, over 300 graves were found, and a unique 11th-century carved slate slab was discovered.[51] During 1996/1997, the foundations were left exposed for a year, which resulted in damage being caused to the surviving foundations.[25]

Rebuilding the monastery edit

The western end of the boundary walls and the Economic Gate were rebuilt first, followed by the bell tower, which was then used as a temporary observation platform.[15][52] Later, the murals on the walls were restored.[38] Work on the rebuilding of the cathedral church officially began on 24 May 1997,[13] with building work continuing from November 1998 until the end of 1999.[53] It was decided to have a new church on the second floor of the bell tower, dedicated to the Three Saints. The church was consecrated in 1999 in memory of the destroyed church of the same name, and to all the Ukrainian victims of Soviet repression.[38]

 
The inauguration of the rebuilt bell tower in 1999

The new bells in the 48.28 metres (158.4 ft) high tower were rung for the first time on 30 May 1998.[54] Most of the bells, including the seven heaviest ones, were cast at Novovolynsk in western Ukraine. They weigh from 2 kilograms (4.4 lb) to 8 tonnes (7.9 long tons; 8.8 short tons).[55] The computer-controlled keyboard for operating the carillon of the bell tower [uk] is unique in Ukraine. It works 12 bells, tuned chromatically.[55] A new electronic clock with hands was installed. The chimes sound every hour, and can play 23 well-known Ukrainian melodies.[52]

The ceremony to sanctify the completed cathedral took place on 28 May 2000. Amongst those who attended was the Ukrainian president, Leonid Kuchma.[56] The cathedral was officially reopened on 30 May 1999, prior to the interior decorations, mosaics, and frescoes being completed on 28 May 2000. The side chapels were consecrated to Saint Barbara and Saint Catherine of Alexandria in 2001.[2]

The rebuilt cathedral has received criticism for being based on "renditions of scantily recorded and insufficiently studied predecessors", and for being constructed upon the historical remains of the destroyed cathedral.[57] According to the historian Olenka Z. Pevny, "the recreated cathedral not only memorializes the present view of the past, but draws attention to the perspective contemplation embodied in 'preserved' cultural-historical sites."[49]

The Museum of the History of St. Michael's Golden-domed Monastery in Kyiv [uk] is situated on the first floor of the bell tower.[58] It was established in 1998 to exhibit some of the many excavation finds.[51]

Role of the monastery in the religious life of Ukraine edit

With the restoration of Ukraine's independence, the refectory church was returned by the Ukrainian government to the religious community. It became one of the first churches in Kyiv to hold services in the Ukrainian language.[23]

The St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery became the headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine after the church's creation on 15 December 2018. St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery is used as the headquarters of the Metropolitan of Kyiv and all Ukraine.[59][60] The rector of the monastery has the rank of diocesan bishop.[61] The Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine, and the primate of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, is Epiphanius I of Ukraine.[62]

The vicar of St. Michael's is Agapit (Humenyuk)  [uk], who was appointed on 10 November 2009.[63] When the Kyiv Orthodox Theological Academy [uk] restarted in 1992, the refectory became the Kyiv Theological School's church.[23]

Architecture edit

 
Plan of the restored St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery:
  1. Cathedral of St. Michael the Archangel
  2. Monks' cells
  3. Bell tower; Holy Gate
  4. Economic Gate
  5. Choristers' cells
  6. Refectory with the Church of St. John the Theologian
  7. Pilgrims' hotel
  8. Hotels

The monastery's four main buildings were the domed cathedral, the refectory, the hotel accommodation (built in 1858), and the hegumen's accommodation block (built in 1857).[64] The 11th century church was located in what became the centre of the cathedral,[6] which originally had a single dome.[5] A miniature church, likely a baptistery, may have adjoined the cathedral from the south. As with the cathedral, the baptistery could have been topped by a dome.[65]

Dates, styles and architects edit

The names of the architects and artists involved in building the medieval monastery are unknown, but the icon painter Alypius of the Caves, who is associated with the paintings of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, is traditionally considered to have been involved in decorating the cathedral church.[66]

Cathedral (11th–20th century structure) edit

The 11th-century cathedral was modelled on the Assumption Cathedral (Kyiv) [uk] of the Monastery of the Caves. It was designed with the Greek cross plan prevalent during the time of the Kyivan Rus, adapted from churches built in the Byzantine style, and had six pillars.[5] It had three naves and three apses on the eastern side.[13] Maps of Kyiv from 1638 and 1651 show the cathedral with its single dome.[66] There was also a tower with a staircase leading to the choir loft; it was incorporated into the northern part of the narthex rather than protruding from the main block as was common at the time.[65] At the expense of the Cossack military commander Bohdan Khmelnytsky, the cathedral dome was gilded during the period when he was hetman of the Zaporozhian Host.[12]

 
Plan of the cathedral by Dmitry Aynalov and Egor Redin [ru], Ancient Monuments of Art in Kyiv (1899)

The building began to be enlarged during the 16th century, but the main changes to the cathedral occurred a century later.[2] Along with many of Kyiv's Byzantine churches, during the 17th and 18th centuries, the cathedral was remodeled, and given a Baroque exterior.[9] In 1715 and in 1731, two side aisles (St. Catherine's from the south and St. Barbara's from the north) were added to the original core of the building.[12] The St. Catherine aisle, which replaced the 15th-century Church of the Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem, was paid for by Peter I and Catherine I.[15] At the same time, large arches were pierced in the ancient northern and southern walls. The arches weakened the structure and necessitated the addition in 1746 of massive arc-boutants (flying buttresses) with single-storey rooms between them and two tall protrusions on the western facade.[12]

The cathedral was largely rebuilt between 1746 and 1754, which caused the central dome to split into four. A seven-domed structure was then created.[67] As the cathedral was enlarged over the centuries, it had the effect of making the interior darker.[5] The upper tiers of the 1718 iconostasis were removed in 1888, when the Eucharist mosaic was revealed. 1908, the cathedral was given underfloor heating, new parquet floors, and vestibules for the entrances.[15]

Rebuilt cathedral edit

In 1992, it was decided to excavate the site prior to rebuilding the monastery.[1] The Ukrainian government produced a draft program for the rebuilding of historical and cultural monuments, and in 1998 the List of Historical and Cultural Monuments Subject to Reproduction of Top Priority was approved.[1][note 6]

Part of the ancient cathedral was uncovered and found to be still intact; this today makes up a part of the current cathedral's crypt.[43]

Exterior edit

The cathedral could have been reconstructed to look as it last appeared in the 1930s, or as it was in 1840, when detailed records were made by the architect Pavlo Sparro [uk]. It was decided to restore it to its appearance when it was first remodelled in the Ukrainian Baroque style, so avoiding the need to reconstruct those extensions made after this period that had caused structural issues, or include outbuildings that had been added in later years.[46]

The total area of the cathedral is 74.5 square metres (802 sq ft); height 39 metres (128 ft); the central cross is 4.2 metres (14 ft) high.[68] The building's walls and vaults are constructed in brick.[46] The outside walls are blue, with those parts that project being painted white or gold.[68] The cathedral walls are approximately 50 centimetres (20 in) above the level of the 11th-century foundations. Both the original foundations and a staircase were not destroyed in the 1930s, and are able to be viewed.[46] The newly-made concrete foundations were designed reach a depth of 15 metres (49 ft), but still allowed the remains buried below ground to be inspected.[53]

 
The statue of the Archangel Michael on the roof of the cathedral
 
A cathedral facade
 
North-east view of the cathedral
 
Cathedral entrance
 
View from the bell tower
 
The view of the monastery from St. Sophia Cathedral

Interior edit

The interior was painted throughout, the central core being in the style of the ancient Rus frescoes, and the aisles in a baroque style. New mosaics were commissioned for the high altar and the main dome.[69]

The interior decorations, mosaics, and frescoes were not completed until 2000.[13] Some of the paintings were able to be recreated using archive photographs, but for those in St. Catherine’s aisle, 18th-century examples of paintings from other buildings had to be used.[70] The reconstruction of the cathedral's interior showed the effectiveness of advanced paint technologies. Keim’s process was used, which made the artworks more resistant to surface dirt, light, moisture, temperature variation, and the effects of microorganisms.[71]

In 2001 and 2004, 18 art works were returned to Kyiv from Moscow.[13]

 
 
 
 
Interior of the cathedral

Refectory edit

The refectory church is a small, one-story structure typical of Orthodox monasteries. The main entrance was originally on the northern side, and was lavishly decorated. In 1787, the church was described as being stone-built with a gilded cross above the bell tower, with a sheet-iron roof painted green, the main roof being iron and painted red. The iconostasis gate was carved and gilded. An architectural drawing made by Sparro in 1847 shows the building with three entrances.[23] In 1824, during the rectorship of Bishop of Chyhyryn Athanasius, the roof of the refectory, along with the iron roofs of other monastic buildings, was repainted green.[72]

In 1715–1718, at the expense of Kyiv Metropolitan Joasaf Krokovsky [uk], a single-tier carved wooden and gilded iconostasis was installed in the refectory church. It is considered that the church was built out of the brick of the Kyiv's Simeon Church at Kudriavka that burnt down in 1676.[72] A description of 1880 describes the iconostasis as having images of God the Father with the Holy Spirit, the Annunciation, Mary, the Nativity of Jesus, the four Evangelists, the Epiphany, and the Introduction of the Mother of God into the Church. During the renovation of the refectory in 1837, the shrine was decorated with a new wall painting. By 1845, the walls had been decorated with 23 icons. 1850s sources describe a painting of the Miracle of the fishes and the loaves on the ceiling.[23]

In 1904, the temple was significantly damaged by fire, but the shrine was soon restored.[72] With the arrival of Soviet power, the church was closed and converted into a dining hall and later a sports hall, and the religious painting was whitewashed.[72] In 1937 the refectory church of John the Theologian was the only sacred building that remained intact during the destruction of the monastery.[72]

In August 1963, the preserved refectory of the demolished monastery without its Baroque cupola was designated a monument of architecture of the Ukrainian SSR.[73] The building was restored between 1976 and 1981 under the leadership of the architect Valentyna Shevchenko,[72] when the ceilings were rebuilt, the 1780s southern extension was removed, and the roof replaced with a Baroque-style shingle roof.[72] As part of the 1970s restoration, the painting was restored, which was preserved only in the lower tier of the altar part; the composition depicts the Resurrection, the image of the four Evangelists, and two seraphim.[72] The preserved part of the wall painting was created by an unknown master in the style of classicism.[72] After the restoration, the building was used to house the Museum of Ceramics of the State Architectural and Historical Reserve "Sofia Museum". In 1998, the shrine was restored.[23]

With the restoration of Ukraine's independence, in the early 1990s, the church was returned to the religious community.[72] The Church of John the Theologian became one of the first churches in Kyiv where services were held in the Ukrainian language.[72] With the opening in 1992 of the Kyiv Theological Academy and Seminary within the walls of the ruined St. Michael's Monastery, the refectory church became the academic temple of the Kyiv Theological Schools.[72] In 1997–1998, the refectory church of John the Theologian became the first building to be restored in the architectural ensemble of the St. Michael Golden-Domed Monastery. Also at this time, the shrine was restored to its historical appearance, covering the roof and baths with shingles, a roofing material made of wedge-shaped boards.[72]

During the Revolution of Dignity, the temple was equipped with an improvised hospital where the wounded were treated.[72]

 
Refectory of St. John the Divine
 
Interior of the church
 
Roof detail
 
View of the exterior of the church, seen from the south-east

Other buildings edit

 
A 1911 lithograph of the monastery

A 1911 lithograph shows the arrangement of the precinct during early part of the 20th century, with the cathedral, the bell tower with the Holy Gate, the bishop's house with the Cross Church of St. Nicholas, the choristers’ cells, the refectory, and the cells for the older monks all depicted.[15]

The three-tiered bell tower built over the entrance to the monastery was the oldest example of a brick-built bell tower in Kyiv. In around 1631, Boretsky entered into an agreement with the "mason Peter Nimets, a citizen of Kyiv" to construct a brick bell tower. Instead, a three-storey wooden tower was built. This was replaced in 1716–1720 with the new structure, which had a gilded dome and was made with bricks taken from the destroyed St. George's Church in Oster, which had belonged to the monastery.[74] There were 23 bells.[38]

In the south-east part of the monastery precinct was a farm, gardens and an area for cultivating vegetables. The farmyard was surrounded by stables and a carriage house. Other buildings in the precinct included a hospital, a treasury building, and a school. The entrance to the monastery's cellars was close to the Economic Gate. In 1908, a pair of four-storey accommodation blocks were built, forming an independent block with their own courtyard.[15]

The monastery and the nunnery (before the nuns were relocated) were both surrounded by walls, and separated from each other by parallel rows of monastic cells.[15] The Economic Gate was a traditional mid-18th-century Ukrainian feature, being an arch flanked by columns and topped with a decorated pediment. Its position at an angle to the wall is unusual.[12]

 
The pre-1930s bell tower and cathedral depicted on a postcard
 
Taras Shevchenko (attributed), A View of St Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery in Kyiv (1846)
 
Economic Gate (undated)
 
The refectory church, photographed surrounded by the rubble of the cathedral
 
The choristers' accommodation
 
The monks' cells

Rebuilt bell tower edit

 
The rebuilt bell tower
 
The monastery clock

When excavated, the original foundations of the bell tower were discovered to be dilapidated, and the brick masonry was of indifferent quality. The foundations were therefore not used for the reconstructed building.[25]

The architectural style of the rebuilt bell tower resembles the over-gate bell towers of the Saint Sofia's Cathedral and the Vydubychi Monastery. The floors are made with reinforced concrete.[12] The structure is 48.28 metres (158.4 ft) tall. It was possible to reduce the thickness of the rebuilt walls from their original 3.0–4.0 metres (9.8–13.1 ft) to 0.51–0.77 metres (1 ft 8 in – 2 ft 6 in). The second tier, which is cubic, has four arches, and is narrower than the first tier.[39] The third tier is narrower still, and has a chiming clock and four windows.[75] It is crowned with a gilded dome.[39] The mechanism of the original clock broke already in the middle of the 19th century.[75] It never had dials, but in March 1998, it was decided to include dials for the tower's clock.[38]

Cathedral artworks (pre-1935) edit

Interior elements edit

The ancient cathedral's most striking interior elements were its 12th–century frescoes and mosaics.[13] In the 1880s, Prakhov formed a team of Kyiv artists, selected from the drawing school of the Ukrainian painter and art historian Mykola Murashko. In 1882, the team made copies of the cathedral mosaics; in 1884, the newly-discovered mosaics of the dome and the triumphal arch were drawn; and in 1888, drawings of the previously unknown frescoes were made.[76]

Few of the mosaics and frescoes escaped destruction when the cathedral was demolished.[77] Some of those that survived were shown in 1935 at an exhibition "Religion in the Service of Feudal Exploiters" in the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra.[32] During the Second World War, those mosaics and frescoes not previously removed to Moscow by the Soviets were taken to Germany by the Nazis. After the end of the war, they were returned to the Soviet Union.[13]

Frescoes edit

 
The fresco of Samuel, which once decorated the cathedral (c. 1112, Russian Museum)

From 1746–1754, during reconstruction work, subsidence in the aisles of the cathedral split the main dome into four, and the subsequent repair work caused irreparable damage to many of the frescoes.[15] At the beginning of the 19th century, the interior of the cathedral was decorated using oil-based paints.[78] In 1888, a number of 12th-century frescoes, previously hidden by other oil paintings, were discovered and cleaned by Prakhov. They were revealed hidden under layers of plaster after the iconostasis was dismantled. They were hidden again when the lower tiers of the iconostasis were reinstalled. In 1889, the frescoes above the iconostasis were painted over,[6][79][80] having been left unretouched by Prakhov as a "keepsake for posterity".[81]

Medallions were painted on the cathedral's pillars that depicted half-figures of Saint Sebastian along with names of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste, images of St. Barbara, the archangel Gabriel, Mary, the high priest Zechariah, the prophet Samuel, and a small number of unnamed figures.[82]

When the cathedral's mosaics were being removed in 1934, the frescoes were seen again. Some were taken away between June to mid-September that year; information about the means by which this was done is fragmentary. The work on removing them continued until August 1937, when the cathedral was destroyed. Those that had been taken were afterwards distributed among the museums of Kyiv and Moscow. As scaffolding was not installed prior to the cathedral being demolished, it is not thought any of the dome's frescoes were saved. Most of the Kyiv frescoes were taken to Germany during the war, which caused them to be damaged or lost. After the war the surviving works were returned to museums in Novgorod and Leningrad.[83]

Mosaics edit

Above the main altar was a collection of mosaics depicting the Last Supper and the Apostles of Jesus.[84] Paul of Aleppo described them he saw them in 1654:[85]

The large Tabernacle resembles that of St. Sophia, and of the Convent of Petcherske, and has three large windows ; and, in like manner, it is painted in the centre with the portrait of Our Lady, standing upright in her gold ornaments, and having both her hands raised and open. Next to her is Our Lord, handing to his Disciples, on both sides, the divine bread and blood. Below them are the portraits of Chief Priests, in rows, and all with inscriptions.

 
 
The Eucharist mosaic, installed on the second floor of the Saint Sophia Cathedral; the mosaic of St. Demetrius, installed by Sviatopolk II

The mosaics became so covered with dust and soot that many remained hidden and unrecorded until they were rediscovered by Prakhov. In 1888, by agreement with the diocese, he cleaned them using a soap and oil mixture, and removed the dirt between the cubes using dough-like plaster patches.[79] Prakhov's team made sketches of all the mosaics. Four large-format volumes of drawings and draft sketches were produced.[86] His work attracted the interest of the art historian Nikodim Kondakov, who was largely responsible for initiating the systematic study of medieval Russian art [ru].[87][note 7] Kondakov identified a clear artistic shift from the "Greek" mosaics and frescoes of the St. Sophia Cathedral to those of the Monastery of St. Michael, arguing that the figures at St. Michael's were more fluid than the static and stylized figures in St. Sophia's. Kondakov concluded this was due to the influence of Russian craftsmen, who were employed in addition to the Byzantine masters.[87]

In 1899, the art historian Dmitry Aynalov and the archaeologist Egor Redin [ru] noted the similarities between the Eucharist mosaic and one of the same scene in St. Sophia's Cathedral: “The general character of the style is lower than the Sophian mosaic; there are disproportionately smaller heads, arms and legs; the draperies are tangled. Technically, the mosaic is distinguished by colorless tones; it is dominated by white and red cubes."[5]

Beside the Eucharist mosaic, the only mosaics to have survived the demolition of the cathedral depict the figures of Saint Demetrius, Saint Stephen, and the Apostle Thaddeus.[77] The mosaic of Saint Demetrius was located on the southern edge of the north-eastern pillar, under the eastern arch of the main nave. In 1936, the mosaic was removed, set in cement, and taken to the Kyiv Museum of Russian Art [uk].[89] Some of the mosaics were deposited in the Tretiakov Gallery in Moscow and in St Sophia's Cathedral. The items at St. Sophia's were looted by the Nazis after they occupied Kyiv. After the end of the Second World War, they were returned by the Americans to the Soviet authorities. They were then reinstalled in St. Sophia's.[13]

Relics of St. Barbara edit

 
A photograph of the ceremonial kissing of the relics of St. Barbara

The monastery enjoyed the patronage of hetmans and other benefactors throughout the years. The chief attraction for pilgrims to the monastery were the relics of Saint Barbara, alleged to have been brought to Kyiv from Constantinople in 1108 by the wife of Sviatopolk II.[65] According to a tradition, St. Barbara's relics were hidden under the staircase when Kyiv was occupied by the Mongols.[46] At one time they were kept in a silver sepulcher donated by Ivan Mazepa in 1701. Weighing 32 kilograms (71 lb), the sepulcher represented the crowning achievement of Ukrainian jewellery-making.[90][note 8]

In 1870, about 100,000 pilgrims travelled to the monastery to see the relics.[65] Before the Russian Revolution in 1917, rings manufactured and blessed by the monks, known as St. Barbara's rings, were very popular. They were said to bring good luck and protect the wearer against witchcraft, but were also considered effective against illness and sudden death.[65]

The saint's relics were kept at various locations in the city after the monastery was destroyed. As of 2023, they are kept at St Volodymyr's Cathedral.[91]

Iconostasis edit

 
Volodymyr Nikolaev [uk], drawings of the cathedral's iconostasis (left) as built in 1718; (right) as lowered in 1888

Behind the sepulcher was a wooden five-tiered gold and silver-gilt iconostasis, donated by the Cossack nobleman Ivan Skoropadsky in 1718.[13] The iconostasis, which replaced the one installed in the cathedral in 1631,[12][34] was made by the Chernihiv craftsman Hryhoriy Petrov, and had icons painted by the Kyiv priest Stefan Lubenskyi.[12]

During renovation works in 1888, the iconostasis was planned to be replaced by a marble altar wall. Due to a lack of funds, the three upper tiers were removed, leaving the iconostasis in two tiers, as shown by a number of 20th-century photographs. A sketch of the iconostasis was made by Volodymyr Nikolaev [uk], the architect responsible for its partial dismantling in the 1880s, and the complete iconostasis is partly visible in a 1851 drawing by Mazer.[92]

The church historian Leonid Ivanovich Denisov [ru], writing in 1908, described the iconostasis in the cathedral church as having a golden icon of St. Michael the Archangel, sprinkled with diamonds and other gems, that had been given to the church by Tsar Alexander I in 1817.[10] The iconostasis was destroyed shortly before the cathedral was demolished.[92]

Other notable artworks edit

Paul of Aleppo described the cathedral's tabernacle as it was when he saw it in 1654:[85]

At the back of the left choir is a handsome tabernacle, facing your left-hand as you enter. It has an iron folding-door reaching from the top to the bottom, and beautifully divided into compartments, which are diversified with painted flowers and the figures of angels and saints, in the manner we described of St. Sophia.

— Paul of Aleppo, The Travels of Macarius (translated from the original in 1829)[21]

Other notable artworks in the cathedral included an icon of St. Barbara, adorned with stars, clasps and diamond rings, was given by Anna and Elizabeth of Russia, a gold lamp set with pearls and diamonds,[84] and five silver candlesticks commissioned by Hetman Mazepa in 1701.[34]

Books and documents edit

One of the achievements of the polymath Ivan Yakymovych Falkovskyi) [uk], who was head of the Kyiv Theological Academy, was to improve the monastery's library. As well as being the centre of the preservation of the city's historical manuscripts and books, the monastery was provided for the spiritual and educational needs of the people of Kyiv. Falkovskiy was responsible for the cataloguing of the books and manuscripts, which he numbered and listed alphabetically. He also worked on renovating the books in the library.[93]

The monastery library contained 4,200 books. In the 1860s, a free reading room was opened for the public. The Soviets confiscated the library's books, and moved them to the National Library of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences (now the National Library of Ukraine.[15] The monastery's surviving collection of old books, consisting of approximately 300 publications and 750 manuscripts, are now stored in the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine).[16] St. Michael's main library has more than 20,000 books.[94]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In 1712, the convent moved to Podil, and the land it occupied passed to the monastery.[15]
  2. ^ 19th-century architectural drawings and photographs of the cathedral had shown that parts of the building dated back to the 12th century, and that the northern, southern, and western façades were 17th- and 18th-century additions.[34]
  3. ^ The site was also excavated in 1940, and 1948–1949.[40]
  4. ^ The building, which was severely damaged by the invading Germans during World War II,[8] now houses the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[16]
  5. ^ mazer's drawings were shown at an 1999 exhibition in the National Art Museum of Ukraine in Kyiv.[44]
  6. ^ It has been calculated that more than 10,000 buildings were destroyed during the 20th century, including St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral, the Assumption Cathedral of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, and Chersonesus Cathedral.[1]
  7. ^ In 1888, Kondakov published his findings on the Russo-Byzantine monuments of Kyiv and Feodosia. The encyclopaedic Russkiia drevnosti v pamiatnikakh iskusstva (Russian Antiquities in Monuments of Art), written jointly by Kondakov and Ivan Ivanovich Tolstoy, was the first comprehensive history of medieval Russian art.[88]
  8. ^ Starting from the late 17th century a song honoring St. Barbara was sung in the cathedral of the monastery on each Tuesday just before the liturgy (Makarov 2002, p. 558)

References edit

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  4. ^ Klos 2019, pp. 7, 11.
  5. ^ a b c d e Aynalov & Redin 1899, pp. 55–57.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kivlytskyi 1894, p. 601.
  7. ^ D-Vasilescu 2018, p. 76.
  8. ^ a b c d Cross 1947, p. 57.
  9. ^ a b c d Watson, Schellinger & Ring 2013, p. 372.
  10. ^ a b Denisov 1908, p. 301.
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Sources edit

In English edit

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In Ukrainian edit

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  • Klos, Vitaly (2013). "Київський Свято – Михайлівський Золотоверхий чоловічий монастир УПЦ КП" [Kyiv St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church]. Encyclopedia of Modern Ukraine (in Ukrainian). Vol. 13. NASU Institute of Encyclopaedic Research. ISBN 978-966-02-2074-4. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
  • Makarov, A.N. (2002). Мала енциклопедія Київської старовини [Little Encyclopedia of Kyiv's Antiquities] (in Ukrainian). Kyiv: Dovira. ISBN 978-966-507-128-0.
  • Olianina, Svitlana (2012). "Втрачені українські іконостаси доби гетьманщини в архівних зібраннях києва" [Lost Ukrainian Iconostases of the Age of the Hetmanate in the Archive Collections of Kyiv] (PDF). Museology and Munistology (in Ukrainian). Institute of Cultural Studies of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (5): 144–150.
  • Perepeliuk, Olha (2021). "З Історії Хору Київського Михайлівського Золотоверхого Монастиря (ХIX — Початок ХX Століття)" [The History of the Kyiv Mykhailivskyi Zolotoverkhyi Monastery Choir (XIX — Early XX Centuries)] (PDF). Ethnological Notebooks (in Ukrainian). Lviv: Institute of Folklore of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. 5 (161): 1261–1266. doi:10.15407/nz2021.05.1261. ISSN 1028-5091.
  • Shevchenko, Valentina (1997). "Трапезна Михайлівського Золотоверхого монастиря" [The Refectory of the Mikhailovsky Golden-domed Monastery]. Пам’ятки України [Sights of Ukraine] (in Ukrainian). No. 1. Kyiv. pp. 46–51.

In Russian edit

  • Denisov, Leonid Ivanovich (1908). Православные монастыри Россiйской Имперiи [Orthodox monasteries of the Russian Empire] (in Russian). Moscow: A. D. Stupin.
  • Kivlytskyi, E. (1894). "Златоверхій Михайловскій муж- ской 1-го класса монастырь въ Кіевѣ" [St. Michael's Golden-Domed male 1st class monastery in Kyiv.]. Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). Vol. 12A. St. Petersburg: Semenovskaya Typolitography (I.A. Efron). Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  • Korenyuk, Y. A. (2014). "Фрески Михайловского Златоверхого собора в Киеве [The Frescoes of St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral in Kyiv]". В созвездии Льва. Сборник статей по древнерусскому искусству в честь Льва Исааковича Лифшица [In the Constellation Leo: A Collection of Articles on Ancient Russian Art in Honour of Leo Isaacovitch Lifshits] (PDF) (in Russian). Moscow: State Institute of Art. ISBN 978-5-98287-072-8.
  • Yunakov, Oleg (2016). Architect Joseph Karakis (in Russian). Almaz. ISBN 978-1-68082-000-3.

Further reading edit

  • Anon. (1889). Кіево-Златоверхо-Михайловскі м-рь [Kyiv-Golden-domed-Mikhailovsky Monastery] (in Russian). Kyiv: S. V. Kulzhenko. OCLC 144539761.
  • Krivorchuk, H.; Losytskyi, Yu., eds. (2011). (PDF) (in Ukrainian). Kyiv. p. Reproduction of Lost Pearls of Architecture: Mikhailivsky Zolotoverky. ISBN 978-966-2377-14-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2017.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Mytsyk, Y.A.; Sohan, S.V.; Mitsan, T.V.; Sinyak, I.L., eds. (2011). Documentary Heritage of St. Michael's Zolotoverky Monastery in Kyiv, 16th – 18th centuries; From the Foundations of (in Ukrainian). Kyiv: National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine / National Library of Ukraine / Institute of Ukrainian Archaeography.
  • Pokhilevich, L. I. (1865). Monasteries and Churches of Kyiv. Kyiv. pp. 16–36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

External links edit

  • . People's Catalog of Orthodox Architecture (in Russian). sobory.ru. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 21 June 2011. (self-published)
  • Information about the monastery from MD-Ukraine.
  • A 2022 recording of the bells of the monastery by Barny Smith.
  • A report on the role played by the monastery during the anti-government protests of 2014 from Reuters.
  • More information about the history of the refectory church from pslava.info (in Ukrainian)

50°27′21″N 30°31′22″E / 50.4557°N 30.5227°E / 50.4557; 30.5227

michael, golden, domed, monastery, ukrainian, Михайлівський, золотоверхий, монастир, mykhailivskyi, zolotoverkhyi, monastyr, monastery, kyiv, capital, ukraine, dedicated, michael, archangel, located, edge, bank, dnieper, northeast, saint, sophia, cathedral, si. St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Ukrainian Mihajlivskij zolotoverhij monastir Mykhailivskyi zolotoverkhyi monastyr is a monastery in Kyiv the capital of Ukraine dedicated to Michael the Archangel It is located on the edge of the bank of the Dnieper northeast of the Saint Sophia Cathedral The site is located in the historic administrative Uppertown and overlooks Podil the city s historical commercial and merchant quarter The monastery has been the headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine since December 2018 St Michael s Golden Domed MonasteryKiyevo Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij cholovichijLocation within UkraineMonastery informationDenominationOrthodox Church of UkraineEstablished1108 1113Dedicated toSaint Michael the ArchangelPeopleFounder s Sviatopolk II of KyivAbbotAgapit Humenyuk uk Vicar ArchbishopEpiphanius I of Ukraine Metropolitan ArchitectureStatusActiveArchitectIvan Hryhorovych Barskyi reconstruction Completion date1999 reconstruction SiteLocationKyivCountryUkraineWebsitearchangel wbr kiev wbr uaOriginally built in the Middle Ages by the Kievan Rus ruler Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych the monastery comprises the cathedral church the Refectory Church of the Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian Kyiv uk built in 1713 the Economic Gate constructed in 1760 and the bell tower which was added in the 1710s The exterior of the structure was remodelled in the Ukrainian Baroque style during the 18th century while the interior kept its original Byzantine architecture Much of the monastery including the cathedral church was demolished by the Soviet authorities in the 1930s The complex was rebuilt following Ukrainian independence in 1991 the cathedral reopened in 1999 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 1 1 Construction 1 2 Medieval period 1 3 16th 17th centuries 1 4 18th century 1 5 19th century 1 6 20th century 2 Demolition 2 1 Aftermath 3 Restoration 3 1 Plans and preparatory work 3 2 Rebuilding the monastery 4 Role of the monastery in the religious life of Ukraine 5 Architecture 5 1 Dates styles and architects 5 2 Cathedral 11th 20th century structure 5 3 Rebuilt cathedral 5 3 1 Exterior 5 3 2 Interior 5 4 Refectory 5 5 Other buildings 5 5 1 Rebuilt bell tower 6 Cathedral artworks pre 1935 6 1 Interior elements 6 1 1 Frescoes 6 1 2 Mosaics 6 2 Relics of St Barbara 6 3 Iconostasis 6 4 Other notable artworks 7 Books and documents 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 11 1 In English 11 2 In Ukrainian 11 3 In Russian 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editEarly years edit nbsp Nikolai Zakrevsky ru s plan of Kyiv from 988 to 1240 from his Description of Kyiv 1868 There were once many medieval churches in Kyiv but nearly all of them were timber built none of those made of wood have survived 1 During the 1050s Iziaslav I died 1078 the Grand Prince of Kyiv built a monastery dedicated to Demetrius of Thessaloniki close to the Saint Sophia Cathedral 2 3 The heads of the monastery were the hegumens of Kyiv Pechersk Lavra 4 Construction edit According to an 1108 annal from the Laurentian Codex Iziaslav s son Sviatopolk II of Kyiv founded a stone church in Kyiv 5 and it is thought that the monastery of St Michael was founded at the same time 6 Contemporary chronicles give no account of a monastery founded during this period and it is likely that Svyatopolk built the cathedral for the new monastery within the precincts of the monastery of St Demetrius There are no historical references to St Michael s before the end of the 14th century 3 The monastery church was dedicated to Michael the Archangel Iziaslav s patron saint 2 but it may have been built to commemorate Svyatopolk s victory over the Polovtsians as Michael the Archangel is the patron saint of war victories 7 The exact date of completion of St Michael s is unknown 8 It is considered to have been built between 1108 and 1113 9 the year Svyatopolk was buried in the cathedral 10 By tradition the relics of Saint Barbara were transferred to the monastery during Svyatopolk s rule He was a vassal prince of the kings of Poland who gave him charters that allowed him the freedom to choose the monastery s hegumens 6 The cathedral s dome was probably the first in Kyivan Rus to be gilded 11 and the monastery was likely called the Golden Domed for that reason 6 Medieval period edit During the Middle Ages the cathedral became the burial place of members of the ruling Izyaslavych family 12 St Michael s Monastery probably came under the control of the Pechersk Lavra in c 1128 13 The monastery was looted and sustained damage during the Mongol invasion in 1240 when Kyiv was occupied 14 It survived the Mongol invasion and subsequent political violence 9 but afterwards ceased to function as an institution 13 It was mentioned again in documents in 1398 12 A 1523 charter of Sigismund I the Old described the monastery as being deserted in 1470 15 It sustained further damage in 1482 during the raid on Kyiv by the Crimean Khan Menli I Giray 6 after which it was abandoned 8 It had re emerged by 1496 16 shortly before the epithet the Golden Domed started to be used 13 16th 17th centuries edit nbsp The monastery depicted in part of Lieutenant Colonel Ushakov s plan of the city 1695 During the 16th century the monastery became one of the most popular and wealthiest in Ukraine 2 11 From 1523 it was granted freedoms by Sigismund I which encouraged restoration work to be undertaken 8 The Austrian soldier and diplomat Erich Lassota de uk visited Kyiv in 1594 He wrote a diary of his travels later published as Tagebuch des Erich Lassota von Steblau 17 and described the monastery 18 19 It is a fine building In the center it has a round cupola with a golden roof The choirs are turned inwards and are also decorated with mosaics The floor is laid out with small colored stones As one enters the church through the gates which are directly opposite the high altar one sees on the left a wooden casket which holds the body of a saintly virgin Barbara 68 a king s daughter she was a young girl about 12 years old as can be judged by her size Her remains covered down to her feet with a piece of fine linen have not decomposed yet as I myself could observe by touching her feet which were still hard and not deteriorated On her head there is a gilded crown made of wood Erich Lassota von Steblau trans Orest Subtelny Habsburgs and Zaporozhian Cossacks 1594 While most of the city s Orthodox clergy and monasteries converted to the Uniate Church in the 17th century St Michael s retained its Orthodox doctrine 9 In 1612 the Polish king Sigismund III Vasa gave the monastery to the Uniate Church which never took possession of the monastery and its estates 6 A wooden refectory church was built in 1613 12 In 1618 the religious figure Antony Grekovych uk tried to extend his power over the monastery This provoked a sharp reaction the Cossacks captured him and drowned him in a ditch opposite the Vydubychi Monastery 20 nbsp Athanasius Kalnofoisky uk s 1638 map of Kyiv shows the monastery at the topIn 1620 St Michael s hegumen Job Boretsky made the monastery s cathedral the seat of the re established Metropolis of Kyiv Galicia and all Rus 12 The monastery s bell tower and refectory were constructed during his hegumenship 16 Under Boretsky a convent was established close to the monastery on the site of what is now Kyiv Funicular s upper station 15 note 1 During this period a printing house was established 12 On both a map of Kyiv in Teraturgy 1638 written by the Kyiv monk Athanasius Kalnofoisky uk and on a Dutch drawing of 1651 the monastery is shown with its single dome 15 The work on rebuilding the medieval cathedral was mentioned by the French engineer Guillaume Le Vasseur de Beauplan in his Description d Ukranie 1650 15 The Syrian traveller and writer Paul of Aleppo visited the monastery whilst in Kyiv during the summer of 1654 21 He wrote that 22 The entire building is of wood except the magnificent lofty and elegant church which is of stone and lime and has a high cupola shining with gold This church consists only of one nave It is lighted all round with glazed windows The three churches I have been describing are all of one style of architecture and of one age 18th century edit In 1712 the nuns of St Michael s who lived in a convent adjoining the monastery were transferred to a separate institution in the Podil district of Kyiv 6 The refectory church was built in 1713 1715 in the Ukrainian Baroque style from the bricks of Kyiv s Simeon Church which had been destroyed by fire in 1676 23 The remains of 18th century foundations for part of the western aisle of the cathedral have been preserved 24 As indicated by the foundations of the cathedral s extension in the late 17th and early 18th centuries the northern aisle was added first followed by the southern aisle in 1709 while the western aisle was built at a later date It could be seen that the flying buttresses had been put in place to strengthen the structure where it is placed on low strength soil This had become necessary after the dismantling of the old walls of the original church when the cathedral was enlarged 25 During the late 18th century a number of the monastery s properties were sold off 13 All of its estates were lost in 1786 after a decree issued by Catherine the Great As a result of the decree the number of monks capable of being supported by the monastery was greatly reduced and all new building work stopped 26 19th century edit nbsp The monastery photographed in 1888In 1800 the monastery became the residence of both of the bishop of Chernihiv and the vicars of the diocese of Kyiv 6 By the start of the 19th century the monastery had a library a teacher training school and a choir school The growth of church choirs during this period meant that musical education became a priority for the authorities The choir at St Michael s at first recruited from Chernihiv The most important choir in the Kyiv eparchy St Michael s was also one of the earliest to be formed in the city 27 In 1886 a singing school was opened which ran until start of the 1920s 15 During the 19th century there were up to 240 monks at St Michael s 13 In the 1880s the Russian art historian Adrian Prakhov discovered some of the cathedral s 12th century mosaics and frescoes which he cleaned and restored He made life sized copies of them in oil and photographed the restoration process Copies of his work were exhibited in St Petersburg in 1883 and in Odesa in 1884 28 In 1888 the cathedral was equipped with a hot air heating system and provided with new flooring The interior decoration was left unaltered Construction work in the monastery precinct continued up to 1902 and included the construction of a large pilgrims hotel and a new building for the monks cells 29 20th century edit The refectory church was damaged by fire in 1904 23 In 1906 a medieval hoard was discovered in a casket on Trekhsvyatytelska Street opposite the gates of St Michael s The hoard which was dated to the 11th 12th centuries was probably hidden in 1240 when Kyiv was sacked by the Mongols Gold jewellery from the hoard is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York other pieces are in the British Museum 30 The cathedral was nearly destroyed in the aftermath of World War I when it was hit by shells fired by the Bolsheviks One of the arches supporting the cathedral s central dome was destroyed and large hole made in the side of the building 31 In 1919 the monastic buildings were appropriated by the new Soviet government 31 In 1922 the monastery was closed by the authorities The refectory was converted into the Proletarian Students House and used as sleeping quarters The other buildings were used by various institutions including a driver training school 12 32 nbsp The Bohdan Khmelnytsky Monument with the monastery in the distance late 19th century nbsp The monastery in the 1900s nbsp The cathedral photographed in 1914 nbsp Cossacks of the 3rd Haydamatsky Infantry Regiment uk near the cathedral in 1918Demolition editMain article Demolition of St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery nbsp A submission by the Ukrainian architect Rykov Mykytovych ru for the planned Government Centre 1935 In January 1934 the government decided to move the Ukrainian capital from Kharkiv to Kyiv and in April that year a competition to build a Government Centre in Kyiv was announced to be built on the site occupied by St Michael s 15 Many of the architects who entered the competition such as Yakiv Shteinberg uk suggested the inclusion of a huge Lenin statue as a part of their overall plans for the complex 33 To prevent public protests against the need to demolish the monastery the art critics Fyodor Ernst uk Mykola Makarenko uk and Stefan Taranushenko uk were arrested and archaeologists including Volodymyr Goncharov condoned the proposed demolition of the cathedral declaring that it was not worth preserving because it dated to no earlier than the 17th century 15 34 note 2 On 27 March 1934 the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine made the decision to remove the most important mosaics and frescoes and then demolish the monastery 12 On 26 June 1934 under the supervision of Vladimir Frolov ru of the Leningrad Academy of Arts work began on the removal of the 12th century Byzantine mosaics 35 Covering an area of 45 square metres 480 sq ft they were apportioned among the State Hermitage Museum the Tretyakov Gallery and the State Russian Museum 36 nbsp The ruins of the destroyed cathedralThe monastery was systematically demolished During the spring of 1935 the golden domes of the cathedral were dismantled and its iconostasis gates Mazepa s reliquary and other valuables were sold abroad or destroyed 37 The bell tower was destroyed between 1934 and 1935 followed by the Economic Gate and the monastery s outer walls 1936 1937 The bishop s house and farm buildings were dismantled in 1936 12 37 38 The shell of the cathedral was dynamited on 14 August 1937 16 The refectory was left intact 23 and two buildings used to house the monks the choristers building part of the bell tower s lower southern wall and the monastery s cellars also survived 24 39 The foundations of the cathedral and the bell tower and one part of the monastery wall were not completely demolished Archaeologists have since found that the foundations of the old core of the cathedral were made of large rubble stone bound by opus signinum mortar and that they were set in rubble filled ditches that were reinforced with wood fastened with iron pins 24 Aftermath edit Surveys of the monastery were made by the Institute of the History of Material Culture of the Ukrainian SSR between 1928 and 1937 40 and following the demolition of the complex excavations were carried out on the site of the monastery and in adjacent areas in 1938 note 3 The information obtained consisted of documents and photographs of the interior and exterior of the cathedral and of the excavation process 40 The new headquarters of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine was built on the site of the demolished Three Saints Church 15 note 4 Work on the site of the demolished monastery was interrupted by the Second World War but resumed after the liberation of Kyiv in 1944 The refectory church was then used as a canteen for archaeology students 40 The empty site was converted into pitches 15 and until the mid 1970s the refectory was used as an indoor sports facility 23 The refectory and several of the other surviving buildings were threatened with destruction in the 1970s when a projected Lenin Museum was planned to be built on the site The refectory at that time in a state of disrepair was restored 41 Restoration editPlans and preparatory work edit The idea to rebuild the monastery was first suggested in 1966 by the Russian architect Pyotr Baranovsky It had public support as well as the backing of the newly founded Ukrainian Society for the Protection of Historical and Cultural Monuments uk 15 During the 1970s architects and engineers worked out plans for reconstructing the monastery The plans were only seriously considered after Ukraine became an independent state in 1991 42 when there were calls for the monastery s full scale reconstruction as part of the rebuilding of the country s lost cultural heritage 43 nbsp nbsp Drawings by Carl Peter Mazer of St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery and its cathedral 1851 which were used to help rebuild the complex The Swedish artist Carl Peter Mazer visited had Ukraine in 1851 when he had made a series of architectural drawings Included were depictions of St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery and the interior of the cathedral The drawings which are a unique record of mid 19th century Kyiv and have great historical significance 44 note 5 were accurate enough to be used to help rebuild the monastery 45 Documentation produced by the Soviet architectural historian prior to the destruction of the monastery Ipolit Morgilevskyi uk was of sufficient accuracy to be used to rebuild the cathedral 12 To find its correct orientation and position the restorers in 1981 devised a technique first used for the reconstruction of the city s Fountain of Samson An old photograph of the cathedral taken from the 12th storey of the bell tower was used to produce an electronically generated drawing of the cathedral s true position and orientation 46 The monastery was designed to include the Ukrainian Baroque additions it had possessed at the time of its destruction 47 The restorers researched Baroque style imagery to incorporate into those parts of the monastery known to have been built in the 17 18th centuries such the cathedral s side aisles dedicated to Saint Barbara and Saint Catherine The core of the cathedral s interior was planned to look as it might have appeared during the 11th century 48 Drawings and photographs of the 12th century mosaics and frescoes were used as templates and the styles of the interiors of extant Rus and Byzantine churches such as St Sofia s Cathedral and the Church of St Cyril was copied 48 49 The site was sanctified on 24 May 1997 50 During excavation work which was done by the NASU Institute of Archaeology between 1992 and 1995 over 300 graves were found and a unique 11th century carved slate slab was discovered 51 During 1996 1997 the foundations were left exposed for a year which resulted in damage being caused to the surviving foundations 25 Rebuilding the monastery edit The western end of the boundary walls and the Economic Gate were rebuilt first followed by the bell tower which was then used as a temporary observation platform 15 52 Later the murals on the walls were restored 38 Work on the rebuilding of the cathedral church officially began on 24 May 1997 13 with building work continuing from November 1998 until the end of 1999 53 It was decided to have a new church on the second floor of the bell tower dedicated to the Three Saints The church was consecrated in 1999 in memory of the destroyed church of the same name and to all the Ukrainian victims of Soviet repression 38 nbsp The inauguration of the rebuilt bell tower in 1999The new bells in the 48 28 metres 158 4 ft high tower were rung for the first time on 30 May 1998 54 Most of the bells including the seven heaviest ones were cast at Novovolynsk in western Ukraine They weigh from 2 kilograms 4 4 lb to 8 tonnes 7 9 long tons 8 8 short tons 55 The computer controlled keyboard for operating the carillon of the bell tower uk is unique in Ukraine It works 12 bells tuned chromatically 55 A new electronic clock with hands was installed The chimes sound every hour and can play 23 well known Ukrainian melodies 52 The ceremony to sanctify the completed cathedral took place on 28 May 2000 Amongst those who attended was the Ukrainian president Leonid Kuchma 56 The cathedral was officially reopened on 30 May 1999 prior to the interior decorations mosaics and frescoes being completed on 28 May 2000 The side chapels were consecrated to Saint Barbara and Saint Catherine of Alexandria in 2001 2 The rebuilt cathedral has received criticism for being based on renditions of scantily recorded and insufficiently studied predecessors and for being constructed upon the historical remains of the destroyed cathedral 57 According to the historian Olenka Z Pevny the recreated cathedral not only memorializes the present view of the past but draws attention to the perspective contemplation embodied in preserved cultural historical sites 49 The Museum of the History of St Michael s Golden domed Monastery in Kyiv uk is situated on the first floor of the bell tower 58 It was established in 1998 to exhibit some of the many excavation finds 51 Role of the monastery in the religious life of Ukraine editWith the restoration of Ukraine s independence the refectory church was returned by the Ukrainian government to the religious community It became one of the first churches in Kyiv to hold services in the Ukrainian language 23 The St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery became the headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine after the church s creation on 15 December 2018 St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery is used as the headquarters of the Metropolitan of Kyiv and all Ukraine 59 60 The rector of the monastery has the rank of diocesan bishop 61 The Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine and the primate of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine is Epiphanius I of Ukraine 62 The vicar of St Michael s is Agapit Humenyuk uk who was appointed on 10 November 2009 63 When the Kyiv Orthodox Theological Academy uk restarted in 1992 the refectory became the Kyiv Theological School s church 23 Architecture edit nbsp Plan of the restored St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Cathedral of St Michael the ArchangelMonks cellsBell tower Holy GateEconomic GateChoristers cellsRefectory with the Church of St John the TheologianPilgrims hotelHotelsThe monastery s four main buildings were the domed cathedral the refectory the hotel accommodation built in 1858 and the hegumen s accommodation block built in 1857 64 The 11th century church was located in what became the centre of the cathedral 6 which originally had a single dome 5 A miniature church likely a baptistery may have adjoined the cathedral from the south As with the cathedral the baptistery could have been topped by a dome 65 Dates styles and architects edit The names of the architects and artists involved in building the medieval monastery are unknown but the icon painter Alypius of the Caves who is associated with the paintings of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra is traditionally considered to have been involved in decorating the cathedral church 66 Cathedral 11th 20th century structure edit The 11th century cathedral was modelled on the Assumption Cathedral Kyiv uk of the Monastery of the Caves It was designed with the Greek cross plan prevalent during the time of the Kyivan Rus adapted from churches built in the Byzantine style and had six pillars 5 It had three naves and three apses on the eastern side 13 Maps of Kyiv from 1638 and 1651 show the cathedral with its single dome 66 There was also a tower with a staircase leading to the choir loft it was incorporated into the northern part of the narthex rather than protruding from the main block as was common at the time 65 At the expense of the Cossack military commander Bohdan Khmelnytsky the cathedral dome was gilded during the period when he was hetman of the Zaporozhian Host 12 nbsp Plan of the cathedral by Dmitry Aynalov and Egor Redin ru Ancient Monuments of Art in Kyiv 1899 The building began to be enlarged during the 16th century but the main changes to the cathedral occurred a century later 2 Along with many of Kyiv s Byzantine churches during the 17th and 18th centuries the cathedral was remodeled and given a Baroque exterior 9 In 1715 and in 1731 two side aisles St Catherine s from the south and St Barbara s from the north were added to the original core of the building 12 The St Catherine aisle which replaced the 15th century Church of the Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem was paid for by Peter I and Catherine I 15 At the same time large arches were pierced in the ancient northern and southern walls The arches weakened the structure and necessitated the addition in 1746 of massive arc boutants flying buttresses with single storey rooms between them and two tall protrusions on the western facade 12 The cathedral was largely rebuilt between 1746 and 1754 which caused the central dome to split into four A seven domed structure was then created 67 As the cathedral was enlarged over the centuries it had the effect of making the interior darker 5 The upper tiers of the 1718 iconostasis were removed in 1888 when the Eucharist mosaic was revealed 1908 the cathedral was given underfloor heating new parquet floors and vestibules for the entrances 15 Rebuilt cathedral edit In 1992 it was decided to excavate the site prior to rebuilding the monastery 1 The Ukrainian government produced a draft program for the rebuilding of historical and cultural monuments and in 1998 the List of Historical and Cultural Monuments Subject to Reproduction of Top Priority was approved 1 note 6 Part of the ancient cathedral was uncovered and found to be still intact this today makes up a part of the current cathedral s crypt 43 Exterior edit The cathedral could have been reconstructed to look as it last appeared in the 1930s or as it was in 1840 when detailed records were made by the architect Pavlo Sparro uk It was decided to restore it to its appearance when it was first remodelled in the Ukrainian Baroque style so avoiding the need to reconstruct those extensions made after this period that had caused structural issues or include outbuildings that had been added in later years 46 The total area of the cathedral is 74 5 square metres 802 sq ft height 39 metres 128 ft the central cross is 4 2 metres 14 ft high 68 The building s walls and vaults are constructed in brick 46 The outside walls are blue with those parts that project being painted white or gold 68 The cathedral walls are approximately 50 centimetres 20 in above the level of the 11th century foundations Both the original foundations and a staircase were not destroyed in the 1930s and are able to be viewed 46 The newly made concrete foundations were designed reach a depth of 15 metres 49 ft but still allowed the remains buried below ground to be inspected 53 nbsp The statue of the Archangel Michael on the roof of the cathedral nbsp A cathedral facade nbsp North east view of the cathedral nbsp Cathedral entrance nbsp View from the bell tower nbsp The view of the monastery from St Sophia Cathedral Interior edit The interior was painted throughout the central core being in the style of the ancient Rus frescoes and the aisles in a baroque style New mosaics were commissioned for the high altar and the main dome 69 The interior decorations mosaics and frescoes were not completed until 2000 13 Some of the paintings were able to be recreated using archive photographs but for those in St Catherine s aisle 18th century examples of paintings from other buildings had to be used 70 The reconstruction of the cathedral s interior showed the effectiveness of advanced paint technologies Keim s process was used which made the artworks more resistant to surface dirt light moisture temperature variation and the effects of microorganisms 71 In 2001 and 2004 18 art works were returned to Kyiv from Moscow 13 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Interior of the cathedral Refectory edit The refectory church is a small one story structure typical of Orthodox monasteries The main entrance was originally on the northern side and was lavishly decorated In 1787 the church was described as being stone built with a gilded cross above the bell tower with a sheet iron roof painted green the main roof being iron and painted red The iconostasis gate was carved and gilded An architectural drawing made by Sparro in 1847 shows the building with three entrances 23 In 1824 during the rectorship of Bishop of Chyhyryn Athanasius the roof of the refectory along with the iron roofs of other monastic buildings was repainted green 72 In 1715 1718 at the expense of Kyiv Metropolitan Joasaf Krokovsky uk a single tier carved wooden and gilded iconostasis was installed in the refectory church It is considered that the church was built out of the brick of the Kyiv s Simeon Church at Kudriavka that burnt down in 1676 72 A description of 1880 describes the iconostasis as having images of God the Father with the Holy Spirit the Annunciation Mary the Nativity of Jesus the four Evangelists the Epiphany and the Introduction of the Mother of God into the Church During the renovation of the refectory in 1837 the shrine was decorated with a new wall painting By 1845 the walls had been decorated with 23 icons 1850s sources describe a painting of the Miracle of the fishes and the loaves on the ceiling 23 In 1904 the temple was significantly damaged by fire but the shrine was soon restored 72 With the arrival of Soviet power the church was closed and converted into a dining hall and later a sports hall and the religious painting was whitewashed 72 In 1937 the refectory church of John the Theologian was the only sacred building that remained intact during the destruction of the monastery 72 In August 1963 the preserved refectory of the demolished monastery without its Baroque cupola was designated a monument of architecture of the Ukrainian SSR 73 The building was restored between 1976 and 1981 under the leadership of the architect Valentyna Shevchenko 72 when the ceilings were rebuilt the 1780s southern extension was removed and the roof replaced with a Baroque style shingle roof 72 As part of the 1970s restoration the painting was restored which was preserved only in the lower tier of the altar part the composition depicts the Resurrection the image of the four Evangelists and two seraphim 72 The preserved part of the wall painting was created by an unknown master in the style of classicism 72 After the restoration the building was used to house the Museum of Ceramics of the State Architectural and Historical Reserve Sofia Museum In 1998 the shrine was restored 23 With the restoration of Ukraine s independence in the early 1990s the church was returned to the religious community 72 The Church of John the Theologian became one of the first churches in Kyiv where services were held in the Ukrainian language 72 With the opening in 1992 of the Kyiv Theological Academy and Seminary within the walls of the ruined St Michael s Monastery the refectory church became the academic temple of the Kyiv Theological Schools 72 In 1997 1998 the refectory church of John the Theologian became the first building to be restored in the architectural ensemble of the St Michael Golden Domed Monastery Also at this time the shrine was restored to its historical appearance covering the roof and baths with shingles a roofing material made of wedge shaped boards 72 During the Revolution of Dignity the temple was equipped with an improvised hospital where the wounded were treated 72 nbsp Refectory of St John the Divine nbsp Interior of the church nbsp Roof detail nbsp View of the exterior of the church seen from the south east Other buildings edit nbsp A 1911 lithograph of the monasteryA 1911 lithograph shows the arrangement of the precinct during early part of the 20th century with the cathedral the bell tower with the Holy Gate the bishop s house with the Cross Church of St Nicholas the choristers cells the refectory and the cells for the older monks all depicted 15 The three tiered bell tower built over the entrance to the monastery was the oldest example of a brick built bell tower in Kyiv In around 1631 Boretsky entered into an agreement with the mason Peter Nimets a citizen of Kyiv to construct a brick bell tower Instead a three storey wooden tower was built This was replaced in 1716 1720 with the new structure which had a gilded dome and was made with bricks taken from the destroyed St George s Church in Oster which had belonged to the monastery 74 There were 23 bells 38 In the south east part of the monastery precinct was a farm gardens and an area for cultivating vegetables The farmyard was surrounded by stables and a carriage house Other buildings in the precinct included a hospital a treasury building and a school The entrance to the monastery s cellars was close to the Economic Gate In 1908 a pair of four storey accommodation blocks were built forming an independent block with their own courtyard 15 The monastery and the nunnery before the nuns were relocated were both surrounded by walls and separated from each other by parallel rows of monastic cells 15 The Economic Gate was a traditional mid 18th century Ukrainian feature being an arch flanked by columns and topped with a decorated pediment Its position at an angle to the wall is unusual 12 nbsp The pre 1930s bell tower and cathedral depicted on a postcard nbsp Taras Shevchenko attributed A View of St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery in Kyiv 1846 nbsp Economic Gate undated nbsp The refectory church photographed surrounded by the rubble of the cathedral nbsp The choristers accommodation nbsp The monks cells Rebuilt bell tower edit nbsp The rebuilt bell tower nbsp The monastery clock When excavated the original foundations of the bell tower were discovered to be dilapidated and the brick masonry was of indifferent quality The foundations were therefore not used for the reconstructed building 25 The architectural style of the rebuilt bell tower resembles the over gate bell towers of the Saint Sofia s Cathedral and the Vydubychi Monastery The floors are made with reinforced concrete 12 The structure is 48 28 metres 158 4 ft tall It was possible to reduce the thickness of the rebuilt walls from their original 3 0 4 0 metres 9 8 13 1 ft to 0 51 0 77 metres 1 ft 8 in 2 ft 6 in The second tier which is cubic has four arches and is narrower than the first tier 39 The third tier is narrower still and has a chiming clock and four windows 75 It is crowned with a gilded dome 39 The mechanism of the original clock broke already in the middle of the 19th century 75 It never had dials but in March 1998 it was decided to include dials for the tower s clock 38 Cathedral artworks pre 1935 editInterior elements edit The ancient cathedral s most striking interior elements were its 12th century frescoes and mosaics 13 In the 1880s Prakhov formed a team of Kyiv artists selected from the drawing school of the Ukrainian painter and art historian Mykola Murashko In 1882 the team made copies of the cathedral mosaics in 1884 the newly discovered mosaics of the dome and the triumphal arch were drawn and in 1888 drawings of the previously unknown frescoes were made 76 Few of the mosaics and frescoes escaped destruction when the cathedral was demolished 77 Some of those that survived were shown in 1935 at an exhibition Religion in the Service of Feudal Exploiters in the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra 32 During the Second World War those mosaics and frescoes not previously removed to Moscow by the Soviets were taken to Germany by the Nazis After the end of the war they were returned to the Soviet Union 13 Frescoes edit nbsp The fresco of Samuel which once decorated the cathedral c 1112 Russian Museum From 1746 1754 during reconstruction work subsidence in the aisles of the cathedral split the main dome into four and the subsequent repair work caused irreparable damage to many of the frescoes 15 At the beginning of the 19th century the interior of the cathedral was decorated using oil based paints 78 In 1888 a number of 12th century frescoes previously hidden by other oil paintings were discovered and cleaned by Prakhov They were revealed hidden under layers of plaster after the iconostasis was dismantled They were hidden again when the lower tiers of the iconostasis were reinstalled In 1889 the frescoes above the iconostasis were painted over 6 79 80 having been left unretouched by Prakhov as a keepsake for posterity 81 Medallions were painted on the cathedral s pillars that depicted half figures of Saint Sebastian along with names of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste images of St Barbara the archangel Gabriel Mary the high priest Zechariah the prophet Samuel and a small number of unnamed figures 82 When the cathedral s mosaics were being removed in 1934 the frescoes were seen again Some were taken away between June to mid September that year information about the means by which this was done is fragmentary The work on removing them continued until August 1937 when the cathedral was destroyed Those that had been taken were afterwards distributed among the museums of Kyiv and Moscow As scaffolding was not installed prior to the cathedral being demolished it is not thought any of the dome s frescoes were saved Most of the Kyiv frescoes were taken to Germany during the war which caused them to be damaged or lost After the war the surviving works were returned to museums in Novgorod and Leningrad 83 Mosaics edit Above the main altar was a collection of mosaics depicting the Last Supper and the Apostles of Jesus 84 Paul of Aleppo described them he saw them in 1654 85 The large Tabernacle resembles that of St Sophia and of the Convent of Petcherske and has three large windows and in like manner it is painted in the centre with the portrait of Our Lady standing upright in her gold ornaments and having both her hands raised and open Next to her is Our Lord handing to his Disciples on both sides the divine bread and blood Below them are the portraits of Chief Priests in rows and all with inscriptions nbsp nbsp The Eucharist mosaic installed on the second floor of the Saint Sophia Cathedral the mosaic of St Demetrius installed by Sviatopolk II The mosaics became so covered with dust and soot that many remained hidden and unrecorded until they were rediscovered by Prakhov In 1888 by agreement with the diocese he cleaned them using a soap and oil mixture and removed the dirt between the cubes using dough like plaster patches 79 Prakhov s team made sketches of all the mosaics Four large format volumes of drawings and draft sketches were produced 86 His work attracted the interest of the art historian Nikodim Kondakov who was largely responsible for initiating the systematic study of medieval Russian art ru 87 note 7 Kondakov identified a clear artistic shift from the Greek mosaics and frescoes of the St Sophia Cathedral to those of the Monastery of St Michael arguing that the figures at St Michael s were more fluid than the static and stylized figures in St Sophia s Kondakov concluded this was due to the influence of Russian craftsmen who were employed in addition to the Byzantine masters 87 In 1899 the art historian Dmitry Aynalov and the archaeologist Egor Redin ru noted the similarities between the Eucharist mosaic and one of the same scene in St Sophia s Cathedral The general character of the style is lower than the Sophian mosaic there are disproportionately smaller heads arms and legs the draperies are tangled Technically the mosaic is distinguished by colorless tones it is dominated by white and red cubes 5 Beside the Eucharist mosaic the only mosaics to have survived the demolition of the cathedral depict the figures of Saint Demetrius Saint Stephen and the Apostle Thaddeus 77 The mosaic of Saint Demetrius was located on the southern edge of the north eastern pillar under the eastern arch of the main nave In 1936 the mosaic was removed set in cement and taken to the Kyiv Museum of Russian Art uk 89 Some of the mosaics were deposited in the Tretiakov Gallery in Moscow and in St Sophia s Cathedral The items at St Sophia s were looted by the Nazis after they occupied Kyiv After the end of the Second World War they were returned by the Americans to the Soviet authorities They were then reinstalled in St Sophia s 13 Relics of St Barbara edit nbsp A photograph of the ceremonial kissing of the relics of St BarbaraThe monastery enjoyed the patronage of hetmans and other benefactors throughout the years The chief attraction for pilgrims to the monastery were the relics of Saint Barbara alleged to have been brought to Kyiv from Constantinople in 1108 by the wife of Sviatopolk II 65 According to a tradition St Barbara s relics were hidden under the staircase when Kyiv was occupied by the Mongols 46 At one time they were kept in a silver sepulcher donated by Ivan Mazepa in 1701 Weighing 32 kilograms 71 lb the sepulcher represented the crowning achievement of Ukrainian jewellery making 90 note 8 In 1870 about 100 000 pilgrims travelled to the monastery to see the relics 65 Before the Russian Revolution in 1917 rings manufactured and blessed by the monks known as St Barbara s rings were very popular They were said to bring good luck and protect the wearer against witchcraft but were also considered effective against illness and sudden death 65 The saint s relics were kept at various locations in the city after the monastery was destroyed As of 2023 update they are kept at St Volodymyr s Cathedral 91 Iconostasis edit nbsp Volodymyr Nikolaev uk drawings of the cathedral s iconostasis left as built in 1718 right as lowered in 1888Behind the sepulcher was a wooden five tiered gold and silver gilt iconostasis donated by the Cossack nobleman Ivan Skoropadsky in 1718 13 The iconostasis which replaced the one installed in the cathedral in 1631 12 34 was made by the Chernihiv craftsman Hryhoriy Petrov and had icons painted by the Kyiv priest Stefan Lubenskyi 12 During renovation works in 1888 the iconostasis was planned to be replaced by a marble altar wall Due to a lack of funds the three upper tiers were removed leaving the iconostasis in two tiers as shown by a number of 20th century photographs A sketch of the iconostasis was made by Volodymyr Nikolaev uk the architect responsible for its partial dismantling in the 1880s and the complete iconostasis is partly visible in a 1851 drawing by Mazer 92 The church historian Leonid Ivanovich Denisov ru writing in 1908 described the iconostasis in the cathedral church as having a golden icon of St Michael the Archangel sprinkled with diamonds and other gems that had been given to the church by Tsar Alexander I in 1817 10 The iconostasis was destroyed shortly before the cathedral was demolished 92 Other notable artworks edit Paul of Aleppo described the cathedral s tabernacle as it was when he saw it in 1654 85 At the back of the left choir is a handsome tabernacle facing your left hand as you enter It has an iron folding door reaching from the top to the bottom and beautifully divided into compartments which are diversified with painted flowers and the figures of angels and saints in the manner we described of St Sophia Paul of Aleppo The Travels of Macarius translated from the original in 1829 21 Other notable artworks in the cathedral included an icon of St Barbara adorned with stars clasps and diamond rings was given by Anna and Elizabeth of Russia a gold lamp set with pearls and diamonds 84 and five silver candlesticks commissioned by Hetman Mazepa in 1701 34 Books and documents editOne of the achievements of the polymath Ivan Yakymovych Falkovskyi uk who was head of the Kyiv Theological Academy was to improve the monastery s library As well as being the centre of the preservation of the city s historical manuscripts and books the monastery was provided for the spiritual and educational needs of the people of Kyiv Falkovskiy was responsible for the cataloguing of the books and manuscripts which he numbered and listed alphabetically He also worked on renovating the books in the library 93 The monastery library contained 4 200 books In the 1860s a free reading room was opened for the public The Soviets confiscated the library s books and moved them to the National Library of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences now the National Library of Ukraine 15 The monastery s surviving collection of old books consisting of approximately 300 publications and 750 manuscripts are now stored in the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine 16 St Michael s main library has more than 20 000 books 94 See also editArchitecture of Kievan Rus Notes edit In 1712 the convent moved to Podil and the land it occupied passed to the monastery 15 19th century architectural drawings and photographs of the cathedral had shown that parts of the building dated back to the 12th century and that the northern southern and western facades were 17th and 18th century additions 34 The site was also excavated in 1940 and 1948 1949 40 The building which was severely damaged by the invading Germans during World War II 8 now houses the Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs 16 mazer s drawings were shown at an 1999 exhibition in the National Art Museum of Ukraine in Kyiv 44 It has been calculated that more than 10 000 buildings were destroyed during the 20th century including St Michael s Golden Domed Cathedral the Assumption Cathedral of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra the Dormition Cathedral of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra and Chersonesus Cathedral 1 In 1888 Kondakov published his findings on the Russo Byzantine monuments of Kyiv and Feodosia The encyclopaedic Russkiia drevnosti v pamiatnikakh iskusstva Russian Antiquities in Monuments of Art written jointly by Kondakov and Ivan Ivanovich Tolstoy was the first comprehensive history of medieval Russian art 88 Starting from the late 17th century a song honoring St Barbara was sung in the cathedral of the monastery on each Tuesday just before the liturgy Makarov 2002 p 558 References edit a b c d Ivashko et al 2022 p 149 a b c d e Pavlovsky amp Zhukovsky 1984 pp 503 504 a b Cross 1947 p 56 Klos 2019 pp 7 11 a b c d e Aynalov amp Redin 1899 pp 55 57 a b c d e f g h i Kivlytskyi 1894 p 601 D Vasilescu 2018 p 76 a b c d Cross 1947 p 57 a b c d Watson Schellinger amp Ring 2013 p 372 a b Denisov 1908 p 301 a b Zlatoverkhy Mikhailovsky monastyr Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in Russian Retrieved 26 October 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Vecherskyi V V Svyato Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij monastir St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Great Ukrainian Encyclopedia State Scientific Institution Encyclopedic Publishing House Retrieved 12 September 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Pavlovsky Vadym Zhukovsky Arkadii Saint Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Internet Encyclopaedia of Ukraine Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Retrieved 16 August 2023 Chobit 2005 p 147 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Mihajlovskij Zolotoverhij monastir 12 20 st Mykhailo Golden Domed Monastery 12 20 centuries Streets of Kyiv in Ukrainian Retrieved 10 September 2023 a b c d e Klos 2013 Erich Lassota von Steblau Selbstzeugnisse im Deutschsprachigen Raum in German Free University of Berlin 9 July 2008 Retrieved 28 August 2023 Klos 2019 p 12 von Steblau amp Wynar 1975 p 76 Cac 2009 pp 190 191 a b Zhukovsky Arkadii Paul of Aleppo Internet Encyclopaedia of Ukraine Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies Retrieved 1 September 2023 Paul of Aleppo 1836 pp 231 232 a b c d e f g h i Asadcheva Tatyana 21 May 2023 Trapeznij cerkvi Mihajlivskogo zolotoverhogo 310 chim unikalna cya svyatinya The refectory church of Mykhailivskyi zolotoverhoho 310 how unique is this shrine Vechirnij Kiyiv Evening Kyiv in Ukrainian Kyiv Retrieved 6 September 2023 a b c Orlenko et al 2022 pp 37 39 a b c Orlenko et al 2022 p 40 Klos 2019 p 22 Perepeliuk 2021 Taroutina 2018 p 39 Ivashko et al 2022 pp 151 152 Armlet British Museum Retrieved 11 August 2023 a b Klos 2019 p 34 a b We continue to acquaint you with the collection of the Preserve National Reserve Kyiv Pechersk Lavra 30 July 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2023 Tuchynska Svitlana 28 July 2011 Forgotten Soviet Plans For Kyiv Kyiv Post Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2017 a b c d Pevny 2010 p 480 Hewryk 1982 p 15 The Transfer to the Ukraine of Fragments of Frescoes from Kyiv s Mikhailovo Zlatoverkh Monastery The State Hermitage Museum Archived from the original on 24 June 2004 Retrieved 5 April 2017 a b Hewryk 1982 p 16 a b c d e Kiyiv Dzvinicya Mihajlivskogo monastirya Mihajlivska plosha Kyiv Bell tower of Mykhailivskyi Monastery Mykhailivska Square in Ukrainian National Technical University of Ukraine Ihor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute Retrieved 10 September 2023 a b c Dzvinicya zi Svyatoyu bramoyu 1997 98 Belfry with the Holy Gate 1997 98 Streets of Kyiv in Ukrainian Retrieved 9 September 2023 a b c d Doslidzhennya Mihajlivskogo Zolotoverhogo Monastirya 1920 1960 h neopublikovana arheologiya Research of the Mykhailo Golden Top Monastery 1920s 1960s Unpublished Archeology in Ukrainian Institute of Archeology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Retrieved 5 September 2023 Shevchenko 1997 p 46 Chobit 2005 p 24 a b Woronowycz Roman 29 November 1998 Historic St Michael s Golden Domed Sobor is rebuilt The Ukrainian Weekly Kyiv Press Bureau Archived from the original on 27 April 2006 Retrieved 29 August 2006 a b Muzejnij eksponat yak hudozhnij dokument epohi The museum exhibit as an artistic document of the era in Ukrainian The Poltava Art Museum Art Gallery named after Mykola Yaroshenko 21 January 2018 Retrieved 12 September 2023 Totska Irma 1999 r Programa malovan inter yeru Mihajlivskogo soboru 1999 Interior painting program of St Michael s Cathedral Pslava in Ukrainian M Zharkykh Archived from the original on 24 October 2016 Retrieved 8 January 2024 a b c d e Putem Evropy Kak vosstanavlivali Mihajlovskij sobor v Kieve The way of Europe How St Michael s Cathedral was restored in Kyiv Korrespondent net in Russian 25 March 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2023 Wilson 2000 p 243 a b Whittaker 2010 p 108 a b Pevny 2010 p 483 Klos 2019 p 38 a b Klos 2019 p 37 a b Chobit 2005 p 26 a b Klos 2019 pp 40 44 Klos 2019 p 39 a b Kolokola Mihajlovckogo Zlatoverhogo monastyrya Bells of St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery in Ukrainian Casting 24 June 2013 Retrieved 31 August 2023 Klos 2019 p 46 Pevny 2010 p 472 Muzeyi Kiyeva Muzej istoriyi Mihajlivskogo monastirya Museums of Kyiv The Museum of the History of St Michael s Monastery in Ukrainian PrimeTour Archived from the original on 24 January 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2023 Letyak Valentina 16 December 2018 Fakti ICTV Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij stane kafedralnim soborom yedinoyi UPC Mykhailivskyi Zolotoverkhi will become the cathedral of the unified UOC Facts ICTV uk in Ukrainian Retrieved 17 December 2018 St Michael s Golden Domed Cathedral will be the main temple of the OCU Religious Information Service of Ukraine 16 December 2018 Retrieved 17 December 2018 Filaret to head Kyiv Diocese Metropolitan Symeon elected Chief Secretary of the OCU the Synod decides Religious Information Service of Ukraine 5 February 2019 Retrieved 9 February 2019 World Digest Dec 15 2018 Ukrainian church leaders approve split from Russians The Washington Post 15 December 2018 Retrieved 10 March 2022 Governor in Ukrainian St Michael s Golden roofed Men s Monastery in Kyiv Archived from the original on 30 April 2016 Retrieved 31 August 2023 Denisov 1908 pp 300 301 a b c d e Makarov 2002 p 558 a b Klos 2019 p 11 Klos 2019 p 13 a b Klos 2019 p 44 Ivashko et al 2022 p 153 Ivashko et al 2022 p 155 Ivashko et al 2022 p 159 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n The refectory church of the St Michael s Golden Domed is 310 years old how unique is this shrine Trapeznij cerkvi Mihajlivskogo zolotoverhogo 310 chim unikalna cya svyatinya df news 21 May 2023 Yunakov 2016 p 40 Ernst 1930 pp 371 372 a b Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij monastir St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Interesting Kyiv in Ukrainian 28 November 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2023 Vzdornov 2017 pp 187 188 a b Cerkov Arhangela Mihaila Kiev Ukraina Church of the Archangel Michael Kyiv Ukraine Christianity in Art Icons Frescoes Mosaics in Russian Retrieved 4 September 2023 Korenyuk 2014 p 238 a b Vzdornov G I Istoriya otkrytiya i izucheniya russkoj srednevekovoj zhivopisi XIX vek Vzdornov G I The history of the discovery and study of Russian medieval painting 19th century Christianity in Art Icons Frescoes Mosaics in Russian Retrieved 4 September 2023 Korenyuk 2014 pp 235 238 Vzdornov 2017 p 32 Korenyuk 2014 p 239 Korenyuk 2014 pp 235 240 249 a b Denisov 1908 p 302 a b Paul of Aleppo 1836 p 232 Vzdornov 2017 p 12 a b Taroutina 2018 p 43 Taroutina 2018 p 42 Dmitrij Solunskij Dmitry Solunsky Christianity in Art Icons Frescoes Mosaics in Russian Retrieved 4 September 2023 Klos 2019 p 18 Klos 2019 p 19 a b Olianina 2012 Ivanyuk 2013 Klos 2019 pp 54 55 Sources editIn English edit Cross Samuel H 1947 The Mosaic Eucharist of St Michael s Kiev The American Slavic and East European Review 6 1 56 61 doi 10 2307 2491933 ISSN 0037 6779 JSTOR 2491933 D Vasilescu Elena Ene 2018 Heavenly Sustenance in Patristic Texts and Byzantine Iconography Nourished by the Word London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 33199 8 986 0 Hewryk Titus D 1982 The Monastery Of St Michael Of The Golden Domes The Lost Architecture of Kyiv New York The Ukrainian Museum ASIN B0006E9KPQ Ivashko Yulia Buzin Ivan Sandu Ioan Gabriel Kusnierz Krupa Dominika Kobylarczyk Justyna Dmytrenko Andrii Bednarz Lukasz 2022 State of the Art Technologies of Imitation of Mural Painting from the Kyivan Rus and Baroque Periods in the Reconstructed St Michael Golden Domed Cathedral in Kyiv PDF International Journal of Conservation Science 1 147 162 ISSN 2067 533X Klos Vitaly 2019 St Michael Golden Domed Monastery Guidebook Translated by Tkachova Vitalina St Michael Golden domed Monastery Kyiv OCLC 856055059 Orlenko Mykola Ivashko Yulia Kobylarczyk Justyna Kusnierz Krupa Dominika 2022 Study of foundations in Ukraine from the eleventh to eighteenth centuries and their preservation and conservation methods Experiences PDF Muzeologia a kulturne dedicstvo 10 1 33 51 doi 10 46284 mkd 2022 10 1 3 S2CID 247300670 Paul of Aleppo 1836 The travels of Macarius Patriarch of Antioch Vol 1 London Printed for the Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland OCLC 1157900987 Pavlovsky V Zhukovsky A 1984 St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 4 Toronto University of Toronto Press Pevny Olenka Z 2010 The Encrypted Narrative of Reconstructed Cossack Baroque Forms Harvard Ukrainian Studies 31 1 471 519 JSTOR 41756512 von Steblau Erich Wynar Lubomyr R 1975 1866 Wynar Lubomyr R ed Habsburgs and Zaporozhian Cossacks The Diary of Erich Lasspta von Steblau 1594 PDF Translated by Subtelny Orest Littleton Colorado Ukrainian Academic Press Taroutina Maria 2018 The Icon and the Square Russian Modernism and the Russo Byzantine Reviv University Park Pennsylvania Penn State University Press ISBN 978 02710 8 257 8 Vzdornov Gerol d I 2017 The History of the Discovery and Study of Russian Medieval Painting Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90043 0 527 4 Watson Noelle Schellinger Paul Ring Trudy eds 2013 Northern Europe International Dictionary of Historic Places Vol 2 New York Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 884964 022 Whittaker Cynthia Hyla 2010 Visualizing Russia Fedor Solntsev and Crafting a National Past Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90041 9 185 3 Wilson Andrew 2000 The Ukrainians Unexpected Nation 4th ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 03002 1 725 4 In Ukrainian edit Aynalov Dmitry Vlasyevich Redin Egor Kuzmich 1899 Drevnie pamyatniki iskusstva Kieva Sofijskij sobor Zlatoverho Mihajlovskij i Kirillovskij monastyri Ancient monuments of art in Kiev St Sophia Cathedral Zlatoverkho Mikhailovsky and St Cyril s monasteries Proceedings of the Pedagogical Department of Kharkov History and Philology Society in Russian 6 Cac I M 2009 Grekovich Anthony In Smoliy V A ed Enciklopediya istoriyi Ukrayini Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine in Ukrainian Vol 2 Kyiv Institute of History of Ukraine OCLC 1267399436 Chobit Dmytro 2005 Mykhailivskyi Zolotoverkhyi Monastyr St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery in Ukrainian Prosvita ISBN 978 966 7544 24 9 Ernst Fyodor ed 1930 kol zolotoverho mihajlivskij manastir Zolotoverho Mikhailiv Monastery Kiyiv Providnik Kyiv A Guide in Ukrainian All Ukrainian Academy of Sciences Committee for the 10th Anniversary of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences pp 361 375 Ivanyuk I A 2013 Kulturno Prosvitnicka Diyalnist Yepiskopa Irineya Falkovskogo Iz Uporyadkuvannya Knizhkovih Zibran Biblioteki Kiyevo Mihajlivskogo Zolotoverhogo Monastirya Enlightenmental and cultural activity connected with regulation of collection of books in St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery library by bishop Irynei Falkovsky Scientific Journal of the Antiquities of Sums in Ukrainian Sumy Ukraine Sumy State University 40 145 149 ISSN 2311 5408 Klos Vitaly 2013 Kiyivskij Svyato Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij cholovichij monastir UPC KP Kyiv St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Encyclopedia of Modern Ukraine in Ukrainian Vol 13 NASU Institute of Encyclopaedic Research ISBN 978 966 02 2074 4 Retrieved 10 March 2022 Makarov A N 2002 Mala enciklopediya Kiyivskoyi starovini Little Encyclopedia of Kyiv s Antiquities in Ukrainian Kyiv Dovira ISBN 978 966 507 128 0 Olianina Svitlana 2012 Vtracheni ukrayinski ikonostasi dobi getmanshini v arhivnih zibrannyah kiyeva Lost Ukrainian Iconostases of the Age of the Hetmanate in the Archive Collections of Kyiv PDF Museology and Munistology in Ukrainian Institute of Cultural Studies of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine 5 144 150 Perepeliuk Olha 2021 Z Istoriyi Horu Kiyivskogo Mihajlivskogo Zolotoverhogo Monastirya HIX Pochatok HX Stolittya The History of the Kyiv Mykhailivskyi Zolotoverkhyi Monastery Choir XIX Early XX Centuries PDF Ethnological Notebooks in Ukrainian Lviv Institute of Folklore of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine 5 161 1261 1266 doi 10 15407 nz2021 05 1261 ISSN 1028 5091 Shevchenko Valentina 1997 Trapezna Mihajlivskogo Zolotoverhogo monastirya The Refectory of the Mikhailovsky Golden domed Monastery Pam yatki Ukrayini Sights of Ukraine in Ukrainian No 1 Kyiv pp 46 51 In Russian edit Denisov Leonid Ivanovich 1908 Pravoslavnye monastyri Rossijskoj Imperii Orthodox monasteries of the Russian Empire in Russian Moscow A D Stupin Kivlytskyi E 1894 Zlatoverhij Mihajlovskij muzh skoj 1 go klassa monastyr v Kievѣ St Michael s Golden Domed male 1st class monastery in Kyiv Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in Russian Vol 12A St Petersburg Semenovskaya Typolitography I A Efron Retrieved 11 August 2023 Korenyuk Y A 2014 Freski Mihajlovskogo Zlatoverhogo sobora v Kieve The Frescoes of St Michael s Golden Domed Cathedral in Kyiv V sozvezdii Lva Sbornik statej po drevnerusskomu iskusstvu v chest Lva Isaakovicha Lifshica In the Constellation Leo A Collection of Articles on Ancient Russian Art in Honour of Leo Isaacovitch Lifshits PDF in Russian Moscow State Institute of Art ISBN 978 5 98287 072 8 Yunakov Oleg 2016 Architect Joseph Karakis in Russian Almaz ISBN 978 1 68082 000 3 Further reading editAnon 1889 Kievo Zlatoverho Mihajlovski m r Kyiv Golden domed Mikhailovsky Monastery in Russian Kyiv S V Kulzhenko OCLC 144539761 Krivorchuk H Losytskyi Yu eds 2011 Vidtvorennya vtrachenih perlin arhitekturi Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij PDF in Ukrainian Kyiv p Reproduction of Lost Pearls of Architecture Mikhailivsky Zolotoverky ISBN 978 966 2377 14 9 Archived from the original PDF on 18 January 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mytsyk Y A Sohan S V Mitsan T V Sinyak I L eds 2011 Documentary Heritage of St Michael s Zolotoverky Monastery in Kyiv 16th 18th centuries From the Foundations of in Ukrainian Kyiv National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine National Library of Ukraine Institute of Ukrainian Archaeography Pokhilevich L I 1865 Monasteries and Churches of Kyiv Kyiv pp 16 36 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery in Kyiv Kyiv Michael s Golden Domed Monastery People s Catalog of Orthodox Architecture in Russian sobory ru Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 21 June 2011 self published Information about the monastery from MD Ukraine A 2022 recording of the bells of the monastery by Barny Smith A report on the role played by the monastery during the anti government protests of 2014 from Reuters More information about the history of the refectory church from pslava info in Ukrainian 50 27 21 N 30 31 22 E 50 4557 N 30 5227 E 50 4557 30 5227 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Michael 27s Golden Domed Monastery amp oldid 1194590267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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