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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 the city's historical commercial and merchant quarter, the Podil. 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 монастирhe monastery comp
St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery—the bell tower (left) and cathedral (right)
50°27′20″N 30°31′22″E / 50.45556°N 30.52278°E / 50.45556; 30.52278
LocationKyiv
CountryUkraine
DenominationOrthodox Church of Ukraine
Websitearchangel.kiev.ua
History
Founded1108–1113
Founder(s)Sviatopolk II of Kiev
DedicationSaint Michael the Archangel
Architecture
Architect(s)Ivan Hryhorovych-Barskyi
StyleUkrainian Baroque
Completed1999
Demolished1934–1936 (original)

Originally built in the Middle Ages by the Kievan Rus' ruler Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych, the monastery comprises the cathedral church, the Refectory of St. John the Divine, built in 1713, the Economic Gates, 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. The cathedral was demolished by the Soviet authorities in the 1930s, but was rebuilt following Ukrainian independence in 1991, and opened in 1999.

History

Early years

 
The mosaic of St. Demetrius was installed by Sviatopolk II in the monastery cathedral to glorify the patron saint of his father

During the 1050s, Iziaslav I, the Grand Prince of Kyiv, built a monastery, then called the Monastery and Church of St Demetrius, close to the Saint Sophia Cathedral.[1][2] Half a century later, his son Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych, commissioned the monastery church, which was dedicated to his father's patron saint, Michael the Archangel.[2] The church may have been built to commemorate Svyatopolk's victory over the Polovtsians, as Michael the Archangel is the patron saint of war victories.[3]

Sviatopolk II was interred in the monastery in 1113,[4] as were other members of his family.[citation needed]

The cathedral domes were probably the first in Kyivan Rus to be gilded.[5] The monastery was damaged during the Mongol invasion in 1240, when the domes were pillaged.[6] The cloister became so ruinous that it was left unmentioned in official records for the next 250 years. By 1496, by which time its name was changed to St. Michael's, the monastery's fortunes had revived.[note 1][citation needed]

Restoration and subsequent patronage

After being restored and enlarged during the 16th century, the monastery became one of the most popular and wealthiest in Ukraine.[2][5] In 1618, the religious figure Antony Grekovych [uk] tried to extend his power over the monastery, which provoked a sharp reaction: the Cossacks captured him and drowned him in a ditch opposite the Vydubychi Monastery.[7] In 1620, Iov Boretsky made it the residence of the renewed Orthodox metropolitan of Kyiv, and in 1633, Isaya Kopynsky was named a supervisor of the monastery.[note 2][citation needed]

The monastery enjoyed the patronage of hetmans and other benefactors throughout the years. The chief magnet for pilgrims were the relics of Saint Barbara, alleged to have been brought to Kyiv from Constantinople in 1108 by Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych's wife and kept in a silver reliquary donated by Hetman Ivan Mazepa.[8][9][note 3] Although most of the monastery grounds were secularized in the late 18th century, as many as 240 monks resided there in the 19th and 20th centuries. The monastery served as the residence of the bishop of Chernigov after 1800. A precentor's school was located on the monastery grounds; many prominent composers, such as Kyrylo Stetsenko and Yakiv Yatsynevych, either studied or taught at the school.[citation needed]

1870s–1930s

 
The cathedral in 1888

In 1870, about 100,000 pilgrims paid tribute to St. Barbara at St. Michael's Monastery.[9] Before the Russian Revolution in 1917, rings manufactured and blessed at St. Michael's Monastery, known as St. Barbara's rings, were very popular among the citizens of Kyiv. They usually served as good luck charms and, according to popular beliefs, occasionally protected against witchcraft but were also effective against serious illnesses and sudden death.[9] These beliefs reference the facts that the Monastery was not affected by the plague epidemics in 1710 and 1770 and cholera epidemics of the 19th century.[citation needed]

In 1906, a medieval hoard of silver and gold jewellery was discovered in a metal casket on Trekhsvyatytelska Street (Street of the Three Saints), opposite the gates of St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery. Gold jewellery from the hoard is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the silver jewellery and two ingots are in the British Museum, London. The hoard is dated to the 11th–12th centuries and was probably hidden at the time of the Tartar invasions and the Sack of Kyiv in 1240.[10][11]

Demolition of the cathedral and bell tower during the Soviet era

Proposals

During the first half of the 1930s, various Soviet publications questioned the known historical facts regarding the age of the Cathedral. The publications stressed that the medieval building had undergone major reconstructions and that little of the original Byzantine-style cathedral was preserved. This wave of questioning sought to justify the demolition of the monastery and its replacement with a new administrative centre for the Ukrainian SSR (previously located in the city of Kharkiv). Before its demolition (8 June – 9 July 1934), the structure was carefully studied by T.M. Movchanivskyi [uk] and K. Honcharev from the recently purged and re-organized Institute of Material Culture [uk] of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. On the basis of their survey, the cathedral was declared to belong primarily to the Ukrainian Baroque style, rather than to the twelfth century as was previously thought, and thus did not merit preservation due to its alleged lack of historical and artistic value. This conclusion backed up the Soviet authorities' plans to demolish the entire monastery. Local historians, archaeologists, and architects agreed to the monastery's demolition, although reluctantly. Only one professor, Mykola Makarenko [uk], refused to sign the demolition act; he later died in a Soviet prison.[1][note 4]

In the mid-1930s, after the transfer of the Ukrainian capital from Kharkiv to Kyiv, a decision was made to demolish the cathedral and build administrative buildings in its place. For this purpose, in 1934 Soviet authorities decided to hold a competition for the project of the Governmental Centre with a place for parades.[12] In all of the projects submitted for the location in the area of Bogdan Khmelnitsky Square, the St. Michael's Golden-domed Cathedral was demolished, except for one.[12] The project of Joseph Karakis was the only one of four projects submitted for the competition with the location of the centre in this place, in which the St. Michael's Golden-domed Cathedral and the monument to Bogdan Khmelnitsky were preserved.[12] However, at the end of the first round, the project of architect Peter Yurchenko [uk] was selected by the authorities as the most appropriate.[13][14]

This project, according to the architect Boris Erofalov [uk], "was repeating the general scheme of the Karakis, but was done in a more frontal approach, with the liquidation of the St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral. And if the location of the main volumes of the Karakis is asymmetric…"[13] In March 1934, authorities decided to abandon the previous decision and announce a new competition, and at the end to choose the project of architect Joseph Langbard. [13] Meanwhile, according to Oleg Yunakov's research based on archive documents, it is clear that although there is no cathedral in the projects of J. Langbard and P. Yurchenko, that was not the reason for the demolition, since the decision to demolish the monastery was adopted by the resolution of the Politburo in February 1934, and the dismantling of mosaics began to be produced already in 1933.[13]

Removal of the mosaics prior to demolition

 
The Eucharist mosaic, installed on the second floor of the Saint Sophia Cathedral

On 26 June 1934, work began on the removal of the twelfth-century Byzantine mosaics. It was conducted by the Mosaic Section of the Leningrad Academy of Fine Arts. Specialists were forced to work in haste on account of the impending demolition and were thus unable to complete the entire project.[15] Despite the care and attention shown during the removal of the mosaics from the cathedral's walls, the relocated mosaics cannot be relied upon as being absolutely authentic.[16]

The remaining mosaics, covering an area of 45 square metres (485 sq ft), were apportioned among the State Hermitage Museum, the Tretyakov Gallery, and the State Russian Museum.[17] The other remaining mosaics were installed on the second floor of the Saint Sophia Cathedral, where they were not on display for tourists. Those items that remained in Kyiv were seized by the Nazis during World War II and taken to Germany. After the war ended, they fell into American hands and were later returned to Moscow.[citation needed]

Demolition (1935–1936)

During the spring of 1935, the golden domes of the monastery were pulled down. The cathedral's silver royal gates, Mazepa's reliquary—weighing two poods of silver—and other valuables were sold abroad or simply destroyed.[16] Master Hryhoryi's five-tier iconostasis was removed (and later destroyed) from the cathedral as well. St. Barbara's relics were transferred to the Church of the Tithes and upon that church's demolition, to the St Volodymyr's Cathedral in 1961.[citation needed]

 
The ruins of the destroyed cathedral

During the spring-summer period of 1936, the shell of the cathedral and bell tower were blown up with dynamite. The monastery's Economic Gate (Ekonomichna Brama) and the monastic walls were also destroyed. After the demolition, a thorough search for valuables was carried out by the NKVD on the site.[16] The resulting empty plot was joined with Sofiyivska Square, renamed Uryadova Square (Governmental Square) and was designated as the new city centre and parade grounds.[18] Soviet authorities then commissioned a competition how to best fill the empty plot; most architects, including Yakiv Shteinberg [uk], suggested a huge Lenin statue.[18] The square itself was planned as a rectangle with huge governmental buildings on the perimeter.[18] Four pillars were planned with statues of workers, peasants and revolutionaries with flags standing on them.[18] Some architects suggested demolishing the statue of Bohdan Khmelnytsky in front of the Saint Sophia Cathedral and the Cathedral itself.[18]

The only building completed on the former monastery grounds before World War II currently houses the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The construction of the second building ("the capital centre"), planned to be built on the site where the Cathedral had once stood, was delayed in the spring of 1938 as the authorities were not satisfied with the submitted design. This building failed to materialize. Some time after demolition, the site where the former cathedral used to be located was transformed into a sport complex, including tennis and volleyball courts. The refectory (trapezna) of St. John the Divine was used for changing rooms.[citation needed]

Reconstruction

 
Commemorative plaque to Oles Honchar as the initiator of the monastery's revival

In 1973, the Kyiv City Council established several "archaeological preservation zones" within the city; these included the territory surrounding the monastery. However, the vacant site of the demolished cathedral was excluded from the proposed Historic-Archaeological Park-Museum, The Ancient Kyiv, developed by architect A. M. Miletskyi and consultants M. V. Kholostenko and P. P. Tolochko.[citation needed]

During the 1970s, Ukrainian architects I. Melnyk, A. Zayika, V. Korol, and engineer A. Kolyakov worked out a plan of reconstruction of the St. Michael's Monastery. However, these plans were only considered after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.[19]

After Ukraine regained independence in 1991, the demolition of the monastery was deemed a crime and voices started to be heard calling for the monastery's full-scale reconstruction as an important part of the cultural heritage of the Ukrainian people. These plans were approved and carried out in 1997–1998, whereupon the cathedral and belltower were transferred to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate. Yuriy Ivakin, the chief archaeologist for the site, said that more than 260 valuable ancient artifacts were recovered during excavations of the site before reconstruction. In addition, a portion of the ancient cathedral, still intact, was uncovered; this today makes up a part of the current cathedral's crypt.[20]

The monastery was recreated with the Baroque additions it had at the time of its destruction.[21] With support of Kyiv City Council, architect-restorer Y. Lositskiy and others restored the western part of the stone walls. The belltower was restored next and became an observation platform. Instead of the original chiming clock, a new electronic one with hands and a set of chimes (a total of 40)[22] was installed from which today the melodies of famous Ukrainian composers can be heard.[note 5] The Cathedral was reconstructed last and decorated with a set of wooden baroque icons, copies of former mosaics and frescoes, and new works of art by Ukrainian artists.[1]

The newly rebuilt St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral was officially opened on 30 May 1999. However, interior decorations, mosaics, and frescoes were not completed until 28 May 2000. The side chapels were consecrated to Saint Barbara and Saint Catherine of Alexandria in 2001. During the following four years, 18 out of 29 mosaics and other objets d'art from the original cathedral were returned from Moscow after years of tedious discussion between Ukrainian and Russian authorities.[2] However, by the end of 2006, the remaining frescoes of the monastery are going to be transferred from the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg to Kyiv.[23] They are placed in a special preserve that is owned by the municipality rather than the church body.[citation needed]

Headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine

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.[24][25] The rector of the monastery has the rank of diocesan bishop.[26]

As of March 2022:

Architecture

Cathedral

 
St Michael's Church

The religious architecture of St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery incorporates elements that have evolved from styles prevalent during Byzantine and Baroque periods. The St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral (Ukrainian: Михайлівський Золотоверхий Собор) is the monastery's main church, built in 1108–1113 at the behest of Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych. The cathedral was the largest of three churches of St. Demetrius Monastery.[citation needed]

The ancient cathedral was modeled on the Assumption Cathedral (Kyiv) [uk] of the Monastery of the Caves. It used the Greek cross plan prevalent during the time of the Kyivan Rus, six pillars, and three apses. A miniature church, likely a baptistery, adjoined the cathedral from the south. 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. It is likely that the cathedral had a single dome, although two smaller domes might have topped the tower and baptistery. The interior decoration was lavish as its high-quality shimmering mosaics, probably the finest in Kyivan Rus, still testify.[9]

 
Interior of the cathedral

When the medieval churches of Kyiv were rebuilt in the late 17th and early 18th centuries in the Ukrainian Baroque style, the cathedral was enlarged and renovated dramatically. By 1746, it had acquired a new baroque exterior, while maintaining its original Byzantine interior. Six domes were added to the original single dome, but the added pressure on the walls was counteracted by the construction of buttresses.[1] The remaining medieval walls, characterised by alternative layers of limestone and flat brick, were covered with stucco. Ivan Hryhorovych-Barskyi was responsible for window surrounds and stucco ornamentation.[citation needed] Inside the church, an intricate five-tier icon screen funded by Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky and executed by Hryhoryi Petriv from Chernigov was installed in 1718. During the 18th and 19th centuries, almost all of the original Byzantine mosaics and frescoes on the interior walls were painted over. Some restoration work on the mosaics and frescoes that remained unpainted was carried out towards the end of the 19th century. However, there were no major and serious investigations of the walls done, so it is possible that medieval frescoes or mosaics were preserved under the newer coats of plaster.[citation needed]

Refectory

 
Refectory of St. John the Divine

In August 1963, the preserved refectory of the demolished monastery without its Baroque cupola was designated a monument of architecture of the Ukrainian SSR. In 1973–1982 restoration of the Refectory Church of St. John the Theologian (the only building that survived the demolition of the 1930s) was held – authors of the project were architect V. Shevchenko and architect I. Karakis (interiors and furniture).[28]

The refectory of St. John the Divine is a rectangular brick building which contains a dining hall for the brethren as well as several kitchens and pantries. The Church of John the Theologian adjoins it from the east. The outside is segmented by pilasters and displays window surrounds reminiscent of traditional Eastern Orthodox church architecture. The refectory was erected in 1713, taking the place of the original wooden refectory. Its interior was overhauled in 1827 and 1837 and the restoration work was undertaken from 1976 to 1981.[citation needed]

Notes

  1. ^ Historians are not certain which church survived the Tatar invasion, Saint Demetrius's or Saint Michael's.[citation needed]
  2. ^ Both Iov Boretsky and Isaya Kopynsky were buried within the monastery.[citation needed]
  3. ^ 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)
  4. ^ There is a memorial plate dedicated to him, hanging on the monastery's walls.[citation needed]
  5. ^ The bells chime every hour and play 23 different melodies (Chobit 2005, p. 26)

References

  1. ^ a b c d Malikenaite 2003, p. 147.
  2. ^ a b c d Pavlovsky & Zhukovsky 1984, pp. 503–504.
  3. ^ D-Vasilescu 2018, p. 76.
  4. ^ Antonovych 1874, p. 14.
  5. ^ a b "Zlatoverkhy Mikhailovsky monastyr". Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). Retrieved 26 October 2007.
  6. ^ Chobit 2005, p. 147.
  7. ^ Cac 2009, pp. 190–191.
  8. ^ Chervonozhka, Valentyna (2–8 September 2006). "Cathedral of outstanding deeds". Zerkalo Nedeli (in Russian and Ukrainian). Retrieved 17 September 2006.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ a b c d Makarov 2002, p. 558.
  10. ^ Metropolitan Museum Collection
  11. ^ "Collection". The British Museum.
  12. ^ a b c Yunakov 2016, p. 111.
  13. ^ a b c d Yunakov 2016, p. 112.
  14. ^ Yunakov 2016, p. 416.
  15. ^ Hewryk 1982, p. 15.
  16. ^ a b c Hewryk 1982, p. 16.
  17. ^ . The State Hermitage Museum. Archived from the original on 24 June 2004. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  18. ^ a b c d e . Kyiv Post. 28 July 2011. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  19. ^ Chobit 2005, p. 24.
  20. ^ Woronowycz, Roman (29 November 1998). . The Ukrainian Weekly. Kyiv Press Bureau. Archived from the original on 27 April 2006. Retrieved 29 August 2006.
  21. ^ Wilson 2015, p. 243.
  22. ^ Chobit 2005, p. 26.
  23. ^ "The frescoes of the Michael's Monastery are going to be returned to Ukraine". Korrespondent (in Russian). Retrieved 2 December 2006.
  24. ^ "Факти ICTV – Михайлівський Золотоверхий стане кафедральним собором єдиної УПЦ". 16 December 2018. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  25. ^ "Михайлівський Золотоверхий собор буде головним храмом ПЦУ". risu.org.ua. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  26. ^ "Filaret to head Kyiv Diocese, Metropolitan Symeon elected Chief Secretary of the OCU, the Synod decides". risu.org.ua. 5 February 2019. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
  27. ^ "World Digest: Dec. 15, 2018: Ukrainian church leaders approve split from Russians". The Washington Post. 15 December 2018. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
  28. ^ Yunakov 2016, p. 40.

Sources

  • Antonovych, Volodymyr (1874). Sbornik materialov dlia istoricheskoi topografii: Kieva i ego okrestnostei [A Collection of Materials for Historical Topography: Kyiv and its surroundings] (in Ukrainian). Kyiv: E. Ya. Fedorov. OCLC 902898333.
  • Cac, I.M. (2009). "Grekovich, Anthony". In Smoliy, V.A. (ed.). Енциклопедія історії України [Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine] (in Ukrainian). Vol. 2. Institute of History of Ukraine.
  • Chobit, Dmytro (2005). Mykhailivskyi Zolotoverkhyi Monastyr [St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery] (in Ukrainian). Prosvita. ISBN 978-966-7544-24-9.
  • 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.
  • Makarov, A.N. (2002). Мала енциклопедія Київської старовини [Little Encyclopedia of Kyiv's Antiquities] (in Ukrainian). Kyiv: Dovira. ISBN 978-966-507-128-0.
  • Malikenaite, Ruta (2003), Touring Kyiv (in Ukrainian), Baltija Dryk, ISBN 978-966-96041-3-2
  • Pavlovsky, V.; Zhukovsky, A. (1984). "St Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery". Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Vol. 4. Toronto: University of Toronto Press – via Internet Archive.
  • Wilson, Andrew (2015). The Ukrainians: unexpected nation (4th ed.). New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-03002-1-725-4.
  • Yunakov, Oleg (2016). Architect Joseph Karakis (in Russian). Almaz. ISBN 978-1-68082-000-3.

Further reading

External links

  • . People's Catalog of Orthodox Architecture (in Russian). sobory.ru. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  • . Orthodox Central. Archived from the original on 7 September 2006. — information about the relics of Saint Barbara
  • Information about the monastery from MD-Ukraine

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 the city s historical commercial and merchant quarter the Podil The monastery has been the headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine since December 2018 St Michael s Golden Domed MonasteryKiyevo Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij cholovichij monastirhe monastery compSt Michael s Golden Domed Monastery the bell tower left and cathedral right 50 27 20 N 30 31 22 E 50 45556 N 30 52278 E 50 45556 30 52278LocationKyivCountryUkraineDenominationOrthodox Church of UkraineWebsitearchangel wbr kiev wbr uaHistoryFounded1108 1113Founder s Sviatopolk II of KievDedicationSaint Michael the ArchangelArchitectureArchitect s Ivan Hryhorovych BarskyiStyleUkrainian BaroqueCompleted1999Demolished1934 1936 original Originally built in the Middle Ages by the Kievan Rus ruler Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych the monastery comprises the cathedral church the Refectory of St John the Divine built in 1713 the Economic Gates 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 The cathedral was demolished by the Soviet authorities in the 1930s but was rebuilt following Ukrainian independence in 1991 and opened in 1999 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Restoration and subsequent patronage 1 3 1870s 1930s 1 4 Demolition of the cathedral and bell tower during the Soviet era 1 4 1 Proposals 1 4 2 Removal of the mosaics prior to demolition 1 4 3 Demolition 1935 1936 1 5 Reconstruction 2 Headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine 3 Architecture 3 1 Cathedral 3 2 Refectory 4 Notes 5 References 6 Sources 6 1 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditEarly years Edit The mosaic of St Demetrius was installed by Sviatopolk II in the monastery cathedral to glorify the patron saint of his fatherDuring the 1050s Iziaslav I the Grand Prince of Kyiv built a monastery then called the Monastery and Church of St Demetrius close to the Saint Sophia Cathedral 1 2 Half a century later his son Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych commissioned the monastery church which was dedicated to his father s patron saint Michael the Archangel 2 The church may have been built to commemorate Svyatopolk s victory over the Polovtsians as Michael the Archangel is the patron saint of war victories 3 Sviatopolk II was interred in the monastery in 1113 4 as were other members of his family citation needed The cathedral domes were probably the first in Kyivan Rus to be gilded 5 The monastery was damaged during the Mongol invasion in 1240 when the domes were pillaged 6 The cloister became so ruinous that it was left unmentioned in official records for the next 250 years By 1496 by which time its name was changed to St Michael s the monastery s fortunes had revived note 1 citation needed Restoration and subsequent patronage Edit After being restored and enlarged during the 16th century the monastery became one of the most popular and wealthiest in Ukraine 2 5 In 1618 the religious figure Antony Grekovych uk tried to extend his power over the monastery which provoked a sharp reaction the Cossacks captured him and drowned him in a ditch opposite the Vydubychi Monastery 7 In 1620 Iov Boretsky made it the residence of the renewed Orthodox metropolitan of Kyiv and in 1633 Isaya Kopynsky was named a supervisor of the monastery note 2 citation needed The monastery enjoyed the patronage of hetmans and other benefactors throughout the years The chief magnet for pilgrims were the relics of Saint Barbara alleged to have been brought to Kyiv from Constantinople in 1108 by Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych s wife and kept in a silver reliquary donated by Hetman Ivan Mazepa 8 9 note 3 Although most of the monastery grounds were secularized in the late 18th century as many as 240 monks resided there in the 19th and 20th centuries The monastery served as the residence of the bishop of Chernigov after 1800 A precentor s school was located on the monastery grounds many prominent composers such as Kyrylo Stetsenko and Yakiv Yatsynevych either studied or taught at the school citation needed 1870s 1930s Edit The cathedral in 1888In 1870 about 100 000 pilgrims paid tribute to St Barbara at St Michael s Monastery 9 Before the Russian Revolution in 1917 rings manufactured and blessed at St Michael s Monastery known as St Barbara s rings were very popular among the citizens of Kyiv They usually served as good luck charms and according to popular beliefs occasionally protected against witchcraft but were also effective against serious illnesses and sudden death 9 These beliefs reference the facts that the Monastery was not affected by the plague epidemics in 1710 and 1770 and cholera epidemics of the 19th century citation needed In 1906 a medieval hoard of silver and gold jewellery was discovered in a metal casket on Trekhsvyatytelska Street Street of the Three Saints opposite the gates of St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Gold jewellery from the hoard is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York the silver jewellery and two ingots are in the British Museum London The hoard is dated to the 11th 12th centuries and was probably hidden at the time of the Tartar invasions and the Sack of Kyiv in 1240 10 11 Demolition of the cathedral and bell tower during the Soviet era Edit Proposals Edit During the first half of the 1930s various Soviet publications questioned the known historical facts regarding the age of the Cathedral The publications stressed that the medieval building had undergone major reconstructions and that little of the original Byzantine style cathedral was preserved This wave of questioning sought to justify the demolition of the monastery and its replacement with a new administrative centre for the Ukrainian SSR previously located in the city of Kharkiv Before its demolition 8 June 9 July 1934 the structure was carefully studied by T M Movchanivskyi uk and K Honcharev from the recently purged and re organized Institute of Material Culture uk of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences On the basis of their survey the cathedral was declared to belong primarily to the Ukrainian Baroque style rather than to the twelfth century as was previously thought and thus did not merit preservation due to its alleged lack of historical and artistic value This conclusion backed up the Soviet authorities plans to demolish the entire monastery Local historians archaeologists and architects agreed to the monastery s demolition although reluctantly Only one professor Mykola Makarenko uk refused to sign the demolition act he later died in a Soviet prison 1 note 4 In the mid 1930s after the transfer of the Ukrainian capital from Kharkiv to Kyiv a decision was made to demolish the cathedral and build administrative buildings in its place For this purpose in 1934 Soviet authorities decided to hold a competition for the project of the Governmental Centre with a place for parades 12 In all of the projects submitted for the location in the area of Bogdan Khmelnitsky Square the St Michael s Golden domed Cathedral was demolished except for one 12 The project of Joseph Karakis was the only one of four projects submitted for the competition with the location of the centre in this place in which the St Michael s Golden domed Cathedral and the monument to Bogdan Khmelnitsky were preserved 12 However at the end of the first round the project of architect Peter Yurchenko uk was selected by the authorities as the most appropriate 13 14 This project according to the architect Boris Erofalov uk was repeating the general scheme of the Karakis but was done in a more frontal approach with the liquidation of the St Michael s Golden Domed Cathedral And if the location of the main volumes of the Karakis is asymmetric 13 In March 1934 authorities decided to abandon the previous decision and announce a new competition and at the end to choose the project of architect Joseph Langbard 13 Meanwhile according to Oleg Yunakov s research based on archive documents it is clear that although there is no cathedral in the projects of J Langbard and P Yurchenko that was not the reason for the demolition since the decision to demolish the monastery was adopted by the resolution of the Politburo in February 1934 and the dismantling of mosaics began to be produced already in 1933 13 Removal of the mosaics prior to demolition Edit The Eucharist mosaic installed on the second floor of the Saint Sophia CathedralOn 26 June 1934 work began on the removal of the twelfth century Byzantine mosaics It was conducted by the Mosaic Section of the Leningrad Academy of Fine Arts Specialists were forced to work in haste on account of the impending demolition and were thus unable to complete the entire project 15 Despite the care and attention shown during the removal of the mosaics from the cathedral s walls the relocated mosaics cannot be relied upon as being absolutely authentic 16 The remaining mosaics covering an area of 45 square metres 485 sq ft were apportioned among the State Hermitage Museum the Tretyakov Gallery and the State Russian Museum 17 The other remaining mosaics were installed on the second floor of the Saint Sophia Cathedral where they were not on display for tourists Those items that remained in Kyiv were seized by the Nazis during World War II and taken to Germany After the war ended they fell into American hands and were later returned to Moscow citation needed Demolition 1935 1936 Edit During the spring of 1935 the golden domes of the monastery were pulled down The cathedral s silver royal gates Mazepa s reliquary weighing two poods of silver and other valuables were sold abroad or simply destroyed 16 Master Hryhoryi s five tier iconostasis was removed and later destroyed from the cathedral as well St Barbara s relics were transferred to the Church of the Tithes and upon that church s demolition to the St Volodymyr s Cathedral in 1961 citation needed The ruins of the destroyed cathedralDuring the spring summer period of 1936 the shell of the cathedral and bell tower were blown up with dynamite The monastery s Economic Gate Ekonomichna Brama and the monastic walls were also destroyed After the demolition a thorough search for valuables was carried out by the NKVD on the site 16 The resulting empty plot was joined with Sofiyivska Square renamed Uryadova Square Governmental Square and was designated as the new city centre and parade grounds 18 Soviet authorities then commissioned a competition how to best fill the empty plot most architects including Yakiv Shteinberg uk suggested a huge Lenin statue 18 The square itself was planned as a rectangle with huge governmental buildings on the perimeter 18 Four pillars were planned with statues of workers peasants and revolutionaries with flags standing on them 18 Some architects suggested demolishing the statue of Bohdan Khmelnytsky in front of the Saint Sophia Cathedral and the Cathedral itself 18 The only building completed on the former monastery grounds before World War II currently houses the Ministry of Foreign Affairs The construction of the second building the capital centre planned to be built on the site where the Cathedral had once stood was delayed in the spring of 1938 as the authorities were not satisfied with the submitted design This building failed to materialize Some time after demolition the site where the former cathedral used to be located was transformed into a sport complex including tennis and volleyball courts The refectory trapezna of St John the Divine was used for changing rooms citation needed Reconstruction Edit Commemorative plaque to Oles Honchar as the initiator of the monastery s revivalIn 1973 the Kyiv City Council established several archaeological preservation zones within the city these included the territory surrounding the monastery However the vacant site of the demolished cathedral was excluded from the proposed Historic Archaeological Park Museum The Ancient Kyiv developed by architect A M Miletskyi and consultants M V Kholostenko and P P Tolochko citation needed During the 1970s Ukrainian architects I Melnyk A Zayika V Korol and engineer A Kolyakov worked out a plan of reconstruction of the St Michael s Monastery However these plans were only considered after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 19 After Ukraine regained independence in 1991 the demolition of the monastery was deemed a crime and voices started to be heard calling for the monastery s full scale reconstruction as an important part of the cultural heritage of the Ukrainian people These plans were approved and carried out in 1997 1998 whereupon the cathedral and belltower were transferred to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Kyiv Patriarchate Yuriy Ivakin the chief archaeologist for the site said that more than 260 valuable ancient artifacts were recovered during excavations of the site before reconstruction In addition a portion of the ancient cathedral still intact was uncovered this today makes up a part of the current cathedral s crypt 20 The monastery was recreated with the Baroque additions it had at the time of its destruction 21 With support of Kyiv City Council architect restorer Y Lositskiy and others restored the western part of the stone walls The belltower was restored next and became an observation platform Instead of the original chiming clock a new electronic one with hands and a set of chimes a total of 40 22 was installed from which today the melodies of famous Ukrainian composers can be heard note 5 The Cathedral was reconstructed last and decorated with a set of wooden baroque icons copies of former mosaics and frescoes and new works of art by Ukrainian artists 1 The newly rebuilt St Michael s Golden Domed Cathedral was officially opened on 30 May 1999 However interior decorations mosaics and frescoes were not completed until 28 May 2000 The side chapels were consecrated to Saint Barbara and Saint Catherine of Alexandria in 2001 During the following four years 18 out of 29 mosaics and other objets d art from the original cathedral were returned from Moscow after years of tedious discussion between Ukrainian and Russian authorities 2 However by the end of 2006 the remaining frescoes of the monastery are going to be transferred from the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg to Kyiv 23 They are placed in a special preserve that is owned by the municipality rather than the church body citation needed Headquarters of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine EditThe 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 24 25 The rector of the monastery has the rank of diocesan bishop 26 As of March 2022 update Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine Epiphanius I of Ukraine 27 Architecture EditCathedral Edit St Michael s ChurchThe religious architecture of St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery incorporates elements that have evolved from styles prevalent during Byzantine and Baroque periods The St Michael s Golden Domed Cathedral Ukrainian Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij Sobor is the monastery s main church built in 1108 1113 at the behest of Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych The cathedral was the largest of three churches of St Demetrius Monastery citation needed The ancient cathedral was modeled on the Assumption Cathedral Kyiv uk of the Monastery of the Caves It used the Greek cross plan prevalent during the time of the Kyivan Rus six pillars and three apses A miniature church likely a baptistery adjoined the cathedral from the south 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 It is likely that the cathedral had a single dome although two smaller domes might have topped the tower and baptistery The interior decoration was lavish as its high quality shimmering mosaics probably the finest in Kyivan Rus still testify 9 Interior of the cathedralWhen the medieval churches of Kyiv were rebuilt in the late 17th and early 18th centuries in the Ukrainian Baroque style the cathedral was enlarged and renovated dramatically By 1746 it had acquired a new baroque exterior while maintaining its original Byzantine interior Six domes were added to the original single dome but the added pressure on the walls was counteracted by the construction of buttresses 1 The remaining medieval walls characterised by alternative layers of limestone and flat brick were covered with stucco Ivan Hryhorovych Barskyi was responsible for window surrounds and stucco ornamentation citation needed Inside the church an intricate five tier icon screen funded by Hetman Pavlo Skoropadsky and executed by Hryhoryi Petriv from Chernigov was installed in 1718 During the 18th and 19th centuries almost all of the original Byzantine mosaics and frescoes on the interior walls were painted over Some restoration work on the mosaics and frescoes that remained unpainted was carried out towards the end of the 19th century However there were no major and serious investigations of the walls done so it is possible that medieval frescoes or mosaics were preserved under the newer coats of plaster citation needed Refectory Edit Refectory of St John the DivineIn August 1963 the preserved refectory of the demolished monastery without its Baroque cupola was designated a monument of architecture of the Ukrainian SSR In 1973 1982 restoration of the Refectory Church of St John the Theologian the only building that survived the demolition of the 1930s was held authors of the project were architect V Shevchenko and architect I Karakis interiors and furniture 28 The refectory of St John the Divine is a rectangular brick building which contains a dining hall for the brethren as well as several kitchens and pantries The Church of John the Theologian adjoins it from the east The outside is segmented by pilasters and displays window surrounds reminiscent of traditional Eastern Orthodox church architecture The refectory was erected in 1713 taking the place of the original wooden refectory Its interior was overhauled in 1827 and 1837 and the restoration work was undertaken from 1976 to 1981 citation needed Notes Edit Historians are not certain which church survived the Tatar invasion Saint Demetrius s or Saint Michael s citation needed Both Iov Boretsky and Isaya Kopynsky were buried within the monastery citation needed 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 There is a memorial plate dedicated to him hanging on the monastery s walls citation needed The bells chime every hour and play 23 different melodies Chobit 2005 p 26 References Edit a b c d Malikenaite 2003 p 147 a b c d Pavlovsky amp Zhukovsky 1984 pp 503 504 D Vasilescu 2018 p 76 Antonovych 1874 p 14 a b Zlatoverkhy Mikhailovsky monastyr Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary in Russian Retrieved 26 October 2007 Chobit 2005 p 147 Cac 2009 pp 190 191 Chervonozhka Valentyna 2 8 September 2006 Cathedral of outstanding deeds Zerkalo Nedeli in Russian and Ukrainian Retrieved 17 September 2006 permanent dead link a b c d Makarov 2002 p 558 Metropolitan Museum Collection Collection The British Museum a b c Yunakov 2016 p 111 a b c d Yunakov 2016 p 112 Yunakov 2016 p 416 Hewryk 1982 p 15 a b c Hewryk 1982 p 16 The Transfer to the Ukraine of Fragments of Frescoes from Kiev s Mikhailovo Zlatoverkh Monastery The State Hermitage Museum Archived from the original on 24 June 2004 Retrieved 5 April 2017 a b c d e Forgotten Soviet Plans For Kyiv Kyiv Post 28 July 2011 Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2017 Chobit 2005 p 24 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 Wilson 2015 p 243 Chobit 2005 p 26 The frescoes of the Michael s Monastery are going to be returned to Ukraine Korrespondent in Russian Retrieved 2 December 2006 Fakti ICTV Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij stane kafedralnim soborom yedinoyi UPC 16 December 2018 Retrieved 17 December 2018 Mihajlivskij Zolotoverhij sobor bude golovnim hramom PCU risu org ua Retrieved 17 December 2018 Filaret to head Kyiv Diocese Metropolitan Symeon elected Chief Secretary of the OCU the Synod decides risu org ua 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 Yunakov 2016 p 40 Sources EditAntonovych Volodymyr 1874 Sbornik materialov dlia istoricheskoi topografii Kieva i ego okrestnostei A Collection of Materials for Historical Topography Kyiv and its surroundings in Ukrainian Kyiv E Ya Fedorov OCLC 902898333 Cac I M 2009 Grekovich Anthony In Smoliy V A ed Enciklopediya istoriyi Ukrayini Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine in Ukrainian Vol 2 Institute of History of Ukraine Chobit Dmytro 2005 Mykhailivskyi Zolotoverkhyi Monastyr St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery in Ukrainian Prosvita ISBN 978 966 7544 24 9 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 Makarov A N 2002 Mala enciklopediya Kiyivskoyi starovini Little Encyclopedia of Kyiv s Antiquities in Ukrainian Kyiv Dovira ISBN 978 966 507 128 0 Malikenaite Ruta 2003 Touring Kyiv in Ukrainian Baltija Dryk ISBN 978 966 96041 3 2 Pavlovsky V Zhukovsky A 1984 St Michael s Golden Domed Monastery Encyclopedia of Ukraine Vol 4 Toronto University of Toronto Press via Internet Archive Wilson Andrew 2015 The Ukrainians unexpected nation 4th ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 03002 1 725 4 Yunakov Oleg 2016 Architect Joseph Karakis in Russian Almaz ISBN 978 1 68082 000 3 Further reading 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 Klos W 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 NASU Institute of Encyclopaedic Research ISBN 978 966 02 2074 4 Retrieved 10 March 2022 Rapoport Pyotr 1986 Zodchestavo Drevnei Rusi The Architecture of Ancient Russia in Russian Saint Petersburg Nauka ISBN 978 966 507 128 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Michael s Cathedral 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 Saint Barbara Orthodox Central Archived from the original on 7 September 2006 information about the relics of Saint Barbara Information about the monastery from MD Ukraine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Michael 27s Golden Domed Monastery amp oldid 1149451912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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