Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Orthodox Cemetery, Warsaw

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Established
  
1841

Country
  
Poland

Location
  
Warsaw

Phone
  
+48 22 836 68 16

Orthodox Cemetery, Warsaw

Type
  
Christian Orthodox cemetery

Address
  
Wolska 138/140, 01-126 Warszawa, Poland

Similar
  
Cmentarz Powązko, Cmentarz Wolski, Cmentarz Żydowski, Cmentarz Wojskowy, Kościół pw św Wawrzyńca

(Polish: Cmentarz Prawosławny w Warszawie), The Orthodox Cemetery in Warsaw is a historic Eastern Orthodox cemetery located in the Wola district, western part of Warsaw, Poland.

Contents

Details

In 1834 the first Orthodox parish was established in Warsaw and a decision was made to set up a cemetery for the community. The Roman Catholic parish of St. Lawrence was then turned into an Orthodox church, by decree of the Tsar himself. Although the cemetery was officially consecrated in 1841, the first burials took place there as early as 1836. In 1905 a new church, St. John the Ladder was built, while St. Lawrence Church returned to the Roman Catholic church after Poland regained its independence.

The burial place of a person depended on his/her social status, therefore; generals, the clergy and civil service notables were buried near the church. The second 'zone' included the graves of lower rank officers, clerks and wealthy merchants. The third 'zone' housed the graves of soldiers and members of the bourgeoisie, while the poorest were buried in the area furthest from the church. During the Warsaw Uprising mass executions of Varsovians were carried out there.

On All Saint's Day, processions of the Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches take place there, preceded by an ecumenical service conducted by priests from both congregations.

Selected notable burials

Among those buried at the cemetery are former Mayor of Warsaw (from the Tsarist times) Sokrates Starynkiewicz (1820-1892), Russian poet and writer Mikhail Artsybashev (1879-1927) and leading Polish Orthodox theologian Jerzy Klinger (1918-1975).

  • Marko Bezruchko (1883 – 1944), Ukrainian military commander and a General of the Ukrainian National Republic
  • Dmitry Filosofov (1872-1940), Russian author, essayist, literary critic
  • Alexander Petrov (1794-1867), Russian chess player, chess composer, and chess writer
  • Czesław Kiszczak (1925-2015), Polish general, Interior Minister, Prime Minister
  • References

    Orthodox Cemetery, Warsaw Wikipedia