Harman Patil (Editor)

Sophia Cathedral

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Affiliation
  
Russian Orthodox

State
  
Russia

Capacity
  
5,000

Phone
  
+7 812 451-53-49

Rite
  
Orthodox

Year consecrated
  
1788 (1989, 1999)

Architectural style
  
Palladian architecture

Sophia Cathedral

Location
  
Pushkin, Saint Petersburg, Russia

Municipality
  
Saint Petersburg, Tsarskoye Selo

Address
  
Sofiyskaya pl., 1, Pushkin, g. Sankt-Peterburg, Russia, 196603

Architects
  
Charles Cameron, Ivan Starov, Leon Benois

Similar
  
Tsarskoye Selo, St Julian's Church - Pushkin, Alexander Park, St Vladimir's Cathedral, Alexander Palace

Saint sophia cathedral los angeles 100 year anniversary liturgy


The Ascension Cathedral in the town of Sophia (now a part of Pushkin) in the vicinity of Saint Petersburg, was one of the first purely Palladian churches to be built in Russia. Rather paradoxically, it may also be defined as "the first example of Byzantinism in Russian architecture".

Contents

Saint sophia cathedral


Construction. Architecture

The cathedral was founded in July 1782 at the instigation of Catherine II of Russia as a reminder of her lifelong Greek Plan. The Tsarina, eager to liberate Constantinople from the Turks, wished to have a replica of the Hagia Sophia in the proximity of the Catherine Palace where she spent her summers. But the first project - an exact copy of the Hagia Sophia - was very expensive.

Then the Empress called upon her favourite architect, Charles Cameron, to design this "Byzantinesque" church, but the Scottish architect, though well versed in the Palladian idiom, had a vague idea of what Byzantine architecture stood for. His design called for an austere and monumental whitewashed exterior, with Doric porticoes on each side, probably a reference to the works of Lord Burlington.

Construction works, supervised by Ivan Starov, lasted for six years. In the eventual variant, the five wide domes were placed on squat drums, vaguely reminiscent of the Hagia Eirene. The church was consecrated on 28 May 1788 in the presence of the Empress. During the two decades that followed, the Imperial Academy of Arts had the interior adorned with Neoclassical paintings. A detached two-storied belltower was added considerably later, in 1905, to a design by Leon Benois.

1788-1934

In 1784, the cathedral was to be the chapter church of the newly established Order of Saint Vladimir. The first dean was archpriest Andrey Samborsky - the religion teacher of tsarina's grandsons.

In 1817, Alexander I of Russia gave the cathedral to a hussar regiment of his Leib Guard, which was quartered in Sophia. During the rest of the 19th century, the regiment had the cathedral transformed into a sort of military museum, its walls lined with marble plaques honouring the hussars' victories. Near the altar, for instance, were placed the banners captured by General Cherniaev from the Khan of Kokand.

1934-1989

In 1934, the Communist government had the cathedral closed down, with marble plaques and precious furnishings either nationalized or stolen.

Since 1989

In 1989, the Russian Orthodox Church resumed worship there. The same year, a bust of Alexander Nevsky was added nearby, by way of commemorating the 750th anniversary of the Battle of the Neva.

The complete consecration after the restoration took place on May 19, 1999.

In 2003, a monument to the Leib guard hussar regiment was erected south of the cathedral.

References

Sophia Cathedral Wikipedia