Английская Википедия:Church of St. John the Warrior

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Шаблон:Infobox Historic building

Church of St. John the Warrior on Yakimanka Street (Шаблон:Lang-ru, Шаблон:Lang) is a Russian Orthodox church in Yakimanka District of Moscow erected in 1704-1717,[1] during the reign of Peter the Great. It is attributed to architect Ivan Zarudny. The church address is 46, Bolshaya Yakimanka.

History

The lowlands between present-day Bolshaya Yakimanka Street and Moskva River were regularly flooded in spring; they were occupied by sloboda settlements of Streltsy, Poles and ordinary farmers.[1]

Legendary accounts link the present-day church with Peter I. Peter, examining the damage done by the flood, noticed the ruined church of St. John (1625). He ordered to rebuild in on a higher, safer lot, and financed the construction to commemorate the Battle of Poltava. The fence around St.John was erected later, in 1754-1758. In 1779-1791, the church was decorated by Gavriil Domozhirov (frescoes) and Vasili Bazhenov (iconostasis); this artwork was lost in 1860s. In 1928, the church was refitted with an iconostasis taken from the demolished Three Saints church at Red Gates.[2]

After the Russian Revolution, numerous icons and relics from the churches destroyed by the Communists were stored in the Church of St. John. The church itself operated continuously through the entire Soviet period.[3]

Architecture

Файл:Ivanavoina.jpg
The church at night

The church combines elements of the Muscovite baroque style with the Ukrainian baroque and European influences prevalent in Russian architecture of Peter's reign. Architect remains unknown; similarities with Menshikov Tower suggest the work of Ivan Zarudny. The main building is a traditional muscovite octagon on a square (восьмерик на четверике), however, this time there are two coaxial octagons, each crowned with a half-dome.

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:Coord

  1. 1,0 1,1 Russian: П.В. Сытин, "Из истории московских улиц", М, 1948
  2. Russian: "Москва и Подмосковье", М., Искусство, 1979, cтр. 491
  3. Russian: www.pravoslavie.ru