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  1. Russian Orthodox Church. The Russian Orthodox church in Tunis ( Arabic: الكنيسة الأرثوذكسية الروسية بتونس ), also called 'Church of the Resurrection' ( Russian: Церковь Воскресения Христова) is a church Orthodox of the city of Tunis ( Tunisia ). Located on the Avenue Mohammed V, it was ...

  2. On the other hands, Orthodox Church in Japan was also belonged to Russian Orthodox Church. Therefore Japanese occupation of Korea resulted persecution of Orthodox Christian believers but did not terminated whole relations between Russian Orthodox Church and Eastern Orthodoxy in Korea.

  3. The modern Russian Orthodox diocese was founded in 1839 with the incorporation of the Uniate parishes under Metropolitan Joseph Semashko into the Russian church at the Synod of Polotsk. Among the more notable hierarchs of Lithuania in the later imperial period was St. Tikhon (Bellavin), who served in the post 1913–1917. The diocese functioned ...

  4. Russian Orthodox Chapel. The Russian Orthodox Chapel is a funerary chapel built in Weimar in 1860 for Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia. It was constructed in the Historical Cemetery behind the Weimarer Fürstengruft, to which it is connected by an underground passage. Maria Pavlovna's coffin is located in the passage, with her husband ...

  5. La Iglesia ortodoxa rusa fuera de Rusia o Iglesia ortodoxa rusa en el Extranjero (en ruso: Ру́сская Правосла́вная Це́рковь Заграни́цей - РПЦЗ y (en inglés: Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia - ROCOR, ROCA ), es una fracción de la Iglesia ortodoxa rusa que se constituyó en forma independiente en 1920 y que el 17 de mayo de 2007 firmó el Acta ...

  6. Na Rússia Czarista. A história da Igreja Ortodoxa sob a Rússia Czarista é conturbada, como em 1569, quando Ivan, o Terrível ordenou o assassinato do Metropolita Filipe II. Em 1589, com o crescimento da importância da Igreja, o Patriarca Jeremias II de Constantinopla reconhece sua autocefalia [ 13] e proclama seu Metropolita como Patriarca.

  7. The Church of the Holy Trinity, also called the Russian Church, in Belgrade is a metochion of the Russian Orthodox church in Belgrade, Serbia. It was erected in 1924 according to the plans of Russian émigré architect Valery Stashevsky and was meant mainly for refugees from Soviet Russia who arrived in Serbia in thousands from 1920, after the defeat of the White Army in European part of ...