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  1. Saint Alexander Nevsky Lavra or Saint Alexander Nevsky Monastery was founded by Peter I of Russia in 1710 at the eastern end of the Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg, in the belief that this was the site of the Neva Battle in 1240 when Alexander Nevsky, a prince, defeated the Swedes. But the battle took place about 12 miles (19 km) away from ...

  2. De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. La primera referencia que se conoce al monasterio de Alejandro Nevski, también conocido como Alexander Nevsky Lavra, indica que fue fundado en 1710 por Pedro el Grande en el extremo sur de la Avenida Nevski, principal avenida de San Petersburgo, para que albergara los restos de Alejandro Nevski ...

    • Construction
    • Design and Interior
    • Soviet Period

    The first mention of the monastery complex is July 1710, when Peter the Great ordered the construction of a monastery to Saint Alexander Nevsky on a plot of land close to the present River Monastyrka [ru], believing this to be the site of Alexander Nevsky's 1240 victory over the Swedes at the Battle of the Neva. The first buildings on the site were...

    As completed the cathedral is surmounted by a single dome on a high drum, with two double-tiered bell towers on either side of the loggia of the central entrance. The main entrance consists of a portico of six Doric columns, with the facades consisting of shallow panels and pilasters. The north and south entrances are surmounted by bas-relief panel...

    After the revolution, many of the valuables were removed from the cathedral and placed in museums, part of the state's general confiscation of Russian Orthodox Church property. The courtyard between the cathedral and the Metropolitan's house became a burial ground in 1917 called the Kazachye Cemetery, later the "Communist Square". The cathedral was...

  3. Aleksandr Nevski (en ruso: Александр Ярославич Невский, Aleksandr Yaroslávich Nevski; 1 Pereslavl-Zaleski, c. 1220- Gorodéts, 14 de noviembre de 1263), 2 príncipe de Nóvgorod (1236), de Kiev (1246) y de Vladímir-Súzdal (1252-1263), fue un líder ruso y santo de la Iglesia ortodoxa rusa, segundo hijo del gran duque Yaroslav II, quien gobernaba...

  4. La “batalla en el Hielo", en la que Alexánder Nevski, un príncipe ruso, derrotó a los caballeros de la Orden de Livonia, se considera un hito en la historia de Rusia. Explicamos esto y otros...