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  1. The Building of the Patriarchate ( Serbian: Зграда Патријаршије / Zgrada Patrijaršije) is a building in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is the administrative seat of the Serbian Orthodox Church and its head, the Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Finished in 1935, the building was declared a cultural monument on 18 December 1984. [1] [2]

    • Completed
  2. The building of the Patriarchate was built in 1935, on the site of the old, demolished metropolitan court. The building was designed by a Russian-born architect Viktor Lukomsky. The previous building of the metropolitan court was a simple, one-story building erected on the land bought in 1818.

  3. Hace 2 días · PATRIARCHATE OF THE SERBIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH Kralja Petra I 5, tel. 328-2593, www.spc.yu. Today's building of the Patriarchate was built in 1934-1935 and designed by the architect Viktor Lukomski. The building has a square base, it is solid and has monumental forms.

  4. Protestant. Synagogues. See also. References. Religious architecture in Belgrade. Saborna Crkva, the Eastern Orthodox cathedral. Belgrade, Serbia has an abundance of religious architecture. The city has numerous Serbian Orthodox churches and temples and it is also the seat of the Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church.

  5. 3 de dic. de 2019 · Patriarchate. The building of the Serbian Patriarchate, which is the supreme body of the Serbian-Orthodox Curch, is a monumental structure positioned in possibly the most beautiful part of Belgrade, facing the Cathedral Church of St. Michael, in Kosančićev Venac neighborhood, close to Belgrade Fortress, next to Princess Ljubica ...

  6. Belgrade: Residence: Building of the Patriarchate, Belgrade: Headquarters: Belgrade, Serbia: Information; Denomination: Eastern Orthodox: Sui iuris church: Serbian Orthodox Church: Rite: Byzantine Rite: Established: 1931: Cathedral: St. Michael's Cathedral, Belgrade: Language: Church Slavonic Serbian: Calendar: Julian calendar ...

  7. Housed in the Building of the Patriarchate, the Museum of the Serbian Orthodox Church boasts a permanent exhibition of objects of immeasurable religious, cultural and artistic value. They provide an insight into the history of the Serbian Orthodox Church from Stefan Nemanja and Saint Sava until the modern times.