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  1. The Penza Recluses ( Russian: Пензенские затворники, True Russian Orthodox Church, TROC; Russian: Настоящая русская православная церковь) were an Independent Russian doomsday cult founded by Pyotr Kuznetsov which borrowed some ideas from Eastern Orthodoxy. The self-given name of the group ...

  2. The Chinese Orthodox Church ( simplified Chinese: 中华东正教会; traditional Chinese: 中華東正教會; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Dōngzhèngjiàohuì, Russian: Китайская православная церковь) is an autonomous Eastern Orthodox Christian church in China. An organized Orthodox presence was maintained in the region as ...

  3. Church of the Holy Trinity, Athens. Coordinates: Exterior view of the Holy Trinity church. The Church of the Holy Trinity ( Greek: Ναός Αγίας Τριάδος, romanized : Naos Agias Triados, Russian: Церковь Святой Троицы) is a Byzantine -era church at Filellinon Street that serves the Russian Orthodox community of ...

  4. St. Theodosius Cathedral ( Russian: Собор Святого Феодосия) is an Eastern Orthodox church located on Starkweather Avenue in the West Side neighborhood of Tremont in Cleveland, Ohio. Considered one of the finest examples of Russian church architecture in the United States, [2] it is listed on the National Register of Historic ...

  5. The Russian Orthodox Church, also called the Russian Orthodox Church of Saint Megalomartyr Barbara ( French: Église orthodoxe russe de la sainte mégalomartyre Barbara; Russian: Це́рковь свято́й великому́ченицы Варва́ры ), is a Russian Orthodox Church in Vevey, canton of Vaud, Switzerland. It is listed as ...

  6. This means that despite current political issues, the Metropolis of Bessarabia is now recognized as "the rightful successor" to the Metropolitan Church of Bessarabia and Hotin, which existed from 1927 until its dissolution in 1944, when its canonical territory was put under the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church's Moscow Patriarchate in 1947.

  7. Archimandrite Nicholas Gibbes: From the Russian Orthodox Church in Exile to the Moscow Patriarchate. ROCOR Studies. March 26. Accessed May 2020. —. 2021. The Belgrade Nightingales: A Russian Choir in London, 1939–1940. Nicholai Studies, January 5: 81-130. Accessed January 5, 2020. Volume I (2021), Issue 1 — Nicholai Studies.