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  1. St. Andrew's Cathedral, Philadelphia. Coordinates: 39.9635°N 75.1464°W. St. Andrew's Cathedral in 2022. St. Andrew's Cathedral, is a Russian Orthodox cathedral in Philadelphia. Established in 1897, it is the oldest Eastern Orthodox Christian Church in Philadelphia. The current rector is the Archpriest Mark Shinn.

  2. Previously under the Russian Orthodox Church, it has been an autonomous Orthodox archdiocese of the Patriarchate of Constantinople since 1923. The wooden church of Sts. Peter and Paul in Tornio, built in 1884. The Orthodox Church of Finland is divided into three dioceses (hiippakunta), each with a subdivision of parishes (seurakunta).

  3. The American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese of North America ( ACROD) is a diocese of the Ecumenical Patriarchate with 78 parishes in the United States and Canada. Though the diocese is directly responsible to the Patriarchate, it is under the spiritual supervision of the Primate of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America .

  4. The Russian Orthodox Church held a privileged position in the Russian Empire, expressed in the motto, Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality, of the late Russian Empire. It obtained immunity from taxation in 1270, and was allowed to impose taxes on the peasants .

  5. 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.

  6. 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 ...

  7. The Russian Orthodox Church in Wiesbaden was built from 1847 to 1855 by Duke Adolf of Nassau on the occasion of the death of his wife, the 19-year-old Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mikhailovna of Russia, niece of Emperor Nicholas I. [1] Adolf and Elizabeth married in 1844, but the following year, she died in childbirth, as did their newborn daughter.