Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 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 Charles Frederick 's coffin ...

  2. Russian Orthodox church in Samarkand. Russian Orthodox Church in Uzbekistan has been established in 1871 and extends to Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan. The Russian Orthodox Church has a better standing with the government than other religious groups do. The constitution establishes a secular framework to separate church and state.

  3. The Russian Orthodox Eparchy of Eastern America and New York ( Russian: Восточно-Американская и Нью-Йоркская епархия) is a diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia that is the see of its First Hierarch. The current First Hierarch is Metropolitan Nicholas (Olhovsky) since September 14th, 2022.

  4. Russian icons. Holy Trinity, Hospitality of Abraham; by Andrei Rublev; c. 1411; tempera on panel; 1.1 x 1.4 m (4 ft 8 in x 3 ft 8 3⁄4 in); Tretyakov Gallery (Moscow) The use and making of icons entered Kievan Rus' following its conversion to Orthodox Christianity in AD 988. As a general rule, these icons strictly followed models and formulas ...

  5. Russian Orthodox church buildings. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Russian Orthodox churches. Church buildings belonging to the several church bodies of Russian Orthodoxy, including the Russian Orthodox Church (a.k.a. Moscow Patriarchate), the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia, the Orthodox Church in America, the Archdiocese of ...

  6. 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.

  7. November 19, 1969. Russian Orthodox Cathedral of the Transfiguration of Our Lord is a historic Russian Orthodox cathedral at 228 North 12th Street in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City. The cathedral was designated a New York City landmark by the Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1969, and was listed on the National ...