Holy Trinity Cathedral, Jerusalem

The Holy Trinity Cathedral (Russian: Свято-Троицкий собор, Hebrew: קתדרלת השילוש הקדוש) is a cathedral of the Russian Orthodox Church in Jerusalem. The cathedral was built in 1860 - 1872 by an Israeli Russian-Orthodox institute that operated in Jerusalem, under the Ottoman Empire government.

The cathedral structure

The structure was designed by the architecture Martin Eppinger, As a Basilica with two aisles, And rounded chambers in the side, what makes the cathedral cross-shaped. The cathedral is built from white stone, with eight steeples, with a cross on their top. The inside of the cathedral is covered with holy Murals, and barely contains chairs. most of the attendant are praying standing, as is customary in Orthodox churches [1]

History

The Cathedral of the Holy Trinity was officially founded on September 11, 1860. In 1864 the outside was completed but the construction was suspended due to budgetary issues. By 1872 the cathedral was luxuriously inaugurated, in a ceremony where Duke Nicholas participated. since then the cathedral is used by Pilgrims and locals. The author of the project was a Russian architect Martin Eppinger. It was originally supposed to be consecrated as the church of St. Alexander Nevsky (the patron saint of Alexander II), but finally it was decided to dedicate the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity.[2]

In 1895 to 1897, the cathedral was renovated. the process included repairing the roof and fixing blind area. Further, the glutinous paints on the walls of the Cathedral were scraped off, and three interiors were painted white; and then the cathedral was decorated with sacred images. Next to the altar an indoor emergency exit was built.

In the period of the British Mandate, the Trinity Cathedral remained independent and was in the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia .

During the first Arab-Israeli war, the temple was badly damaged. From 1948 it is in the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church .

References

External links

Coordinates: 31°46′54″N 35°13′23″E / 31.78159°N 35.223005°E / 31.78159; 35.223005

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.