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Entries / Our Lady’s Church of Joy for All Who Sorrow

Our Lady’s Church of Joy for All Who Sorrow


Categories / Architecture/Architectural Monuments/Religious Architecture (see also Religion.Church)
Categories / Religion. Church/Places of Worship (see also Architecture and Urban Planning)

OUR LADY’S CHURCH OF JOY FOR ALL WHO SORROW, located at 35a Shpalernaya Street. Constructed in 1817-18, in a late Classicist style (architect L. Rusca), replacing the Holy Resurrection Church built in 1711 at the palace of Tsarina Natalya Alexeevna. The building is crowned with a low cupola. The centre of the main facade is emphasized by a magnificent six-columned portico, crowned with a low cupola on a low dome drum; the interior is designed as a rotunda decorated with 24 contiguous Ionian columns, made of artificial white marble. The iconostasis was made by engraver Y. A. Dunaev; the icons were painted by artists V. K. Shebuev and S. S. Kurlyandtsev. The revered icon of Our Lady the Joy of All Who Sorrow of the late 17th century in a precious frame was painted in the workshop of F. A. Verkhovtsev according to the drawing of F. G. Solntsev, and came from the former church. A second tier of windows was added in 1841. In 1932, the Our Lady’s Church of Joy for All Who Sorrow was closed down, and the building was used to house the department of the All-Russian Society for Historic and Cultural Monuments. In 1993, church services were resumed.

References: Георгиевский Н. Г. Историко-статистическое описание Санктпетербургской Скорбященской церкви, что за Литейным двором. СПб., 1866; Антонов В. В., Кобак А. В. Святыни Санкт-Петербурга: Ист.-церков. энцикл. СПб., 1994. Т. 1. С. 151-153.

V. V. Antonov.

Persons
Dunaev Yakov Alexeevich
Kurlyandtsev Stepan Semenovich
Natalia Alexeevna, Duchess
Rusca Luigi (Aloisy Ivanovich)
Shebuev Vasily Kozmich
Solntsev Fedor Grigorievich
Verkhovtsev Fedor Andreevich

Addresses
Chernyshevskogo St./Saint Petersburg, city, house 3
Shpalernaya St./Saint Petersburg, city, house 35-а

Bibliographies
Георгиевский Н. Г. Историко-статистическое описание Санктпетербургской Скорбященской церкви, что за Литейным двором. СПб., 1866
Антонов В. В., Кобак А. В. Святыни Санкт-Петербурга: Ист.-церков. энцикл. СПб., 1994

The subject Index
Neoclassicism

Chronograph
1818


Miracle-Working and Revered Icons (entry)

MIRACLE-WORKING AND REVERED ICONS. The most famous Miracle-Working icon of Our Lady of Kazan — the copy of the 16th century of the lost Miracle-Working icon of the same name, can now be seen in the Kazan Cathedral