Church of Nicholas the Wonderworker
Church of Nicholas the Wonderworker
Church of Nicholas the Wonderworker
5
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العنوان
تواصَل مباشرة
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نصنف هذه المطاعم ومعالم الجذب من خلال موازنة التعليقات التي يتم الحصول عليها من أعضائنا مع مدى قربها من هذا الموقع.
معالم الجذب
9 على بُعد 10 كيلومترات
5.0
تعليقين
ممتاز
2
جيد جدًا
0
متوسط
0
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0
سيئ جدًا
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تمت ترجمة هذه التعليقات آليًا من لغتها الأصلية.
قد تحتوي هذه الخدمة على ترجمات تم تقديمها من خلال Google. وتخلي Google مسؤوليتها من جميع الضمانات، صريحةً كانت أم ضمنيةً، المتعلقة بالترجمات، بما في ذلك أي ضمانات تتعلق بالدقة والموثوقية، وكذلك أي ضمانات ضمنية تتعلق بقابلية التسويق والملاءمة لغرض معين والخلو من التزييف.
investigator64
Ivanovo, روسيا43,279 مساهمة
العائلة • سبتمبر 2023
My acquaintance with the Nizhny Novgorod village of Isada cannot be called close: its location is too inconvenient for a travel lover. Imagine a high, steep bank - the ledges of the Thaddeus Mountains - densely overgrown with trees and bushes. Among the latter, on a small plateau at the foot of Bald Mountain, there are several residential buildings and... It is this very “and” that makes Isady a very attractive place for “hunters” of sacred things. If you get to it by land, then we leave the M7 Volga highway in the direction of Trofimovo, before reaching the last one we go along the highway through Okishino in the direction of Ushakovka, and after the Okishino mini-airfield we go along the dirt road to the left, going down to the Volga, to Isady.
It's probably easier to get to the latter from the river. Well, or, at least, just sail abeam and take a photo of the local sacred “heart” - the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker. Wikipedia speaks rather sparingly about Isady: it has been mentioned since the 17th century as a fishing settlement, in the 17th-18th centuries there was a monastic hermitage in Isady... Actually, that's all... Guys, I found an engraving by Karl Rudolfovich Weyerman, a famous St. Petersburg engraver and woodcut artist of the 19th century century, dated 1871 with the image of the village of Isada. The engraving was made from a series of sketches made during Emperor Alexander II’s trip along the Volga in the summer of 1871.
The isads of that time were really impressive - after all, there were THREE temples and a monastery in the village!!! Moreover, the monastery was founded by soldiers under the command of governor Dmitry Fedorovich Belsky from the army of Ivan IV the Terrible during his unsuccessful campaign against Kazan in 1548. The small monastery was named in honor of Saint Stephen, archdeacon and apostle of the seventy. During his second campaign against Kazan in 1549-1550, John IV arrived at that same monastery and invested his generous gifts into it.
In the 17th century, with the beginning of navigation along the Volga, a trading pier was regularly set up under the Stefanovsky Monastery, where imported goods were sold and exchanged by merchants, and it was then that the local settlement began to be called Isads (“isads” - “landing place on the shore, pier”). In 1764, the Stefanovsky Monastery was closed as part of the secularization reform of Empress Catherine II, and its temple - the Church of Stefan the Archdeacon - was converted into a parish. But let’s return to the “hero” of my post today - the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker.
It was built in stone in 1847 through the diligence of the parish people and the merchant A.F. Sergeeva. The latter was the owner of the pier at Isady and two passages. There were three altars in the temple: the main one - in honor of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, the side altars: in honor of the Holy Three Ecumenical Hierarchs and in honor of the Intercession of the Mother of God. If we talk about the eclectic architecture of the sacral, then its main volume is a cube-shaped two-light quadrangle, completed with a belt of large zakomaras. The quadrangle is crowned with five slightly flattened onion-shaped domes (the central one is larger than the corner “commodities”) on cylindrical drums with arcatures.
From the east, the quadrangle is adjoined by a pentagonal apse lowered to the first light under a cone-shaped conch. In the western direction, the spatial-volumetric composition is continued by an equally high refectory with the apse, connecting the quadrangle to the first tier of a three-tier hipped bell tower with two rows of lucarenes. Visually, the massive northern aisle somewhat “weights down” the entire sacred composition. In 1937, the St. Nicholas Church in Isady was expectedly closed, desecrated, looted - all in the best “traditions” of the then authorities.
The restoration of the abandoned and dilapidated sacral began only in 2015 with the blessing of Bishop Silouan of Lyskovsky and Lukoyanovsky. Nowadays, the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker in Isady, with its magnificent appearance, pleases the souls of a few parishioners and the eyes of travel lovers. I recommend!!!
It's probably easier to get to the latter from the river. Well, or, at least, just sail abeam and take a photo of the local sacred “heart” - the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker. Wikipedia speaks rather sparingly about Isady: it has been mentioned since the 17th century as a fishing settlement, in the 17th-18th centuries there was a monastic hermitage in Isady... Actually, that's all... Guys, I found an engraving by Karl Rudolfovich Weyerman, a famous St. Petersburg engraver and woodcut artist of the 19th century century, dated 1871 with the image of the village of Isada. The engraving was made from a series of sketches made during Emperor Alexander II’s trip along the Volga in the summer of 1871.
The isads of that time were really impressive - after all, there were THREE temples and a monastery in the village!!! Moreover, the monastery was founded by soldiers under the command of governor Dmitry Fedorovich Belsky from the army of Ivan IV the Terrible during his unsuccessful campaign against Kazan in 1548. The small monastery was named in honor of Saint Stephen, archdeacon and apostle of the seventy. During his second campaign against Kazan in 1549-1550, John IV arrived at that same monastery and invested his generous gifts into it.
In the 17th century, with the beginning of navigation along the Volga, a trading pier was regularly set up under the Stefanovsky Monastery, where imported goods were sold and exchanged by merchants, and it was then that the local settlement began to be called Isads (“isads” - “landing place on the shore, pier”). In 1764, the Stefanovsky Monastery was closed as part of the secularization reform of Empress Catherine II, and its temple - the Church of Stefan the Archdeacon - was converted into a parish. But let’s return to the “hero” of my post today - the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker.
It was built in stone in 1847 through the diligence of the parish people and the merchant A.F. Sergeeva. The latter was the owner of the pier at Isady and two passages. There were three altars in the temple: the main one - in honor of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, the side altars: in honor of the Holy Three Ecumenical Hierarchs and in honor of the Intercession of the Mother of God. If we talk about the eclectic architecture of the sacral, then its main volume is a cube-shaped two-light quadrangle, completed with a belt of large zakomaras. The quadrangle is crowned with five slightly flattened onion-shaped domes (the central one is larger than the corner “commodities”) on cylindrical drums with arcatures.
From the east, the quadrangle is adjoined by a pentagonal apse lowered to the first light under a cone-shaped conch. In the western direction, the spatial-volumetric composition is continued by an equally high refectory with the apse, connecting the quadrangle to the first tier of a three-tier hipped bell tower with two rows of lucarenes. Visually, the massive northern aisle somewhat “weights down” the entire sacred composition. In 1937, the St. Nicholas Church in Isady was expectedly closed, desecrated, looted - all in the best “traditions” of the then authorities.
The restoration of the abandoned and dilapidated sacral began only in 2015 with the blessing of Bishop Silouan of Lyskovsky and Lukoyanovsky. Nowadays, the Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker in Isady, with its magnificent appearance, pleases the souls of a few parishioners and the eyes of travel lovers. I recommend!!!
كُتب بتاريخ 24 أبريل 2024
يعبر هذا التعليق عن الرأي الشخصي لأحد أعضاء Tripadvisor ولا يعبر عن رأي شركة Tripadvisor LLC. يجري Tripadvisor عمليات تحقق حول التعليقات.
Igor Alexeev
موسكو, روسيا129,668 مساهمة
زوجان • يوليو 2023
The village of Isady in the Nizhny Novgorod region, on the right bank of the Volga, has been known since the 17th century. The heyday of the village came in the 19th century, when the village had many marinas, 3 churches and a population of more than 600 people. During the years of Soviet power and the following years of power of Russian "effective managers", the number of marinas was reduced to zero, the number of churches was tripled, and the population - 60 times, up to 10 (!) people... Of the temples, only Church of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, built in 1847. Five years ago, the church was in complete ruin and desolation. Fortunately, restoration of the temple began several years ago and now it looks quite decent. In any case, if you look at the village and the temple from the Volga waters...
كُتب بتاريخ 7 أغسطس 2023
يعبر هذا التعليق عن الرأي الشخصي لأحد أعضاء Tripadvisor ولا يعبر عن رأي شركة Tripadvisor LLC. يجري Tripadvisor عمليات تحقق حول التعليقات.
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