Telegram Web Link
Let's continue to a place where Christians have been oppressed much longer - the once Roman city of Damascus.

Yet, this story will be more joyful - as much as it can be there. I suggest to take a look at the Cathedral of the Dormition in Damascus, dating back to the IV century, on the street where the Apostle Paul himself once lived. It was repeatedly destroyed and rebuilt, and at some point, the Patriarchate of Antioch moved here - by that time the church itself had already become the city's cathedral instead of an old one, which had been taken by the Muslims.

The present form with Ottoman Baroque features was acquired after another destruction in the XIX century, when it was restored with the support of the Russian Empire. Even though the Christians of Syria in general and Damascus in particular are now once again in danger, the history of the cathedral reminds us that there is always hope.

May we now pray to the Blessed Theotokos for our brothers in Syria!
17
In conclusion, I suggest to take a look at one of the most important Dormition churches in Georgia - the catholicon of the Ananuri fortress.

The church is both archetypically symbolic and, at the same time, quite unusual. It is located in one of the most picturesque and well-preserved castles in the country, being its heart, and at first glance has a very canonical appearance.

At the same time, however, the it is the last building of the fortress, erected at the end of the XVII century, a time that wasn’t the best for local architecture due to Muslim pressure.

By this time, local traditions had undergone a significant Persian influence, which is noticeable in both the architecture and the carvings of the church, the latter being particularly unusual. While the penetration of Eastern traditions was widespread then, monumental carving weren’t, and only a few lesser-known churches decorated in such way. The interior of the church hides one of the best-preserved pre-revolutionary iconostases in the country.
16❤‍🔥1
The receding perspective of the former Road Palace in Vyshny Volochek, which was recently restored.

Over time, the building changed its original Baroque appearance to a more austere one when it became a school for railway conductors.
11
A detail of Byzantine marble panelling in the catholicon of Nea Moni on Chios - one of the few surviving examples of this craftsmanship in Greece.
14🔥41
Old district court building in Leskovac, Serbia.
14👍2
The preserved classical frescoes in the church of the Nikandrov Monastery in Russia have not lost their nobility, but rather seem to have strengthened it.
16
Villa Allatani in Thessaloniki, Greece, is one of the best-preserved XIX century mansions in the city, thanks to the fact that it currently houses the local municipality.
13👍2🔥1
A Byzantine funerary stele from Ankyra with text inscribed in a characteristic Roman frame with handles called tabula ansata.
134
The massive building of Azov-Don Commercial bank in St. Petersburg, build in a characteristic for the city "northern" second-wave neoclassicism.
15
An old XVII-century Saint Nicholas church in Rebegești, Romania, built by Great Logothete Radu Cretulescu.
14🔥2
An excavated and partially restored stable in the Byzantine town of Sobata, Israel.

Long considered Nabataean town largely developed under Roman rule, it is nowadays widely accepted the the majority of the city, including this building, was constructed already after reforms of Constantine.
13👍4
The slender late Baroque of the Church of the Protection of the Most Holy Theotokos in the village of Naryshkino, Nizhny Novgorod Region, Russia.
17
2025/10/22 16:24:46
Back to Top
HTML Embed Code: