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St. Stanislaus Church, Saint Petersburg

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117:(1731–1826), the first Archbishop of Mogilev Saint Petersburg in 1783, who donated money and land which used to be his residence. The church, built between 1823 and 1825, is the work of Italian architect David Visconti. It has a capacity of seven hundred people. A year after the consecration, the archbishop was buried there. This was the second Catholic church built after the St. Catherine on Nevsky Prospekt. The parish had 10,200 faithful on the eve of the 1917 revolution had a parochial school and a charity. Bishop Antoni Malecki (1861–1935), who was deported to Siberia in 1930, officiated there from 1887 to 1921. A plaque commemorates his memory in the church. 34: 61: 251: 246: 231: 236: 256: 192: 114: 241: 133: 138: 169: 73: 78: 33: 99: 121: 103: 91: 48: 225: 207: 194: 252:
Cultural heritage monuments of federal significance in Saint Petersburg
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19th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Russia
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Index


Saint Petersburg
Russia
Denomination
Roman Catholic Church
Russian
neoclassical style
Saint Petersburg
Russia
Stanisław Bohusz Siestrzeńcewicz
fall of communism
Roman Catholicism in Russia
St. Stanislaus
St. Stanislaus Church
"Римско-католическая архиепархия Божией Матери в Москве"
59°55′21″N 30°17′17″E / 59.9226°N 30.2880°E / 59.9226; 30.2880
Categories
Roman Catholic churches in Saint Petersburg
Roman Catholic churches completed in 1825
Church buildings with domes
19th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Russia
Cultural heritage monuments of federal significance in Saint Petersburg
Neoclassical church buildings in Russia

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