Knowledge (XXG)

Sarov Monastery

Source 📝

143: 19: 85: 204: 209: 60:
In 1927, the monastery was closed, the monks faced Bolshevik repressions, and many were executed. During World War II, the monastery buildings were used as factories for producing rockets for
104: 199: 214: 180: 57:
and other members of the imperial family. At that time the monastery had nine churches, including one underground. Around 320 monks lived in the monastery.
53:, one of the most venerated saints of the Russian Orthodox church, was living in Sarov from 1778 to 1833. In 1903, the monastery was visited by Tsar 49:. In 1664, an Orthodox monk Theodosius first settled on the Sarov hill. The monastery was established for monks in 1706. The hermit and mystic 173: 166: 89: 67:
It was reactivated in 2006 and reconstruction is taking place. It is under the jurisdiction of the Eparchy of the
61: 68: 50: 142: 18: 46: 150: 31: 72: 193: 54: 205:
Cultural heritage monuments of federal significance in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
119: 106: 96: 84: 45:
The town took its name from being the site of the monastery, next to the
39: 17: 149:
This article about a Russian building or structure is a
154: 210:Buildings and structures in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast 28:Monastery of the Dormition of the Mother of God 174: 8: 181: 167: 22:Sarov Monastery, turn of the 20th century 97:English page on Sarov Monastery web-site 200:Russian Orthodox monasteries in Russia 7: 215:Russian building and structure stubs 139: 137: 153:. You can help Knowledge (XXG) by 14: 36:Свято-Успенская Саровская пустынь 141: 83: 1: 231: 136: 35: 69:Russian Orthodox Church 51:Saint Seraphim of Sarov 23: 120:54.92611°N 43.32500°E 92:at Wikimedia Commons 21: 116: /  125:54.92611; 43.32500 64:rocket launchers. 24: 162: 161: 88:Media related to 222: 183: 176: 169: 145: 138: 131: 130: 128: 127: 126: 121: 117: 114: 113: 112: 109: 87: 62:BM-13 "Katyusha" 38:) is located in 37: 230: 229: 225: 224: 223: 221: 220: 219: 190: 189: 188: 187: 134: 124: 122: 118: 115: 110: 107: 105: 103: 102: 90:Sarov Monastery 81: 73:Nizhny Novgorod 12: 11: 5: 228: 226: 218: 217: 212: 207: 202: 192: 191: 186: 185: 178: 171: 163: 160: 159: 146: 100: 99: 80: 79:External links 77: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 227: 216: 213: 211: 208: 206: 203: 201: 198: 197: 195: 184: 179: 177: 172: 170: 165: 164: 158: 156: 152: 147: 144: 140: 135: 132: 129: 98: 95: 94: 93: 91: 86: 78: 76: 74: 70: 65: 63: 58: 56: 52: 48: 43: 41: 33: 29: 20: 16: 155:expanding it 148: 133: 101: 82: 66: 59: 44: 27: 25: 15: 123: / 55:Nicholas II 47:Sarov River 194:Categories 111:43°19′30″E 108:54°55′34″N 42:, Russia. 32:Russian 40:Sarov 151:stub 26:The 71:of 196:: 75:. 34:: 182:e 175:t 168:v 157:. 30:(

Index


Russian
Sarov
Sarov River
Saint Seraphim of Sarov
Nicholas II
BM-13 "Katyusha"
Russian Orthodox Church
Nizhny Novgorod

Sarov Monastery
English page on Sarov Monastery web-site
54°55′34″N 43°19′30″E / 54.92611°N 43.32500°E / 54.92611; 43.32500
Stub icon
stub
expanding it
v
t
e
Categories
Russian Orthodox monasteries in Russia
Cultural heritage monuments of federal significance in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
Buildings and structures in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast
Russian building and structure stubs

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.