Before the 1917 Revolution, all Russians used to visit churches and there were a huge number of them to accommodate all the believers. But what about these days?
Russia’s Prince Vladimir massively turned the country into Orthodoxy in 988. Since those times, all of Russian history has seen the building of churches (excluding the 70 years of Soviet power, of course). Firstly, churches were financed with the Princes’ money. They considered constructing big and beautiful cathedrals as a prestigious action, showing their might. They invited the best architects and spent huge amounts of money on them.
Dukes from different parts of Russia competed with each other in matters of church and monastery construction, trying to build better masterpieces than their neighbors. They cared more about beautiful churches, rather than their own palaces, which actually were sometimes just ordinary wooden houses.
Forty Martyrs' Church in Pereslavl-Zalessky
Legion Media
Monastery of Saint Euthymius in Suzdal
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Since the 16th century, when all Russian regions united, churches were built under the tsar’s order. Rich merchants and noblemen gave large sums of money to the cathedral. At the same time, churches were also built with people’s donations. Christ the Savior Cathedral was built on folks’ money after Russia’s win over Napoleonic France.
Christ the Savior Cathedral
Alexander Grishin/Global Look Press
Rich and prosperous villages also had churches. Faith was an important and big part of everyday life. To give you an idea about the level of religiousness, here’s just one episode from Russian history. When, in the 17th century, a new patriarch named Nikon began a massive reformation of the Orthodox Church, many Russians didn’t accept the new rules of praying so much that they preferred to die and hundreds of people literally burned themselves alive!
Churches in Old Russia
61a50d7785600a1e4866aed9.jpgChurch of the Transfiguration and the 17th century Kizhi Pogost in Karelia
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Most of the churches used to be built from wood, rare examples of them remaining in the Russian North, and they are brilliant (take a look at them here). But, just like all wooden buildings, they frequently burned down and new churches had to be built in their places.
However, in big cities, the authorities tried to build stone churches as a sign of their power. Each Russian region used to have its own “department” of the Church and the local bishops took care of the churches and monasteries.
Church of the Intercession on the Nerl River
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Churches sometimes could be the only stone buildings in Old Russian cities. And that’s why some of them have been preserved from very ancient times (one of the oldest is dated to the 11th century).
But, how many churches could a city build? Well, a lot! Indeed, in the early 20th century, there were roughly 800 cathedrals in Moscow and even more chapels and other places of worship. Each Moscow street had a church and sometimes not just one.
Church of St. Nicholas in Khamovniki, Moscow
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Other Russian cities also had lots of churches. And many of them were built on donations of the parish. In the cities of Russia’s Golden Ring tourist route, there are many preserved old churches. And listening to their bells ringing all together, one can feel as if one is back in Old Russia.
Churches after the Revolution
61a50d7785600a1e4866aeda.jpgOn December 5, 1931, Christ the Savior Cathedral was blown up
Public domain
The Bolsheviks implemented a massive anti-religion campaign. They closed churches, grabbed the church valuables and icons and sold them to the West, arrested and killed priests. The captured cathedrals the Soviets used as army barracks, warehouses, grain storages, hospitals, orphanages, museums, and for many other purposes (read more here).
The Bolsheviks also destroyed a huge number of churches. Before the Revolution of 1917, the Russian Empire had roughly 54,000 churches and over 1,000 monasteries. And by the late 1980s, when perestroika began, their number had decreased to 6,893 and 22, respectively.
Church of Cosmas and Damian in Moscow, demolished in 1938
I. Barshchevsky
Just in Moscow alone, from around a thousand churches, only around 50 remained serving liturgy by the 1980s. And the most famous example is Christ the Savior Cathedral, which was demolished in 1931. A swimming pool was built in its place. However, in the 1990s, the cathedral was rebuilt according to its original form. Unfortunately, there are some great cathedrals that were lost forever, which you can see here.
So, how many churches are there in modern Russia?
Calculating the number of churches now is a tough task. According to the latest official data for the past three decades, now there are more 21,000 churches and other places of worship and almost a thousand monasteries. Meanwhile, around the world, under the authority of the Russian Orthodox Church, there are over 38,000 churches.
St. Basil's Cathedral in Moscow
Getty Images
This number only includes churches where the liturgy is currently served. According to the website Sobory.ru that lists all Russian churches, there are more than 47 thousand religious Orthodox objects in Russia, including churches that are active, closed, or abandoned.
Church of All Saints in Yekaterinburg, built in 2000s
Legion Media
On average there is one cathedral for every five thousand people, while in big cities, such Moscow and St. Petersburg, there is one cathedral for every 15 thousand people. Now, Moscow has more than 1,000 churches, and each year another 10-20 new ones are being built in the city.
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