The Zaikonospassky Moscow Monastery is not only active today, it has been granted the status of the Patriarchal Metochion. It is located in Kitai-Gorod on Nikolskaya Street and dates back more than four centuries. Almost all of the monastery buildings that existed at the beginning of the last century have been preserved and today are recognized as historical and architectural monuments.

Cradle of Russian education

The monastery, which was initially called the Monastery of the Most Merciful Savior on the St. Nicholas Cross behind the Icon Row, was founded by Tsar Boris Godunov himself. And although the monastery was first mentioned in documents only in 1635, the date of its foundation is considered to be 1600. And the notorious clarification about the location of the monastery behind the rows in which they sold folding objects and icons served to transform the name of the church institution into the Zaikonospassky Monastery.

In the mid-60s of the 17th century, Simeon of Polotsk established a school for clerks of the Order of Secret Affairs in the monastery, and already in 1687 the Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy settled here. It is considered the first higher educational institution in Great Russia. The academy's graduates included the great Russian scientist M. Lomonosov, Kamchatka explorer S. Krasheninnikov, architect V. Bazhenov, poet V. Trediakovsky, and founder of the Russian theater F. Volkov.

With the opening of Moscow University, the Academy was transformed exclusively into a theological educational institution that trained clergy. At the beginning of the 19th century, it was renamed, began to be called the Moscow Theological Academy and was relocated to the walls of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, and a theological school was opened in the Zaikonospassky Monastery.

Architectural masterpieces of the monastery

The architectural ensemble of the Zaikonospasskaya monastery consists of several remarkable monuments: the Spassky Cathedral, the Brotherhood or Teachers' Building, and the building of the Theological School.

Back in the reign of Alexei the Quiet in 1660, a stone church was founded in the monastery. It was built with funds donated by the governor, Prince F. Volkonsky. The structure had two altars: the first main altar was consecrated in the name of the icon of the Savior Not Made by Hands, the second in the name of the icon of the Mother of God. In the first half of the 18th century, the monastery and cathedral were twice subjected to the destructive fire of fires, after which they were rebuilt.

The temple was especially damaged in the raging fire of 1737. Empress Elizaveta Petrovna, having arrived at the Mother See for the coronation, personally ordered the restoration of the temple. This work was excellently performed by the architect I. Michurin, who managed to revive the temple without significant changes in its architectural appearance. The monastery was also severely devastated by the invasion of Napoleonic troops.

Stables were built in the temple, and tailors were located in the cells to repair officer uniforms.

In 1851, during regular renovations, the dome of the cathedral was decorated with an exquisite rotunda with an onion dome. In the middle of the last century, restoration of the cathedral facades was carried out.

Directly opposite the gate is the old fraternal building. This two-story building was built in 1686. Almost 200 years later, under the leadership of the architect V. Sher, a third floor was built over it and the general design of the facade was completed. Somewhat to the left of it is a two-story building, which was built in 1720 by the architect Zarudny.

The building of the religious school was erected according to the design of the architect Beauvais in 1822. There is a memorial plaque on it with the name of M. Lomonosov, who mastered various sciences at the Academy, engraved.

In 1929, the monastery was closed; even earlier, the gate bell tower was dismantled. For decades, various organizations and institutions were located on the territory of the monastery. Despite the fact that in 2010 it was decided to reopen the monastery, many of the premises are still occupied by non-church organizations.

Spas on Sacred Street

This is what Nikolskaya Street was called in the old days. Even before the Mongol yoke, it lay on the way from Moscow to Vladimir, Rostov and Suzdal, and then became part of the holy road to the Trinity Monastery. After the Vladimir Icon was met in 1395 and the Sretensky Monastery appeared, the entire section of the road from the Kremlin to the border of Zemlyanoy Val began to be called Sretenskaya Street. When the wall of Kitai-Gorod was built in 1534, the section of the street inside the wall began to be called Nikolskaya: in the chronicle this name was first mentioned in 1547, when Ivan the Terrible was crowned king. According to one version, its name was given by the St. Nicholas Gate of the Kremlin, which was overshadowed by the image of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker; according to another, it was the ancient St. Nicholas Monastery, founded in the 14th century and which became the birthplace of the Spasskaya monastery, which in the old days was called “that on the St. Nicholas sacrum.” Such sacrums existed on all three Posad streets of Kitai-Gorod; these are the places where chapels stood, where people were led to the ancient oath - kissing the cross. On the Nikolsky sacrum there was a chapel of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, where the participants in the trial were sworn in in controversial cases: as evidence of the rightness, the litigants kissed the cross and the image of St. Nicholas. Previously, such issues were resolved in judicial duels with the help of clubs: whoever wins is right, but this custom was banned in 1556 at the insistence of the Church.

Nikolskaya was also called “Sacred Street” because of the abundance of churches, monasteries and chapels on it, although it was located in the center of city trade. Trading rows occupied most of Kitai-Gorod, and in the Nikolskaya area there was a special Icon Row, where icons, according to pious custom, were “exchanged” without haggling and setting a firm “divine price” for them, albeit often too high.

Ivan the Terrible gave the St. Nicholas Monastery to the Athonite monks. There is an opinion that on its territory stood the Spasskaya Church, which in 1600 became isolated together with a plot of monastic land into an independent monastery: Boris Godunov is considered the founder of the Spasskaya monastery. Since part of the monastery’s territory was behind the Icon Row, hence the well-known name - Zaikonospassky. It was also called “Spas on Stary” or “Spas Old”, which led to the version about the formation of the Spassky Monastery from Nikolsky, but there was practically no information left about the early stage of its history. It is only known that there were two churches in it: a stone cathedral and a wooden one. At first, the position of the young monastery was more than modest, moreover, in 1626, the wooden Nikolskaya Street was destroyed by a fire, which did not escape the monastery, and after it the honor of the territory was transferred to the Zemsky Prikaz. The inhabitants clearly suffered from a lack of basic necessities. In the summer of 1661, when, apparently, there was a second fire, Archimandrite Dionysius and his brethren beat Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, so that in return for the taken away land they would be “given for food” a poor house that was located outside the Sretensky Gate (probably on Bozhedomka). The request was fulfilled, and in those same years the monks received a truly royal gift. In 1660, by order of the highest order, a new stone cathedral was laid in the monastery - for the sake of beauty and to avoid the risk of a new fire. Funds for the cathedral were given by vow from one of the local residents, boyar Fyodor Volkonsky, whose house stood opposite the monastery. A distant descendant of the holy Prince Michael of Chernigov, who suffered for the Christian faith at Batu’s headquarters in 1246, he participated in the defense of Moscow from the troops of the Polish prince Vladislav in the Time of Troubles, helped Prince Pozharsky, and collected materials for the Council Code. Probably, the vow could have been made back in 1650, when Volkonsky was sent to Pskov to pacify a grain riot with the order to execute the perpetrators, and the rioters almost executed him. Miraculously surviving, he returned to Moscow and was made a boyar.

The new cathedral had two altars: the main altar was in the name of the Savior Not Made by Hands, and the chapel may have retained the dedication of the old wooden church. Historian A.F. Malinovsky argued that the dedication of the second throne was unknown before 1742. The cathedral was consecrated in November 1661, and 20 years later, when the “educational” history of the monastery had already begun, the authorities banned the “private” trade in icons: in 1681, Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich issued a decree so that “trading people should not keep holy icons on the exchange.” . The row of icons was liquidated, and wooden benches were built at the Printing Yard for the “exchange” of icons.

A few years later, the first higher school in Russia, the Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy, opened in the Zaikonospassky Monastery.

"Moscow's new shining Athens"

The transformation of the Zaikonospassky Monastery into a teaching one began even before the construction of the new cathedral. In the first half of the 17th century, there was an urgent need for competent specialists for the needs of the Printing House, corrections and translations of church books, for the training of officials of the Ambassadorial and other state orders. In addition, the task of raising the educational level of the Russian clergy, including to protect Orthodoxy from foreign influence, became clear. The experience of inviting Greek scholars and Kyiv monks (Rtishchev School, Chudov School) was successful, but showed the need to create our own school. In 1634, a Greco-Latin school was established in Moscow under the leadership of the Greek Arseny, where for the first time they began to teach ancient languages: Latin and Greek. This is what Adam Olearius testified, but according to other sources, this school was founded in 1653 under Patriarch Nikon in the Chudov Monastery, and in 1655 Arseny and the school moved to Zaikonospassky, and the monastery began to be called “educational.” This began its gradual transformation into a center of Russian education.

A new page in the history of the monastery began already in 1664 - with the arrival in Moscow of the famous Simeon of Polotsk, a graduate of the Kiev-Mohyla College and a school teacher in Polotsk, which is where his nickname came from. In Polotsk he met Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich when he visited the city. He presented welcoming poems to the sovereign and charmed him so much that he received an invitation to Moscow, where he became the teacher of the royal children, the first court poet in Russia, the creator of the first Russian private school at the Church of St. John the Evangelist in Bronnaya Sloboda and the rector of the Zaikonospassky Monastery, where he stayed upon arrival . With his arrival, a protracted, dangerous struggle began in Russian society between the polar currents of Grecophiles and Latinizers. And the victory of the Greek camp became, without exaggeration, the victory of Russia, which defended its faith, national identity and Orthodox enlightenment.

Simeon of Polotsk was encyclopedically educated, by the standards of his time, he had eloquence and a sharp pen, capable of writing scientific treatises, poetry, and theatrical comedies. He turned to the king with a prayer to “find wisdom,” that is, to establish schools and colleges, but, being the head of the “Latin” camp, he convinced of the need to create schools according to Western models, with teaching in Latin, with an emphasis on rational knowledge, on secular education , for the training of European educated specialists. This trend was opposed by the Greekophile camp, led by the monk Epiphanius Slavinetsky, a member of the Rtishchev and then the Chudov school. They defended the traditional Orthodox orientation in the matter of education: the goal of education is a deep understanding of the Orthodox faith, the study of the Holy Scriptures and patristic heritage, and at the same time a broad mastery of science, languages, and “liberal arts” for the sake of Christian knowledge and for the sake of protecting Orthodoxy from heresies, rationalism, ignorance and superstitions That is why teaching should be conducted in Greek and combine “ecclesiastical wisdom with secular knowledge.”

The Grecophiles had the support of the all-powerful boyar Artamon Matveev, the royal friend, and then Patriarch Joachim. The state so far took the side of Polotsk. Already in 1665, on the orders of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, the first Spassky school was opened at the Zaikonospassky Monastery, where Simeon of Polotsk taught Latin to the sovereign's clerks of the Ambassadorial Prikaz: translators needed knowledge of an international language, and that was Latin then. Among the students was Semyon Medvedev, who later became a monk in this monastery under the name Sylvester and became the successor and follower of Polotsk.

Polotsky felt that he was capable of more. When his young pupil Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich ascended the throne, who made large donations for the maintenance of the teacher and his monastery, he decided to begin implementing a long-desired idea - to create an academy in the Zaikonospassky Monastery. In 1680, Polotsk drew up an Academic Privilege (charter) in the form of a royal manifesto on the establishment of the academy and its charter. It was supposed to prepare educated specialists from different classes for state and church service and teach them languages, the seven liberal arts (grammar, rhetoric, dialectics, music, astronomy, geometry, philosophy) and theology. The Academy, according to Polotsky, should also be a body for protecting the purity of religious thoughts, administer justice to heretics, carry out spiritual censorship and supervision of all educational institutions and even home teachers. But Polotsk was unable to fulfill his plan: he died in August of the same 1680. He was buried in the lower church of the cathedral, and Sylvester Medvedev wrote a “lamentation” for him on his tombstone:

Look, man, this coffin, touched with your heart,
I shed a nice tear over the death of the teacher:
There is only one such former teacher here,
A right theologian, who preserved the dogma of the Church.
A faithful husband, needed by the Church and the kingdom,
Preaching the word to the people is useful...

At the request of the Tsar, Sylvester Medvedev became the rector of the Zaikonospassky Monastery. He still had all of Polotsk’s papers, and, dreaming of heading the academy, he wrote the draft Privilege again and submitted it to the Tsar for approval. He, fired up by the idea, turned to the Eastern patriarchs with a request to send reliable teachers to Moscow, experienced in Orthodoxy, but “skilled” in the liberal sciences. However, in 1682, Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich died, and the academy project was again not implemented.

Princess Sophia did not want to quarrel with Patriarch Joachim and did not let the matter proceed. But the patriarch delayed the opening because he was afraid of the Western influence of its founders, which threatened to give the academy a Latin character.

Sylvester Medvedev surpassed his teacher in his abilities. He taught literacy and languages ​​at the Spasskaya school, compiled the “Table of Contents of Books, Who Compiled Them” - the first bibliographic reference book in Russia, which gave him the glory of the first Russian bibliographer, but still cherished the dream of turning his school into an academy. In 1685, it is believed that Medvedev again submitted a charter to Princess Sophia to establish the academy, enclosing his own message in verse, when suddenly everything was decided unexpectedly and in the best possible way.

In response to the request of Tsar Feodor, on the recommendation of the Eastern Patriarchs, Greek scholars arrived in Moscow - the hieromonk brothers Ioannikis and Sophronius Likhud, descendants of the Byzantine aristocratic family. One of their ancestors, Constantine Likhud, was the Patriarch of Constantinople from 1059 to 1063, and according to their stories, the son-in-law of Emperor Constantine Monomakh, who even wanted to leave him the throne. In 1453, the Likhud brothers left Byzantium and settled in the Venetian possessions in Cephalonia, where the brothers were born. Having graduated from the University of Padua, the brothers soon took monastic vows, preached a lot, traveled and arrived in Constantinople, where they received a flattering recommendation from the patriarch for the Russian Tsar. They say that on their way to Russia they were detained by the Polish king Jan Sobieski at the instigation of the Jesuits, who did not want the strengthening of Russia and competition for themselves in it, but the brothers secretly left Poland and in 1685 appeared before the young kings Ivan and Peter. They delivered their welcoming speeches in Greek and Latin, which made an extremely favorable impression.

At first, Ioannikis and Sophronius Likhuds stayed in the Greek St. Nicholas Monastery. And the Hellenic-Greek Academy, as it was then called, opened in 1685 in the neighboring Epiphany Monastery and existed there for about two years, while a stone building was built for it at the Zaikonospassky monastery at the expense of Vasily Golitsyn and the patriarchal order. Historian E.E. Golubinsky believed that the location was chosen extremely poorly, because Nikolskaya Street was a shopping street and one of the noisiest in Moscow. Already in December 1687, with the blessing of the patriarch, the academy celebrated its housewarming. The Spassky Cathedral became her home church, and the monastery library became her student’s library.

The Academy became a victory for the Greekophile camp, representing, according to I.E. Zabelina, church education. The textbooks were written by the Likhud brothers, following the system of the University of Padua, but varying it. Teaching was in Greek, and Latin was given a secondary role. They studied both spiritual and secular sciences, but the main subject was the Holy Scripture and the works of the Church Fathers, and the scientific material was interpreted from the standpoint of patristic teaching. Thus, the nature of the academy was theological, although it trained not only educated priests, but also specialists of the widest civil profile. Since it was the first higher school in Russia, many boyar children came only for education, without intending to take holy orders. In addition, to teach languages, children had to be sent to the academy, and hiring home teachers was prohibited. The project of Simeon of Polotsk was also partially realized: the academy became the guardian of the purity of Orthodoxy in Russia. She was obliged to monitor preachers, the presence of prohibited books, and compliance with Orthodox canons. She also had the right to trial heretics, apostates, and detractors - up to and including the death penalty. Naturally, the Zaikonospassky Monastery began to prosper: to maintain the academy, it was granted rich estates and a royal library. The teachers of the academy were the monks of the Zaikonospassky Monastery, and its rector was also the rector.

The Likhud brothers did not have time to read the theology course. In the early 1690s, they fell into disgrace with the Patriarch of Jerusalem Dosifei, provoked largely by the slander of the Greeks, who did not receive a warm welcome from the brothers, and also by the dissatisfaction of the Likhud brothers in Westernizing Moscow circles. They were charged with a variety of false accusations, including teaching Latin and secular sciences and concealing their supposedly true, artisanal origins. The brothers were fired from the academy and given the opportunity to teach Italian at the printing house, then they were sent to the Ipatiev Monastery. Later, through the efforts of the locum tenens of the patriarchal throne, Stefan Yavorsky, they returned to Moscow and worked on correcting the Slavic translation of the Bible. Both rested in Moscow, only in different monasteries. Ioannikiy Likhud died on August 7, 1717 at the 84th year of his life and was buried in the cathedral of the Zaikonospassky Monastery. His brother wrote an epitaph for him:

O traveler, why are you passing by?
Stand, read...
Behold, here lies the man of God,
Angel of the Eastern Church.

Sophrony Likhud died in June 1730 in the Novospassky Monastery. And their fierce enemy Sylvester Medvedev laid his head on the chopping block in 1691, accused of participating in Shaklovity’s conspiracy against Peter.

After the removal of the Likhud brothers, the decline of the academy began, because the remaining teachers did not have the same level of education. The cathedral was dilapidated, the educational building was in danger of collapse. In 1697, Peter I, talking with Patriarch Adrian, wished to renew the academy and call the best Kyiv scientists. Soon, Hieromonk Palladius (Rogovsky), who studied with the Likhud brothers and then in Rome, became its rector and abbot of the monastery, but he was ill and died in 1703; This is where he was laid to rest. Metropolitan Stefan Yavorsky, the patriarchal locum tenens, was appointed protector of the academy. And in 1701, a royal decree was issued “to introduce Latin teachings at the academy,” without teaching “ecclesiastical” Greek, but with the expansion of disciplines towards European ones - Western languages, medicine, physics. The Academy began to be called Slavic-Latin and began to train personnel for Peter's sovereign service. The students especially pleased the tsar by greeting him after the Battle of Poltava with solemn speeches in Latin and singing poems of their own composition.

At the same time, the academy retained the functions of a spiritual censor. The police, finding magic or fortune-telling books, sent their owners to the rector for inquiry and admonition, just like the schismatics. The academy continued to train educated priests. Children of the clergy could be ordained only after training. And the noble offspring in it sometimes tried to hide from Peter’s “digital” duty. One day, young nobles, who did not want to study difficult sciences, enrolled in a whole crowd at the Zaikonospasskaya school, but Peter ordered the “theologians” to be sent to the St. Petersburg maritime school and forced them to beat piles on the Moika.

The Academy opened the way to life for talented people. From its walls came St. Innocent of Irkutsk, Antiochus Cantemir, the publisher of the first Russian arithmetic textbook Leonty Magnitsky, the founder of the Russian theater Fyodor Volkov, the architect Vasily Bazhenov, the first professors of Moscow University N.N. Popovsky and A.A. Barsov, traveler S.P. Krasheninnikov, the first translator of the Iliad E.I. Bonfires. And all of them were parishioners of the Spassky Cathedral. It is noteworthy that in the early days, along with the nobility, the children of merchants, sextons and even enslaved people studied there; the difference was only in the amount of scholarships. However, then a decree of the Holy Synod of 1728 prohibited the adoption of peasant children, which complicated Lomonosov’s path. Even in this textbook-famous, polished story about the path to Moscow of the son of a Pomeranian fisherman, there is a lot of interesting data. For example, he was the son of a free and very wealthy peasant who had his own fishing schooners and donated impressive sums for the construction of a village church. Lomonosov's first teacher was a peasant from the same volost, Ivan Shubnoy, whose son was the sculptor Fedot Ivanovich Shubin, a friend of Lomonosov. The boy, who became the best reader in the parish church, was even “caught” by the priestless schismatics, but he left them. When he became interested in books and wanted to study, the grumpy stepmother managed to turn his father against “empty pursuits,” he set out to marry his son, and Lomonosov could only flee. In December 1730, he was released on trade business with a fish train until September of the following year and arrived in Moscow along the Trinity Road. At first, he “stood” in Sukharevka at the Navigation School to study arithmetic, but there seemed little science to him, and, declaring himself a noble son, he entered the Zaikonospasskaya Academy, submitting a corresponding petition. There is another, legendary version: as if young Lomonosov secretly escaped from his father’s house at night in a sheepskin coat and with two books, caught up with a fish train and begged the clerk to take him with him to Moscow, saying that he wanted to look at it. There, however, he had no choice but to sell fish, for he had no acquaintances. One day, while spending the night on a cart, the young man began to tearfully pray to the nearest church, asking God to send him help and protection. And at dawn, one butler came for the fish, who turned out to be a fellow countryman of Lomonosov. He had an acquaintance, a monk of the Zaikonospassky Monastery, whom he asked to petition the archimandrite to admit Lomonosov to the Zaikonospassky Academy, which he did. The father sent letters to the “runaway son” asking him to return home, unsuccessfully tempting him with a profitable marriage.

It is interesting that before Lomonosov, a similar path was taken by the poet Vasily Kirillovich Trediakovsky, the son of an Astrakhan priest. When he turned 20, his father decided to marry him to a priest and assign him to the ministry, but he, dreaming of becoming a scientist, on the night before the wedding, fled from his father’s house to Moscow, to the Zaikonospassky Monastery.

After the founding of Moscow University in 1755, the academy turned into a higher theological school and began to train clergy. After the reforms of Metropolitan Plato, who in 1775 was appointed its head, it began to be called the Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy. The disciples were required to often attend services in the Spassky Cathedral, and on holidays Metropolitan Platon himself served there - its walls also remember this wonderful Russian theologian.

“Do not betray the laws of your fathers”

The presence of the academy in the monastery had a beneficial effect on his condition. In 1701, after the advice of Peter I with Patriarch Adrian on the resumption of the academy, a new double-altar cathedral was built in the monastery, which became one of the best and rarest monuments of Peter the Great's baroque. It was built by the talented architect Ivan Zarudny, who left the Menshikov Tower and the Church of St. John the Warrior on Bolshaya Yakimanka to Moscow. Then the Spassky Cathedral acquired its modern appearance: a tall octagon on a quadrangle, walkways with observation platforms, and the decor clearly indicated a new architectural era: the ridges and shells of the Naryshkin Baroque replaced strict order elements. The walls of the temple were painted with scenes from the Old and New Testaments, and behind the left choir there was a church pulpit in the form of a pillar with a canopy - this innovation was explained by the academic purpose of the temple, sermons were spoken from it to the students of the academy.

It was in this temple that Lomonosov prayed. Although the cathedral was damaged during a terrible fire in 1737, it was restored by the skilled craftsman I.F. Michurin (the creator of the Church of St. Andrew the First-Called in Kyiv according to the design of V.V. Rastrelli) without significantly changing the architectural appearance created by Zarudny. Empress Elizaveta Petrovna, having arrived in Moscow for the coronation, personally ordered the restoration of the cathedral and in the summer of 1742 attended its consecration. Then the upper altar was consecrated in honor of the icon of the Mother of God “Joy of All Who Sorrow.” And the next year the Holy Gate, facing Nikolskaya, was crowned with a bell tower. Only the elegant onion-shaped dome-rotunda on the dome of the cathedral appeared in 1851 during the next renovation. The cathedral kept a copy of the miraculous Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God in a Golden Robe, donated by Count N.P. Sheremetev, whose Moscow family home was located on Nikolskaya Street. On the feast of the Vladimir Icon on May 21, a religious procession was held here from the Assumption Cathedral in memory of the deliverance of Moscow from the invasion of the Crimean Khan Makhmet-Girey in 1521.

Many outstanding abbots of the monastery and rectors of the academy later held archpastoral positions and participated in the most important events in Russian history. Gideon I (Vishnevsky), Bishop of Smolensk and Dorogobuzh, who was the archimandrite of the monastery and rector of the academy from 1723 to 1728, did not submit to Feofan (Prokopovich). Gabriel (Petrov-Shaposhnikov), Metropolitan of Novgorod and Olonetsky, in 1768 was elected as a deputy of the Legislative Commission. Anthony (Gerasimov-Zybelin), Archbishop of Kazan, held his flock during the Pugachev rebellion. Archimandrite Simeon of the Zaikonospassky Monastery commemorated Prince Bagration on the first anniversary of his death.

The two great shepherds who emerged from the walls of the Zaikonospasskaya monastery were especially memorable. The first is Seraphim (Glagolevsky), a graduate of Moscow University, who took monastic vows at the Zaikonospassky Monastery. In 1819 he became Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna, and from 1821 - Metropolitan of St. Petersburg, Novgorod, Estonia and Finland and Archimandrite of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. Metropolitan Seraphim, who cared about raising the level of education of the clergy, acted as a zealous opponent of Freemasonry, secret societies and the unhealthy mysticism that gripped Russian society and government circles in the second half of the reign of Alexander I. Vladyka warned the emperor, who was in honor, about the danger posed by secret societies coup d'etat and achieved their ban in 1822. Two years later, through his efforts, the Minister of Spiritual Affairs and Public Education, Prince A.N., was deposed. Golitsyn, who was carried away by such ideas, closed the Bible Society. The Emperor granted the Metropolitan the Order of St. Apostle Andrew the First-Called.

And it was Metropolitan Seraphim who had the opportunity to see off Alexander the Blessed in September 1825, when he left St. Petersburg forever. The Emperor foresaw this. Early in the morning he arrived at the Lavra and received a blessing from the Metropolitan, prayed at the relics of St. Alexander Nevsky and cried during the prayer service, then asked to place the Gospel on his head and, leaving the monastery, asked to pray for him and was baptized at the cathedral for a long time. He died in Taganrog in November of the same year.

After his death, the Decembrist uprising broke out. On that day, Bishop Seraphim served a prayer service in the Winter Palace and was not afraid to go out into Senate Square in full vestments with a cross to exhort the rebels, testifying to the legality of the new oath: “In the name of the Crucified One, I assure you of the truth; I already have one foot in the grave and I won’t deceive you.” Others wavered and began to approach the cross, but bullets whistled over the bishop’s head; then the sovereign ordered him to be taken to the palace. After the oath was taken, Metropolitan Seraphim took part in the coronation of Nicholas I and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna. In 1831, in commemoration of his merits, the emperor granted him diamond signs to the St. Andrew’s Order - thus, Bishop Seraphim became the first metropolitan in Russian history to be awarded the highest degree of this order. He also condemned the “Philosophical Letter” of P.Ya. Chaadaev, believing that “the judgments about Russia contained in this worthless article are offensive to feelings, false, reckless and criminal in themselves.”

Another outstanding shepherd of the monastery was Augustine (Vinogradsky), Archbishop of Moscow and Kolomna, under whom Moscow survived 1812. He served as rector of the Moscow Academy and rector of the monastery from December 25, 1801 to February 1804, when he was consecrated Bishop of Dmitrovsky, vicar of the Moscow diocese, which he ruled from 1811 due to the illness of Metropolitan Plato. He was nicknamed “Chrysostom of the twelfth year” for his patriotic sermons during Napoleon’s invasion, with which he inspired the militia. The emperor called on him to compose a special prayer “in the invasion of the adversary,” which was heard in churches during the liturgy and at the prayer service on the Borodino field before the battle.

The Reverend Augustine supervised the removal of Moscow shrines to Vologda. And on August 26, on the feast of the Presentation of the Icon of the Vladimir Mother of God and at the hour of the Battle of Borodino, he walked in a religious procession around the walls of Moscow with the miraculous Vladimir, Iveron and Smolensk icons. After the expulsion of the enemy, Eminence Augustine was engaged in the restoration of Moscow churches. First of all, he went to the Assumption Cathedral. He was warned that the metropolitan northern gates could be mined, but with the singing of a prayer, the bishop boldly entered the temple. At his request, the Holy Synod decided to leave open the relics of St. Peter, Metropolitan of Moscow, which had been kept under wraps since the time of Tsarina Anastasia Romanovna and were unsealed by the French. On the first anniversary of the Battle of Borodino, Vladyka Augustine sent Archimandrite of the Zaikonospassky Monastery Father Simeon to Borodino to serve a memorial service at the remains of the famous Raevsky battery, and he himself served that day in the Sretensky Monastery, on its patronal feast day. Then the tradition of annually commemorating the Russian soldiers who fell on the Borodino field was established, and Bishop Augustine proposed establishing the Borodino memorial Saturday, along with Dmitrievskaya.

The Zaikonospassky Monastery suffered greatly during Napoleon's invasion. In the plundered church there were stables, in the cells French tailors repaired uniforms, in bookstores they sold wine, and monks who had not left the monastery were forced to do the most difficult work, and those who were weak were thrown into the river. Although the monastery survived the fire, it was still devastated and destroyed by an explosion in the Kremlin. It was impossible for the academy to remain in dilapidated buildings that threatened to collapse, although classes began in March 1813. They were going to withdraw the academy after the fire of 1737, then they decided to transfer it to the Donskoy Monastery, but there were no proper premises there, and the Synod did not have money for construction. In February 1765, Prince G.A. Potemkin announced to the Synod the highest decree on finding the academy “the most convenient place,” which was ordered to be reported personally to the empress. However, the transfer took place only in 1814: at the suggestion of Bishop Augustine, the theological academy was transferred to the Trinity-Sergius Lavra.

After that, the Moscow Theological Seminary was located in the Zaikonospassky Monastery, and after 1834, when it moved to Osterman’s house on Samotechnaya, the Moscow Theological School Zaikonospassky. It is located in a building built by the architect O. Bove in 1822 on the site of academic buildings. Of course, the role of the monastery fell with the transfer of the academy, but the Moscow holy father Alexy Mechev studied at this school. He wanted to become a doctor and enter Moscow University, but his mother insisted that he become a priest - then he was grateful to her for this. His pastoral path began in the Zaikonospassky Monastery: here on March 19, 1893, he was ordained a priest, and then began to serve in his St. Nicholas Church on Maroseyka.

At the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, the monastery took on its final appearance. Along the red line of Nikolskaya, two houses were erected in the pseudo-Russian style for the monastery’s trading premises (No. 7 and 9), with a gate bell tower that included the former Holy Gate - it is believed that it was an exact copy of the bell tower of the famous Assumption Church on Pokrovka.

"In the hour of great trials"

In Soviet times, Nikolskaya was renamed “25th October Street” in memory of the fact that in the fall of 1917, the Nikolsky Gate of the Kremlin was broken by artillery shelling. The memory of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker was carefully erased: his image was hung with a red cloth, the street was renamed, and the St. Nicholas Monastery was destroyed. The Zaikonospassky Monastery was also abolished, but not demolished, but divided into communal apartments. In the 1920s, the cathedral was captured by renovationists from the Union of Church Revival, led by the former Bishop of Vladikavkaz and Mozdok Antonin (Granovsky), who were hostile not only to Patriarch Tikhon, but also to other branches of renovationism. On the Feast of Peter and Paul in 1923, after the liturgy in the Spassky Cathedral, he proclaimed from the pulpit the autocephalous department of the “Church Revival.” The rejection of the “clerical” Church for the benefit of the believing common people, the simplification of rituals, the abolition of church titles, the use of Russian instead of Church Slavonic in services, the simplification of clergy vestments, and the reduction of bell ringing to a minimum were proclaimed. The popularity of Antonin (Granovsky) was quite great, but with his death the activities of the “Union” soon ceased. For the funeral service, which took place in the Spassky Cathedral in January 1927, one wreath was sent by M.I. Kalinin for his participation in Pomgol (Committee for Famine Relief).

Soon after this, the Zaikonospassky Church was taken away from the “Union”. In July 1929, it was closed, the cross was removed, a window was broken in the stone icon case instead of the icon of the Savior Not Made by Hands, and the gate bell tower was dismantled even earlier. House No. 7, which once belonged to the monastery, housed the first Soviet television studio, where, since 1931, as part of the work to create national television, experimental, still silent television broadcasts were carried out. In 1934, the transition to sound television was being developed, which required additional premises. And then the television crews moved with their equipment to the bell tower of the Spassky Cathedral. In the fall of 1934, regular sound television broadcasting began here. The first TV show lasted 25 minutes: actor Ivan Moskvin, who had climbed the bell tower with difficulty, read Chekhov’s story “The Intruder.” In 1938, a new studio was opened on Shabolovka, and broadcasting from Nikolskaya stopped only in April 1941.

The Cathedral of the Savior Not Made by Hands was returned to the Church in 1992 and received the status of the Patriarchal Metochion. In February 1993, the Russian Orthodox University opened in the monastery, and the cathedral almost became a “school” church again, but this idea was abandoned due to the disrepair of the cathedral and the lack of premises, and the university moved to the Vysokopetrovsky monastery.

The recent history of the Zaikonospassky Monastery was overshadowed, firstly, by the well-known conflict with the Russian State University for the Humanities, which occupied part of the former monastery premises, and secondly, by the construction by the Stargrad company of a huge underground pit for a shopping center and parking, which caused subsidence of the ground and tilting of the cathedral . However, the mayor of Moscow signed a decree on the transfer of churches and buildings of the former Zaikonospassky and Nikolsky monasteries to the courtyard of His Holiness Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus' Alexy II for free use. The project for the revival of the monasteries includes the restoration of the gate bell towers, the holy gates, the buildings of the Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy and even the reconstruction of St. Nicholas Cathedral, if possible.

The extraordinary gloom of the Spassky Cathedral, which the pre-revolutionary historian wrote about, is not felt at all these days. It is beautifully recreated and, on the contrary, creates an exciting prayerful mood.

Partially used site materials

Zaikonospassky Monastery (address: Nikolskaya St., 7/9) is located in Moscow. This monastery has a special status; it was the one that received the title of patriarchal metochion. The age of the monastery is quite respectable, because it is about 4 centuries old. Surprisingly, the monks managed to preserve all the buildings from the beginning of the last century. That is why the general ensemble of the monastery is considered not only a historical monument, but also an architectural one. After all, architecture is truly unique and special. However, other monasteries in Moscow are also famous for this.

Early history of the Zaikonospassky Monastery

At its foundation, surprisingly, the monastery bore a different name, namely, the Most Merciful Savior. The monastery was founded by Boris Godunov. Scientists have investigated the age of the monastery, and the first mention has a date of 1635. But the monks themselves claim that the monastery was founded in 1600. The history of the renaming of the monastery is a little strange, but some claim that the monastery was located behind the shopping arcades where church utensils were sold. Based on this, the monastery received the name Zaikonospassky Monastery.

During the first years of its existence, the monastery did not have much authority. Many people didn’t even know about him. But over time, his grace spread more and more to people, so more and more parishioners began to come here. And soon the Zaikonospassky Monastery in Moscow became the symbolic center of Orthodoxy.

Cradle of Russian education

In the 17th century, Simeon of Polotsk founded a school at the monastery, it was called the school of clerks of the order of Secret Affairs. And over time, namely in 1687, the foundation of the Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy was laid here. It was this institution that was the first high-level educational center on the territory of Great Russia. It was thanks to this academy that the world saw an innumerable number of exceptionally talented people. For example, graduates of the academy are the scientist V. Lomonosov, the poet V. Trediakovsky, the founder of the Russian theater F. Volkov and many others, this list can be continued for quite a long time.

After the opening of another higher institution in the city, namely Moscow University, it was decided that the academy should narrow its profile, and now exclusively theological teaching was taught here. Within the walls of the institution, people were trained who would subsequently receive a clergy title. At the beginning of the 19th century, the academy was moved to the walls of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, and already bore the name of the Moscow Theological Academy. But on the basis of the monastery a wonderful theological school was opened.

Architecture

If we take into account information from documents of the 20-50s. XVII century, on the territory of the modern monastery there was a small stone church. It is most obvious that this was the same cathedral of the Zaikonospassky Monastery. There was also another church on the territory, which was made of wood.

Construction of a new cathedral

A new cathedral made of stone was erected in 1660. Funds for construction were provided by boyar Volkonsky, who paid all expenses in full. Thus, soon after construction the temple was consecrated. The consecration of the upper church was carried out in honor of the Image of the Savior Not Made by Hands, but it was decided to consecrate the lower church in honor of the icon of the Mother of God “Joy of All Who Sorrow.” It was not so difficult to find out the construction date, because this was taken care of in advance. One of the laid stones indicates the date; on it you can make out the following inscription: “On the 30th day of the summer of April 7168, the construction of the Church of the All-Merciful Savior of the Not Made by Hands began at the command of... the king... Alexy Mikhailovich... built according to his promise by the boyar prince Feodor Feodorovich Volkonskaya, and was committed on the 20th day of November 7169.” In 1701, an unfortunate event occurred on the territory of the temple: a fire occurred, during which the temple was damaged. But soon everything was restored, and even a refectory was erected, where parishioners were received and fed everything that God had sent.

In 1709, construction of a new temple began. This is evidenced by some historical documents. In one of them, a report was found to Tsar Peter I that construction was still underway, there were not enough materials, so there was no completion date yet. Another denunciation was also found, which said that the temple had to take out a large loan to continue construction.

Completion of construction

About a year later, the construction was completed, which brought great joy and happiness to the believers. The temple turned out to be incredibly beautiful, very bright and spacious. In 1721, its appearance was taken as an architectural template for the construction of other temples. In 1737, the cathedral again suffered an unpleasant event: it was that year that a large-scale fire occurred in Moscow, during which the monastery was also damaged. After the fire, active restoration of the temple began under the leadership of architect Michurin. The work lasted for more than one year. At the end, the temple was consecrated again.

Variety of styles

The Orthodox Stavropegic Monastery can be called a classic example of Peter the Great's architecture; this style was very popular in those days, and most buildings were built this way. At the same time, other styles were reunited in the temple, and there is a great variety of them. But despite such inconsistency, everything surprisingly looks organic and attracts the attention of not only parishioners, but also tourists.

Riddles and secrets

At the moment, historical research of the temple is still underway. Many scientists cannot come to a consensus on who was the architect of the temple. Many argue that it was one of the famous Russian architects Zarudny. This statement has not received a documentary-historical basis, therefore this version of scientists cannot be accepted as official. Until 1773, the Zaikonospassky Monastery had quite rare icons and utensils; it was this decoration that was the work of Theodore Tiron, but, unfortunately, all this splendor burned down during the Moscow fire, and only historical information has survived to our times.

Interior decoration

You can also learn a lot of interesting things from the description of 1781. Thus, in the lower church there was an incredibly beautiful gilded iconostasis, which was preserved until the twentieth century. The space of the temple was flooded with sunlight, and there were choirs along three walls. Today, the location of the choirs has been moved. An incredible amount of work and talent was invested in the upper temple; the walls were completely painted with scenes. A huge amount of light penetrated here, thanks to which all the images seemed to come to life and also rejoice in the sun. But in the evening, by candlelight, the faces seemed more stern.

At the end of the 17th century, some changes took place in the temple. The Spasskaya Church houses a magnificent stone iconostasis. The royal doors, made of wood, were covered in places with gilding to emphasize the majesty of the icons. But for the icon “Savior Not Made by Hands” a stunning silver crown was made.

In 1812, an outrageous event occurred. During Napoleon's invasion, the temple was again desecrated and looted. The French soldiers set up a stable in the church and settled their tailors in the cells. The joy of the invaders was short-lived. However, it was possible to renovate the temple only in 1851. The cathedral was completely restored, and services began here again.

Lost Wealth

Studying the descriptions of the early twentieth century, you can find out that the temple had a huge number of miraculous icons that were in the silver sacristy. Few monasteries in Moscow could boast of such wealth. Nativity and many other beautiful scenes are depicted near the walls of the altar. The master tried so hard that all the images look alive. The temple also houses a huge number of relics of saints, which are famous for their miraculous effects. Unfortunately, all this spiritual wealth was completely lost by the beginning of 2008.

Grandiose restructuring

In 1665, by decree of Tsar Peter I, the temple was given additional land for the construction of the collegium building. A 3-story stone structure was erected. But in 1819, at the suggestion of one architect, the building was completely dismantled, leaving only the foundation. According to the design of the same architect, a new building in the Empire style was erected in subsequent years. On the north side of the college there is a fraternal building with cells. Additionally, cells were built for students who began their spiritual journey here and completely devoted themselves to studying and serving the Lord.

In 1743, the bell tower was also rebuilt and made more spacious. Therefore, the ringing was heard over even greater distances. In subsequent years, under Elizabeth's reign and at her behest, some buildings were demolished because she felt that the monastery took up too much space on the street. But to replace those dismantled, other buildings were built, of course, smaller in size, but they were necessary. In subsequent years, the bell tower and courtyard of the Zaikonospassky Monastery were rebuilt again.

Monuments of church antiquities

During numerous disasters and reconstructions, many valuables were damaged or lost for various reasons. Thus, during the Moscow fire, the sacristy of the monastery suffered the most, but that was not the end. After restoration, as is already known, the temple was captured by the French, which again brought enormous harm and destruction.

In 1813, Archimandrite Simeon carried out a reconciliation of the temple’s property, during which it turned out that there were not a huge number of icons, jewelry and silver crosses. Among these crosses there was one unique one, it contained 420 particles of the relics of various saints, and there was also a pendant with particles of the Lord’s robe. Thus, a huge number of unique things that simply have no analogues disappeared from the temple. All these things were sold or simply destroyed. Today, perhaps, something remains, but it is in private collections and, probably, will not return to the monastery. But still some things were saved.

The monks are trying to maintain the building so that it can live for many more centuries and amaze new generations with its beauty and majesty, and the walls of the academy can once again produce unique people devoted to their spiritual calling. From the first steps you can feel a special energy within these walls. The temple has had its share of many trials, but to this day it operates. The service in the Zaikonospassky Monastery ascends from heaven every day, and it will continue to do so for centuries to come.

The monastery was founded in 1600 by Tsar Boris Godunov. The first mention in historical documents dates back to 1635. The name “Zaikonospassky” is explained by its location behind the icon row, located along Nikolsky Street. Since 1665, a school was established in the monastery, headed by Simeon of Polotsk. The school trained officials for government agencies. In 1685, the Slavic-Greek-Latin Academy was opened in the premises of the monastery, headed by the brothers Ioannikis and Sophronius Likhud, famous in Russian history. Many Church leaders, scientists, and writers came out of the academy. In 1814, the academy was transformed into the Theological Academy and transferred to the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, and the Theological School remained in the monastery.

The main temple of the monastery - Spassky Cathedral - was built in 1660 by order of Emperor Alexei Mikhailovich Prince. F.F. Volkonsky. Consecrated in 1661, November 20. The current cathedral arose on the basis of this building. The exact date of its construction is unknown (presumably dates back to 1711-1720; the bypass gallery on columns dates back to the second quarter of the 18th century). Belongs to the monuments of the circle of I.P. Zarudny (in details there is a similarity with such structures as the Menshikov Tower and the Church of St. John the Warrior on Yakimanka). This is a tiered, cross-shaped temple of the octagon-on-quadrangle type, in the decoration of which the main role is given to elements of the classical pilaster order. In 1737, the temple was severely damaged by fire, but was restored under Elizabeth Petrovna and consecrated in 1742.

In 1812, the entire monastery complex was badly damaged during the invasion and atrocities of the French army. The temple was renovated in 1851. At the top there was a side-chapel in honor of the icon of the Mother of God of the Joy of All Who Sorrow. This church is the same as the main one. Its walls are richly painted inside with images of the events of the Old and New Testaments, behind the left choir is a church pulpit in the form of a “pillar”, the icons are richly decorated. The entrance to the lower cathedral church in honor of the All-Merciful Savior comes from the monastery courtyard. The first impression upon entering the temple is its extraordinary darkness, the almost complete absence of daylight due to the fact that this low temple is surrounded on three sides by high two-story and three-story monastery buildings. The temple is supported by four stone pillars.

In 1920 the temple became the center of the renovationist “Union of Church Revival”, and in 1929 it was closed. The temple building housed various government institutions. In the 1960s the building of the closed cathedral was restored. The upper tier was rebuilt - lucarnes were made in the roof, decorative fencing was installed on the 3rd and 4th tiers, etc. Instead of a cross, a gilded pin was erected.

The temple was returned to the Church in 1992. Divine services resumed in July 1992. The temple has the status of a patriarchal metochion. Bell towers b. are assigned to the temple. Zaikonospassky and b. St. Nicholas-Greek Monastery (1902, architect G.A. Kaiser). On March 5, 2010, the Holy Synod decided to open the Zaikonospassky stauropegic monastery in the city of Moscow, separating it from the Patriarchal metochion of the former Zaikonospassky and Nikolsky monasteries in Kitai-Gorod, Moscow.

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Zaikonospassky Monastery was founded in 1600 under Tsar Boris Godunov. It was usually called “The Savior in the Old Place”, “The Old Savior on the Sands” or “The Spassky Monastery, which is behind the icon row”.

According to information from 1610, 1626 and 1629, the monastery had two churches, a stone one and a wooden one. Around 1660, the monastery was damaged by fire, and on the promise of Prince F.F. Volkonsky, a two-story temple was built, consecrated on November 20, 1661.

Around 1701, Abbot Palladius (Rogovsky) built a covered gallery on the second floor. During the fire of 1737, the upper church was greatly damaged. The restoration was accompanied by some alteration, as a result of which the appearance of the church lost its 17th-century character. The consecration took place on July 15, 1742, and, at the request of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna, the upper throne was renamed in honor of All Who Sorrow Joy. The lower temple is called the Image of the Savior Not Made by Hands. The last significant renovation, mainly internally, dates back to 1851.

The current bell tower on the site of the previous one built in 1743 was built in the 20th century. designed by architect Z.I. Ivanova; it represents some imitation of the bell tower of the Assumption Church of 1696 on Pokrovka. The monastery is called stauropegial, which means direct dependence on the Holy Synod, the same as the Simonov, Novospassky and Donskoy monasteries.

Historically, the Zaikonospassky Monastery is important because since 1686 it has housed the Academy, which merged all the former higher schools: Chudovskoe, Andreevskoe, Epiphany and Typographical. This academy was Hellenic-Slavic until 1700, Slavic-Latin until 1775, and Slavic-Greek-Latin until 1814. Since 1814 there has been no higher theological educational institution in Moscow. The memory of the sermons delivered by the mentors and students of the Academy was preserved in the Sorrow Church in the form of a special pulpit at the left choir, shaped like a gilded pillar.

"Index of churches and chapels in Kitay-Gorod." Moscow, “Russian Printing House”, Bolshaya Sadovaya, No. 14, 1916