:''For the church in
Kaliningrad, see
Cathedral of Christ the Saviour (Kaliningrad).''
The 'Cathedral of Christ the Saviour' () is the tallest
Eastern Orthodox Church in the world. It is situated in
Moscow, on the bank of the
Moskva River, a few blocks west of
the Kremlin.
Design

Modern replica of the original cathedral.
When the last of
Napoleon's soldiers
left Moscow, Tsar
Alexander I signed a manifesto,
December 25,
1812, declaring his intention to build a Cathedral in honor of Christ the Saviour "to signify Our gratitude to Divine Providence for saving Russia from the doom that overshadowed Her" and as a memorial to the sacrifices of the Russian people.
It took some time for actual work on the projected cathedral to get started. The first finished architectural project was endorsed by
Alexander I in
1817. It was a flamboyant
Neoclassical design full of
Freemasonic symbolism. Construction work was begun on the
Sparrow Hills, the highest point in Moscow, but the site proved insecure.

Interior of the Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow (1883).
In the meantime
Alexander I was succeeded by his brother
Nicholas. Profoundly Orthodox and patriotic, the new Tsar disliked the Neoclassicism and Freemasonry of the project selected by his brother. He commissioned his favourite architect
Konstantin Thon to create a new design, taking as his model
Hagia Sophia in
Constantinople. Thon's
Neo-Byzantine design was approved in
1832, and a new site, closer to the
Moscow Kremlin, was chosen by the Tsar in
1837. A convent and church on the site had to be relocated, so that the cornerstone was not laid until
1839.
Construction
The Cathedral had taken many years to build and did not emerge from its scaffolding until
1860. Some of the best Russian painters (
Ivan Kramskoi,
Vasily Surikov,
Vasily Vereshchagin) continued to embellish the interior for another twenty years. The Cathedral was consecrated on the very day
Alexander III was crowned,
May 26,
1883. A year earlier,
Tchaikovsky's ''
1812 Overture'' debuted there.
The inner sanctum of the church (
naos) was ringed by a two-floor gallery, its walls inlaid with rare sorts of marble, granite, and other precious stones. The ground floor of the gallery was a memorial dedicated to the Russian victory over
Napoleon. The walls displayed more than 1,000 square meters of
Carrara bianca marble plaques listing major commanders, regiments, and battles of the
Patriotic War of 1812 (with the lists of awards and casualties appended). The second floor of the gallery was occupied by church choirs.
Demolition

1931 - demolition.
After the
Revolution and, more specifically, the death of Lenin, the prominent site of the cathedral was chosen by the
Soviets as the site for a monument to
socialism known as the
Palace of Soviets. This monument was to rise in modernistic,
buttressed tiers to support a gigantic statue of
Lenin perched atop a dome with his arm raised in blessing.
On
December 5,
1931, by order of
Stalin's minister
Kaganovich, the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour was dynamited and reduced to rubble. It took more than one blast to destroy the church and more than a year to clear the debris from the site. The original marble
high reliefs were preserved and are now on display at the
Donskoy Monastery (see the ). For a long time, they were the only reminder of the largest Orthodox church ever built.
The construction of the Palace of Soviets was interrupted due to a lack of funds, problems with flooding from the nearby
Moskva River, and the outbreak of war. The flooded foundation hole remained on the site until, under
Nikita Khrushchev, it was transformed into a huge public
swimming pool, the largest the world has ever seen.
New cathedral
With the end of the Soviet rule, the
Russian Orthodox Church received permission to rebuild the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in February
1990. A temporary cornerstone was laid by the end of the year. The restorer
Aleksey Denisov was called upon to design a replica of extraordinary accuracy.
A construction fund was initiated in
1992 and funds began to be poured from ordinary citizens in the autumn of
1994. When construction was well under way, Denisov was replaced by
Zurab Tsereteli who introduced several controversial innovations. For instance, the original marble high reliefs along the walls gave way to the modern bronze ones, which have few if any parallels in
Russian church architecture. The lower church was
consecrated to the Saviour's Transfiguration in
1996, and the completed Cathedral of Christ the Saviour was consecrated on the Transfiguration day,
August 19,
2000.
A pedestrian bridge across the river from
Balchug was constructed between
21 June 2003 and
3 September 2004 (
details, ). On the slope of the hill to the right from the cathedral are
the monumental statues of Alexander II and
Nicholas II. The cathedral square is graced by several chapels, designed in the same style as the cathedral itself.
Below the new church is a large hall for church assemblies, where the last Russian
Tsar, and his family were
glorified as saints in 2000. On
May 17,
2007, the
Act of Canonical Communion between the
Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church and the
Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia was signed there. The full restoration of
communion with the Moscow Patriarchate was celebrated by a
Divine Liturgy at which the
Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia,
Alexius II and the First Hierarch of ROCOR,
Metropolitan Laurus, concelebrated the
Divine Liturgy for the first time in history.
The first Russian President
Boris Yeltsin, who died of heart failure on
April 23 2007, lay in state in the cathedral prior to his funeral on
Novodevichy Cemetery.
External links
★
Official website, with full details of the construction and reconstruction history.
★
Google Maps Satellite Photo
★
Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow: A Russian Allegory
★
Churches Around the World Archive