ST ANDREW'S CHURCH OF KIEV
The baroque 'St Andrew's Church' () or the ''Cathedral of St Andrew'' was built in Kiev in 1747–1754, to a design by the Russian imperial architect Bartolomeo Rastrelli. Overlooking the historical Podil district from a steep hill to which the church gave its current name (Andriyivska Mount, former Uzdyhalnytsya) this exuberant and colourful structure is one of the city's best known landmarks.
The church was constructed by a team of Russian and Ukrainian masters under Ivan Michurin, the principal architect of Moscow, to replace the older Church of the Resurrection, on the Women's Market Square (''Babiy Torzhok''). The legend has it that it was the spot where St. Andrew erected a cross and prophesied the foundation of a great Christian city in what was then a sparsely inhabited area.
Since 1968, the church has been open to visitors as a museum. The interior showcases sculptures and paintings of famous Russian and Ukrainian masters such as Alexei Antropov. Occasionally the edifice is used for services of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church, a minority Ukrainian church that walled itself off from the Eastern Orthodox Communion.
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See also
★ Andriyivskyy Descent
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