Trinity Church on Sparrow Hills. Church of the Life-Giving Trinity on Sparrow Hills

29.09.2019

Website: www.hram-troicy.prihod.ru
Email: [email protected]
Address: 119334, Moscow, st. Kosygina, 30 (metro station "Vorobyovy Gory", observation deck).
Directions: m. Oktyabrskaya, m. Kyiv, troll. No. 7, to the stop "University Square".
Divine service schedule: http://www.hram-troicy.prihod.ru/raspisanie-bogoslujeniy

Historical reference

The wooden temple of the Trinity on Sparrow Hills has existed since ancient times and is associated with the history of the ancient palace village of Vorobyevo. According to the chronicle, it is known that when the Grand Duchess Sofia Vitovtovna, the wife of the Moscow Grand Duke Vasily I and the daughter of the Grand Duke of Lithuania Vitovt, bought the village in the 15th century, the temple was already standing.

The first priest of the wooden church of the Trinity known to us was Fr. Titus, who was abbot from 1628 to 1632. The wooden Trinity Church in the village of Vorobyevo, according to the receipt books of the Patriarchal State Order of 1628, was written among the "residential" Moscow churches - "outside the Wooden City". Until 1690, the Trinity Church was painted in the Prechistensky Magpie of Moscow, and since 1691. it was already written in the Zagorodskaya tithe. By the end of the 1790s, the temple was badly dilapidated and, by order of Catherine the Great, was dismantled. The last priest of the wooden temple of the Trinity was Father Nikifor Vasiliev.

The current brick church with a white stone plinth was built in 1811 according to the project of architect A. L. Vitberg, the author of the project of the memorial church of Christ the Savior on Sparrow Hills. The building was built in the style of late classicism, as it is said in the documents “…by the diligence of the parishioners and well-meaning givers…” Father Jacob Ilyin was the first rector of the stone church. The stone temple was erected near the former wooden one. In place of the altar of the old temple in 1811, a crowned one was installed. a white-stone monument with a cross, which has survived to this day. The porch in front of the entrance on the western facade of the bell tower and extensions on its sides appeared during the repairs of the building in 1858-61 and 1898. The territory of the church is surrounded by a brick fence of the late XIX - early XX century. with metal grill.

In 1812, M. I. Kutuzov prayed here in front of the council in Fili. The building survived during the Napoleonic invasion.

Until 1818, the temple was listed among the churches of the Moscow district, and from March 30, 1818, in the Zamoskvoretsky Magpie of Moscow.

The Trinity Church was not only saved from socialist destruction, but was not even closed during the Soviet era, so its ancient interior has been preserved. Moreover, after the well-known Bolshevik prohibition of bell ringing throughout Moscow, it was in the Vorobyov Trinity Church that the bells continued to ring and Orthodox Muscovites secretly went to listen to the blessed ringing of its bells. Once again, the church survived the construction of a high-rise building of Moscow State University in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

Now the temple on Sparrow Hills has, as before, three aisles - in honor of the Holy Trinity, St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, St. Sergius of Radonezh. There is also a side throne of St. Jonah, Metropolitan of Moscow, which is located in the altar of St. Nicholas.

The temple belongs to the Mikhailovsky deanery of Moscow.

Shrines: In the temple there are icons of the 19th century - "Saints Guriy, Samon and Aviv", "Saints Cosmas and Damian", "Burning Bush", "Joy of All Who Sorrow", "Kazan" icon of the Mother of God, a four-part icon - with images of the Nativity of Christ, Christmas of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Nativity of John the Baptist and the Nativity of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, the icon "The Savior Not Made by Hands" by the school of Simon Ushakov. Revered icon of the Mother of God - "Blessed Sky". Antique icons: a revered list from the miraculous icon of the Mother of God "Donskaya" and St. Nicholas with life. In the temple there is a reliquary with particles of the relics of saints: St. Mitrofan of Voronezh, Righteous Alexy (Mechev) and Blessed Matrona of Moscow.

Full name: LOCAL RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATION - ORTHODOX PARISH OF THE CHURCH OF THE LIFE-GENERATING TRINITY ON SPOROBEVY GORHY OF THE CITY OF MOSCOW OF THE MOSCOW DIOCESE OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH

social activities

  • Orphanage No. 7 for children with disabilities, Moscow, st. Profsoyuznaya, 47.
  • Children's Psychoneurological Hospital No. 4, Moscow region, Ruzsky district, Nikolskoye village.
  • Orphanage, Voronezh region, Gubari village.
  • House for the disabled, Moscow region, Yurma settlement.

The parish of the Trinity Church interacts with a number of social institutions and provides them with assistance:
1. Orphanage No. 7 for children with disabilities, Moscow, st. Profsoyuznaya, 47.
2. Children's Psychoneurological Hospital No. 4, Moscow region, Ruza district, Nikolskoye village.
3. Orphanage, Voronezh region, Gubari village.
4. House for the disabled, Moscow region, Yurma settlement.
Assistance is also provided to the elderly, disabled and families with many children.

Temple clergy

  • Archpriest Andrei Novikov (rector)
  • Archpriest Konstantin Georgievsky
  • Archpriest Gennady Eremenko
  • Priest Sergiy Zverev
  • Deacon Anthony Gorokhovets (temporary)

The temple on this site has been mentioned since 1644, but the true time of its foundation is unknown and most likely refers to an earlier period. The village of Vorobyevo itself has been known since 1453. The existing temple was built in 1811-1813. in the style of classicism, the interior decoration is modern in construction. The main altar was consecrated in the name of the Life-Giving Trinity, the southern aisle - St. Nicholas, the northern - St. Sergius of Radonezh, the side altar - in the name of St. Jonah, Metropolitan of Moscow. The temple never closed. The church has a charity service.



Trinity Church on the Sparrow Hills (Kosygina street, house number 30).

On the high steep bank of the Moskva River, in front of the almost 300-meter high-rise building of Moscow University and literally a few steps from the famous observation deck on Sparrow Hills, stands the Church of the Life-Giving Trinity. In 1937, the nearby Trinity Church in Troitskoye-Golenishchevo was closed, two antimensions were transferred from it to the temple on Sparrow Hills and a side throne was built in the main altar in the name of the aisles of St. Jonah, Metropolitan of Moscow, and Martyr Agapius that were in the closed church.

The wooden church has been known on Sparrow Hills since ancient times. In 1451 Grand Duchess Sofia Vitovtovna bought a small village on the high bank of the Moskva River. In 1700, documentary sources called the “Church of Sergius in the Garden” standing in the village (apparently named after the chapel), and in 1720 they mention in it the chapel of St. Alexis, the man of God. It is also known that in 1785 this ancient church was rebuilt, and at the end of the 18th century the royal summer palace was dismantled. In 1811-1813. near the place where the wooden church stood, they built and consecrated the stone Trinity Church with the right aisle - St. Nicholas and the left - St. Sergius of Radonezh. It was small, typical of villages near Moscow. The bell tower, the refectory and the main temple were traditionally located along the east-west axis. A powerful dome-rotunda, standing on a cubic main volume, completed the drum with a small cupola. The southern entrance had a far-reaching portico with Tuscan columns. The two-tiered bell tower, on the lower tier of which the main entrance to the temple was built, beautifully complemented the whole composition. At the same time, in 1811, a small white-stone obelisk topped with a cross was installed on the site of the throne of the old church. This obelisk has survived to this day - six meters to the right of the entrance to the temple. The letters on it have long been erased, but the image of the trumpeting archangel is clearly visible. The old fence with an arched entrance has also been preserved. However, some sources claim that only the bell tower has survived intact from 1811 to our time. It is noteworthy that on the eve of the military council in Fili in 1812, M.I. prayed in the newly rebuilt Trinity Church. Kutuzov.

In 1817, the Cathedral of Christ the Savior was laid on Sparrow Hills - a monument to the victory in the Patriotic War of 1812. It was supposed to descend in terraces from the top of Sparrow Hills to the Moscow River. However, during earthworks, it was found that the soil was crumbling and sliding; therefore, in 1827 construction here was stopped and later transferred to Prechistenka. So the Trinity Church remained in these places the only monument and witness to the heroic events of 1812. In the 19th century, the renovation of the Trinity Church took place twice: in 1858-1861. and in 1898. In the 20th century, in 1964 and 1971, the external repair of the building was carried out, and in 1971-1972. - internal repair. The wall paintings were cleaned, partly a new one was made. In 2006, the church building was also renovated outside and inside. The outer walls of the temple and the bell tower are currently decorated with frescoes. On the bell tower at the top is the image of the Mother of God "The Sign", and on the lower tier - "St. Sergius of Radonezh blesses the blgv. book. Demetrius Donskoy", "Metr. Alexy of Moscow heals Queen Taidulla” and “Prayer of St. Seraphim of Sarov on a stone in front of the image of the Virgin "Tenderness". St. Nicholas is depicted on the right wall of the refectory, and St. Sergius of Radonezh is depicted on the left (in accordance with the location of the aisles). On the portico of the southern entrance is the fresco "St. Trinity with Abraham and Sarah under the Oak of Mamre.

Further counterclockwise: the image of John the Baptist, on the outer wall of the High Place - Golgotha, and, finally, the image of the Savior. The wall paintings inside the temple deserve special attention. Above the entrance to the main part of the refectory, the Old Testament Trinity is depicted, on the dome - God the Father and God the Holy Spirit with the upcoming angels, and above the altar - the Ascension of the Lord. On the walls in medallions there are images of the prophets Elijah and Moses, Saints Nicholas and Alexy, Metropolitan of Moscow, Saints Seraphim of Sarov and Sergius of Radonezh, as well as the image of the Mother of God "The Sign". Above the southern door, below the medallions, is the Presentation of the Lord and “The Feeding of Five Thousands with Five Loaves,” above the northern door is the Entry into the Church of the Most Holy Theotokos. In the iconostasis of the main altar, the icon of the Mother of God "Life-Giving Spring" attracts attention, as a memory of the former name of the temple. In front of the salt on the left is the Pechersk Icon of the Mother of God, on the right is the image of the Savior Not Made by Hands. Behind these icons are two faces (choirs) for antiphonal singing. To the left of the pulpit is a small icon of the New Martyrs of Russia, to the right is an icon of the Royal Martyrs of the same size. On the northern wall is the icon of the Mother of God "Satisfy my sorrows" and the especially revered image of the Mother of God "Blessed Sky", on the southern wall - the icon of the Mother of God "Reigning".

In the Nikolsky chapel, in spirit and origin, as it were, more strict, Byzantine, in the iconostasis is the Iberian Icon of the Mother of God, in front of the salt on the right - the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God. Here are also the images of the saints John the Warrior, Gury, Samon and Aviv, the icon of the Mother of God "Unexpected Joy". In the Sergius chapel there are icons of the Hieromartyr Patriarch Hermogenes, Saints Blaise, Florus and Laurus, the Monk Anna of Kashinsky and the image of the Mother of God "Joy of All Who Sorrow".

Mikhail Vostryshev "Orthodox Moscow. All churches and chapels".

http://rutlib.com/book/21735/p/17



In 1451, the village of Vorobyovo was bought by Grand Duchess Sofia Vitovtovna. Around that time, a temple was being built here, consecrated in honor of the Life-Giving Trinity. The first mention of a wooden church is contained in written sources dating back to the 17th century, during the reign of the first tsar from the Romanov family, approximately 1628-1632. "The Church of the Holy Life-Giving Trinity, in the village of Vorobiev, tribute 18 altyn 4 money, and on September 28, for the current 7136, that money was paid by pop Titus, in 7140 - tribute was added to the Trinity Church to the previous tribute according to the new salary 2 altyns 5 money" - this is what is said in the receipt books of the Patriarchal State Order. Of course, in those days, as in more ancient times, the church was wooden and was listed as "a residential Moscow church outside the wooden city."

In 1720, the dilapidated wooden church was demolished and a new one was built in its place: “On the 6th day of April, the decree on the construction of the church was sealed, at the request of the great sovereign of the palace village of Vorobyov, the Church of the Life-Giving Trinity, priest Ivan Vasiliev from the parishioners, he was ordered to them in that village of Vorobyov , instead of the dilapidated church, on the same church site, build again a wooden church in the name of the Life-Giving Trinity, and in the aisle of St. Alexis, the man of God, two hryvnias were taken. In 1786, this new temple also fell into a completely dilapidated state, so much so that services were prohibited here. But only in the mid-1790s, by order of Empress Catherine II, the Trinity Church was dismantled. Thus began a new period in the history of this church.

Architect Alexander Lavrentievich Vitberg, a Russian artist of Swedish origin, became the author of a project for a new stone church in the style of late classicism. Of course, Vitberg is better known as the author of the project for the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, the first one approved by Emperor Alexander I. The project was not implemented, and the temple that stands in Moscow today was created by another architect, Konstantin Andreyevich Ton. And Witberg's creation adorns Sparrow Hills.

The brick temple with a white stone plinth was built at the expense of parishioners and donors. The dimensions of the temple are small, the architecture is rather modest, even ordinary for the beginning of the 19th century. This is a parish church typical of the Moscow region. A rotunda is installed on the quadrangle, completed with a blind drum with a small cupola. From the south and north, the temple is decorated with porticos of the Tuscan order with four columns. There are two chapels in the refectory - in the name of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker and St. Sergius of Radonezh. The main throne was consecrated in the name of the Holy Trinity. The bell tower is the only building that has survived to this day in an unchanged form - a two-tiered one. The temple itself was rebuilt several times during repairs in 1858-1861, then in 1898 and 1900.

It is impossible not to recall that the name of the "holy doctor" Fyodor Petrovich Haaz, who was the chief physician of Moscow prison hospitals, is closely connected with the Trinity Church on Sparrow Hills. Dr. Haaz contributed a lot to the completion of the construction of the Sparrow Church, wishing that the prisoners held in the transit prison on Sparrow Hills would be assigned to this church and could attend services. And Fyodor Petrovich achieved this, as he also achieved the construction in 1832 of a hospital for prisoners with 120 beds on the same Sparrow Hills.

The church was not closed during the Soviet era, it was even repaired and temple icons were restored. Today, in addition to the three main thrones in the Nikolaevsky side-altar, there is also a side throne of St. Jonah, Metropolitan of Moscow. It appeared after 1937, when the antimins of the aisles of Metropolitan Jonah and the martyr Agapius were transferred from the Golenishchevo church to the Vorobyov temple.

From the magazine "Orthodox Temples. Journey to the Holy Places". Issue #289, 2018

The Church of the Life-Giving Trinity on Sparrow Hills (Moscow, Kosygina St., 30) belongs to the monuments of cultural heritage of federal significance in the city of Moscow. It stands in a very picturesque place from which a magnificent panorama of Moscow opens.

The current building of the temple was built at the beginning of the nineteenth century, but the church existed here much earlier.

The village of Vorobyevo has been known since the middle of the 15th century, when the wife of Vasily I, Princess Sofya Vitovtovna, bought the settlement from the "Priest Sparrow". It seems that it was from the name of this priest that the name of the mountains arose. True, there is another legend according to which solid cherry orchards grew around, and there were so many berries that many sparrows divorced here.

From the very beginning, Vorobyevo was called a "village", which means that there was a temple in it. Apparently, even then the Trinity Church occupied its place of honor in the village.

Once, not far from the church, the father of Ivan the Terrible, Grand Duke Vasily III built a wooden palace, which he often visited and even hid in during the invasion of Khan Mengli Giray.

When Ivan the Terrible turned 17, he also fled to the Sparrow Hills to the royal palace during a terrible summer fire in Moscow in 1547. The burning city was deserted, and here, to the royal palace, the rebellious people rushed, but were met by cannons. This event marked the beginning of the reign of the first Russian tsar.

This palace was loved by both Boris Godunov, and Peter I, who ordered a birch grove to be planted in his garden, and Catherine the Great, but by the end of her reign in the 1790s, the palace was dismantled due to dilapidation. But the temple remained.

In 1812, M.I. Kutuzov himself prayed in the temple before going to the military council in Fili. According to legend, this area has been associated with the Kutuzov family since ancient times. They owned the neighboring village of Golenishchevo with Vorobyov.

Napoleon also came here to explore the panorama of Moscow, which is located at the foot of the mountains. But even during the war, the temple on the Sparrow Hills was almost not damaged.

The church miraculously survived in Soviet times, although the Bolsheviks paid great attention to the Sparrow Hills (somewhere here was the dacha of Lunacharsky himself, and then Khrushchev).

Then Sparrow Hills was renamed - they became Lenin. Prospekt Ilyicha, which is under construction, the main thoroughfare of the city, as planned, will also pass through the Lenin Hills. Surprisingly, the temple was not touched even then. Moreover, the shrine was not closed even once during the years of Soviet power.

When they began to erect the building of Moscow State University, it seemed that nothing would help to keep the temple intact. However, this time the historical monument survived, which seems incredible. The temple could become a brownie for the university, but this did not happen. And it is unlikely that he would have been able to accommodate all the numerous parishioners within his walls.

Vladimir Putin visited the church on several occasions: in 2000 he visited the temple during Christmas, in 2004 he attended a litia for those who died during the terrorist attack in Beslan, in 2011 he attended a memorial service for those who died in the terrorist attack in Domodedovo, and in September 2014 he lit a candle "for those who suffered while protecting people in Novorossiya."

In the temple there is an icon of the holy martyr, who once served as a priest in this temple, and who was shot in the year 37 - the holy martyr Andrei (Voskresensky).

Moscow rockers call this temple "John Lennon Church". According to legend, when John Lennon was killed, all the leading Russian rock musicians gathered in the church on Sparrow Hills and commemorated him. Here one could also tell about the bikers who gather in the evenings in the area of ​​the Observation Deck and have chosen this temple as "their own", but something I recently fell out of love with this audience.

The Church of the Life-Giving Trinity on Sparrow Hills (Moscow, Kosygina St., 30) belongs to the monuments of cultural heritage of federal significance in the city of Moscow. It stands in a very picturesque place from which a magnificent panorama of Moscow opens.

The current building of the temple was built at the beginning of the nineteenth century, but the church existed here much earlier.

The village of Vorobyevo has been known since the middle of the 15th century, when the wife of Vasily I, Princess Sofya Vitovtovna, bought the settlement from the "Priest Sparrow". It seems that it was from the name of this priest that the name of the mountains arose. True, there is another legend according to which solid cherry orchards grew around, and there were so many berries that many sparrows divorced here.

From the very beginning, Vorobyevo was called a "village", which means that there was a temple in it. Apparently, even then the Trinity Church occupied its place of honor in the village.

Once, not far from the church, the father of Ivan the Terrible, Grand Duke Vasily III built a wooden palace, which he often visited and even hid in during the invasion of Khan Mengli Giray.

When Ivan the Terrible turned 17, he also fled to the Sparrow Hills to the royal palace during a terrible summer fire in Moscow in 1547. The burning city was deserted, and here, to the royal palace, the rebellious people rushed, but were met by cannons. This event marked the beginning of the reign of the first Russian tsar.

This palace was loved by both Boris Godunov, and Peter I, who ordered a birch grove to be planted in his garden, and Catherine the Great, but by the end of her reign in the 1790s, the palace was dismantled due to dilapidation. But the temple remained.

In 1812, M.I. Kutuzov himself prayed in the temple before going to the military council in Fili. According to legend, this area has been associated with the Kutuzov family since ancient times. They owned the neighboring village of Golenishchevo with Vorobyov.

Napoleon also came here to explore the panorama of Moscow, which is located at the foot of the mountains. But even during the war, the temple on the Sparrow Hills was almost not damaged.

The church miraculously survived in Soviet times, although the Bolsheviks paid great attention to the Sparrow Hills (somewhere here was the dacha of Lunacharsky himself, and then Khrushchev).

Then Sparrow Hills was renamed - they became Lenin. Prospekt Ilyicha, which is under construction, the main thoroughfare of the city, as planned, will also pass through the Lenin Hills. Surprisingly, the temple was not touched even then. Moreover, the shrine was not closed even once during the years of Soviet power.

When they began to erect the building of Moscow State University, it seemed that nothing would help to keep the temple intact. However, this time the historical monument survived, which seems incredible. The temple could become a brownie for the university, but this did not happen. And it is unlikely that he would have been able to accommodate all the numerous parishioners within his walls.

Vladimir Putin visited the church on several occasions: in 2000 he visited the temple during Christmas, in 2004 he attended a litia for those who died during the terrorist attack in Beslan, in 2011 he attended a memorial service for those who died in the terrorist attack in Domodedovo, and in September 2014 he lit a candle "for those who suffered while protecting people in Novorossiya."

In the temple there is an icon of the holy martyr, who once served as a priest in this temple, and who was shot in the year 37 - the holy martyr Andrei (Voskresensky).

Moscow rockers call this temple "John Lennon Church". According to legend, when John Lennon was killed, all the leading Russian rock musicians gathered in the church on Sparrow Hills and commemorated him. Here one could also tell about the bikers who gather in the evenings in the area of ​​the Observation Deck and have chosen this temple as "their own", but something I recently fell out of love with this audience.

Fais se que dois adviegne que peut.

What is what in the church

The completion of the construction of the Trinity Church is sometimes attributed to Dr. Fyodor Gaaz. He wanted the inmates of the local transit prison to be able to attend the temple. The stone church was placed next to the predecessor, in place of the altar of which there is a white stone monument crowned with a cross.

On the eve of the famous council in Fili, Kutuzov prayed here, and the fire of 1812 bypassed the temple.

The Trinity Church, far from the center, survived and was not closed during the Soviet era. Its ancient interior remained untouched, and during the period of the prohibition of bell ringing in Moscow, the bells continued to ring in the Church of the Life-Giving Trinity on Sparrow Hills.

In 1937, in connection with the closure of the Church of the Life-Giving Trinity in Troitskoye-Golenishchevo, the antimensions from the chapels of St. Jonah and the martyr Agapius were transferred to the temple on Sparrow Hills. Also, a reliquary with particles of the relics of Saints Mitrofan of Voronezh, Alexy Mechev and Blessed Matrona of Moscow was installed in the church.



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