Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Interior Church of Saint Sava. The Church of Saint Sava (Serbian Cyrillic: Храм Светог Саве, romanized: Hram Svetog Save, lit. ''The Temple of Saint Sava'') is a 79 m high [6] Serbian Orthodox church, which sits on the Vračar plateau in Belgrade, Serbia. It was planned as the bishopric seat and main cathedral of the Serbian ...
The Church of Saint Sava (Serbian: Црква светог Саве) in Čerević is Serbian Orthodox church in Vojvodina, Serbia. The church was likely constructed in the early 18th century (1744 [ 2 ] ), but subsequent modifications in the 1770s finalized its appearance. [ 1 ]
The Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Monastery and School of Theology (Serbian: Манастир Светог Саве, romanized: Manastir Svetog Save) in Libertyville, Illinois is a monastery and professional theological school in the Serbian Orthodox Church in the USA and Canada. The school is a collocated facility with the monastery.
View of the Church of Saint Sava, Vračar plateau. Saint Sava Cathedral is one of the largest Orthodox churches in the world, being built continuously since the end of the 1980s on the site where the relics of Saint Sava were desecrated by the Ottomans. The Yugoslav wars gravely impacted several branches of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Many ...
The Trinity Chapel Complex, now better known as the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sava (Serbian: Црква светог Саве, romanized: Crkva svetog Save) is a historic Eastern Orthodox church at 15 West 25th Street between Broadway and the Avenue of the Americas (6th Avenue) in the NoMad neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.
St. Sava Church, St. Sava Serbian Church, St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Church, Saint Sava Church, or other variations on the name, is a commonly used name for specific churches within the Serbian Orthodox Church. Notable uses of the term may refer to:
Construction of the Church of Saint Sava finally began on 10 May 1935, forty years after the initial idea, and 340 years after the burning of Saint Sava's remains. The cornerstone was laid by Metropolitan Gavrilo of Montenegro, future Serbian Patriarch Gavrilo V. Works were halted by the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941.
English: Church of Saint Sava (Belgrade, Serbia) with the monument to Karađorđe, leader of first Serbian uprising against the Turks Српски / srpski: Црква светог Саве на Врачару у Београду, поред споменика Карађорђу (2021)