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The monastery was established in the Bulgarian Empire in 905 [4] by St Naum of Ohrid himself. St Naum is also buried in the church. Since the 16th century, a Greek school had functioned in the monastery. [5] The monastery had close ties with the printing house of Moscopole, a former prosperous Aromanian city now in Albania. [6]
North Cambridge Catholic Cemetery, Cambridge; Pine Haven Cemetery, Burlington; Salem Street Burying Ground, Medford (late 17th century) Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord [1] Spring Hill Cemetery, Marlborough; St. Michael Cemetery, Hudson; Wildwood Cemetery, Winchester
Southeastern Europe in the 9th century. Monastery of Saint Naum, resting place of Naum, located in North Macedonia. Naum (Bulgarian and Macedonian: Свети Наум, romanized: Sveti Naum), also known as Naum of Ohrid or Naum of Preslav (c. 830 – December 23, 910), was a medieval Bulgarian writer and missionary among the Slavs, considered one of the Seven Apostles of the First Bulgarian ...
Springfield Cemetery is located in the Connecticut River Valley city of Springfield, Massachusetts. The cemetery opened in 1841 and was planned on the model of a rural cemetery. With the relocation of remains from the city's earliest burying ground, the cemetery became the final resting place for many of Springfield's 17th and 18th century ...
Sep. 4—A burial stone dating to 1794, the oldest in the Middle Village Cemetery in Springfield, received a roadside historical marker Friday, Aug. 30, funded by the private William C. Pomeroy ...
Location of Springfield in Massachusetts. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Springfield, Massachusetts. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Springfield, Massachusetts, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are ...
Name Image Place Geographic Coordinates Built in Notes; Church of St. Clement of Ohrid: Skopje: 1990 [1]: Church of the Nativity of the Theotokos Sredno Vodno Church of Sts.
Ohrid by night. The ancient name of the city was Lychnidos, which probably means "city of light". In antiquity the city was known under the ancient Greek name of Λυχνίς (Lychnis) and Λυχνιδός (Lychnidos) and the Latin Lychnidus, [8] [9] probably meaning "city of light", literally "a precious stone that emits light", [10] from λύχνος (lychnos), "lamp, portable light". [11]