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The Main Cathedral of the Russian Armed Forces (Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ; Russian: Главный храм Вооружённых сил России (Храм Воскресения Христова)) is a lavish Russian Orthodox Patriarchal cathedral [2] in honour of the Resurrection of Christ and "dedicated to the 75th anniversary of victory in the Great Patriotic War, as ...
Holy Virgin Mary Russian Orthodox Cathedral (Orthodox Church in America 34°04′50″N 118°16′47″W / 34.0804841°N 118.2797613°W / 34.0804841; -118.2797613 ( Holy Virgin Mary Russian Orthodox Cathedral, Los Angeles, California
Russia: Moscow Patriarchate: Kronstadt Naval Cathedral: 3,000 m² [citation needed] 5,000 [citation needed] 1913 Kronstadt: Russia: Moscow Patriarchate: Saint Sophia Cathedral: 2,276 m² 1011 Kyiv: Ukraine: Orthodox Church of Ukraine: Church of Saint Panteleimon: 2,068 m² [citation needed] 5,000 [citation needed] 1930 Athens: Greece: Greek ...
Pages in category "Russian Orthodox cathedrals in the United States" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Orthodox churches in America became a self-governing Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church in America in 1924 under the leadership of Metropolitan Platon (Rozhdestvensky), popularly called the Metropolia (from Russian: митрополия). The Russian Orthodox Greek Catholic Church in America was granted autocephaly by the Russian Orthodox ...
Led by Patriarch Kirill, the Russian Orthodox Church is one of the most tangible cultural bonds between Russia and Ukraine. To Vladimir Putin, Orthodox Christianity is a tool for asserting Moscow ...
Russian Orthodox cathedrals in the United States (7 P) Pages in category "Russian Orthodox cathedrals in North America" This category contains only the following page.
The diocese stands out as one of the most historic in the OCA with many parishes dating back to the late 1890s, [1] the diocese was also the epicenter of the mass conversion of Eastern Catholic Americans to orthodoxy between the 1890s-1920s in much part thanks to the labors of the former Eastern Catholic priest St. Alexis Toth who brought more than 20,000 to the church by the end of his life. [2]