Video: Orthodox Christmas Mass in Russia's major Cathedral
More than 30,000 churches and cathedrals across Russia have held religious services as Russia is celebrating Orthodox Christmas. The Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, Kirill, has delivered the Christmas Eve Mass in the Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow.
The first residential building in St. Petersburg: Cabin of Peter the Great
The cabin of Peter the Great (is a small wooden house which was the first St Petersburg palace of Tsar Peter I.
The log cabin was constructed in three days in May 1703, by soldiers of the Semyonovskiy Regiment. At that time, the new St Petersburg was described as a heap of villages linked together, like some plantation in the West Indies. The date of its construction is now considered to mark the foundation of the city.
The design is a combination of an izba, a traditional Russian countryside house typical of the 17th century, and the Tsar's beloved Dutch Baroque, later to evolve into the Petrine Baroque. Peter built similar domiki elsewhere in Russia - for example, in Voronezh, and Vologda. The wooden cabin in St Petersburg covers only 60 square meters (650 sq ft) and contains three rooms - living room, bedroom, and study. It has large ornate windows and a high hipped roof of wooden tiles. Inside, the wooden walls were painted with red oil to resemble brick, and the rooms came to be known as the red chambers. There are no fires or chimneys, as it was intended to be used only in the warmer summer months. It was occupied by the Tsar between 1703 and 1708, while Peter supervised the construction of the new imperial city and the Peter and Paul Fortress.
The cabin was moved to its present location, 6 Petrovskaia Naberezhnaia, in 1711 from its original site on the north bank of the River Neva close to the present Winter Palace. Peter had it encased for its protection within a red brick pavilion in 1723 and ordered that it be preserved for posterity as a memorial to his modesty, and the creation of St Petersburg ex nihilo. Catherine the Great ordered the shelter for the cabin to be renovated in 1784, and the protective brick pavilion was reconstructed by Nicholas I in the 1840s. Nicholas I also had the bedroom converted into a chapel dedicated to Christ the Redeemer, and iron railings were added in 1874.
Peter's domiki were used to mark significant dates, such as the bicentenary of Peter's birth in 1672. They became a center of devotion to the tsar, the Russian Orthodox Church, and the Russian motherland. An image of the log cabin was included on the Peter the Great Fabergé egg, created in 1903 to celebrate the bicentenary of the founding of St Petersburg. After the Russian Revolution, they became symbols of Russian heroic labor.
A prized national monument, the contents were removed, and the Cabin was boarded up and camouflaged during the Second World War. It was the first St Petersburg museum to reopen in September 1944, after the end of the Siege of Leningrad. Personal and domestic objects owned and used by Peter are still displayed within, and a bust of Peter by Parmen Zabello stands outside. The cabin is open to the public as a branch of the Russian Museum.
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KAZAN - TATARSTAN, RUSSIA [ HD ]
Catholics gather for Christmas Eve service in capital
++INTERIOR SHOTS++
1. Priests carrying a statue of the baby Jesus out of the church
++NIGHT SHOTS++
2. Wide of priests and church members walking outside of the church towards the manger
3. People standing around the nativity scene
4. Priest shaking holy water on the statue of baby Jesus in the manger
5. Close-up of statue of baby Jesus
6. People doing cross sign in front of statue
++INTERIOR SHOTS++
7. Wide of service beginning inside the church
8. Wide of parish members seated and standing
9. Priest speaking
10. Close-up of thurible
11. Priest shaking thurible at altar; UPSOUND congregation singing
12. People praying; UPSOUND bell
13. Wide of church; UPSOUND congregation singing
14. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Natasha, No surname given, worshipper:
Typically we celebrate in the (Russian) Orthodox tradition, but given that the whole world is celebrating right now, we decided to stay in the country but still celebrate Catholic Christmas while the whole world is celebrating.
15. Natasha and her family leaving the church
16. Kirill Gorbunov, priest at the cathedral, speaking to a parishioner
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Kirill Gorbunov, priest of the cathedral
For the Catholic community in Moscow, which is around 50 to 60,000 strong, this doesn't feel like - well, we have a work day today, so many of our parishioners, for example, cannot stay for the night mass because tomorrow they have to be early at work. And so this gives us a very special feeling that we are a small community in a big town, in a very big town.
++NIGHT SHOTS++
18. Low angle view of people leaving the church
STORYLINE:
Russian Catholics flocked to celebrate Christmas Eve mass at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary in Moscow on Monday.
Participants prayed at a nativity scene - where priests symbolically threw holy water on a repersentation of the baby Jesus - before attending the evening sermon.
Though Russia is predominantly Orthodox, the church was full of worshippers.
Eastern Orthodox Christians traditionally enjoy their festivities on 6 January, which they call Christmas Eve, but worshippers like Natasha joined in the Catholic celebrations nonetheless.
Typically we celebrate in the (Russian) Orthodox tradition, but given that the whole world is celebrating right now, we decided to stay in the country but still celebrate Catholic Christmas while the whole world is celebrating, said Natasha, who came to the service with her family.
Christmas falls later for the Russian and other Eastern Orthodox churches that use the old Julian calendar, than for Protestant and Catholic churches, which follow the 16th-century Gregorian calendar. Russian secular life goes by the Gregorian calendar.
Local priest Kirill Gorbunov, said that many of his parishioners cannot stay for the night mass because tomorrow they have to be early at work.
This gives us a very special feeling that we are a small community in a big town, he said.
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Orthodox Christmas Russian St.Panteleimon church Saint-Petersburg
Russian Artist Elena Salnikova
A selection of artworks by Russian Artist Elena Salnikova
Elena Salnikova was born in Voronezh in 1970
She began to engage in the art studio with eight years. After graduating from art school in Voronezh arrived in Lipetsk State Pedagogical Institute in the graphic arts department, who graduated with honors in 1993.
Since 1995 she has worked and participated in art exhibitions in Voronezh. After her first solo exhibition was invited to work on the painting of St. Seraphim of Sarov (hut – baptistery at the Church of Our Lady of Kazan city of Voronezh). From 1995 to 2000, she led a team of artists working on painting. Since 2004, she lived and worked in Orekhovo-Zuyevo City.
Her works are kept in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, Moscow, in the Historical and Art Museum, Dolgoprudny, Moscow region, in Znamenskoye district local history museum of the Tambov region, in private collections in Russia and abroad.
Major exhibitions:
1995 – 1998, she took part in all the art exhibitions of the Voronezh branch of the Union of Artists of Russia.
1995 – The first solo exhibition of paintings in the scientific regional library. Nikitin. When she received the invitation of the Orthodox Church on the mural in the church.
1995 – 2000 of – creative work – painting the Temple of St. Seraphim of Sarov (hut – baptistery at the Church of Our Lady of Kazan Voronezh). He led a team of artists.
1997 – personal exhibition in the Diagnostic center of the city of Voronezh.
1998 – personal exhibition in the Historical Museum of Art Dolgoprudny, Moscow region.
2003 – exhibition in the gallery “Elena” CHA Moscow
2003 – participation in the 13th exhibition of painting “Golden Brush” New Manege Moscow
2005 – personal exhibition at the Moscow International Salon “Habitat” CHA Moscow
2005 – participant 2 – All-Russian art exhibition devoted to 300 – anniversary of the birth of Bishop St Joasaph of Belgorod, Belgorod.
2006 – took part in the 4th Festival of Fine Arts “Moscow – the city of peace” in interethnic competition for young artists. Borodino Panorama Moscow
Since 2005 – he participated in all art exhibitions Orekhovo – Zuevo branch of the Union of Artists of Russia.
2011. – Personal exhibition of painting and drawing at the Museum “House of Gogol.” Moscow
2012. – Participation in a group exhibition of painting “Artists Orekhovo-“, Ryazan.
Russian cathedral built on site of famous murder
One of the most interesting buildings in St. Petersburg is impossible to miss. The city's most recognizable cathedral, Savior of the Spilled Blood, is built on the site of a famous Russian murder.
Иркутский собор / Irkutsk Cathedral: 1875-1932
Дореволюционная Россия на фотографиях
Собор Иконы Божией Матери Казанская
г. Иркутск
1875-1932
Pre-revolutionary Russia in photos
Cathedral of the Icon of the Mother of God of Kazan
Irkutsk
1875-1932
Music:
Gloria & Hallelujah by Georgy Sviridov and
Dance of the earth from Le Sacre de Printemps by Igor Stravinsky
The Cathedral of Irkutsk - The Cathedral of the Icon of the Mother of God of Kazan was a huge Byzantine style four-pillared five-cupola place of worship. The main building being connected by a passage to the Cathedral Bell-tower.
For almost half a century, the idea of a great cathedral for Irkutsk was discussed. Finally, in 1849, , the Irkutsk millionaire-gold miner Evfimiy Andreevich Kuznetsov made a large donation of 250 thousand rubles. However, it took until April 17, 1875, on the birthday of Emperor Alexander II, for the solemn laying of the foundation stone. Almost from the beginning of the project disagreements arose between the Holy Synod and the architect, V.A. Kudelsky.....This finally led to his dismissal from the works.
Engineer-captain Mitrofan Nilovich Ogon-Dogonovsky, who compiled a new project of the Kazan Cathedral, was invited to supervise the construction of the cathedral. The facade of the cathedral was repeatedly adjusted, because it did not satisfy the metropolitan authorities in artistic terms. Finally, Emperor III wrote, annoyingly I agree, it's a little better, but not particularly tasteful. However, now there's nothing to be done.....
By June 1879, the walls of the cathedral were erected to the height of the second tier of windows, when a terrible fire destroyed half of the city and suspended the construction of the cathedral for six years.
After the fire, the engineer-architect Baron Heinrich Vladimirovich Rozen was invited to lead the works. The project was approved by the St. Petersburg Technical Committee with a resolution that the facade of the cathedral in its last form was more elegant in artistic terms.
The construction of the Cathedral was completed, finally, in 1894. In total, 904,025 rubles 42 ½ kopecks were spent for the construction and establishment of church utensils........
The consecration of the main chapel in the name of the icon of Kazan Mother of God took place on January 25, 1894. From the end of January until the end of August 1894, Archbishop Tikhon consistently consecrated the remaining altars of the new cathedral. In all, there were six altars in the church: the main one was in the name of the icon of the Kazan Mother of God; the right - Saint and Miracle-worker Nicholas; the left is the St. Evfimiya of Novgorod and St. Euphemia; on the right choirs - St. Tikhon of Zadonsk and St. Mitrofan of Voronezh; on the left choirs - St. Innocent of Irkutsk and the Monk Benjamin Caves and a cave shrine in the name of the Last Judgment of the Lord.
Irkutsk Kazan Cathedral was one of the largest religious buildings in Russia. It accommodated five thousand worshipers, and its height reached 60 meters (from the ground level to the top of the cross of the main dome, not including the underground burial vault).
The consecration of the main chapel in the name of the icon of Kazan Mother of God took place on January 25, 1894.
Irkutsk Kazan Cathedral was one of the largest religious buildings in Russia. It accommodated five thousand worshipers, and its height reached 60 meters (from the ground level to the top of the cross of the main dome, not including the underground temple-burial vault).
The consecration of the main chapel in the name of the icon of Kazan Mother of God took place on January 25, 1894. From the end of January until the end of August 1894, Archbishop Tikhon consistently consecrated the remaining altars of the new cathedral. In all, there were six altars in the church: the main one was in the name of the icon of the Kazan Mother of God; the right - Saint and Miracle-worker Nicholas; the left is the St. Evfimiya of Novgorod and St. Euphemia; on the right choirs - St. Tikhon of Zadonsk and St. Mitrofan of Voronezh; on the left choirs - St. Innocent of Irkutsk and the Monk Benjamin Caves and a cave shrine in the name of the Last Judgment of the Lord.
Irkutsk Kazan Cathedral was one of the largest religious buildings in Russia.
After the October Revolution, in conditions of persecution and terror against the church, the life of the cathedral began to wain considerably. In 1919 the steam heating was destroyed and divine services began to be performed only in the warm season. The cathedral was blown up in 1932. The broken brick was used to fill the area, the level of which, after levelling off the remains of the cathedral, rose almost a metre.
In 1938, almost at the same place where the majestic Kazan Cathedral stood, began the construction of the House of Soviets.
This stark grey coloured monolith, remains to this day........
Kazan church 4K. Богоявленский собор. Казань.
Музыка: П.И. Чайковский. Русский танец из балета Щелкунчик
Russian university to My hostel journey by public transport..
It's my first vlog in which I try to show you my journey from my university main building that means Dean office to my hotel...this vlog has 3 part this is 1st part...
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The natural beauty of Russia, the important places in various cities, social conditions, political issues and analysis, including government machinery work system, cultural programs, customs and traditions, social issues and educational system, and changes in climate, impact on human life, changes in all seasons of Russia And the changes that occur in that context, their food and attributes need common man in Russia, Russian Finance Policy, visits the church in Russia,
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Новые колокола в Воскресенском кафедральном соборе
Владимир – аэросъемка города 4K || Vladimir Russia – Aerial Video 4K
Владимир – город, местами не утративший свою архаичность, но в тоже время растущий и развивающийся, привлекающий внимание людей разных поколений и каждое по-своему. Кто-то приезжает в город ради музеев и памятников старины, таких, как Успенский собор, Дмитриевский храм и Золотые Ворота, которые сохранились до наших дней с XII века. Другие желают получить образование в университетах, колледжах и школах, которыми Владимир тоже богат. Иные люди приезжают работать, а некоторые просто хотят жить в городе, ритмы которого размеренны, но в то же время дни можно скрасить в парках, кафе, театрах и во всех прочих местах современного города.
Владимир может быть разным, и показать его весь и сразу было бы непросто. Однако, в этом видео вы увидите многообразие летнего города и одни из наиболее узнаваемых памятников Владимира в разное время суток с высоты птичьего полета.
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____________________________________________________________________
Vladimir is a city that has not lost its archaism, but at the same time it’s growing and developing. This city attracts the attention of people of different generations for various reasons. Someone visits Vladimir to see its museums and monuments that have survived to our days since the 12th century, such as the Assumption Cathedral, Dmitrievsky Church and the Golden Gate. Others want to get educated at universities, colleges and schools of Vladimir. Someone come to work and some just want to live in a city whose rhythms are not bustling, but at the same time may brighten up their days in parks, cafes, theaters and in all other places of the modern city.
Vladimir is a diverse city that difficult to show all at once. However, in this video you will see some of the most recognizable monuments of Vladimir and the diversity of the summer city at different times of the day. And all this from a bird's eye view.
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Казань и Уфа | Kazan and Ufa Aerial View 4K | by Vitaly Popov
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VK:
Reactions following Saturday's anti-Putin protest
(11 Dec 2011)
1. Wide of gate into Moscow's Red Square opened by policeman, St. Basil Cathedral in background
2. Wide of Red Square
3. Mid of Russian Orthodox Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan in Red Square
4. Mid of churchgoers inside church
5. Close of candles inside church
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Vox pop, Maria (no surname given), churchgoer:
There is a need (of change). We have a lot of injustice, the laws aren't working, ordinary people are simply not protected. The young people are unsettled, it is really hard to get a job for the young people. Old people are not protected. And villages are facing simply a nightmare.
7. Mid of people entering the cathedral
8. Close of Christ icon on church fa�ade
9. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Vox pop, Gennady (surname not given) 48 years-old, businessman from Russia's Bashkiria republic:
(The protests) mean that there are some sort of disorders in our society. We always should come to some sort of truth by consent, consent is necessary. If someone is protesting, this means someone should be listening to them. So they should listen, make some sort of decisions. Our society is sick, our society needs a treatment. There will be protests inevitably.
10. Mid of police in central Moscow
11. Wide of motorcade of police trucks in central Moscow
STORYLINE
People in Moscow on Sunday reacted after mass demonstrations were held across the country on Saturday to protest against alleged electoral fraud and urge an end to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's rule.
The demonstrations, the largest public show of discontent in post-Soviet Russia, came three months before Putin, who was president in 2000-2008 and effectively remained the country's leader while Prime Minister, is to seek a third presidential term.
Two churchgoers interviewed by Associated Press Television outside Moscow's central Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan in Red Square on Sunday said change was needed and authorities should listen to the protesters' demands.
We have a lot of injustice, the laws aren't working, ordinary people are simply not protected, said Maria, one churchgoer.
Our society is sick, our society needs a treatment. There will be protests inevitably, said businessman Gennady, from Russia's republic of Bashkiria.
The biggest of Saturday's rallies across the country took place in Moscow.
The protests followed last Sunday's parliamentary elections, during which Putin's United Russia party narrowly retained a majority of seats, but lost the unassailable two-thirds majority it had held in the previous parliament.
According to the opposition, even that reduced performance was unearned, inflated by massive vote fraud. They cited reports by local and international monitors of widespread violations.
The reports of vote-rigging and the party's loss of seats acted as a catalyst for long-simmering discontent of many Russians.
Protests took place in more than 50 cities from the Pacific Coast to the southwest, including a large demonstration estimated by police at 7,000 people in St. Petersburg.
The Moscow rally, which lasted about three hours, was so sprawling that unbiased crowd estimates were difficult to make. Police put the attendance at 25-thousand; organisers claimed up to 150-thousand.
Whatever the precise number, it was a show of dismay that gave pause to the ruling elite.
State-controlled TV channels that usually ignore or deride the opposition gave notable airtime to the protests.
Officials in many cities, including Moscow, gave permission for the protests.
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С-Петербург.Казанский собор,Невский проспект.18 января 2014 года.Kazan Cathedral,Nevsky Prospect.
Съёмка 18 января 2014 года, 8 часов вечера , в Питере идёт снег...Очень красиво!! Казанский собор и Невский проспект в Крещенский сочельник.
Весенний звон (2).wmv
Нариман Ахмеров.
Тремоло колокольчиков и голос великого колокола.
Мужской церковный хор.
День 2 2 Переулки и колокольный звон
13.05.2012 Воскресное утро в Ровине
Свято-Благовещенский мужской монастырь
Свято-Благовещенский мужской монастырь
Муромский Благовещенский мужской монастырь возник из скромной деревянной церкви Благовещения Пресвятой Богородицы. Ее сооружение церковное предание приписывает св. бл. князю Константину (Ярославу) Святославичу — сыну Черниговского князя Святослава, внуку великого киевского князя Ярослава Мудрого.
Согласно церковному сказанию, жители Мурома долгое время исповедовали языческую религию, обожествлявшую силы природы. Прослышав об этом, князь Константин выпросил у своего отца Муром себе в удел, чтобы обратить жителей города в христианскую веру. В этом богоугодном деле ему помогали сыновья Михаил и Федор. Муромские язычники, не желая принимать князя, убили его младшего сына Михаила. Пораженные чудесным знамением от иконы Божией Матери, названной впоследствии Муромской, они раскаялись в своем злодеянии, и приняли крещение в водах озера Кстово, находившееся неподалеку от города.
В настоящее время Благовещенский монастырь — уникальная сокровищница древнерусской православной культуры. Сегодня в нем совершаются ежедневные монастырские богослужения и ведется духовно-просветительская деятельность.
Это видео в YouTube
Канал shopping in internet
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Tourism in Saint Petersburg Russia
Tourism in Saint Petersburg Russia - Best Tourist Attractions
Saint Petersburg is Russia's second-largest city after Moscow, with 5 million inhabitants in 2012, part of the Saint Petersburg agglomeration with a population of 6.2 million (2015). An important Russian port on the Baltic Sea, it has a status of a federal subject (a federal city).
Situated on the Neva River, at the head of the Gulf of Finland on the Baltic Sea, it was founded by Tsar Peter the Great on 27 May [O.S. 16 May] 1703. On 1 September 1914, the name was changed from Saint Petersburg to Petrograd, on 26 January 1924 to Leningrad, and on 1 October 1991 back to its original name. During the periods 1713–1728 and 1732–1918, Saint Petersburg was the capital of Imperial Russia. In 1918, the central government bodies moved to Moscow, which is about 625 km (388 miles) to the south-east.
Saint Petersburg is one of the most modern cities of Russia, as well as its cultural capital. The Historic Centre of Saint Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments constitute a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Saint Petersburg is home to the Hermitage, one of the largest art museums in the world. Many foreign consulates, international corporations, banks and businesses have offices in Saint Petersburg.
Saint Petersburg has a significant historical and cultural heritage.
The 18th and 19th-century architectural ensemble of the city and its environs is preserved in virtually unchanged form. For various reasons (including large-scale destruction during World War II and construction of modern buildings during the postwar period in the largest historical centers of Europe), Saint Petersburg has become a unique reserve of European architectural styles of the past three centuries. Saint Petersburg's loss of capital city status helped the city to retain many of its pre-revolutionary buildings, as modern architectural 'prestige projects' tended to be built in Moscow; this largely prevented the rise of mid-to-late-20th-century architecture and helped maintain the architectural appearance of the historic city center.
Saint Petersburg is inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage list as an area with 36 historical architectural complexes and around 4000 outstanding individual monuments of architecture, history and culture. New tourist programs and sightseeing tours have been developed for those wishing to see Saint Petersburg's cultural heritage.
The city has 221 museums, 2000 libraries, more than 80 theaters, 100 concert organizations, 45 galleries and exhibition halls, 62 cinemas and around 80 other cultural establishments. Every year the city hosts around 100 festivals and various competitions of art and culture, including more than 50 international ones.
Despite the economic instability of the 1990s, not a single major theatre or museum was closed in Saint Petersburg; on the contrary many new ones opened, for example a private museum of puppets (opened in 1999) is the third museum of its kind in Russia, where collections of more than 2000 dolls are presented including 'The multinational Saint Petersburg' and 'Pushkin's Petersburg'. The museum world of Saint Petersburg is incredibly diverse. The city is not only home to the world-famous Hermitage Museum and the Russian Museum with its rich collection of Russian art, but also the palaces of Saint Petersburg and its suburbs, so-called small town museums and others like the museum of famous Russian writer Dostoyevsky; Museum of Musical Instruments, the museum of decorative arts and the museum of professional orientation.
The musical life of Saint Petersburg is rich and diverse, with the city now playing host to a number of annual carnivals.
Ballet performances occupy a special place in the cultural life of Saint Petersburg. The Petersburg School of Ballet is named as one of the best in the world. Traditions of the Russian classical school have been passed down from generation to generation among outstanding educators. The art of famous and prominent Saint Petersburg dancers like Rudolf Nureyev, Natalia Makarova, Mikhail Baryshnikov was, and is, admired throughout the world. Contemporary Petersburg ballet is made up not only of traditional Russian classical school, but also ballets by those like Boris Eifman, who expanded the scope of strict classical Russian ballet to almost unimaginable limits. Remaining faithful to the classical basis (he was a choreographer at the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet), he combined classical ballet with the avant-garde style, and then, in turn, with acrobatics, rhythmic gymnastics, dramatic expressiveness, cinema, color, light, and finally with spoken word.
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Irkutsk Academic Drama Theater. N.P. Okhlopkova. Russia, From Drone, Point of interest
Irkutsk Academic Drama Theater. N.P. Okhlopkova. Russia, From Drone, Point of interest
Видое из моих путешествий! Всем удачи Here you can buy this movie without watermark and in high resolution (1920x1080, as well as most of the available resolution 4K)
Я присутствую на стоках, тут можно приобрести данное видео без ватермарка и в хорошем разрешении (1920x1080, а так же, большинство доступно в разрешении 4K)