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Church-of-the-Spilled-Blood
Church-of-the-Spilled-Blood
(Resurrection church) is one of St
Petersburg's most romantic sites. Although its history
suggests it is far from romantic. It was built on the site
of
Tsar Alexander's II assassination in 1881 when a
terrorist threw a bomb at the Tsar's carriage. The son
Alexander III ordered to build a memorial church on this
spot. The pseudo-Russian style was chosen intentionally. The
church would stand out from the rest of European
architecture of St.Petersburg and remind about the accident
and All-Russia's grief. It took over 20 years to construct
it though it never became a public church. Services were
only held for the royal family paying tribute to the Czar
Martyr. General public admission was only allowed after
Bolshevik Revolution and not for long. It was closed
alongside with many other churches in the course of atheism
campaign. World War II and Leningrad siege caused a heavy
damage to the Church. Its precious mosaics crushed of
explosions, artillery shelling, low winter temperatures,
dust, and humidity. After long 30 years of restoration it
finally showed up from behind the scaffoldings. Since 1994
the Church-on-the-Spilled-Blood has been a state museum
acquainting visitors with the story of Alexander's II
assassination and, of course, demonstrating the
unprecedented beauty of Russian mosaic work.
open:
Summer (1st May - 15th, September)
- Cathedral 10.00 - 19.00 (ticket
office closes at 18.00)
Night excursions - 18.15-22.00
Wednesday - day off
Rest of the year
- Cathedral 11.00 - 19.00 (ticket
office closes at 18.00)
Wednesday - day off
Tourists' remarks
" ... My jaw dropped. Really.
The interior is magnificent. Almost everything is mosaic:
icons, pictures, walls, columns and arches, ceilings,
floors, even the cupola. Stonework is composed of rich and
many-hued marble, jasper, rhodonite and porphyry. The church
is light and airy, the people quiet and subdued. The
structure is a romantic impression of late
eighteenth-century Russian church architecture, the exterior
at least. The brick walls are busy, ornamented with carved
marble arches, short columns, an elaborate cornice of brick
and marble, mosaic representations of saints and a great
variety of images. Cupolas are roofed with blue, lime,
yellow, and white tiles. Most of the domes are gold-plated,
one is covered with spiky cubes, and the topmost appears as
a multi-colored turban. Some call the structure garish, a
sort of Russian Neuschwanstein. Others love it. I love it,
inside and out. Neuschwanstein, too ..."
" ... On my third visit to
Russia, in 2001, the restoration of Church of the Spilled
Blood was completed and I was finally able to go inside! It
was mouth-dropping!!! Anyone who has visited many European
Cathedrals is familiar with the awe they inspire. But this
was way beyond that, even. Perhaps it was the effect of the
mosaic work. After the initial reaction, I started looking
closely and realized that there is not ONE cm in that entire
church that is not covered with mosaic!! Not ONE! And it was
not just the technical marvel of the work, the mosaics were
magnificent works of art! No one should even think of going
to St. P'burg without a long visit to the Spilled Blood ..."
" ... The Church of Our Saviour on Blood is a
delightful Russian-style church. It looks both cute
and awesome from its photos, with gold and blue-gold domes
that look like Hershey Kisses. The interior of the
church features extensive unpolished mosaics, which
therefore reflect sunlight ..."
" ... For over 30 years, the
Cathedral of Crist-On-The-Blood, built on the spot where
Alexander II was assassinated, has been under repair. Now,
for the first time in my life, I can see it without
scaffolds. And those are its crosses that glow above the
buildings on the Palace Embankment. And I was visiting St.
Petersburg very frequently since I was 15 ..."
" ... The elaborate edifice
is particularly interesting because it's the only work of
truly Russian architecture in this city of European palaces
..."
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