The Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin (also the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin in Vyshgorod ) is the Orthodox church of the Naro-Fominsk Prospection of the Moscow Diocese , located in the village of Embankment Sloboda of the Naro-Fominsk District of the Moscow Region .
Orthodox Church | |
Assumption Church | |
---|---|
Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin | |
A country | Russia |
Village | Embankment Sloboda Naro-Fominsky District, Moscow Region |
Denomination | Orthodoxy |
Diocese | Moscow |
Architectural style | baroque |
First mention | 1659 |
Building | ??? - 1797 |
Key Dates | |
??? - start of construction 1797 - end of construction | |
Chapels | Paraskeva Friday |
Status | Object of cultural heritage of the peoples of the Russian Federation of regional significance. Reg. № 501410417160005 ( ЕГРОКН ). (Wikigid BD) |
condition | valid |
History
Temples in Vyshgorod existed from ancient times, but were burned in the Time of Troubles and then rebuilt during the 17th century, in 1659 the wooden Church of the Assumption of the Virgin was restored in Embankment Quarter. Preserved description of the year 1677:
Slobodka Berezhnaya on the Porotva River, and in Slobodka, the Church of the Assumption, with the chapel of the great martyr Paraskeva on Friday, is a wooden dumpling with a meal and a church porch with two bells. |
At the same time, a local legend about the miraculous icon of Paraskeva, allegedly sailing along the Protva River, arose (after the church was closed, the icon was first in the Ireinsky Church of Vereya , currently in a specially built chapel near the Cathedral of the Nativity of Christ .
The church burned down in July 1725 and in 1727 a new one was built, also wooden. On February 13, 1751, by the nominal supreme decree, the Vyshegorod palace volost with the peasants and with all lands , including Quay Sloboda, was granted to Count Alexander Ivanovich Shuvalov . In 1797, the owner of the village, Countess E. A. Golovkina (daughter of Shuvalov), built the now existing two-story stone church. On the top floor was the main, Assumption side-altar, on the bottom - Paraskeva Pyatnitsa. In the XIX century a bell tower was attached to the temple.
The church was closed in the 1930s, at one time it was used to store grain, and it was gradually plundered and destroyed. Returned to believers in 2002, valid, for 2013 repair continues.