Temple of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki. Kuzminki Estate: Church Divine service in Kuzminki, Blachernae Church

For the Stroganov family of merchants, who were once simple Pomeranian peasants, 1716 turned out to be an unusually troublesome year. It's no joke, the construction of a church specially erected for the icon, once granted to him for services to the fatherland by Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich himself, was completed! It was this icon, the Blachernae Mother of God, that gave the name to both the church, where it was kept since then, and the village, which became known as Blachernae.

The name of the icon comes from the name of the part of Constantinople where the temple with this shrine was once located. Not only Constantinople, but also the whole of Byzantium was under her protection. The chronicles of those years tell how in 626, through prayers offered before the icon, the Most Holy Theotokos saved the city from the invasion of invaders. Many centuries later, already in Russia, its miraculous power will be revealed during the cholera epidemic in 1830. She saved all the inhabitants of Kuzminki, where she was, and all the inhabitants of the surrounding villages from a terrible disease.

This icon was not ordinary. Its creation is attributed to the Evangelist Luke, a contemporary and one of the apostles of Jesus Christ. The icon was in relief and made using a unique wax-mastic technique. Its peculiarity was that crushed particles of the relics of saints were added to the wax. An image made in this way is called a reliquary.

The appearance of the icon in Russia

It is known that in the 5th century it came to Constantinople, which was at that time the capital of the Christian world, and from there to Holy Athos. In 1654, Athonite monks brought it to Moscow and presented it to the pious sovereign Alexei Mikhailovich, and he, in turn, granted the shrine to the Stroganovs. The wooden Church of Our Lady of Blachernae was built for this icon.

But a rare wooden temple has a long life. This church stood for only sixteen years and burned down in a fire, but by the Will of God the precious icon was saved. In the same year, having asked for the blessing of the ruling bishop, they began to build a new church, also wooden, but it also met the same fate as the previous one. In 1758, as a result of a “fiery ignition,” she died. But this time too the shrine was taken out of the fire.

Construction of a stone temple building

By the time of the fire, the Stroganov Kuzminki family estate passed into the possession of the family of Count Golitsyn. Descendants of the Lithuanian prince Gediminas, they have been the pillar of state power for centuries. This year marks six hundred years since they began their ministry.

A year later, the construction of a stone temple began on the site where the burnt church stood. The count entrusted the creation of the project and the work to the architect I.P. Zherebtsov, who was also involved in the redevelopment and reconstruction of the entire estate. He entered the history of architecture as a representative of the Baroque style. In addition, his name is associated with a movement called early Moscow classicism. For many years he supervised all construction work on the estate.

Architectural features of the new temple

The design of the stone temple was based on the traditional tetrahedral lower part of the building for Russian churches and an octagonal drum built on top. This is how many Orthodox churches in Russia were built. A wooden octagonal bell tower was built nearby. All the decorative design of the temple was made in the Baroque style. In 1762, the construction work was generally completed, but finishing continued for another twelve years.

The Kuzminki estate was the pride of the Golitsyn counts, and they spared no expense on its arrangement. In 1784, they invited the famous Moscow architect R. R. Kazakov, a student of the famous V. I. Bazhenov, who worked with him on the project of the Grand Kremlin Palace. He began to reconstruct the temple, in accordance with the architectural requirements of that time.

Reconstruction of the temple

R.R. Kazakov changed the tetrahedral layout of the main building to a round one, made in the form of a drum, and built a dome on top. On four sides of the building there were entrances with decorative steps and porticoes. The overall composition was complemented by a two-tier stone bell tower. Thus, the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki acquired the outlines familiar to us.

During the War of 1812, the temple suffered significant destruction. Church utensils and icons were stolen. There are eyewitness accounts that tell of numerous incidents of sacrilege committed by French soldiers. At the invitation of the Golitsyns, the best architects worked on its restoration. In 1819, the completely recreated chapel of St. Sergius of Radonezh was consecrated. However, work on the temple continued for several more years. Contemporaries wrote about the extraordinary marble iconostasis in this area. The best stone-cutters in the country worked on it. Famous Ural masters were also invited.

There is much evidence that the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki was constantly in the field of view of the royal family. For example, in 1828, Empress Maria Feodorovna donated a precious brooch made of pearls and diamonds to decorate the icon. In 1858, Emperor Alexander II visited the temple. In addition, the Kuzminki estate saw many other representatives of the House of Romanov. Since 1859, the temple became the Golitsyn family tomb. In the first years of the 20th century, it was again restored and consecrated.

The fate of the church after the revolution

After the revolution, the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki shared the fate of many religious buildings in Russia. Literally in the first years, representatives of the atheistic authorities confiscated all valuables and church utensils. When the temple was finally closed, the miraculous icon was transferred to the Assumption Church in Vishnyaki, and when it ceased to function, the icon was transferred to the Tretyakov Gallery, in whose funds it is kept to this day. In 1929, the domes were demolished, and the building itself was rebuilt beyond recognition, turning it into a holiday home. During the entire period of Soviet power, industrial premises, a transformer substation, and classrooms were located here. The wall paintings and stucco decorations were completely destroyed. Your heart fills with pain when you see photographs of the temple from those years.

Renaissance

In the years following perestroika, many Russian Orthodox churches were returned to the faithful. A period of historical insight has arrived. It was necessary to revive what had been mercilessly destroyed for decades. Government bodies and various public organizations of the country provided great assistance in this. Restorers also came to the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki. It was on the list of objects to be restored first. The work was supervised by architect E. A. Vorontsova. In three years, builders and restorers returned the temple to its original appearance. In 1995, it was solemnly consecrated, like many Orthodox churches in Russia.

Life of the temple today

Today the temple is a major religious and cultural center. It runs a Sunday school and a catechesis school for adults and children. In addition, there is a library whose doors are open to everyone. A separate building has a baptismal font with a font for adults. Like many churches of the Orthodox Church, it has become a place where everyone can gain knowledge about the basics of Orthodoxy, which for many decades was practically closed to the general public.

Address: st. Kuzminskaya, 7, building 1

Oh, what names!
Pike Pond, Shibaevsky Pond, Nizhny Kuzminsky, Verkhny Kuzminsky.
Poplar Alley, Zarechye and Zarechenskaya Street.
Vlahernskoe-Kuzminki - that’s what this wonderful corner was called before the revolution.
This ancient estate is in the southeast of the capital. At one time it was considered the best in Moscow and the third most beautiful in Russia (after Peterhof and Pavlovsk) and was among the ten best landscape ensembles in the world.
How did the estate appear? In 1702, Peter I confiscated land and a mill on the bank of a dammed river from the Simonov Monastery, and transferred them for special merits to his associate, the “eminent man” Grigory Dmitrievich Stroganov.
Later the estate passed to the princes Golitsyn.
In the middle of the 18th century, Kuzminki was decorated with a stone temple, built according to the design of the famous architect Ivan Zherebtsov. Later, the building was rebuilt by another recognized master of classicism, Rodion Kazakov. Moreover, Andrei Voronikhin, the author of the project for the Kazan Cathedral in St. Petersburg, also participated in the creation of this masterpiece. The outstanding architect Domenico Gilardi worked on the interiors of the church.
And it’s called the Blachernae Church. And do you know why?
In 1654, an icon of the Mother of God was brought to Moscow from the Blachernae Monastery on the shores of the Bosphorus. According to legend, it was written by the Evangelist Luke himself, and was revered as miraculous. Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich personally transferred the image to the Assumption Cathedral in the Kremlin. Several copies were made of the revered icon. And one of them was handed over to the Stroganovs, who erected a temple for the family shrine in Kuzminki.
As usual, after the revolution, traces of the icon were lost. And about 30 years ago, the Blachernae image from Kuzminki was discovered in the storerooms of the Tretyakov Gallery.
In the early 90s, the Blachernae Church was included in the list of Moscow shrines to be restored first. And in just a few years, Blachernae was transformed. Based on ancient drawings, they recreated the bell tower, the external and internal decoration of the church.
And now, when you visit the estate, you can not only see the temple, amazingly integrated into the surrounding park ensemble.
It is equally important that the temple houses a modern copy of the Blachernae icon.
So write down in your memory a place that you must visit - Vlakhernskoe-Kuzminki.

Contacts: Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki

Address: st. Kuzminskaya, 7, building 1

How can I get to:
From metro station Ryazansky Prospekt, bus. No. 29, route. No. 429 to the stop "Kuzminsky Park" (terminal), from metro Tekstilshchiki: tr. No. 27, 38, route No. 338 to the stop "Veterinary Academy" (terminal), then 5 minutes. walk along Kuzminskaya Street to the temple (Park Alley).

Driving directions:

03.10.2015

Emperor Constantine the Great, who moved the capital of the Roman Empire to a newly rebuilt city on the Bosporus, dedicated Constantinople to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Perhaps this is why many churches of the Virgin Mary were erected in the Byzantine capital. One of them - the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God - was destined to become one of the most famous churches in the Christian world, the glory of which outlived the Byzantine Empire for many centuries.

The temple, not far from the famous Golden Horn of Constantinople, was founded by the pious Empress Pulcheria in the middle of the 5th century. As it turned out later, this construction was deeply providential. Just a few years after the creation of the temple, a great shrine was brought to Constantinople from Palestine - the incorrupt Robe of the Most Holy Theotokos, which required a worthy place of storage. The church in Blachernae became the ark in which the Byzantines placed the precious relic. Subsequently, along with the Robe, they placed part of the Omophorion and part of the Belt of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The temple also housed an icon of the Mother of God, according to legend, painted by the Apostle Luke. Many miracles were performed from the Blachernae icon, and the veil with which it was hung rose and fell by itself.

Byzantine emperors often came to the Blachernae Church to venerate the shrines and plunge into the holy spring flowing here. Initially, the temple was located outside the city walls, so a palace was erected near it for the rest of royalty. Over time, the fortress walls of Constantinople were expanded, and Blachernae found itself inside the city. In the 12th century, the Byzantine emperors moved to live in the Blachernae Palace, which became their last residence.

The Blachernae Temple played a special role in the history of Constantinople. In 626, during the absence of Emperor Heraclius from the capital, who went to war with the Persians, the city was besieged by the Avars. Patriarch Sergius and the emperor's eldest son Constantine took the miraculous icon of the Mother of God from the Blachernae Church and walked around the fortress walls with it. The Avars, frightened by the formidable appearance of Women in elegant attire, lifted the siege of Constantinople.

The inhabitants of Constantinople more than once turned to the intercession of the Blessed Virgin at critical moments. This was the case in 860, when the Byzantine capital was besieged by the ships of the ancient Russian princes Askold and Dir. Patriarch Photius took the Robe of the Most Holy Theotokos from the Blachernae Church and with prayer lowered its edge into the waters of the Bosphorus. A sudden storm that arose scattered the enemy fleet, and Askold and Dir, struck by the heavenly sign, accepted Orthodoxy and received the names Nicholas and Elijah in baptism.

It was here, in the Blachernae Church, that the miracle of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary took place at the beginning of the 10th century. During the attack on Constantinople by enemies, the great Byzantine saint, blessed Andrew - a Slav by origin - saw during the service the Most Holy Theotokos standing in the air and spreading Her Veil over the city.

In 1434, a tragic event happened in Constantinople. The boys, who were hunting pigeons in the Blachernae region, inadvertently caused a terrible fire that completely destroyed the Blachernae temple. Many Byzantines saw in this incident a terrible omen that foreshadowed disaster for the city, and prepared for the worst. Nineteen years later, Constantinople was besieged by the Turks, and the fall of the city simultaneously marked the end of the Byzantine Empire.

For almost the entire period of the existence of the Ottoman Empire, the holy place was desolate. Only in the middle of the 19th century did local Greeks buy a plot of land on which the Blachernae Church once stood and received permission from the Sultan to rebuild it in the same place. The modern church building was erected in 1867, and since then Orthodox prayer has been offered again in Blachernae.

Nowadays, the appearance of the Blachernae Church is very modest and does not in any way resemble the majestic architecture of the Byzantine era. Surrounded by a high fence, the church with a small green garden is lost among the Istanbul houses near the Old Galata Bridge on the southern bank of the Golden Horn. But the grace and power of God, which has overshadowed this mysterious place since ancient times, still attracts pilgrims from various countries who come here in busloads. In Byzantine times, there was a custom every Friday to perform a special service in front of the miraculous icon of the Blessed Virgin Mary. And currently, in continuation of this pious tradition, the Divine Liturgy is celebrated every Friday in the Blachernae Church.

It is believed that the Blachernae Temple received its name from the source of holy water, which was located next to it, and during the later reconstruction of the church ended up inside it. And today in the temple everyone can take a small bottle, which the church ministers carefully fill with holy water from the source.

The Blachernae icon of the Most Holy Theotokos here is not similar to the image common in Russia. More precisely, in the Blachernae temple there are two icons with the same name. One of them is made in the form of “Hodegetria”, like the Blachernae icons known in Rus'. And the second resembles the “Unbreakable Wall” icon, only behind the Mother of God’s back are the fortress walls of Constantinople, which She protects by raising her hands in prayer to the sky.

Miracles still happen in the Blachernae Temple. There are known cases of the appearance of the Mother of God Herself here.

I. A. Svistunova,
"Russian House", No. 10, 2015.
Printed in abbreviation

Kuzminki Estate: Church

At different times in Kuzminki there were three documented churches successively. The first of them was built in 1716 by the Stroganovs, who received a blessed charter, that is, permission to build it. That church was wooden, consecrated in honor of the family shrine of the owners of Kuzminki - the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God and had a chapel of Alexander Nevsky. The entire estate was named after this church - the village of Vlahernskoe. The church was destroyed by fire in 1732, but a new one was built in its place. Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God, also wooden. She, in turn, died from “fiery ignition” on November 18, 1758.

The current church is the third in a row. It was built in two stages. In 1759-62, a church building was built, as well as a separate wooden bell tower, the author of which was Zherebtsov. However, by 1779 the church building was in need of repair. Prince M.M. Golitsyn soon rebuilt the building in the forms of mature classicism and built a new bell tower instead of the old one. These works were carried out according to the design of the architect R. Kazakov in 1784-85.
There was a family heirloom in the church - Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God(Hodegetria), dates back to the 7th century AD. One of the most revered Greek icons in Moscow. They were brought to Constantinople as a gift to the father of Peter I, Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, in 1653. Along with the icon, a letter was sent in which its origin was associated with the Blachernae Monastery of Constantinople, and the history of its veneration with the early history of the Hodegetria of Constantinople. The icon was kept in the Assumption Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin; the tsar took it with him on military campaigns. The celebration of the icon took place on the fifth week of Lent - Saturday of the Akathist. The Blachernae icon is in relief, made using the wax-mastic technique. The relics of Christian martyrs are added to the wax, thus the icon is a reliquary. In terms of iconographic type, the Hodegetria list, close to the Smolensk icon of the Mother of God, was created in the second half of the 15th - early 16th centuries, possibly as a repetition of an ancient icon on an old board. The icon has a Greek inscription - “God-protected”. Currently, the icon is in the Church of the Deposition of the Robe in the Moscow Kremlin. One of the revered relief lists of the second half of the 17th - early 18th centuries was kept in the family estate of the Stroganov-Golitsyns in the village of Vlahernskoye. The father of the already mentioned Grigory Stroganov was granted to them for his services to the Fatherland. After the temple was built, the area received a third name - the village of Vlahernskoe.
Vlaherna is the name of a locality in Constantinople. A long time ago there stood a church with a miraculous icon. This icon patronized Constantinople and the Byzantine emperors. According to legend, she put to flight the enemies who attacked the city in 626. The icon demonstrated its miraculous power more than once while in Russia. In 1830, a cholera epidemic broke out. It was difficult to indicate at least one place in Moscow or near Moscow that was free from the raging disease. Thousands of people died every day... And yet in Blachernae not a single person died, but even got sick. The Mother of God also showed her intercession in 1871, when another cholera epidemic broke out in Moscow. It is not surprising that Muscovites and surrounding residents revered the icon and considered it miraculous. By the way, all three names - Kuzminki, Melnitsa and Vlahernskoye - were used until 1917, we find all three names in newspapers, guidebooks, letters and diaries of contemporaries. July 2 became the local Christian holiday of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God. In 1920, the Blachernae Church closed, and the icon of the Mother of God was transferred to the Assumption Church in Veshnyaki. When it closed in 1941, the icon went to the Tretyakov Gallery, where it is kept in storage to this day.

Temple destruction


Reconstruction of the church in Kuzminki. Photo 1938

In 1923 it opened in Moscow Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church, at which the decision was made to close the churches. Monasteries and churches were transferred to the All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for camps and prisons for criminals and children's colonies. Thousands of churches were closed in short order. Warehouses, clubs, sobering stations, hostels and museums were built in the ruined churches. In Kuzminki, in response to the “lofty” ideas of building a new state, all the gravestones and crosses of the small churchyard behind the church were destroyed, freeing up the territory for the construction of a dormitory for the institute’s employees. Not far from the dam there was once a well with holy water, which was filled up.

In 1929, the village council confiscated the keys from the rector of the Church of the Blachera Icon of the Mother of God, prohibiting the holding of services. But that is not all. One day in 1929, a cart rolled along Lipovaya Alley to expropriate church valuables in favor of the state and transfer the temple Central Committee of the Automotive Industry. Having learned about this, priest Poretsky tried to protect the holy place, calling on the residents for help. The people warmly responded to the call. The results of the confrontation were sad. In the fall of 1929, the drum of the temple and the bell tower, on which the ancient tower clock was located, were destroyed.

When remodeling the temple only the main skeleton of the building and the portico remained. The pediments were replaced by large and disproportionate attics. The windows were altered beyond recognition: instead of round windows, rectangular ones appeared, and the cast metal strips that held the structure together were damaged. Everything inside has also been redone. In place of the altar (!) they built a toilet and painted over the wall paintings. Many manuscripts and icons were burned. The only picturesque icon of the Blacherskaya Mother of God known to us hung for a long time in the left aisle of the Veshnyakovsky church. Miraculously, this icon survived and was of undoubted value and, by decision of the commission, was transferred to the funds of one of the museums in Moscow.

Today

In 1992 year, by order of 717 Moscow Mayor Luzhkov, the building of the Church of the Blachersk Icon of the Mother of God with the chapels of St. Sergius of Radonezh and St. Alexander Nevsky were transferred to the Patriarchate. The seemingly impossible dreams of restoring the estate began to come true. The rector of the church, Father Alexander, and the newly created community brought life into the dead temple and hope into the hearts of Muscovites. An important stage in the restoration was the dismantling of the water tower, ugly Soviet architecture (it was destroyed by explosion, so carefully that none of the surrounding buildings were damaged). Many organizations and restoration teams took part in the restoration of the temple. Dynasties worked here: the Gvozdev brothers and their sons. And the multi-pound bell was helped by the casting of the staff of the plant named after. Likhacheva.

Website http://vlahernskoe.prihod.ru/

Rector - Priest Alexander Kashkin

Temple opening hours: On Sunday - Matins and Liturgy at 9 a.m., the day before all-night vigil at 5 p.m.

Telephone: 377-87-88

Address: st. Skryabina, 1 (Starye Kuzminki St., 26),

Directions: from metro station Ryazansky Prospekt, bus. 29 to the final stop

For the Stroganov family of merchants, who were once simple Pomeranian peasants, 1716 turned out to be an unusually troublesome year. It's no joke, the construction of a church specially erected for the icon, once granted to him for services to the fatherland by Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich himself, was completed! It was this icon, the Blachernae Mother of God, that gave the name to both the church, where it was kept since then, and the village, which became known as Blachernae.

Origin of the icon

The name of the icon comes from the name of the part of Constantinople where the temple with this shrine was once located. Not only Constantinople, but also the whole of Byzantium was under her protection. The chronicles of those years tell how in 626, through prayers offered before the icon, the Most Holy Theotokos saved the city from the invasion of invaders. Many centuries later, already in Russia, its miraculous power will be revealed during the cholera epidemic in 1830. She saved all the inhabitants of Kuzminki, where she was, and all the inhabitants of the surrounding villages from a terrible disease.

This icon was not ordinary. Its creation is attributed to the Evangelist Luke, a contemporary and one of the apostles of Jesus Christ. The icon was in relief and made using a unique wax-mastic technique. Its peculiarity was that crushed particles of the relics of saints were added to the wax. An image made in this way is called a reliquary.

The appearance of the icon in Russia

It is known that in the 5th century it came to Constantinople, which was at that time the capital of the Christian world, and from there to Holy Athos. In 1654, Athonite monks brought it to Moscow and presented it to the pious sovereign Alexei Mikhailovich, and he, in turn, granted the shrine to the Stroganovs. The wooden Church of Our Lady of Blachernae was built for this icon.

But a rare wooden temple has a long life. This church stood for only sixteen years and burned down in a fire, but by the Will of God the precious icon was saved. In the same year, having asked for the blessing of the ruling bishop, they began to build a new church, also wooden, but it also met the same fate as the previous one. In 1758, as a result of a “fiery ignition,” she died. But this time too the shrine was taken out of the fire.

Construction of a stone temple building

By the time of the fire, the Kuzminki family had passed into the possession of the family of Count Golitsyn. Descendants of the Lithuanian prince Gediminas, they have been the pillar of state power for centuries. This year marks six hundred years since they began their ministry.

A year later, the construction of a stone temple began on the site where the burnt church stood. The count entrusted the creation of the project and the work to the architect I.P. Zherebtsov, who was also involved in the redevelopment and reconstruction of the entire estate. He entered the history of architecture as a representative of In addition, his name is associated with a movement called early Moscow classicism. For many years he supervised all construction work on the estate.

Architectural features of the new temple

The design of the stone temple was based on the traditional tetrahedral lower part of the building for Russian churches and an octagonal drum built on top. This is how many Orthodox churches in Russia were built. A wooden octagonal bell tower was built nearby. All the decorative design of the temple was made in the Baroque style. In 1762, the construction work was generally completed, but finishing continued for another twelve years.

The Kuzminki estate was the pride of the Golitsyn counts, and they spared no expense on its arrangement. In 1784, they invited the famous Moscow architect R.R. Kazakov, a student of the famous V.I. Bazhenov, who worked with him on the Bolshoi project. He began reconstructing the temple in accordance with the architectural requirements of that time.

Reconstruction of the temple

R.R. Kazakov changed the tetrahedral layout of the main building to a round one, made in the form of a drum, and built a dome on top. On four sides of the building there were entrances with decorative steps and porticoes. The overall composition was complemented by a two-tier stone bell tower. Thus, the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki acquired the outlines familiar to us.

During the War of 1812, the temple suffered significant destruction. Objects and icons were stolen. There are eyewitness accounts that tell of numerous incidents of sacrilege committed by French soldiers. At the invitation of the Golitsyns, the best architects worked on its restoration. In 1819, the completely recreated chapel of St. Sergius of Radonezh was consecrated. However, work on the temple continued for several more years. Contemporaries wrote about the extraordinary marble iconostasis in this area. The best stone-cutters in the country worked on it. Famous Ural masters were also invited.

There is much evidence that the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki was constantly owned by the reigning family. For example, in 1828, Empress Maria Feodorovna donated a precious brooch made of pearls and diamonds to decorate the icon. In 1858, Emperor Alexander II visited the temple. In addition, the Kuzminki estate saw many other representatives of the House of Romanov. Since 1859, the temple became the Golitsyn family tomb. In the first years of the 20th century, it was again restored and consecrated.

The fate of the church after the revolution

After the revolution, the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki shared the fate of many religious buildings in Russia. Literally in the first years, representatives of the atheistic authorities confiscated all valuables and church utensils. When the temple was finally closed, the miraculous icon was transferred to the Assumption Church in Vishnyaki, and when it ceased to function, the icon was transferred to the Tretyakov Gallery, in whose funds it is kept to this day. In 1929, the domes were demolished, and the building itself was rebuilt beyond recognition, turning it into a holiday home. During the entire period of Soviet power, both production facilities and classrooms were located here. The wall paintings and stucco decorations were completely destroyed. Your heart fills with pain when you see photographs of the temple from those years.

Renaissance

In the years following perestroika, many Russian Orthodox churches were returned to the faithful. A period of historical insight has arrived. It was necessary to revive what had been mercilessly destroyed for decades. Government agencies and various countries provided great assistance in this regard. Restorers also came to the Church of the Blachernae Icon of the Mother of God in Kuzminki. It was on the list of objects to be restored first. The work was supervised by architect E. A. Vorontsova. In three years, builders and restorers returned the temple to its original appearance. In 1995, it was solemnly consecrated, like many Orthodox churches in Russia.

Life of the temple today

Today the temple is a major religious and cultural center. It runs a Sunday school and a catechesis school for adults and children. In addition, there is a library whose doors are open to everyone. A separate building has a baptismal font with a font for adults. Like many churches, it has become a place where everyone can gain knowledge about the basics of Orthodoxy, which for many decades was practically closed to the general public.