Cathedral
of
Alexander Nevsky
Alexander Nevsky Cathedral
The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral is an orthodox church in the Tallinn Old Town, Estonia. It was built to a design by Mikhail Preobrazhensky in a typical Russian Revival style between 1894 and 1900, during the period when the country was part of the Russian Empire. The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral is Tallinn’s largest and grandest orthodox cupola cathedral. It is dedicated to Saint Alexander Nevsky who in 1242 won the Battle of the Ice on Lake Peipus, in the territorial waters of present-day Estonia. The current Russian patriarch, Alexis II, started his priestly ministry in the church.
The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral crowns the hill of Toompea where the Estonian
folk hero Kalevipoeg is said to have been buried according to a legend. (It
should be noted that there are many such legendary burial places of him in
Estonia.) The cathedral is disliked by many Estonians as a reminder of Russian
occupation. The Estonian authorities scheduled the cathedral for demolition in
1924, but the decision was never implemented. The church has been meticulously
restored since Estonia regained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.
Text from Wikipedia
ladies at the cathedral steps
waiting for alms in their cups
contribution being made
and on to the next