Foreign churches in St. Petersburg and their archives, 1703-1917 / edited by Pieter Holtrop and Henk Slechte.

Walking the first mile of the Nevsky Prospekt in St. Petersburg, the visitor is struck by the sight of the Dutch, Finnish, Swedish, German, Armenian Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, and Roman Catholic churches. These buildings reflect the religious, cultural, and social diversity that has been characteri...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Brill's series in church history, v. 29
TeilnehmendeR:
Year of Publication:2007
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Brill's series in church history ; d. 29.
Physical Description:1 online resource (239 p.)
Notes:Proceedings of a congress held in Oct. 2003 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.
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Other title:Preliminary Material /
Foreign Churches Along The Nevski Prospekt: An Introduction /
Three Hundred Years Of European Integration And Relations Between Churches In St. Petersburg /
Economic Relations Between Western Europe And Russia, 1600–1800 /
Swedish Churches In Russia And Their Historical Sources /
The Swedish Congregation Of St. Petersburg: \'Ett Tempel Till Dyrkande Af All Werldens Gud\' /
Dutch And Reformed In St. Petersburg /
The Lost Battle Of The Last Chairman: François Schmitt And The Decline Of The Dutch Reformed Community In St. Petersburg, 1920–27 /
The Anglican Church In St. Petersburg /
The Communications Network Of Halle Pietists In Russia /
Herrnhut And Russia: Archival Records On Moravian Activity In Russia From The Unity Archives In Herrnhut, Germany /
The History Of Expatriate Estonians In The Registers Of The Congregation Of St. Mary’S In Tomsk /
Historical Sources On Foreign Churches In The Central State Historical Archive Of St. Petersburg /
The Department For Spiritual Affairs Of Foreign Confessions In The Ministry Of The Interior /
Sources On The History Of Lutheran Churches In Russia In The Collections Of The Russian State Historical Archive In St. Petersburg /
Historical Sources On The Evangelical-Lutheran Churches Of North-West Russia In The Central State Archive Of St. Petersburg /
Traces Of The History Of Estonian Churches In Russian Archives /
Collections Of The Roman Catholic And Uniate Spiritual Institutions In The Russian State Historical Archive /
Index Of Names /
Summary:Walking the first mile of the Nevsky Prospekt in St. Petersburg, the visitor is struck by the sight of the Dutch, Finnish, Swedish, German, Armenian Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, and Roman Catholic churches. These buildings reflect the religious, cultural, and social diversity that has been characteristic of the city since Tsar Peter the Great invited thousands of foreigners from all over Western Europe to build this settlement at the estuary of the Neva River. On the occasion of the third centenary of St. Petersburg (2003), historians and archivists from Russia as well as other European countries convened to study the history of the city’s foreign churches in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The resulting studies, published here, offer fascinating insights into the almost forgotten history of those churches and show how substantially they contributed to the religious, cultural, social, and economic history of St. Petersburg. Contributors include: Archpriest V. Fedorov, M. Fundaminski, P.N. Holtrop, B. Jangfeldt, E.E. Knyazeva, N.S. Krylov, T. Mägi, A. Must, E. Norberg, P.M. Peucker, K. Rundell, V.M. Shishkin, C.H. Slechte, A.R. Sokolov, Th.J.S. van Staalduine, T.I. Tatsenko, J.W. Veluwenkamp, and M.V. Shkarovskii.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:1282397702
9786612397707
9047422406
ISSN:1572-4107 ;
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Pieter Holtrop and Henk Slechte.