Pokrovskaya Church

The Pokrovskaya Church (Russian: Храм Покрова Пресвятой Богородицы) is a Russian Orthodox Church in Mary, Turkmenistan built around 1900 by Russian forces when they seized the city of Mary in 1884 and guarded the city with a military garrison against frequent attacks by British forces and Afghan armies.[1]

Early records of the church are scarce, but there are records of baptisms being performed by priest Tikhon Protasov and the deacon John Ilyichev in 1917.[2] Following the Russian Revolution and the Establishment of the Soviet Union, religious freedoms were curtailed and by the 1930s, the church was closed and the building was repurposed as a club and eventually a military warehouse. The church returned to its original function in 1947, following the end of World War II.[3]

Architecture

The present church is made entirely of brick, which at the time, was somewhat in vogue as architects in St. Petersburg and Moscow had begun experimenting with red-brick facades. Brick was a natural choice in the sandy deserts of the region, which lacked trees to produce wooden buildings. The monotony of the red-brick facades is broken by alternating the colors of the bricks comprising the dental moldings and arches, so that each element alternates between red and white.[4] Inside the Church, every spare piece of wall is covered by framed icons and other religious works.[5]

gollark: The "international baccalaureate", an alternative post-16 curriculum some UK schools use, actually *does* include "theory of knowledge".
gollark: I was going to say "I think it's more that people are stupid than that society is doing it" but really I have no idea. I guess you could look at history.
gollark: Alternatively, we somehow train everyone in dealing with cognitive biases, if that's actually possible?
gollark: This is very* practical.
gollark: No, that would be ridiculous. Instead, we force them to speak only through speech synthesis, with their picture obscured, and run the text through a neural network which bland-ifies it and possibly removes some stupid things.

References

  1. Brummell, Paul (2005). Turkmenistan. Bradt Travel Guides. p. 208. ISBN 9781841621449.
  2. "ХРАМ ПОКРОВА БОЖИЕЙ МАТЕРИ В Г. МАРЫ, ТУРКМЕНИСТАН". Live Internet.
  3. "Pokrovskaya Church, Mary, Turkmenistan". Oriental Architecture.
  4. "Pokrovskaya Church, Mary, Turkmenistan". Oriental Architecture.
  5. Brummell, Paul (2005). Turkmenistan. Bradt Travel Guides. p. 208. ISBN 9781841621449.

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