St. George's Church
Äulie Georgi Jeñıstıñ Şırkeuı (Kazakh)
Гео́ргиевская це́рковь (Russian)
View of the chapel and Bukpa Hill, 1880
53°16′55.7″N 69°21′52.4″E / 53.282139°N 69.364556°E / 53.282139; 69.364556
LocationKokshetau, Akmola Region
CountryKazakhstan
DenominationRussian Orthodox
History
StatusParish church
Founded1846 First church
1875 (moved church)
DedicationSaint George
Consecrated26 November 1851
Architecture
Functional statusDestroyed
Architectural typeClassicism
StyleRussian
CompletedBetween 1846 and 1847
Demolished1940 (1940)
Specifications
MaterialsWood

The St. George's Church Kokshetau (Kazakh: Әулие Георгий Жеңістің Шіркеуі, romanized: Mäsıhtıñ qaita tırılu şırkeuı; Russian: Гео́ргиевская це́рковь, or Georgyevskaya tserkov) was a Russian Orthodox church dedicated to the Saint George. It was located on the north-eastern slope of Bukpa Hill in Kokshetau, the capital of Akmola Region in the northern part of Kazakhstan.

The church was constructed between 1846 and 1847, consecrated in 1851, and then in 1875, the church was dismantled and moved to the public square in Kokshetau and consecrated again on January 11, 1876. It was destroyed in 1940.

It was the first church built in Kokshetau.

History

The St. George's Church in Kokshetau was founded in 1846. It was the first largest building in city.[1] On November 26, 1851, the church was consecrated. Initially, the church was built on the north-eastern slope of the Bukpa Hill. In 1875, the church was moved to the center of the city 53°16′55″N 69°21′52″E / 53.28194°N 69.36444°E / 53.28194; 69.36444 and was re-consecrated on January 11, 1876.

After the relocation of the church to the new place in Kokshetau, the chapel was built on the site of the moved church. As part of the program of state atheism, the church was confiscated from the community as part of the Soviet Union's antireligious campaigns and has operated as a warehouse in the 1930s, like many religious buildings at that time.

On January 17, 1940, it was turned into a museum and was then demolished.[2]

See also

References

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