59°58′14″N 30°18′1″E / 59.97056°N 30.30028°E / 59.97056; 30.30028
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The Convent of St. John of Rila (Иоанновский монастырь) is the largest convent in St. Petersburg, Russia and the only stauropegic nunnery in that city.
John of Kronstadt (later Saint John of Kronstadt) established the monastery on the bank of the Karpovka River in 1900 as a branch of the Sura Monastery of St. John the Theologian. The main pentacupolar church of the Twelve Apostles (1902) was built to a Neo-Byzantine design by Nikolay Nikonov [ru]. The ground floor contains the marble tomb of Saint John of Kronstadt.
The Soviets disbanded the convent in 1923. It re-opened as a branch of Pühtitsa Convent in 1991.
External links
- [REDACTED] Media related to Ioannovsky monastery at Wikimedia Commons
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- Monasteries in Saint Petersburg
- Convents in Russia
- Russian Orthodox monasteries in Russia
- Byzantine Revival architecture in Russia
- Christian organizations established in 1900
- Religious buildings and structures completed in 1902
- Cultural heritage monuments of regional significance in Saint Petersburg
- Eastern Orthodox monastery stubs