Russia: 18-tonne bell, the 'Aleksandr Nevsky', arrives at St Petersburg monastery
Video ID: 20140728-027
W/S Bell on truck and Christians praying while walking next to truck
M/S Bell on truck
C/U People touching bell and crossing themselves
M/S Orthodox priests walking and praying
M/S People following the bell
W/S Christians surrounding bell
M/S Bell on truck
M/S Crane driver
W/S Bell on truck
C/U Worker attaching chain to bell
M/S Worker attaching chain to bell
SCRIPT
An 18-tonne bell, named 'Alexander Nevsky', arrived at the Saint Alexander Nevsky Monastery in St Petersburg on Monday.
After being cast in Kamensk-Uralsky in the Sverdlovsk region, the bell travelled through 11 Russian cities including Yekaterinburg, Ufa, Samara, Saratov, Penza, Ryazan, Moscow, Yaroslavl, Vologda, Cherepovets and Tikhvin.
It is to be installed in the belfry of the Troitsky Cathedral in the grounds of the monastery in October. The belfry is currently undergoing repairs.
The bell is named after 13th century Russian hero Aleksandr Nevsky, the Grand Prince of Novgorod and Vladimir who was sainted by the Orthodox Church because of his military victories over the Swedes and Germans.
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Yaroslavl 1987 archive footage
Archival footage shot by an Austrian filmmaker while touring the Soviet Union in 1987.
It contains stock footage of Yaroslavl, a city in today's Russia, situated northeast of Moscow: ships on the Volga river, Strelka Fountains, cityscapes, Spaso-Preobrazhensky orthodox Monastery, Alexander Nevskiy Chapel, Building Of The Former Provincial Offices, Church of Ilia the Prophet, church of the Epiphany, and more.
Please comment if you recognize more subjects.
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Святитель Филарет (Дроздов) в Бразилия!
Metropolitan Philaret (secular name Vasily Mikhaylovich Drozdov, Василий Михайлович Дроздов; 26 December 1782 – 1 December 1867) was Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna and the most influential figure in the Russian Orthodox Church for more than 40 years, from 1821 to 1867.
He was canonized on 13 October 1994 and his feast day is celebrated on November 19.
He was born in Kolomna as Vasily Drozdov (Russian: Василий Михайлович Дроздов). He was educated at the seminaries of Kolomna and Troitse-Sergiyeva Lavra, and on the completion of his studies was at once appointed professor in the latter. He became preacher of the lavra in 1806, and four years later was appointed professor of theology in the ecclesiastical academy of Alexander Nevsky Lavra in St. Petersburg, becoming archimandrite in 1811 and director in 1812.
The Events of 1812 produced a strong impression on Philaret; he explained the success of the Russians by moral reason and read a lecture on this theme in the Society of friends of the Russian word. In 1813 he declaimed his famous speech on Kutuzov's death.
He took monastic vows in 1817, and after being bishop of Reval and episcopal vicar of St. Petersburg, became, in 1819, Archbishop of Tver and a member of the Holy Synod. In the following year he was archbishop of Yaroslavl, and in 1821 was translated to Moscow, also becoming metropolitan in 1826.
His daring utterances, however, brought him into imperial disfavor from 1845 until the accession of Alexander II. In 1855 he was restricted to the limits of his diocese. He is said to have prepared Alexander's proclamation freeing the serfs, and he enjoyed the reputation of being one of the leading pulpit orators of his time and country.
He was the spiritual father of missionary hieromonk Macarius (Glukharyov) (1792–1847), canonized in 2000 for his role as Apostle to the Altai.
Philaret was responsible for some of the worst offences towards the Old Believers, including the misappropriation of churches and the sealing of the altars at the churches of the Rogozhskoye Cemetery, which was the administrative and spiritual center of the Belokrinitskoe Soglasie Old Believers. Philaret was also directly involved in the imprisonment of Old Believer hierarchs and monastics.
Filaret was a prominent figure in preparing a Russian translation of the Bible (until his time, only a Church Slavonic version not readily understood by the general populace was available), and wrote many volumes of theological and historical works collectively known as the Filaretica. They include the Colloquy between a Believer and a Skeptic on the True Doctrine of the Greco-Russian Church (St. Petersburg, 1815); Compend of Sacred History (1816); Commentary on Genesis (1816); Attempt to Explain Psalm lxvii. (1818); Sermons delivered at Various Times (1820); Extracts from the Four Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles for Use in Lay Schools (1820); Christian Catechism (1823); Extracts from the Historical Books of the Old Testament (1828–30); Principles of Religious Instruction (1828); and New Collection of Sermons (1830–36). Filaret also wrote spiritual poems from an early age; his poetical correspondence with Pushkin is well known.
Митрополи́т Филаре́т (в миру Васи́лий Миха́йлович Дроздо́в; 26 декабря 1782 [6 января 1783], Коломна, Московская губерния — 19 ноября [1 декабря] 1867, Москва) — епископ Православной Российской Церкви; с 3 июля 1821 архиепископ (с 22 августа 1826 — митрополит) Московский и Коломенский. Действительный член Императорской Российской академии (1818); почётный член (1827—1841) Императорской Академии наук и впоследствии ординарный академик (1841) по Отделению русского языка и словесности. Крупнейший русский православный богослов XIX века.
В 1994 году Русской православной церковью прославлен в лике святых в святительском чине. День памяти — 19 ноября (2 декабря).
Двоюродный праправнук митрополита Филарета — Николай Николаевич Дроздов — профессор МГУ и ведущий телепередачи «В мире животных».
В конце XIX века в Коломне действовало братство во имя свт. Филарета Милостивого, тезоименитого святого Митрополиту Московскому.
В 1996 года близ храма святых апостолов Петра и Павла в Мемориальном парке Коломны был поставлен памятный крест погребенным здесь родственникам святителя Филарета.
Считается небесным покровителем Коломны.
Opposition to Putin's rule in Russia Разгон Марша несогласных
March Nesoglasnyh 31 July 2010 in Saint-Petersburg, Russia. Opposition to Putin's rule in Russia, Saint-Petersburg, clashes with police on Nevsky prospect, downtown Saint-Petersburg, home town of Putin.
Разгон Марша несогласных 31 июля 2010 Санкт-Петербург редкое видео rare video video HD Площадь Свободы. Главный путинский позор у себя на родине. Зачем разгоняют этих людей в самом центре Санкт-Петербурга, с применением силы, непонятно.
Лозунги - Россия без Путина. Матвиенко - в отставку! Конституция. Россия будет свободной! Милиция - с народом, не служи уродам. Свобода.
march nesoglasnyh 31july2010 spb putin protest action russia marsh hd hq 69 4m wmv
putin, путин, оппозиция путину, opposition to putin, марш несогласных, march nesoglasnyh, omon, омон, акция протеста, protest in russia, march of dissent, несогласные, против путина, against putin,marsh nesoglasnyh, strategia 31, стратегия 31, saint-petersburg, russia, санкт-петербург, россия, я не буду голосовать за путина, spb, ne budu golosovat za putina, максим горький, скоро придут другие, maxim gorky skoro pridut drugie, democracy, freedom, свобода, демократия,
Onion Domes of Russia
Onion Domes in St. Petersburg and Moscow. Demonstration of Corel VideoStudio X8
The Onion Domes of Russia
An overview of the churches we saw from Moscow, along the Volga-Baltic Canal, and into St. Petersburg
The Life And Death Of Daniel of Moscow
Daniil Aleksandrovich (Даниил Александрович in Russian) (1261 – 4 March 1303) was the youngest son of Alexander Nevsky and forefather of all the Grand Princes of Moscow.
Prince Daniel of Moscow was the fourth and youngest son of Saint Prince Alexander Nevsky—famous in the history of the Russian State and the Russian Orthodox Church— and his second wife, Princess Vassa. Daniel was born in 1261 in Vladimir, the capital of the Great Vladimir-Suzdal principality. One of the most junior princes in the House of Rurik, Daniel is thought to have been named after his celebrated relative, Daniel of Galicia.
His father died when he was only two years old. Of his father's patrimonies, he received the least valuable, Moscow. When he was a child, the tiny principality was being governed by tiuns (deputies), appointed by his paternal uncle, Grand Prince Yaroslav III.
Daniel took part in his brothers'—Dmitri of Pereslavl and Andrey of Gorodets—struggle for the right to govern Vladimir and Novgorod, respectively. After Dmitry's death in 1294, Daniel made an alliance with Mikhail of Tver and Ivan of Pereslavl against Andrey of Gorodets of Novgorod.
Daniel's participation in the struggle for Novgorod in 1296 indicated Moscow's increasing political influence. Constantine, the prince of Ryazan, tried to capture the Moscow lands with the help of a Mongol force. Prince Daniel defeated it near Pereslavl. This was a first victory over the Tatars, though not a tremendous victory, but it was noteworthy as a first push towards freedom. In 1300, he imprisoned the ruler of the Ryazan Principality by some ruse, as the chronicle says. To secure his release, the prisoner ceded to Daniel his fortress of Kolomna. It was an important acquisition, as now Daniel controlled all the length of the Moskva River. In 1302 his childless nephew and ally, Ivan of Pereslavl, bequeathed to Daniel all his lands, including Pereslavl-Zalessky.
During the Mongol occupation and internecine wars among the Rus' princes, Daniel created peace in Moscow without bloodshed. During 30 years of ruling Daniel participated in battles only once. According to legend, Daniel was popular and respected by his subjects for his meekness, humility and peacefulness.
Daniel has been credited with founding the first Moscow monasteries, dedicated to the Lord's Epiphany and to Saint Daniel. On the right bank of the Moskva River, at a distance of 5 miles from the Moscow Kremlin not later than in 1282 he founded the first monastery with the wooden church of St. Daniel-Stylite. Now it is the Danilov Monastery. At the age of 42 on the 17-th (4-th in old style) of March in 1303 St. Daniel died. Before his death he became a monk and, according to his will, was buried in the cemetery of the St. Daniel Monastery.
He was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1652.
HISTORICAL PLACES OF RUSSIA IN GOOGLE EARTH PART SIX ( 6/9 )
THE ALEXANDER PALACE,PUSHKIN 59°43'16.30N 30°23'34.18E
MARINE STATION, SOCHI 43°34'50.73N 39°43'6.76E
CHURCH OF THE ASSUMPTION, PUSHKIN 59°44'56.98N 30°35'35.54E
WINTER THEATRE, SOCHI 43°34'20.48N 39°43'50.10E
CHURCH OF ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM,YAROSLAVL 57°36'41.81N 39°54'20.68E
FEDOROV SOVEREIGN'S CATHEDRAL,PUSHKIN 59°43'32.76N 30°23'26.50E
PETER I PALACE,STRELNA 59°51'13.35N 30° 2'42.22E
DMITROV CATHEDRAL,VLADIMIR 56° 7'44.59N 40°24'39.42E
DEMIDOVSKY PILLAR, YAROSLAVL 57°37'30.15N 39°53'50.04E
CENTRAL NAVAL MUSEUM,ST PETERSBURG 59°56'37.50N 30°18'18.07E
PYATNITSKA TOWER, MOSKOVSKAYA 56°18'34.08N 38° 7'56.92E
PETERHOF GRAND PALACE, ST. PETERSBURG 59°53'4.05N 29°54'31.37E
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST CHURCH,YAROSLAVL 57°36'39.10N 39°51'24.80E
CHURCH OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST,PUSHKIN 59°43'22.54N 30°23'57.79E
ST. PETER AND PAUL CHURCH,YAROSLAVL 57°36'8.93N 39°50'37.42E
MARBLE BRIDGE, PUSHKIN 59°42'36.87N 30°23'20.69E
KONNETABLYA,GATCHINA 59°33'36.69N 30° 6'46.03E
TRIUMPHAL ARCH, MOSCOW 37°31'12.12E
CHAPEL OF ALEXANDER NEVSKY,YAROSLAVL 57°37'31.80N 39°53'27.87E
CYRIL & METHODIUS CATHEDRAL,SAMARA 53°15'38.09N 50°12'44.55E
Ivan the Terrible (1945) movie
In 1547, Ivan IV (1530-1584), archduke of Moscow, crowns himself Tsar of Russia and sets about reclaiming lost Russian territory. In scenes of his coronation, his wedding to Anastasia, his campaign against the Tartars in Kazan, his illness when all think he will die, recovery, campaigns in the Baltic and Crimea, self-imposed exile in Alexandrov, and the petition of Muscovites that he return, his enemies among the boyars threaten his success. Chief among them are his aunt, who wants to advance the fortunes of her son, a simpleton, and Kurbsky, a warrior prince who wants both power and the hand of Anastasia. Ivan deftly plays to the people to consolidate his power.
Ivan the Terrible (1945) movie
Genres: Biography, Drama, History
Production Co: Mosfilm
Directed by Sergei M. Eisenstein
Writing Credits: Sergei M. Eisenstein
Produced by Sergei M. Eisenstein
Music by Sergei Prokofiev
Cinematography by Andrei Moskvin, Eduard Tisse
Film Editing by Sergei M. Eisenstein
Cast:
Nikolay Cherkasov as Czar Ivan IV
Lyudmila Tselikovskaya as Czarina Anastasia Romanovna
Serafima Birman as Boyarina Efrosinia Staritskaya
Mikhail Nazvanov as Prince Andrei Kurbsky
Mikhail Zharov as Czar's Guard Malyuta Skuratov
Amvrosi Buchma as Czar's Guard Aleksei Basmanov
Mikhail Kuznetsov as Fyodor Basmanov
Pavel Kadochnikov as Vladimir Andreyevich Staritsky
Andrei Abrikosov as Boyar Fyodor Kolychev
Aleksandr Mgebrov as Novgorod's Archbishop Pimen
Maksim Mikhaylov as Archdeacon
Vladimir Balashov as Piotr Volynetz
Vsevolod Pudovkin as Nikola, Simpleton Beggar
Semyon Timoshenko as Kaspar von Oldenbock, Livonian ambassador
Aleksandr Rumnyov as The Stranger
Pavel Massalsky as Sigismond - King of Poland
Valentina Kuznetsova as Smiling Woman in the Church
Sergei Stolyarov
Additional information:
Ivan the Terrible (Russian: Иван Грозный, Ivan Grozniy) is a two-part historical epic film about Ivan IV of Russia commissioned by Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin, who admired and identified himself with Ivan, to be written and directed by the filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein. Part I was released in 1944; however, Part II was not released until 1958, as it was banned on the order of Stalin, who became incensed over the depiction of Ivan therein. Eisenstein had developed the scenario to require a third part to finish the story but, with the banning of Part II, filming of Part III was stopped; after Eisenstein's death in 1948, what had been completed was destroyed.
Alexander Levine. Fragments from Stichera.
Fragments from Stichera for Great Vespers in honour of the Kursk-Root Icon of the Mother of God. Philarmonic capella Yaroslavia, cond. Vladimir Kontarev. 28.11.2016.
orthodox cathedral... Nizni Novgorod, Russia (Eastern Europe)
Православная церковь Св. Николая (Котка) / Russian Orthodox Church, Kotka (Finland)
Собор Александра Невского
молодожены в соборе Александра Невского в Новосибирске
St. Sofia's Russian Orthodox Church
Video of Sain Sofia's Russian Orthodox Church in Harbin China.
Travel Russia - Visiting the Cathedral on Blood in Yekaterinburg
Take a tour of Cathedral on Blood Yekaterinburg in Yekaterinburg, Russian Federation -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions travel video series by GeoBeats.
The Cathedral on Blood in Yekaterinburg is not a typical Russian Orthodox church.
This was the site of Tsar Nicholas the II's last moments before being killed during the Bolshevik Revolution.
The church was built over what was formerly the Ipatiev house, where the Tsar and his family were kept before the assassinations.
Therefore, the Cathedral is an imperative part of Russia's gruesome political history.
The golden domes of the Cathedral are standard for this architectural style.
The natural allure of the surrounding Ural mountains provide visitors another motive to visit this crucial monument.
MAGIC HOLIDAYS IN RUSSIA in Yaroslavl Orthodox ancient bell ringing
La Russie et ses coupoles // Russia and it's domes (cupolas)
This video really shows up the wonderful domes Russia is known for. Some of them are quite ornate others just pure gold colour. Beautiful!
It's a compilation of various images from the web and done by someone else, and I got it in my email and sharing with you
I don't claim to have made it, just simply sharing the beauty with you.
Enjoy!
Сюжет Колокольный фестиваль
Каменск-Уральский
Журналист: Ирина Мусина
Оператор/монтажёр: Геннадий Амосов
Russia, June 2015: Aerial view of the Orthodox Church with golden domes
Russia, June 2015: Aerial view of the white Orthodox Church with golden domes. White-stone church from helicopter. The church is surrounded by a green forest. Church with golden domes and crosses, city panorama aerial
Buy files are on my pages:
You can buy directly: instacontent@gmail.com
Rostov-on-Don in Russia, one of the oldest in the country and a tourist center of the Golden Ring
Rostov-on-Don in Russia, one of the oldest in the country and a tourist center of the Golde
Rostov (Russian: Ростов; IPA: [rɐˈstof]; Old Norse: Rostofa) is a town in Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia, one of the oldest in the country and a tourist center of the Golden Ring. It is located on the shores of Lake Nero, 202 kilometers (126 mi) northeast of Moscow. Population: 31,792 (2010 Census);[4] 34,141 (2002 Census);[7] 35,707 (1989 Census).[8]
While the official name of the town is Rostov, it is popularly known to Russians as Rostov Veliky (Russian: Ростов Великий, Rostov the Great) to distinguish it from much larger city of Rostov-on-Don, and the name of the town railway station is Rostov Yaroslavsky, due to its position in Yaroslavl Oblast.
he central square of Rostov is occupied by the Assumption Cathedral. It is unknown when the present building was erected, the mid-16th century being the most likely date. Lower parts of the cathedral walls are dated to the 12th century. The ponderous bell-tower was constructed mostly in the 17th century. Its bells are among the largest and most famous in Russia - each has its own name. The largest bell, cast in 1688, weighs 32,000 kilograms (71,000 lb). It is named Sysoy to honor the city's founding father.
An area situated between the cathedral square and the lake was chosen by Iona Sysoevich as a place for his fairy-tale residence. All the construction works were carried out between 1667 and 1694. Major buildings include the ornate Savior Church-na-Senyakh (1675), the sombre Church of St. Gregory (1670), and the barbican churches of St. John the Apostle (1683) and of the Resurrection of Christ (1670). The residence, often erroneously called kremlin, also includes eleven ornate tower bells, numerous palaces, several small belfries, and the diminutive baroque Church of Our Lady of Smolensk (1693). All the churches are elaborately painted and decorated.
The cathedral and four tall kremlin churches with their silver blind domes were imitated throughout the city. This is particularly evident in the Savior-on-the-Market church and the cathedral church of the Nativity convent, both dating from the 17th century and situated near the kremlin walls. The oldest church within the town center was consecrated to St. Isidore the Blessed in 1565. They[who?] say that Ivan the Terrible had the architect executed, because his church was so much smaller than its predecessor.
The kremlin is flanked by two monasteries, both facing the Lake Nero. To the right from the kremlin stands the Abraham monastery, founded in the 11th century and one of the oldest in Russia. Its cathedral, commissioned by Ivan the Terrible in 1553 to commemorate the conquest of Kazan, inspired numerous churches in the region, particularly in Yaroslavl.
Spaso-Yakovlevsky Monastery, situated to the left from the Kremlin on the town's outskirts, has been venerated as the shrine of St. Dmitry of Rostov. Most of the monastery structures were built in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in the fine neoclassical style. There are also two 17th-century churches: the Conception of St. Anna, and the Transfiguration of Our Savior. Unlike most other churches in the town, the monastery belongs to the Russian Orthodoxy and houses a theological seminary.