Global Information Lookup Global Information

List of burials at Lazarevskoe Cemetery information


Monuments in the Lazarevskoe Cemetery

Lazarevskoe Cemetery (Russian: Лазаревское кладбище), part of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra in the centre of Saint Petersburg, is the oldest surviving cemetery in the city and contains a large number of burials as well as monuments and memorials to notable figures in Russian Imperial history.

Burials began in 1717 when Natalya Alexeyevna, the sister of Peter the Great, was interred in the burial vault of the Church of St Lazarus, from which the cemetery took its name.[1][2] [3] During the early years of its existence, it required the Emperor's permission to allow burials in the cemetery, making it the chosen location for the burial plots of St Petersburg's elite.[1][2][4] By the end of the eighteenth century burial was extended to the wealthy merchant class, in exchange for the payment of large sums of money.[4]

By the nineteenth century, the cemetery was becoming overcrowded, and the first of the new cemeteries in the Lavra, the Tikhvin Cemetery, was opened in 1823.[5] Burials in the Lazarevskoe Cemetery became less frequent in the nineteenth century, and in the twentieth century occurred in only exceptional cases.[4] One of the last people to be interred was Count Sergei Witte in 1915, and in 1919 the cemetery was closed to new burials.[1][2]

During the Soviet period the cemetery was closed and placed under state protection, administered by the society "Old Petersburg" (Russian: «Старый Петербург»).[6] In 1932 it was declared a museum and part of the State Museum of Urban Sculpture [ru].[3] Redevelopment work in the Soviet period involved clearing away those memorials thought to have low historical or artistic interest, while those considered to have higher historical or artistic interest were brought from other cemeteries across the city.[7] Large scale restoration work was carried out after the ending of the Siege of Leningrad, with the museum opening to the public in 1952.[4]

Containing a large number of famous burials and elaborate funerary sculpture from some of the country's leading artists, the cemetery has been called the Necropolis of the XVIII century (Russian: некрополь XVIII века). Examples of the work of Ivan Martos, Mikhail Kozlovsky, Vasily Demut-Malinovsky, Andrey Voronikhin, Fedot Shubin, Fyodor Tolstoy and other masters can be seen.[6] Famous people interred in the cemetery include early associates of Peter the Great, such as Field Marshal Boris Sheremetev, General Adam Veyde, and Court Physician Robert Erskine. The graves of academics Mikhail Lomonosov and Stepan Krasheninnikov; playwrights Denis Fonvizin and Yakov Knyazhnin; architects Ivan Starov, and Andrey Voronikhin; statesmen and politicians Alexander Stroganov, Nikolay Mordvinov, Mikhail Muravyov-Vilensky and Sergei Witte; and military officers such as Vasily Chichagov are also to be seen.[1] The family vaults of the Beloselsky-Belozersky, Trubetskoy, Volkonsky and Naryshkin ancient noble houses were located here, as were those of some of the prominent merchant dynasties such as the Demidovs and Yakovlevs.[1][6] Art historian Nikolai Vrangel [ru] wrote "It was as if all those who had once formed a close circle of court society gathered here after death. A whole epoch, a whole world of obsolete ideas, almost all the court society of Elizabeth, Catherine and Paul were buried in the small space of the Lazarevskoe cemetery".[1]

The remains of a number of famous figures in Russian history were reburied in the cemetery during the Soviet period, among whom were architect Jean-François Thomas de Thomon, mathematician Leonhard Euler and engineer Agustín de Betancourt.[8][9][10]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Cite error: The named reference KP was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b c "The Alexander Nevsky Monastery". Express to Russia. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Alexander Nevsky Lavra Cemeteries". museumstudiesabroad.org. 26 November 2018. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d "Лазаревское кладбище". Александро-Невской Лавре. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  5. ^ "Cemetery and Tombs of the Alexander Nevsky Monastery". saint-petersburg.com. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  6. ^ a b c Piryutko, Yu. M. "Некрополь XVIII века". St Petersburg Encyclopedia. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  7. ^ Buckler. Mapping St. Petersburg. pp. 225–226.
  8. ^ "Бетанкур Августин Августинович". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  9. ^ "Тома де Томон Жан Франсуа". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  10. ^ "Эйлер Леонард". lavraspb.ru. Retrieved 15 April 2019.

and 20 Related for: List of burials at Lazarevskoe Cemetery information

Request time (Page generated in 0.9078 seconds.)

List of burials at Lazarevskoe Cemetery

Last Update:

new cemeteries in the Lavra, the Tikhvin Cemetery, was opened in 1823. Burials in the Lazarevskoe Cemetery became less frequent in the nineteenth century...

Word Count : 1448

List of burials at Nikolskoe Cemetery

Last Update:

post-Soviet times. The cemetery, opened in 1863, was the third cemetery in the monastery complex, after the original Lazarevskoe Cemetery in the 1710s, and...

Word Count : 1061

Tikhvin Cemetery

Last Update:

icon of the Tikhvin Mother of God. It soon superseded the Lazarevskoe Cemetery and became a popular and prestigious burial ground. The first literary...

Word Count : 2263

List of burials at Tikhvin Cemetery

Last Update:

Krylov and Vladimir Stasov. The cemetery opened in 1823 to relieve overcrowding in the monastery's Lazarevskoe Cemetery. Initially called the "New Lazarevsky"...

Word Count : 2175

Nikolskoe Cemetery

Last Update:

church of the monastery. It was the third cemetery in the complex, after the original Lazarevskoe Cemetery in the 1710s, and the Tikhvin Cemetery in 1823...

Word Count : 1218

List of cemeteries in Russia

Last Update:

Cemeterycemetery of the former German community in Moscow Bogoslovskoe Cemetery Kazachye Cemetery, part of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. Lazarevskoe...

Word Count : 491

Vladimir Borovikovsky

Last Update:

1825 he died suddenly of a heart attack and was interred in the Lazarevskoe Cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra in Saint Petersburg. In the late 1790s...

Word Count : 1030

List of burials and memorials in the Annunciation Church of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra

Last Update:

the monuments of Alexei Turchaninov and Anna Vorontsova in the Lavra's Lazarevskoe Cemetery were installed in the church. In the case of sculptor Mikhail...

Word Count : 1393

List of buildings and structures in Saint Petersburg

Last Update:

Church of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra Feodorovskaya Church Gate Church Holy Trinity Cathedral of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra Kazachye Cemetery Lazarevskoe Cemetery...

Word Count : 1051

Avtonom Golovin

Last Update:

1720) was a Russian military leader and an associate of Peter the Great. When tsar Peter I of Russia was a young boy, Avtonom Golovin served him as a...

Word Count : 506

Elizaveta Vorontsova

Last Update:

Elizaveta was attached to the Oranienbaum court of Grand Duke Peter's wife, Grand Duchess Catherine Alekseyevna (at this time, Peter was the heir to the Russian...

Word Count : 949

Aleksey Antropov

Last Update:

organizing a Free School there. In 1795 Antropov died of a fever and was buried in the Lazarevskoe Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery, in Saint Petersburg...

Word Count : 641

Stepan Fyodorovich Apraksin

Last Update:

Persia. At the Russian court Apraksin became one of the keenest opponents of both the pro-Prussian party and of Count Lestocq. He was one of the few devoted...

Word Count : 373

Natalia Pushkina

Last Update:

Sophia (b. 1848). Natalia died on 26 November 1863 and was buried in the cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. "Ivan Aleksandrovich Zagryazhskij". geni_family_tree...

Word Count : 960

Giacomo Quarenghi

Last Update:

Quarenghi were moved from the Volkov Cemetery to the Lazarevskoe Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery, and a bust of the architect was erected between...

Word Count : 1482

Andrey Nartov

Last Update:

craftsman of Peter I of Russia, and later a member of the Russian Academy of Science. From 1705 Nartov worked in the lathe workshop at the Moscow School of Mathematics...

Word Count : 502

Sergei Witte

Last Update:

published a paper, "National Savings and Friedrich List", which cited the economic theories of Friedrich List and justified the need for a strong domestic industry...

Word Count : 5950

Leonhard Euler

Last Update:

anniversary of Euler's birth in 1957, his tomb was moved to the Lazarevskoe Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery. Euler worked in almost all areas of mathematics...

Word Count : 10212

Nikolai Islenev

Last Update:

took in the suppression of the uprising in Poland. In 1820, his wife died giving birth to his son, who died in 1822 at the age of 2. Под ред. В. Ф. Новицкого...

Word Count : 134

Mikhail Vielgorsky

Last Update:

encyclopedia of the deepest knowledge, an example of the most tender feelings and the most playful mind. " He is buried in the Lazarevskoye Cemetery of the Alexander...

Word Count : 2264

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net