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Church of the Life-Giving Trinity in the village of Oznobishino. History of the Trinity Church in the village of Oznobishino

Trinity Church Oznobishino

One-time events

Regular events

The church operates a Sunday school for children (from 4 years old). The resumption of classes after the summer break is planned for late September - early October.

For children (for example, Sunday school students), you can organize a visit to the icon-painting workshop (at the temple) with a story-tour, possibly showing some of the actions used in painting icons - preparing paint from minerals, sticking gold, etc. (this experience has been tested on small children several times - and they like it). Duration - by agreement.

There is a hall with a stage. For guests from other parishes, we can show there: - one of the performances for children and adults (at the church there is a theater studio “Hello”), the performance is being prepared for Christmas (you can, by the way, invite fans to take part) and then shown repeatedly as at the church, and in other places - for example, the last (at the moment) showing of the play of this year

Concert of academic vocal music,

Traditional concert on May 9 (we invite everyone as spectators and participants);

For parishes where there is an English language club: a children's musical in English.

It is possible to organize and hold the mentioned performances and concerts in another place (traveling to other parishes, or holding an event for the entire deanery in the hall of one of the d/k). Terms by agreement.

In our auditorium we can host creative groups from other parishes, for example, a performance or concert by Sunday school children. Terms by agreement.

Painting exhibitions are regularly held in the refectory building. We can place an exhibition of artists from other parishes, as well as an exhibition of drawings by Sunday school students from other parishes. We can take one of our displays to organize an exhibition in another parish. - Dates by agreement.

For teachers and students of Sunday schools: master classes for children and adults on handicrafts “Holiday Gift” (for Christmas: angels made from napkins, for Easter: painting eggs in different techniques, including pysanka and kapanka, for other holidays - many crafts using the techniques of quilling, origami, plasticine, designer doll, etc.)

If there is interest in this, you can organize an excursion to the source with a prayer service and immersion in the font. You can direct those who wish to have conversations before the Sacrament of Baptism. They are held on Sundays at 16-00, although not every Sunday, but in accordance with a pre-announced schedule.

In the village of Oznobishino, according to the census books of 1629, the existence of a wooden church in the name of the Intercession of the Mother of God, which has a chapel in honor of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker, is already mentioned. In 1677, boyar Bogdan Khitrovo, being the owner of the village, financed the construction of a new wooden Church in honor of the Life-Giving Trinity with the transfer from the old chapel to the glory of the Archbishop of Myra of Lycia, St. Nicholas and in honor of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos. In terms of architecture, the church was a tall, single-domed quadrangle with vestibules and a refectory below. The chapels were located in the refectory. According to the guards, the church existed until the 30s of the twentieth century. And only from 1935 to 1937 they began to tear it apart into logs, and many icons were simply destroyed.
Stone Church of the Holy Trinity in the village of Oznobisheno, known to us now, was laid on 08/11/1863 next to the wooden one and was completely completed around 1865. The architect of the project was Nikolai Ivanovich Finisov. By analogy with the old wooden church, the refectory had the same two chapels. From 1908 to 1911, the construction of the vestibule to the temple, crowned with a high tented bell tower, was underway. The architect of the bell tower project was Nikolai Nikolaevich Blagoveshchensky. The main bell was comparable to the bell tower itself; its weight was about 500 pounds. Upon completion of all stone construction work Church of the Life-Giving Trinity in the village of Oznobishino The result was a magnificent church in the pseudo-Russian style with the main building in the form of a quadrangle, with slightly narrowed windows, decorated symmetrically with a row of pilasters with Doric capitals. The central part of the walls is surrounded on both sides by equal-ended crosses; on each side in the roof area there are projections framed by small arches. This creation is crowned with a seven-sided dome, slightly elongated, standing on a drum e. The refectory, connecting the temple with the bell tower, is made in the same style, but pilasters are installed at the corners of the building. The beautiful bell tower consists of four tiers. The first is a portal quadrangle with two windows. The second slightly compressed quadrangle has 12 slightly elongated windows, stylized as the main building. The third has a slightly smaller perimeter, has double arches on each side, sufficient in size to mount a large bell. The fourth is very elegant, shaped like an octagon, with a cut arch in each and eight sides. The first three levels are framed by cornices, each of which has its own unique pattern. This structure is crowned with a tent-shaped roof, with a dome on a small cylinder at the top. In 1904, a parish school building was built on the territory of the temple, which later became a Sunday school.
During the Soviet period, the temple suffered, like many others did then. It worked until 1937, after which it was closed; the property was confiscated even earlier. Within its walls there was a stable, then a hat factory, and a warehouse. In 1991, the temple was returned to the church, and restoration began. On 04/07/1996 the first Divine Liturgy was celebrated, after which services were held regularly. In 2005, all restoration work was completed, bells donated by believing patrons appeared on the bell tower. The parish school has reopened.
In the cemetery, next to Trinity Church in the village of Oznobishino you can see the graves of Father Dmitry (the penultimate priest before the closure) - marked with a cross, due to the destruction of the historical tombstone, Stefan Golubev - the deacon of the temple from the period of the 20s of the XX century. It is worth noting that one hundred old tombstones carved from stone with original inscriptions on them have been preserved. Not far from the temple there is a pedestal in memory of the defenders of the Motherland from the Nazis during the Great Patriotic War, which is very symbolic and serves as a kind of bridge of eras.

The village of Oznobishino, located about 8 kilometers from the center of Podolsk, has a fairly ancient history. Judging by archaeological data, a settlement in this place could have existed as early as the beginning of the 13th century. The earliest available written evidence dates back to the first half of the 17th century. So in 1629, the village already had a wooden church in the name of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos with a chapel in the name of St. Nicholas.

In 1676, Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich allowed his close boyar Bogdan Khitrovo to buy the village of Oznobishino; and already in 1677 he built a new wooden church on a stone foundation with a stone bell tower. The icons for it, commissioned by Khitrovo, were painted by the icon painters of the Armory Chamber Simon Ushakov and Nikita Pavlovets - the icon “Old Testament Trinity” (1677), and the “competent icon painter” Fyodor Zubov, a native of Veliky Ustyug, - the icon “Nicholas of Myra”. Currently, the icons are in the Kolomenskoye Museum.

This wooden church operated until 1937, when it was dismantled into logs, some of which were stolen, and some of which were burned. The stone church that has survived to this day was built next to the wooden one in the mid-60s of the 19th century with the “care” of the local priest Alexy Belyaev.

They prepared for the construction for a long time and with the whole world - they saved money, stocked up on white stone and brick. The dean of the Podolsk district, priest Simeon Seredensky, reported to the Consistory about “the willingness of parishioners to donate one silver ruble per soul for the continuation of the construction until its completion.”

In February 1863, Fr. Alexy, the clergyman and the elder send a petition to Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna Philaret (Drozdov) for permission to begin construction work. The corresponding letter was signed by Metropolitan Philaret on July 17 and on August 11 the foundation stone of the stone church was carried out. The author of the project is architect Nikolai Finisov.

In 1908-1911, a vestibule with a high bell tower was added to the temple, according to the design of the architect N.N. Blagoveshchensky. The local merchant Lapshin took a large part in the construction.

In 1889, priest Dimitry Belyaev was appointed rector of the Trinity Church, who served in the temple for more than 30 years, and there are still people alive who remember him. The deacon in those years was Fr. Pavel Troitsky, and later, in the mid-20s, Fr. Stefan Golubev. The headman of the temple was then the peasant Ivan Suchkov.

After the revolution, the temple remained active until 1937, when the wooden church was destroyed and the stone one was closed. But even before that, Fr. Demetrius and his family were persecuted. In 1922, he, like many other clergy, was arrested during the campaign to “seizure church property” for “disseminating the appeals of Patriarch Tikhon,” “opposing the authorities,” and “concealing church property.” Having spent time in Taganskaya prison until December 1922, he was released “for lack of proof of the crime.” The priest's family was kicked out of the house and took shelter in the lodge. Fr. died Demetrius died by his own death, according to some evidence in 1927, and was buried behind the altar of the temple.

The last priest before the closure of the temple was Fr. Alexander Troitsky. He was arrested in the fall of 1937 and sentenced to 10 years of exile in a camp. His further fate is still unknown.

After the closure, before the war, the temple housed a stable and a hat factory... Military operations bypassed the temple, but in those years, soldiers waiting to be sent to the front damaged the paintings on the walls by shooting at them. Then the temple was used as a granary, warehouse, workshop for the production of wire mesh, etc...

In 1991 in the village. An Orthodox community was registered in Oznobishino, and the temple was transferred to the Russian Orthodox Church. He was assigned to the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the village. Shchapovo, and the first work on its restoration was carried out by the rector of the Assumption Church, priest Georgy Evarestov.

In 1995, by the Decree of Metropolitan Juvenaly of Krutitsy and Kolomna, priest Sergius Maruk was appointed rector of the Trinity Church, and a resident of the village was elected head of the temple. Oznobishino Viktor Kosachev.

The first, after an almost 60-year break, Divine Liturgy was celebrated on April 7, 1996, on the Feast of the Annunciation of the Most Holy Theotokos, which coincided that year with the Feast of the Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem. Since that time, regular services have been held and repair and restoration work has been carried out, in which the temple community takes an active and varied part.

http://www.podolskoe.ru/oznobishino/main.htm



The brick Church of the Life-Giving Trinity, next to the wooden one, was built with the “care” of priest Alexy Belyaev according to the design of the architect N.I. Finisov, which was also used in a number of other churches in the Moscow region (Chetryakovo, Stupinsky district). Built between 1863-1886. In 1908-1911 According to the design of the diocesan architect N.N. Blagoveshchensky, at the expense of the merchant Lapshin and the efforts of the priest Dimitry Belyaev, the western porch with a bell tower was built. The oldest part of the building consists of a pillarless, single-domed, double-height quadrangle with a semi-circular apse and a two-pillar, two-aisle refectory (the chapels of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker and the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary). Decor in artistic eclectic forms. From the west, the refectory part is adjoined by a small vestibule with one light axis and a four-story hipped bell tower, which is the architectural dominant of the area. The decoration of the bell tower is an example of the “Russian” style, with an orientation towards Moscow architecture of the 17th century. The lower parts of the bell tower and vestibule are faced with white stone. In the “real” temple there is a closed vault, in the apse there is a conch; in the refectory there is a system of sail vaults resting on two pillars shifted to the east. The original ceilings of the vestibule and bell tower were lost after the church was closed in 1937. At the same time, the nearby wooden church built in 1677 was dismantled. Since 1996, the temple has been revived. The church contains icons with particles of St. relics of martyr Tryphon, sschmch. Thaddeus, Archbishop of Tver and others.

The Church of the Holy Trinity in the village of Oznobishino, Podolsk region, is an object of cultural heritage of regional significance (Resolution of the Government of the Moscow Region dated March 15, 2002 No. 84/9). Now the temple is part of the St. Nicholas deanery of the Moscow diocese (city, Vicariate of new territories).

Sources: Archpriest Oleg Penezhko "Temples of Podolsk and the surrounding area." Vladimir, 2004 "Moscow region. Monasteries, temples, sources" Moscow, UKINO "Spiritual Transfiguration", 2008 website "Vicariate of New Territories".

The village of Oznobishino, located approximately 8 km from the center of Podolsk,

has quite an ancient history. Judging by archaeological data, a settlement existed in this place already at the beginning of the 12th century, and in the 14th-15th centuries. The temple could well already exist. The earliest available written evidence dates back to the first half of the 17th century. So in 1629 the existence in the village was mentioned. Oznobishino wooden church in honor of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary with a chapel in the name of St. Nicholas.

In 1676, Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich allowed his close boyar Bogdan Khitrovo to buy the village of Oznobishino; and already in 1677 he built a new wooden church on a stone foundation with a bell tower. Icons for it, commissioned by Khitrovo, were painted by the icon painters of the Armory Chamber Simon Ushakov with Nikita Pavlovets - the icon “Old Testament Trinity” (1677), and the “granted icon painter Fyodor Zubov, a native of Veliky Ustyug, - the icon “Nicholas of Myra”. Currently, these icons are in the Kolomenskoye Museum.

The wooden church operated, according to some evidence, until 1930. In 1935-1937, it was dismantled into logs, some of which were taken away, and some were burned. Some icons were also burned, but some of them, by some miracle, were saved and transferred (in 1935) to the Kolomenskoye Museum. The stone church that has survived to this day was built next to the wooden one in the mid-60s of the 19th century. "through the diligence" of local priest Alexy Belyaev.

They prepared for the construction for a long time and with the whole world - they saved money, stocked up on white stone and brick. The dean of the Podolsk district, priest Simeon Seredensky, reported to the Consistory about “the willingness of parishioners to donate one silver ruble per soul for the continuation of the construction until its completion.”

In February 1863, Father Alexy with the clergy and headman was sent to Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna Philaret (Drozdov)

(November 19/December 2, New Art) a request for permission to begin construction work. The corresponding charter was signed on July 17, and on August 11, the foundation stone of the stone church was carried out. The author of the project was architect Nikolai Finisov.

In 1908 - 1911 a vestibule with a high bell tower was added to the temple, according to the design of the architect N.N. Blagoveshchensky. The local merchant Lapshin took a large part in the construction. In 1889, priest Dimitry Belyaev was appointed rector of the Trinity Church.

He served in the temple for more than 30 years, and until a few years ago there were people alive who remembered him.

The deacon in those years was Father Pavel Troitsky,

and later in the mid-1920s, Father Stefan Golubev. The headman of the temple was then the peasant Ivan Suchkov, and then Nikolai Kondakov.

After the revolution, the temple remained active until 1937. Then the temple was closed. But even before this, Father Dimitri and his family were persecuted. In 1922, he was arrested during a campaign “to confiscate church valuables” for “distributing the appeals of Patriarch Tikhon” and “concealing church property.” Having spent time in Taganskaya prison until December 1922, he was released “for lack of proof of the crime.” The priest's family was evicted from their home and huddled in a lodge. Father Dimitri died of natural causes, according to some testimonies in 1927, and was buried behind the altar of the temple. Subsequently, his grave was devastated and the monument - in the form of a lectern with a cross and the Gospel - was destroyed. Currently, a cross has been erected at the site of his burial.

The last priest before the closure of the temple was Father Alexander Troitsky. He was arrested in the fall of 1937 and sentenced to 10 years of exile in a camp. His further fate is still unknown. After the closure, the temple housed a stable, a hat factory...

Military operations bypassed the temple, but in those years, soldiers awaiting their departure to the front damaged the paintings on the walls by shooting at them.

After the war, the temple was used as a granary, warehouse, workshop for the production of wire mesh, etc...

In 1991, an Orthodox community was registered in Oznobishino, and the temple was transferred to the Russian Orthodox Church. It was assigned to the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the village of Shchapovo, and the first work on its restoration was carried out by the rector of the Assumption Church, priest Georgy Evarestov.

In 1995, by decree of Metropolitan Juvenaly of Krutitsky and Kolomna, priest Sergius Maruk was appointed rector of the Trinity Church, and a resident of the village was elected head of the temple. Oznobishino Viktor Kosachev.

The first, after an almost 60-year break, Divine Liturgy was celebrated on April 7, 1996 - on the Feast of the Annunciation of the Most Holy Theotokos, which coincided that year with the Feast of the Entry of the Lord into Jerusalem. Since that time, regular services have been held and repair and restoration work has been carried out, in which the temple community takes an active and varied part.

By 2004, in general, the external restoration of the temple and the improvement of the area around the temple were completed. By the feast of the Nativity of Christ in 2005, the internal restoration of the quadrangle was completed and the service was moved to the central altar. Church parishioners M. Kostrikina, V. Erokhin and A. Kudrinskaya continue to paint icons for the central iconostasis. The temple also contains newly painted icons with particles of holy relics: the martyr Tryphon, the noble princes Peter and Fevronia of Murom, the holy martyr Thaddeus, Archbishop of Tver, and St. Agafangel the Confessor, Metropolitan of Yaroslavl.

In 2005, benefactors Pavel and Konstantin donated a set of bells to the temple. Also in 2005, at one of the sources in the village. In Oznobishino, the parishioners of the temple, with the blessing of Metropolitan Juvenaly of Krutitsky and Kolomna, built a chapel-font, consecrated on November 21 - the feast of the Archangel Michael. In 2006, reconstruction of the Sunday (originally parochial) school building, built in 1904, began.

The church has a library of spiritual literature, numbering more than 1,500 books, and a video library, as well as a Sunday school for children.

Not far from Podolsk, in the village of Oznobishino, there is a one-domed church of the Life-Giving Trinity. This monastery is ancient: the first information dates back to the 17th century. Over several centuries, the church has seen a lot: a change of appearance, pogroms, repressions and half a century of closure.

In 1676, Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich allowed his close boyar Bogdan Khitrovo to buy the village of Oznobishino; and already in 1677 he built a new wooden church on a stone foundation with a bell tower. Icons for it, by order of Khitrovo, were created by icon painters of the Armory Chamber: Simon Ushakov and Nikita Pavlovets - the icon “Old Testament Trinity” (1677), and the “competent icon painter” Fyodor Zubov, a native of Veliky Ustyug, - the icon “Nicholas of Myra”.
Now the images are in the Kolomenskoye Museum.

The wooden church operated, according to some evidence, until 1930. In 1935-1937 it was dismantled into logs, some of which were taken away and some were burned. Some icons were also burned, but some of them were miraculously saved and transferred (in 1935) to the Kolomenskoye Museum. The stone church that has survived to this day was built next to the wooden one in the mid-60s of the 19th century. “through the diligence” of local priest Alexy Belyaev.

They prepared for the construction for a long time and with the whole world: they saved money, stocked up on white stone and brick. The dean of the Podolsk district, priest Simeon Seredensky, reported to the Consistory about “the willingness of parishioners to donate one silver ruble per soul for the continuation of the construction until its completion.”

In February 1863, Father Alexy with the clergy and headman sent to Metropolitan of Moscow and Kolomna Philaret (Drozdov) with a request for permission to begin construction work. The charter was signed on July 17, and on August 11, the foundation stone of the stone church was carried out. The author of the project was architect Nikolai Finisov.

In 1908 - 1911 a vestibule with a high bell tower was added to the temple, according to the design of the architect N.N. Blagoveshchensky. The local merchant Lapshin took a large part in the construction.

In 1889, priest Dimitry Belyaev was appointed rector of the Trinity Church. He served in the temple for more than 30 years. The deacon in those years was Father Pavel Troitsky, and later, in the mid-1920s, Father Stefan Golubev. The headman of the temple was then the peasant Ivan Suchkov, and then Nikolai Kondakov.

After the revolution, the temple remained active until 1937; then the temple was closed. But before this, Father Dimitri and his family were persecuted. In 1922, he was arrested during a campaign “to confiscate church valuables” for “distributing the appeals of Patriarch Tikhon” and “concealing church property.” Having spent time in Taganskaya prison until December 1922, he was released “for lack of proof of the crime.”

The priest's family was evicted from their home and huddled in a lodge. Father Dimitri died of natural causes, according to some testimonies in 1927, and was buried behind the altar of the temple. Subsequently, his grave was devastated and the monument - in the form of a lectern with a cross and the Gospel - was destroyed. Currently, a cross has been erected at the site of his burial.

The last priest before the closure of the temple was Father Alexander Troitsky. He was arrested in the fall of 1937 and sentenced to 10 years of exile in a camp. His further fate is still unknown. After the closure, the temple housed a stable, a hat factory...
Military operations bypassed the temple, but in those years, soldiers awaiting their departure to the front damaged the paintings on the walls by shooting at them.

After the war, the temple was used as a granary, warehouse, workshop for the production of wire mesh, etc.

In 1991, an Orthodox community was registered in Oznobishino, and the temple was transferred to the Russian Orthodox Church. It was assigned to the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the village of Shchapovo, and the first work on its restoration was carried out by the rector of the Assumption Church, priest Georgy Evarestov.

In 1995, by decree of Metropolitan Juvenaly of Krutitsy and Kolomna, priest Sergius Maruk was appointed rector of the Trinity Church.



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